Wealth, Poverty and Politics

Wealth, Poverty and Politics by Thomas Sowell is a revised and enlarged edition published by Basic Books on September 6, 2016. This comprehensive work examines the differences in wealth and income both between and within nations, challenging prevalent assumptions and definitions surrounding these economic disparities. Sowell explores various factors influencing economic differences, including geographic, demographic, cultural, and political elements, while also critiquing the views of prominent income redistribution advocates.
Readers will find a thorough analysis that scrutinizes beliefs from across the ideological spectrum, subjecting them to empirical evidence. The book presents historical examples of individuals and nations that have transitioned from poverty to prosperity, as well as the detrimental policies that have perpetuated economic dependency. Sowell’s fact-based approach aims to clarify misconceptions about the causes of economic inequality, making this edition a significant contribution to discussions in economics and political science. With 576 pages, this edition is available in English and provides a detailed examination of critical economic and political ideologies.
Official synopsis Publisher
A revised and enlarged edition of Thomas Sowell’s essential examination of differences of wealth and income between nations and within nations
Wealth, Poverty and Politics challenges the assumptions, the definitions, the evidence and the reasoning of most of what is said about differences of income and wealth by people in the media, in academia and in politics. After an extensive examination of factors behind the economic differences between nations and within nations — including geographic, demographic, cultural and political factors — the last section of the book is a searching critique of leading income redistributionists, from John Rawls to Thomas Piketty and Nobel laureates in economics Paul Krugman, Angus Deaton and Joseph Stiglitz.
Among the more heartening findings from history are the individuals, groups and nations that have risen from poverty and backwardness to prosperity and achievements on the frontiers of human progress. Among the more painful findings are counterproductive creeds and policies that have needlessly prolonged poverty and dependency among lagging groups in countries around the world, and whipped up resentments — and sometimes violence — against more productive and successful minorities in many places and times.
Although Wealth, Poverty and Politics offers many new analyses and insights, it is essentially a fact-based study which subjects many beliefs, from various parts of the ideological spectrum, to the ultimate test of empirical evidence. These challenged beliefs about the causes of economic differences range from genetic determinism to exploitation and discrimination. In each case, the analysis follows where the facts lead, whether that is verification, refutation or some combination of the two. Its guiding principle is expressed in a quotation from the late Daniel Patrick Moynihan that opens the final section of the book: “You’re entitled to your own opinions, but you’re not entitled to your own facts.”
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