a16z Podcast - Marc Andreessen and Joe Lonsdale on Tariffs and Trade
Episode Date: July 18, 2025Today we’re sharing an episode from American Optimist featuring Marc Andreessen in conversation with Joe Lonsdale, recorded live at the inaugural Ronald Reagan Economic Forum.They explore one of the... most urgent and complex questions of our time: Can AI and robotics catalyze a new era of American industrial strength—and how do we ensure the entire country, including rural communities, shares in the upside?Marc walks through the history of U.S. industrialization, the lessons of tariffs and trade from leaders like McKinley, and how America’s shift to a services-based economy helped fuel our current urban-rural divide. The conversation spans immigration policy, housing, education, energy, and the path to a true AI-powered manufacturing revival—touching on what needs to change and how.This episode is a must-listen for anyone thinking about the future of American productivity, growth, and leadership in the age of AI. Resources: Find Marc on X: https://x.com/pmarcaFollow Joe on X: https://x.com/jtlonsdaleYou can find his writings here: https://blog.joelonsdale.com/ Stay Updated: Let us know what you think: https://ratethispodcast.com/a16zFind a16z on Twitter: https://twitter.com/a16zFind a16z on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/a16zSubscribe on your favorite podcast app: https://a16z.simplecast.com/Follow our host: https://twitter.com/stephsmithioPlease note that the content here is for informational purposes only; should NOT be taken as legal, business, tax, or investment advice or be used to evaluate any investment or security; and is not directed at any investors or potential investors in any a16z fund. a16z and its affiliates may maintain investments in the companies discussed. For more details please see a16z.com/disclosures.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
AI is happening and AI is only happening in two places.
Like it's only US versus China.
There's a whole competition thing there,
but like the US is like very powerful.
If you disaggregate sectors of the economy
over the last 25 years,
what you find is basically everything
that technology touches basically collapses in price.
If the country is growing faster,
it's gonna be a fundamentally happier place
because people,
whichever side of the political spectrum you're on,
there's gonna be a sense of optimism.
There's gonna be a sense of opportunity. There's going to be a sense of opportunity.
There's going to be the sense that your kids are going to live better lives than you do.
Today on the A16Z podcast, we're sharing an episode from Joe Lonsdale's
American Optimist, recorded live at the first Ronald Reagan Economic Forum.
Joe sits down with A16Z co-founder Mark Andreessen
to explore one of the biggest questions of our time.
Can the rise of AI spark a new American industrial revival, and what would it take to make sure
the entire country, including rural America, shares in the growth?
They cover the history of US manufacturing, the debate over tariffs and trade, and how
AI and robotics might create the jobs and economic momentum of the future.
They also dig into immigration, regulatory bottlenecks, and what smart policy should
look like in an AI-driven world.
Let's get into it.
This information is for educational purposes only and is not a recommendation to buy, hold,
or sell any investment or financial product.
This podcast has been produced by a third party and may include paid promotional advertisements,
other company references, and individuals unaffiliated with A16Z.
Such advertisements, companies, and individuals
are not endorsed by AH Capital Management LLC, A16Z,
or any of its affiliates.
Information is from sources deemed reliable
on the date of publication,
but A16Z does not guarantee its accuracy.
Mark, everyone welcome to our
first annual Reagan Economic Forum.
It's an honor to have you guys here.
We talk a lot here, of course, about Reagan's economic pillars and policies,
which include deregulation and lower taxes and lower spending,
all of which are very relevant today.
But Mark, I want to start off asking you about someone I know you've been reading about
and President Trump's been reading about from 100 years before,
which is William McKinley.
And William McKinley, of course, was a staunch protectionist at first.
Is this historical example
of how to revitalize American industry relevant today?
Is it relevant to everything we're doing in AI and energy?
Like, how do you think about this?
Yeah, so I've been doing my best
to kind of spin up in the history of this.
And so there was something in the 19th century
actually originally created by Alexander Hamilton
when he was treasury secretary called the American system.
And, you know, this was like 80 years before McKinley,
90 years before McKinley.
What they were dealing with was the British Empire, right?
The UK was the preeminent industrial power.
They were the first like giant industrial power
on planet earth and had built this very commanding
economic technological military position.
And of course America at the time of the revolution
was mostly farmland.
