<b>The best case I've read for putting an upper limit on the accumulation of wealth. Even the super-rich might be glad if there was a finishing line! </b>
- Richard Wilkinson,
<b>You might find yourself, as I did, underlining a sentence or three on every page, and adding exclamation points in the margin</b>
- Tim Adams, Observer
<b>Valuable, intriguing, provocative ... Robeyns poses a question that very rarely gets asked in mainstream politics ... How much is too much?</b>
Guardian
<b>She’s done the maths. We need Limitarianism. Urgently</b>
Irish Examiner
<b>Provocative ... begs an interesting debate about society's future</b>
The Times
<b>A landmark ... gripping, riveting, vivid ... We need to embrace, as Robeyns so compellingly argues, limits on income and wealth.</b>
Inequality.org
<b>Powerful – a must-read</b>
- Thomas Piketty,
<b>Effortlessly navigating between ethics, political theory, economics and public policy, Ingrid Robeyns’ nuanced and persuasive defence of limitarianism is also a much-needed manifesto for reimagining political institutions</b>
- Lea Ypi,
<b>Is it possible to meet the needs of all people within the means of the living planet? Definitely not in a world dominated by extreme wealth, as Ingrid Robeyns powerfully argues. This landmark book combines meticulous logic with compelling personal stories to draw everyone - from the super-rich to the super-riled - into one of the most critical public debates of our times. Read it. </b>
- Kate Raworth,
<b>A compelling case for limiting extreme wealth, along economic, political and moral lines ... This argument has never been more important, and this book is a persuasive call to action</b>
- Jayati Ghosh, Professor of Economics, University of Massachusetts Amherst,