Rutger Bregman
"One of the best books I’ve read this year. Crystal clear, rigorously empirical. Should be read by policymakers from around the globe, especially in the US. It’s the to-do-list for the next president."
Guardian - Oliver Bullough
"In an age when the primary instinct of many left-leaning people is to yearn for a time machine, [The Triumph of Injustice] is a bracing and brave formulation of a radical new approach to public funding."
New York Times - David Leonhardt
"[T]he most important book on government policy that I’ve read in a long time."
Esther Duflo
"In 2018, for the first time in more than one hundred years, billionaires paid a lower tax rate than ordinary workers, crowning the dismantling of America’s system of progressive taxation. In this eye-opening book, Emmanuel Saez and Gabriel Zucman show that there is no iron law of economics that led us there, just many whose self-interest or misunderstanding of economics make them claim the opposite. Their radical proposal to reinvent taxation for a globalized world will become an unavoidable starting point to any intelligent conversation."
Thomas Piketty
"America is tired of inequality and oligarchy. Armed with eye-popping new data, Emmanuel Saez and Gabriel Zucman reveal how tax injustice is fueling the oligarchic drift. But above all, they propose bold solutions to help America reconnect with its tradition of tax justice, from the taxation of extreme wealth and giant corporations to the funding of health care for all. This is a brilliantly argued book that is an essential contribution to the global economic and political debate of the twenty-first century."
Joseph E. Stiglitz
"The Triumph of Injustice is a groundbreaking work that uncovers a diabolical driver of America’s shocking and growing inequality: unfair and regressive tax policies and a tax-avoidance industry that serves the wealthy at the expense of everyone else. Until we reverse this topsy-turvy regime—where ordinary workers may pay a larger share of their income than the very richest Americans—we can’t hope to address our biggest social problems. Anyone who hopes for a better future for everyday Americans needs to read this book."