And then there was this raging debate
between Hamilton and Jefferson as to whether
you'd want America to be an industrial
kind of urban financialized power,
which is what Hamilton wanted or of kind of a rural urban financialized power, which is what Hamilton wanted,
or of kind of a rural farming aristocratic power,
which is what Jefferson wanted.
And Hamilton won that debate.
And so that led to what was called the American system.
The American system led to the creation
of the United States as an industrial power
that developed over the course of the 19th century.
But it really took off at the tail end of the 19th century
and what was called the second industrial revolution.
And so between call it 1870, 1880 and like 1930,
basically everything we view today as the modern world
was basically invented then.
And you could almost look around the room here today
and you could say basically every piece
of physical infrastructure, everything around us,
literally everything, the airplane,
manufacturing techniques to be able to make
modern glassware at scale, air conditioning, television, radio, the automobiles we drove to get here.
It all was the result of the second industrial revolution.
And then the McKinley presidency was right in the middle of that period.
It's really when the whole thing catalyzed.
And so it was really the point at which America became the world's industrial superpower.
And then of course, that led to America being able to become a huge player in both World
War I and World War II, ultimately winning World War II and becoming the arsehole democracy.
All kind of floated out of that period.
And so the American system is something that people really don't like to talk about these
days because it was heavily protectionist.
And the whole theory of it was you don't industrialize just with a single technology or a single
company, you industrialize by having an entire ecosystem, right?
You industrialize by having not just three car companies, but by having all the thousands of parts suppliers
that make all the parts for the cars.
And so the Brits had done this.
They had run a very heavily protectionist program
to be able to boot up the first industrial revolution
in the UK.
But they then advocated for free trade
when exports became more important.
McKinley was the inheritor of the American system
and so he was heavily protectionist
to build up the second industrial revolution.
And then he actually switched
to become more of an advocate for free trade
because his American exporters
were becoming more successful.
They needed exports, they needed foreign markets.
And then by the way, in the 20th century,
basically every Industrial Revolution
and every other country that has worked
in the last 100 years basically follows that model as well.
So it's the same thing Germany did,
it's the same thing Japan did,
it's the same thing Korea did,
it's the same thing China is doing right now.
China's basically been running the American system playbook in China.
And so, and then this goes to tariff policy, and I'm not here to make an argument like it's like in favor of tariffs,
but more of a historical observation that there has been this phenomenon over time that if you want to have the kind of clustering effect that leads to industrial preeminence,
it is not unusual to have a combination of tools
and kind of tools and methods used to do that.
It has been historically characteristic
that tariffs would be a part of that.
But it's also historically characteristic
that there becomes this point when you also therefore
want to go for exports and you want to go for free trade.
And McKinley specifically, he ran for office very much
on the idea of having a high and permanent tariff.
Once he was in office, he switched more to a model
of what he called reciprocity, right?
And basically it was, we start out by tariffing, but the goal actually is to get everybody
to lower their tariffs.
The goal is to get a world of much more free trade, and then therefore these American exporters
are able to succeed globally.
And of course, he was able to use American tariffs as a lever to get other countries
to drop their tariffs.
And so in that sense, what we're going through right now in the US is sort of very characteristic
of that. And what
makes maybe the whole thing kind of more poignant is there is
this kind of fundamental underlying question, which is,
do we want the US to be an industrial superpower or not?
Right. And in the 19th century, they were like completely
clear that they wanted that. And in our time, I think we're
still ambiguous about it.
So it's interesting, though, because, and you've said this
yourself, in other contexts, we have this manufacturing wave.
And then in starting the 1960s,
services really drove a lot of our growth
the last 60 years,
which obviously was not as tied to that.
So the elite maybe were not thinking
about these issues as much.
And I guess the question is today,
are we shifting into something else?
Is it an AI driven economy?
What is it?
And it seems like Trump's camp's a little bit split.
You have really two visions.
One vision, you'd say maybe more like the Bannon side
is more focused on reviving traditional manufacturing
through tariffs, through industrial incentives.
Then you have the other side,
it's more about tech acceleration via AI,
via chips, via energy.
So how do these things play into,
are we going to be able to copy the past
or is it a new policy here?
Yes, I mean, this is sort of the central question, I think.
