
By Atiq Raja
Inequality is often presented as if it were an unchangeable law of nature. Some are naturally talented, some work harder, some are luckier—this is the comfortable story that societies tell themselves. Yet Thomas Piketty, in his book Nature, Culture and Inequality, challenges that assumption with an argument that is both unsettling and liberating: inequality is not a fixed feature of humanity. It is a human creation, shaped by culture, ideology, and the decisions societies make about power and wealth. At the heart of Piketty’s work is a simple but profound insight: inequality is not inevitable. Across history and geography, human societies have organized wealth, property, and influence in radically different ways.
If inequality were truly natural, its patterns would be universal. They are not. In some societies, wealth is concentrated in the hands of a few; in others, it is more evenly distributed. In some eras, social mobility is limited; in others, the gap between rich and poor narrows. The evidence is clear: political choices, institutional arrangements, and social norms matter far more than genes, effort, or chance. Inequality is not written in our biology; it is written in our laws, policies, and cultural narratives. Culture, Piketty argues, plays a decisive role in shaping economic outcomes. Belief systems, moral frameworks, and shared narratives determine what is considered fair and acceptable. Societies construct explanations that make inequality appear natural or deserved.
Sometimes it is divine will, sometimes meritocracy, sometimes the invisible hand of the market. These stories are more than comforting myths—they are powerful tools that maintain the status quo. When people believe inequality is justified, they are less likely to question the structures that perpetuate it. This is why understanding inequality requires more than statistics: it requires examining the culture in which those statistics exist. Ideology is a further instrument in sustaining economic hierarchies. Piketty notes that ideas are never neutral; they are inseparable from the distribution of power. Economic systems survive not merely through laws and institutions, but through the beliefs people accept as common sense.
When wealth becomes concentrated, new ideologies emerge to defend it, cloaked in notions of fairness, efficiency, or natural order. To understand why some societies tolerate extreme inequality while others do not, one must look at the discourses embedded in education, media, politics, and public debate. It is through these channels that unequal arrangements are normalized and reproduced. Perhaps the most empowering lesson from Piketty’s work is that inequality is not accidental. It is the product of deliberate political choices: tax policies, property laws, access to education, and social welfare systems. Societies can design systems that redistribute wealth and expand opportunity, or they can design systems that concentrate wealth and restrict mobility.
Progressive taxation, inclusive education, and social safety nets narrow inequality. Deregulated markets, weak labor protections, and regressive taxation widen it. The point is clear: inequality is a choice, not fate. Recognizing this fact is liberating because it means that inequality can be challenged and reduced through conscious action. History offers a laboratory of possibilities. Piketty urges readers to study the past not as a closed narrative, but as a guide for imagining alternative futures. Post-war Europe, for instance, saw the rise of welfare states and policies that significantly reduced wealth gaps. Contemporary debates about wealth taxes, inheritance taxes, and universal social protections are echoes of these historical experiments.
They show that societies have repeatedly chosen different paths, and that extremes of inequality are neither permanent nor unavoidable. The task is to question dominant narratives and to envision institutions that promote fairness, equity, and opportunity. A further insight from Piketty is self-reflection. Societies do not merely inherit inequality; they participate in sustaining it. Accepting simplistic explanations—“some people just deserve more”—renders citizens passive. Questioning those explanations reclaims agency. Awareness, civic engagement, and public debate are not peripheral to economic reform; they are central to it. Social justice requires not only policy changes but a collective willingness to interrogate the stories that justify inequality.
Nature, Culture and Inequality reminds us that the real work begins in the space between knowledge and action. Understanding that inequality is not predetermined imposes responsibility. It demands that citizens, policymakers, and institutions take seriously the role of ideology, culture, and policy in shaping outcomes. It reminds us that fairness, opportunity, and shared prosperity are not gifts bestowed by the few but achievements that societies construct collectively. The question for humanity, Piketty suggests, is not whether inequality can be reduced—it can—but whether we have the imagination, courage, and will to rewrite the systems that sustain it. In the end, the book is both a critique and a guide. It challenges complacency and the myths that make inequality appear natural. It celebrates human agency and the possibility of change.
(The writer is a rights activist and CEO of AR Trainings and Consultancy, with degrees in Political Science and English Literature, can be reached at editorial@metro-morning.com)
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