Bunkobons

← All books

Cover of A Brief History of Equality

A Brief History of Equality

by Thomas Piketty

Buy on Amazon

One of the big challenges of our age is economic inequality , a topic we’ve been tracking since Five Books started more than a decade ago. Three economists wrote a pioneering paper with data on inequality over the long-term : Thomas Piketty, Emmanuel Saez, and Tony Atkinson (1944-2017). Piketty’s doorstopper books have since become bestsellers but his latest, A Brief History of Equality , is short and so a nice introduction to his approach. As some commentators have pointed out, it’s also a little more optimistic, which we probably all need right now. If you’re just interested in the data, the 2022 World Inequality Report will be out as a book in July , though you can already access it here . The populist politicians who find a convenient scapegoat to blame for everything and whose policies normally make problems worse are well covered this spring. In Beef, Bible and Bullets: Brazil in the Age of Bolsonaro , FT journalist Richard Lapper tracks the phenomenon in Brazil where former military officer Jair Bolsonaro is in power. For the US, American political historian Julian Zelizer has edited a volume with a range of contributors: The Presidency of Donald J. Trump: A First Historical Assessment . Also new out this spring is a biography of Xi Jinping by Alfred Chan (including details such as at what age baby Jinping was weaned). If you’re looking for a general survey of authoritarian leaders around the world, The Age of the Strongman by Gideon Rachman , the FT’s chief foreign affairs columnist, looks at a number of them, starting with Vladimir Putin. All in all, it’s a good time to reflect on liberal democracy, and Francis Fukuyama has a new, short, book out: Liberalism and its Discontents , addressing both what it is and some of the challenges it faces. He’s a clear thinker and also talked about what other books to read about liberal democracy in our most recent interview with him.

Recommended by

"One of the big challenges of our age is economic inequality , a topic we’ve been tracking since Five Books started more than a decade ago. Three economists wrote a pioneering paper with data on inequality over the long-term : Thomas Piketty, Emmanuel Saez, and Tony Atkinson (1944-2017). Piketty’s doorstopper books have since become bestsellers but his latest, A Brief History of Equality , is short and so a nice introduction to his approach. As some commentators have pointed out, it’s also a little more optimistic, which we probably all need right now. If you’re just interested in the data, the 2022 World Inequality Report will be out as a book in July , though you can already access it here . The populist politicians who find a convenient scapegoat to blame for everything and whose policies normally make problems worse are well covered this spring. In Beef, Bible and Bullets: Brazil in the Age of Bolsonaro , FT journalist Richard Lapper tracks the phenomenon in Brazil where former military officer Jair Bolsonaro is in power. For the US, American political historian Julian Zelizer has edited a volume with a range of contributors: The Presidency of Donald J. Trump: A First Historical Assessment . Also new out this spring is a biography of Xi Jinping by Alfred Chan (including details such as at what age baby Jinping was weaned). If you’re looking for a general survey of authoritarian leaders around the world, The Age of the Strongman by Gideon Rachman , the FT’s chief foreign affairs columnist, looks at a number of them, starting with Vladimir Putin. All in all, it’s a good time to reflect on liberal democracy, and Francis Fukuyama has a new, short, book out: Liberalism and its Discontents , addressing both what it is and some of the challenges it faces. He’s a clear thinker and also talked about what other books to read about liberal democracy in our most recent interview with him."
Notable Nonfiction of Spring 2022 · fivebooks.com