So my read of the trajectory basically
is called between 1870 and 1920,
the US economy was heavily based on
industrialization, all the stuff I just talked about. By the way, very high immigration environment at the time, very rapid rate of immigration,
and then actually very high tariffs. And by the way, an annual growth rate of something like 3x, the current growth rate of the US, with a
much smaller population, with fewer tools to work with. Then there was sort of the 1920 to 1970 period where the growth rate was maybe something like 2X,
the rate that we have now.
And that was the space race and rockets and electronics
and the beginning of the computer industry.
And it went quite well from an economic growth standpoint.
And then around the time I was born, around 1971,
basically the US economy permanently downshifted
its growth rate, both in terms of productivity growth,
which of course measures technological transformation
in the economy as well as economic growth.
And so we went from like super high growth
to like high growth to low growth.
That low growth coincided with this shift, right?
With all the shifts that happened in the 1970s,
many of which Reagan was a reaction to,
but many of those shifts happened
and many of those shifts have continued.
As you said, less industrial enthusiasm,
more what they call services.
And by the way, the good news of that transition
is the transition to knowledge work has worked really well.
And we live and work in places like Silicon Valley
and Austin and others that have done phenomenally well
because you've got all these tech companies
that are global exporters of technology
and the AI revolution is happening in the US,
and it's absolutely tremendous.
But we transformed the American economy
to basically have knowledge work on the high end
and then financialization, banking and currency
and being the safe bond asset on the other hand, and then we basically chose
to de-industrialize, right?
And we chose to de-industrialize through a set
of explicit policy choices, not least of which is
we made a lot of industrial activity illegal over time.
And I would argue that formula, first of all,
it just hasn't worked that well in terms of growth, right?
If it doesn't pay off in terms of productivity growth
and economic growth, like how is it actually going?
And of course the problem, the irony of this is
if you don't like populism, the way that you get populism is slow growth, like how is it actually going? And of course, the problem, the irony of this is if you don't like
populism, the way that you get populism is slow growth, right?
Because slow growth puts everybody in the mind of zero sum, right?
Everything becomes a zero sum kind of fight for resources because people
don't think that there's a lot of opportunity in the future.
And so the formula that kind of all the smart people did actually created the
preconditions for the sort of researches of populism on both left and the right.
And then the other kind of really critical thing happening right now that
you see just happening kind of everywhere in our politics and society is this just
giant divide between the cities and the countryside.
And I'm sort of a weird example of this myself.
I grew up in rural Wisconsin when what was sort of originally farming and then sort
of led industry kind of world.
And then when I graduated college, I moved to California, I did a jump to kind
of the polar opposite kind of culture and kind of world.
And of course, when I was in Wisconsin,
I was like, wow, those far people on the coast
must be so much better and smarter than we are.
And then I got to the coast and I was like,
wow, these people on the coast really hate everybody
where I grew up.
This is interesting.
I knew they didn't like us.
I didn't realize they despised us quite to this degree.
And so now we have this just like raging cultural,
social, economic disconnect between the cities
and the countryside, which I think is quite dangerous.
Let's be controversial and dig into this a little bit more in cities.
So I think a lot of us have noticed that our cities are deeply dysfunctional.
They're broken in our society, right?
I think we have a candidate who's like a socialist Islamist who's in danger of taking over New
York very soon right now.
We have all sorts of problems.
People can't afford to have kids in cities the way they're set up.
I think there's this cost disease for everything.
What went wrong?
What's going on with these cities?
And what's an optimistic take on it, Mark?
How can we fix this?
Yeah, so the guy in New York is interesting,
and he's kind of running slightly behind Cuomo
for New York mayor, but he's literally running a platform,
among other things, of having city-owned grocery stores.
Right, and so the joke is he's reinventing bread lines
for the 21st century.
Like, you know, really turn his platform.
Seattle is another case study of this.
Seattle, to give you a sense how crazy things are,
the district in Seattle, the city council district
where the most Microsoft and Amazon executives live,
I elected a city council woman who ran a platform
of nationalizing Microsoft and Amazon.
Right?
And then in the Bay Area,
I live in ground zero of dysfunction and collapse.
And I've got thousands of stories from the Bay Area.
