The Global Digital Citizenship Lab Speaker Series presents Linsey McGoey (University of Essex) and “The Elusive Rentier Rich: Piketty’s data Battles and the Power of Absent Evidence” on Dec. 7, from 2 to 3:30pm in the Qualitative Research & Resource Centre (N141 Ross Building) with discussant Kean Birch, Department of Social Science, York University.
The popularity of Thomas Piketty’s research on wealth disparities raises a question: Why was wealth inequality neglected in mainstream neoclassical economic theory during the latter half of the 20th century? To explore this question, McGoey will draw on the writing of the early neoclassical economist John Bates Clark, who introduced the notion of the marginal productivity of income distribution at the end of the 19th century.
She will then turn to Piketty’s Capital to analyze the salience of marginal productivity theories of income today. She suggests that most of the criticism and praise of Piketty’s research is focused on data that is accessible and measurable, obscuring attention to questions over whether current methods for measuring economic capital are defensible or not.
Debates over the robustness of Piektty’s data have had unanticipated effects, such as the implication that mainstream economics is marked by a high degree of internal tension and fruitful disciplinary discord. In reality, mainstream theory resists challenges to core disciplinary beliefs, such as the belief that remuneration levels reflect one’s economic contributions. She will explore how “absent” data in economics as a whole helps to reinforce blind spots within mainstream economic history.
McGoey is a senior lecturer in sociology at the University of Essex. She’s currently working on two main research projects. The first explores the relationship between global philanthropy and growing economic inequality, with a focus on new, hybrid forms of philanthropy that direct charitable resources to for-profit recipients. The second is a project on abundance and scarcity in economic and social thought, with an emphasis on work by Georges Bataille and Henry George. She is co-editor of the International Routledge Handbook of Ignorance Studies (2015), and the author of No Such Thing as a Fre Gift: The Gates Foundation and the Price of Philanthropy (2015).
Refreshments will be provided.
The event is sponsored by the York Research Chair in Global Digital Citizenship (Fuyuki Kursawa).