If economists to Piketty’s right are concerned that he doesn’t ground 
his theory deep enough in economic models, economists and others to 
Piketty’s left are concerned that he concedes too much to mainstream 
economics and not enough to politics.

Recently, there has been a strong recent resurgence on the left in 
emphasizing the way the state, through law, regulation, and public 
policy, necessarily structures markets. In this telling there is no such 
thing as a “free” market, just different choices about how to structure 
markets fundamentally based in politics and power. The idea of a “free” 
market is a vacuous, question-begging abstraction, invoked to defend the 
status quo or the interests of the wealthy. (A quick look at the titles 
of current academic works like The Illusion of Free Markets, The Myth of 
Ownership, and The Progressive Assault on Laissez Faire give a sense of 
the argument.)

This context explains what is at stake in the left critique of Piketty. 
Some economists, like Dean Baker, have argued that Piketty doesn’t do 
enough to explain how financial regulations or patent protections could 
help deal with the problems he identifies. Others, like James Galbraith, 
invoke debates among midcentury Keynesians to argue that adding up 
capital and assigning it a return doesn’t make sense as a model. More 
broadly, Piketty has been criticized for not acknowledging how 
institutions and politics influence the returns on capital: his theory 
of the dominoes is too focused on economic forces.

So, while economists to Piketty’s right think he should create a model 
that predicts the rate of return on capital (his r) based on the state 
of the economy, rather than historical data, economists to Piketty’s 
left want him to emphasize the idea that many different rates of return 
are consistent with the character of the economy; “r” is a function of 
institutions and political decisions. Those on the left also worry that 
the debate over Capital could devolve into, as the economist Suresh 
Naidu argues, a “bastard Pikettyism” that just navel-gazes at the 
mathematical economic models discussed above, instead of a more 
critical, broader inquiry of how capital works in economies and societies.

full: 
http://www.bostonreview.net/books-ideas/mike-konczal-thomas-piketty-capital-studying-rich
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