Yeah, so I think there's like a very fundamental
political economy thing happening,
which falls out of this sort of economic transformation
that's happened, and this policy transformation
that's happened, and so there's actually a French writer,
geographer, who has, I think, the best analysis on this,
and has written a great book on it called
Twilight of the Elites, and what he basically observes
is if you look at all the Western countries,
through this process of sort of deindustrialization
and financialization and sort of technology and knowledge work
becoming preeminent at the high end of the economy,
you sort of have this pattern where basically,
like in an agricultural economy or in a manufacturing economy,
you kind of have to spread everything out
throughout the country because like natural resources
really matter and energy really matters
and physical infrastructure matters and access to trains
and all these things, you know, really rivers and water
and so forth really matters.
But if you're going to replant the sort of commanding heights
of your economy on knowledge work,
then what you're going to do is you're going to slam
basically all economic growth into the cities, right?
Which is what Silicon Valley has done, right?
So you're going to all the software developers in one place.
The good news is they're going to eat at high end restaurants
and they're going to employ a lot of nannies,
but fundamentally they're going to be sitting
in conference rooms designing software together.
And you want that to happen in a single concentrated place.
And so what happens is basically the city has become a magnet for basically two kinds of people.
One is sort of the upper class, which is to say kind of the highly educated elite
in the knowledge of professions who make enough money where they can afford to buy, you know, three million dollar houses.
So you've got basically like super expensive homes.
And then you've got so-called public housing, right?
Council of States in the UK or Section 8H or whatever it is housing here,
where you've got basically public housing.
And then the public housing is basically,
it's people who are very low paid,
kind of on the low end of the service economy.
And then that's the city.
And then who's squeezed out of the city is basically, right?
The entire middle class is squeezed out.
And just to give you an example of this in the Bay Area,
if you're a cop or a firefighter in the Bay Area
and you work in Palo Alto, you can be at three hours,
both ways, just to be able to like have a house and afford a family, right? And then of course you look what's happening in the Bay Area and you work in Palo Alto, you can get three hours, both ways,
just to be able to like have a house and afford a family.
Right?
And then of course you look what's happening in the cities
and like there's like lots of dogs, there's very few kids.
Right?
And it's like, what on earth is that about?
Well, you can't buy a house, you can't have a family,
you may not even own a car,
like how are you going to get kids anywhere?
But what happens is from a political standpoint
is the cities then are run in their local democracies,
it's these super high-end kind of very progressive elites.
And then it's sort of the clientele underclass, right?
Of, you know, in the U.S. it's Hispanic immigrants
or African-Americans.
When Europe, it's their other kind of clientele underclass
that they've developed in places like Paris.
And so you've got this high plus,
you've got this kind of old political kind of structure
of sort of top plus bottom kind of configuration.
What you've done is you've squeezed the middle
and you've ejected the middle out of the cities
into the countryside, but you've de-industrialized, and so there's no new economic activity happening in the countryside
for all the middle class people to do.
This is so far is not an optimistic panel, Mark.
Sorry. Sorry.
Let me try to make it optimistic. Sorry. Let me try to make it optimistic.
Let me try to make it optimistic.
These are choices. These are choices. These are policy choices.
Sometimes the way this stuff gets painted is that these are just like impersonal economic
forces or technology forces and of course, you know, I get this a lot. It's like you
idiot, don't you understand that like, you know, manufacturing is old fashioned, we have
all this new stuff we shouldn't need, you know. No, these are choices. Like there were
specific choices made. So the classic choice, the classic choice that was made since the Reagan
Library, I'll beat up on Nixon. So Richard Nixon, the year I was born, 1971, he proposed
something called Project Independence.
He actually, visionary, visionary president,
he saw the energy crisis coming,
and he said it's a national imperative
to build 1,000 new nuclear power plants,
civilian nuclear power plants in the US by the year 2000,
cut the entire US electric grid over to nuclear.
By the way, it would have gotten us to electric cars
probably 30, 40 years faster,
and would have completely separated us
from strategic involvement in the Middle East for energy.
So that was the good news.
The bad news is he created the EPA
and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission,
which then prevented project independence from happening.
And of course, no nuclear power plants got built.
But that was a policy choice, right?
And I'm sure that was not the result that he intended,
but that was a policy choice.
And by the way, a lot of this is happening right now
in Washington, like there is an opportunity
to look at everything from nuclear power,
minerals, natural resources.
