The book's essays cluster around several themes. The one percent essays trace the political and economic mechanisms by which top-end concentration intensified — tax policy, financial deregulation, intellectual property expansion, corporate governance failures, and educational inequality. The crisis essays analyze the 2008 financial crisis as the predictable outcome of the regulatory framework that had been constructed over the preceding three decades, and the post-crisis response as a case study in how institutional capture preserves concentration even when crisis creates opportunity for reform. The alternatives essays sketch the outlines of different institutional arrangements that would produce different distributional outcomes.
The AI application is indirect but substantial. The book was written before the generative AI moment but documents the patterns now operating in the AI transition with uncomfortable precision. The financial sector's ability to capture regulatory reform despite the crisis its practices had produced is the template for the AI industry's capture of governance frameworks despite the distributional consequences its deployment is producing. The political economy of tax policy — where top-end rates fell despite popular preference for progressive taxation — is the template for AI taxation, where the industry's political power has so far prevented the windfall taxes and platform taxes that would capture a share of the productivity surplus for public investment. The specific mechanisms differ; the structural pattern is identical.
The book's distinctive value is its translation of theoretical framework into historical narrative. The Price of Inequality establishes the mechanisms by which markets with information asymmetries and concentrated power produce inequality; The Great Divide shows those mechanisms operating in specific policy debates, institutional failures, and political struggles. The transition from abstract framework to concrete history is essential for the AI analysis because it demonstrates that the dynamics Stiglitz diagnoses are not theoretical possibilities but ongoing realities whose persistence across contexts and decades reflects the structural features of the institutional environment rather than the accidents of particular moments.
Stiglitz's 2012–2015 essays on inequality were written in response to the Occupy Wall Street movement, the subsequent inequality discourse, and his own political engagement with progressive policy questions. The collection was assembled and published in 2015 as the second major installment in what became an informal trilogy — critical (The Price of Inequality), empirical (The Great Divide), and constructive (People, Power, and Profits) — articulating his framework for contemporary political economy.
Policy choices, not natural law. Specific historical decisions produced contemporary inequality, and different decisions would have produced different outcomes.
Post-crisis capture. The 2008 crisis created opportunity for structural reform that was largely foreclosed by the political power of the financial sector.
Political economy of tax policy. Top-end tax reductions occurred despite popular preference for progressive taxation, reflecting the capture of political institutions by concentrated interests.
Empirical documentation of mechanisms. The book operationalizes The Price of Inequality's theoretical framework through specific cases and policy debates.
Template for AI analysis. The structural patterns documented for finance and tax reappear in AI governance, suggesting similar outcomes absent significant institutional response.