According to
The New York Times Book Review one of the "strong" virtues of
The Hidden Wealth of Nations, is that it sheds light on a potential area for significant reforms on an issues with which many may agree,"You might believe that the tax system should be made more progressive, or you might believe that it should be made less so. But whatever you think, you are unlikely to support a situation in which trillions of dollars are hardly taxed at all." While
The Atlantic described Zucman's
The Hidden Wealth of Nations as "carefully considered and closely argued", there was criticism that "his optimism about initiatives" like the much despised
Foreign Accounts Tax Compliance Act" (FATCA) and his "neglect" of certain "conflicts of interest within nations". The review noted that Zucman was "at the beginning of what promises to be a brilliant career" − Zucman is a 28-year-old
University of California, Berkeley economist. Tax havens essentially allow "world's wealthiest individuals and firms" to "steal revenue from other nations". Those who avoid paying their fair share of taxes shift the burden to ordinary people.
The Atlantic reviews said that Zucman's "main achievement" was to quantify the theft: "$200 billion in state revenues lost through private individuals' use of tax havens, plus another $130 billion in losses created by U.S. firms booking their profits offshore."
Bloomberg Businessweek described it "this year's Piketty", referring to Thomas Piketty, whose best-selling "opus"
Capital in the Twenty-First Century, "renewed a debate about inequality" in 2014. Piketty, who was Zucman's PhD. supervisor, wrote the foreword to
Hidden Wealth. Zucman, like Piketty is criticizing capitalism and his target is tax havens that allow the wealthiest individuals and corporations to avoid paying taxes on $7.6 trillion which represents about "8 percent of the world's net financial wealth". ==Contents==