I was on a call this morning on natural resources with very promising progress being made.
You know, rare earth metals, there's construction.
We have a project to build a new city in California.
We've bought four times the acreage of Manhattan, Solano County.
We had the opportunity to build like entirely new cities in this country.
There's any number of these policy decisions that we could make that would cause revitalization.
So we're going to fix better policies.
There's something else going on though, which I think you and I are both very bullish on,
which is these AI wave and AI services, right?
And so I think one thing is very interesting right now is obviously we all know there's major cost disease in our society.
Healthcare is becoming more and more unaffordable.
I think people are talking about our $36 trillion debt.
It's actually $150 trillion more if you include our healthcare promises, much bigger problem.
Obviously education, housing, all these things are becoming less affordable.
But you and I have both seen that a lot
of these new technologies are going to turn some
of these services into much more affordable products.
And I think we're making big bets on that.
Tell us about this.
Yeah, so first of all, just a moment on AI.
So you asked a question earlier,
which is there's a traditionalist view of like,
we need to go get the jobs that used to exist.
We need to somehow bring them back.
And here you get into this argument of,
well, you've got Chinese laborers working
for a dollar an hour or whatever.
It was just not cost-effective bring those jobs back
what we have those we're at this very specific and important and fundamental
and I think profound turning point in technology which is the rise of AI and I
would say the good news let's make the panel optimistic the good news is the US
is like by far the leader on AI now by the way we need to decide whether we want
to be the leader in AI because there's like a lot of forces in the US and in
the US government that are trying to prevent that from happening but there's over a thousand laws at state level we've been trying to fight and stop that would screw this up, right?
So there's a lot of people who are against this. California state government almost passed a lot of outlaw AI in California six months ago,
which is an indication how crazy California is, but yes,
it's like everything else. We can have it if we want it. AI is happening and AI is only happening in two places, like it's only
US versus China and there's a whole competition thing there,
but like the US is like very powerful on this.
And then by the way, the US is benefiting a lot
because Europe has basically made AI illegal,
like they're regulating themselves to death.
And so the smart AI people in Europe are moving to the US.
And so like the US really is ground zero for AI.
Today, AI is software, right?
And so when you use AI, you use ChatGPT,
it's an app on your phone, right?
There's no manufacturing kind of
component. People are building giant data centers, but it's
not a huge generator of like middle class jobs. But there's
another turn on AI that's coming, which is the turn to
embodied physical AI, which is robotics, right? And this is a
transition that has already happened. It's already
actually happened in drones, where drones went from being
human piloted to actually being autonomously piloted, they now
fly themselves. It's a transition that's happening in
cars right now,
where cars went from basically purely physical products
to now basically being rolling computers
that drive themselves.
And if you haven't tried this yet,
if you ever have the misfortune of finding yourself
in San Francisco, take away Mo.
It's amazing to live in a cyberpunk future reality
where you're in literally a state-of-the-art
self-driving car that's literally out of the just
and driving fast people who are dying
of fentanyl overdoses on the sidewalk.
I recommend having the experience at least once. But the self-driving car that's literally out of the Jetsons, driving fast people who are dying of fentanyl overdoses on the sidewalk. I recommend having the experience at least once.
But the self-driving car really does work,
like it's really happening.
Then what's going to happen,
you've all probably seen,
Elon has this Optimus robot that he's building,
these humanoid robots, like the general purpose robotics thing
is going to happen and it's going to happen in the next decade,
and it's going to happen at giant scale.
I think there's a plausible argument,
which Elon also believes that robotics is going to be
the biggest industry in the history of the planet. It's usually going to be gigantic. There's going to happen at giant scale. And I think there's a plausible argument, which Elon also believes that robotics is going to be the biggest industry
in the history of the planet.
It's going to be gigantic.
There's going to be billions,
tens of billions, hundreds of billions of robots
of all shapes, sizes, descriptions,
running around doing all kinds of things.
Those robots need to get designed and built, right?
And so my view is we don't try to get
the old manufacturing jobs back.
What we should do is lean hard
into the manufacturing jobs of the future,
which is designing and building all of these new things,
right, by the way, which includes drones and cars,
right, and robots.
And we shouldn't be building manufacturing lines
that have people sitting on a rubber mat
for 10 hours screwing screws in by hand,
but we should be building what Elon calls
alien dreadnought factories, right,
which is like these super sophisticated factories
with like tons of robotics.
But you can imagine thousands and thousands
of different categories of industrial production
that have to happen all across the US
in order to make this happen
and would cause just like enormous economic growth
throughout the country.
We get a huge payoff from all the tech investment
that the coasts are making,
but we generate many tens or hundreds of millions of jobs
in the countryside.
And then the US would lead,
it would be the third industrial,
the fourth industrial revolution,
we would lead in the development of all these new things.
And then you get to the national security side of this,
which is if you don't do this,
you're living in a world of Chinese robots everywhere.
And that has very profound consequences for,
let's just say, yeah, profound consequences.
That's an important policy point.
And I want to dig into this a little bit more.
A lot of, I was just in an interview up there,
like, aren't we going to destroy tens of millions of jobs?
Isn't AI scary?
A lot of people are very scared right now
with the disruption.
I'm very excited about the higher productivity
because I see it being disinflationary.
I see it creating more jobs.
If, assuming we're aligned,
how do we explain this to people?
How do we explain this is actually
a really good thing for the country?
Because a lot of Luddites are going to attack this,
they are going to try to stop it.
Yeah, so the Luddites are wrong.
They're wrong in the sense of like,
for the reason they've always been wrong,
which is the reality is we have not,
in the last 50 years,
been in an era of fast productivity growth,
technological change.
We've been in an area of slow productivity change,
slow economic growth. AI, if it works the way that actually people
either hope or fear that it's going to work,
it's going to cause productivity growth to shoot up.
That will naturally accelerate economic growth.
But look, if it just stays as software,
then the result of that is it's going to make the cities
much better off, right?
It's going to make San Francisco and LA and New York
much better off and Austin much better off.
But it's still not going to answer this question
of what happens in the countryside.
To answer the question of what happens in the countryside, you need to get to the next
thing.
You need to make AI hardware as well as software.
And you're right back to that same prescription of basically reindustrializing the country.
And again, not reindustrialize the country on the stuff that has already left.
Reindustrialize the country based on all the things that have to be invented and built.
And it's just like we know, I mean, just like incredibly highly confident that there's going
to be these giant industries of computerized everything, AI powered all kinds of hardware
of all kinds of shapes, sizes, to descriptions.
You know, you're finding a lot of that kind of thing.
I'm finding a lot of that kind of thing.
I mean, look, the entire defense base
has to get rebuilt around this.
We're going to redo the manufacturing.
We're going to build roads and tunnels and everything cheaper.
It's going to be exciting.
Yeah, and so this is the thing to do.
Like to me, the path on this is very clear
because we have to do this
because it's necessary for national security standpoint. We have to do it because we is very clear, because we have to do this because it's necessary from a national security standpoint.
We have to do it because we need the economic growth.
We have to do it because we need an answer for the entire population of the country,
not just the cities.
Yeah, and we have to do it because if we don't do it, China's going to do it, and we don't
want to live in that world.
So I want to circle back to another controversial topic, which over the last several decades,
you mentioned this, we've kind of pursued deindustrialization, financialization.
We've also pursued mass immigration. And the view from the tech world has almost always been,
we need more of the smartest people to come here
and build with us.
A lot of my smartest friends are immigrants
and they've built great things.
But at the same time, some of this mass immigration
has really affected the working class in certain ways.
It's maybe not great.
I know your views have evolved on this topic.
Like what is the right immigration policy
and how does it tie into what you're seeing
for the next few decades?
Yeah, so separate it, so it separated the classic split
between so-called high-skilled and low-skilled immigration.
So on the low-skilled immigration side,
it's actually a lot of the AI do-mers
kind of have this split personality
where they're like, AI's going to eliminate all the jobs
and we need to import another hundred million people
from the third world as fast as possible
or we won't have any.
So there's a bit of a weird kind of disconnect,
I think, in the logic on that.
Look, the country went through this before. As I said earlier, there was very high immigration between like 1870
and 1920. They closed the gates in 1925. And 1925 to 1970, you could argue it would have
grown faster with higher immigration, but they grew a lot faster than we've grown. Right?
And so, like, I do think if you have AI, if you have advanced high productivity growth,
if you have lots of robots running around, I do think there is a question of exactly
how much low-skilled labor you need in the country,
which bears on a lot of the immigration debates.
The high-skilled immigration debate is the one that's coming,
and it's not really top of mind right now,
but it's the one that's coming.
And the reason it's coming is because, I mean, look,
we need talent, of course, to build all the AI,
build all the robots, to do all these things.
And you see this in the debates around the universities
with the move that the administration's doing
on foreign students and so forth.
And there's this kind of very one-sided argument
that's happening on that right now, which is,
you kind of need limited high-skilled immigration
from the rest of the world, or you're not going to have
this kind of people building stuff here.
And I would say, you know, look, like Joe,
our portfolio at our firm is like the United Nations,
it's founders from a hundred countries.
I've benefited enormously by working in a place
characterized by very high-skilled immigration.
The thing that's really coming to roost, though,
is this fundamental issue,
which kind of nobody wants to talk about,
but I've started to talk about,
which is it's the intersection of DEI and immigration
that has really, I think, warped,
I think our perceptions on high skilled immigration
over the last 50 years.
And you see this by the way,
in like, you look at like the foreign enrollment rates
of the top universities,
which went from like two or three or 4% 50 years ago
to whatever 27 or 30 or 50 years.
And Columbia is over half, right?
70% or whatever it is.
And so there's been this massive transformation
in who gets educated.
And then there's been this massive transformation
of who gets admitted through affirmative action.
And then as we now know at DEI.
And again, this goes straight to the political divide
in the country, which is if you're a family,
if you're parents of a kid where I grew up
and you've got a smart kid and you think you're gonna
get them into a top university in this country,
like you are fooling yourself.
Like there is no chance, right? Because they've got their, well, and you think you're going to get them into a top university in this country, you are fooling yourself.
There is no chance, right?
Because they've got their, well, the top universities
basically have a basic admissions program
that looks like this.
It's like DEI for white people,
which is the donors in all the fake sports, right?
And so, like I have a friend who got into Yale
to play varsity croquet, which let me just say
is not a sport that we played a lot in rural Wisconsin.
And then you've got DEI generally for the other groups,
and then you've got this immigration influx,
and as a consequence of that, it is nearly impossible
for somebody coming from like a Midwestern or rural background
or Southern background to get into the US.
By the way, this doesn't just affect white people,
this also obviously we now see how it's affecting Jewish people,
but it actually also affects African Americans in a very interesting way,
which is actually both the universities and the corporate employers are literally, this is true, they literally import Africans so that they don't have to hire African Americans in a very interesting way, which is actually both the universities and the corporate employers are literally, this is true, they literally import Africans so
that they don't have to hire African Americans because it's still kind of black.
There was a great story, the thing that woke me up to this, there was a story in the New
York Times 20 years ago about Harvard.
So Harvard admits black students, but which ones back when the New York Times could talk
about these things honestly.
And it quoted actually Henry Louis Gates and Lani Guinier at the time at Harvard Law School
basically observing that African Americans were not benefiting from an affirmative action
because Harvard had figured out that they could import Nigerians.
Right?
And again, it's just like, right, the Nigerians are great, they're very smart, they're very
productive, it's fantastic, all of the things being equal, you'd like to have as many of
them in your country, but is that really why we're doing the set-aside programs?
And so there is this really fundamental question, which is like, what level of untapped talent
exists in this country that a combination of DEI and immigration have basically cut out of the loop for the
last 50 years? And how long can we have this story to everybody in the Midwest and the
South that says, sorry, because of historical oppression, your kids are SOL?
This is the angry populism. People are worried about this affecting our politics.
Yeah, like what do you do? Like this is what I've really come to appreciate from growing
up in the one place and now being in the other place, which is if you're in the center of the country,
you're just like, wow, these people really hate me.
They really hate my kids.
They're really out to get me.
And like, that's just such a toxic dynamic.
Like that's a very, very bad thing for that to continue.
So I guess to finish on a more positive note,
we have all these challenges you've outlined.
No, it's fair.
I think in order to be optimistic,
you first have to say what are the challenges
and diagnose it and then say, what are the ways?
Here's an optimistic thing,
which is we have talent in this country. We have so
many smart people in this country who are not being properly trained, properly
educated, and properly employed. We really genuinely do. We have tons of smart kids
running around who have all kinds of potential who have been completely cut
out of opportunity for the last 50 years. So we're gonna have this wave of
productivity growth. It's gonna be in the real world with robotics. We're gonna
start to build hopefully to get the policies right and it's gonna lift all
these people up. What are the bottlenecks or things in the way of doing that?
We have the amazing Secretary of Energy here.
Energy is obviously a really key thing to get right.
There's obviously the chips,
there's the critical minerals you mentioned.
Regulatory stuff is insane in this country,
it needs to be fixed.
Like, what are the biggest ones you're focused on,
and how are we going to get those to a place we need,
that it ends up with the optimistic outcome?
I was going to say yes, those.
So, I mean, the good news on this is a lot of it's obvious,
right, the minute you look at it, you're just like,
well, obviously we have to do these things.
If you talk to anybody running businesses
in any of these sectors, they'll tell you right off the bat
the things that need to happen.
And the current administration, I think,
is pretty devoted to a lot of this.
The other positive thing that's happening,
there's this new book out called Abundance
from Ezra Klein, who I would say I disagree with
on approximately zero of everything.
But I think this book is really good.
And I think he and his co-author, you know,
they don't necessarily have the policy prescriptions I would outline,
but they make this point of,
liberals used to believe in building things, right?
Well, I mean, if you go all the way back,
like, communists really believed in building things, right?
All, like, Soviet iconography 100 years ago
was all like rockets and skyscrapers and cars and motion and energy.
And it was all amazing, and they built all these huge things.
And then liberals, up until basically the 1970s,
they really believed in building things.
They really believed in building the future.
And so Ezra and Derek Thompson are trying to recapture that.
By the way, there's a bunch of leaders of that party
in Washington that are now pushing that quite hard.
Although it seems hard to believe these days,
but there may be an opportunity
for some actual bipartisanship here.
And again, it just makes sense.
If the country is growing faster,
it's going to be a fundamentally happier place
because people, whichever side of the political spectrum you're on, Reagan, Mr. faster, it's going to be a fundamentally happier place because people, whichever side of the political spectrum
you're on, Reagan, Mr. Reagan,
there's going to be a sense of optimism, right?
There's going to be a sense of morning in America.
There's going to be a sense of opportunity.
There's going to be the sense that your kids
are going to live better lives than you do.
And I don't think that's a particularly partisan view
at the end of the day.
And I think there may be an opportunity
to maybe bridge the divide a bit.
And I want to dig a little tiny bit deeper
as we end into what that means.
Because for me, for example,
I think both of us see how healthcare doesn't need to take
up 20% of our GDP, right?
It's very obvious that AI can make these things half a third the cost for better outcomes.
And yet every one of our states in this country has a very powerful provider and payer lobbies
and has very powerful cartels that block competition.
And so if we want to go build something with AI, we're not allowed to right now.
Do you see the left and the right tech working together
to fight these special interests,
to actually fix the regulatory state?
Because it's not like the administration
could just do it, right?
It's got to take a lot of effort.
Like, what does that coalition look like
of the good guys against this kind of broken
regulatory cartel in all these industries?
Is that something we're going to all have to fight?
Yeah, so the way I think about this is there's basically
three components to the American dream.
Right, there's a house for your kids.
And kind of a definition, this goes back to the geographic lens.
The house needs to be like near a place where there's like great job opportunities, right?
So it can't be the house in the middle of nowhere.
It has to be a house where there's going to be great jobs,
and you know, a safe environment and so forth.
Number one. Number two is healthcare.
You need great healthcare for you and your family.
And then three is education.
You want to send your kids to good schools.
If you disaggregate sectors of the economy over the last 25 years, what you find is basically
everything that technology touches
basically collapses in price.
And so television sets and computer games
and anything with electronics in it, basically,
productivity growth in those sectors has advanced very fast.
Product prices have collapsed.
Everything is much cheaper.
But if you chart housing, education, and healthcare,
the prices of those things are skyrocketing, right?
And we all see this.
It's just the price of housing is exploding. The price of education is exploding, the prices of those things are skyrocketing, right? And we all see this,
it's just the price of housing is exploding,
the price of education is exploding,
the price of healthcare,
I mean healthcare is 20% of the economy,
on its way to 50%.
And so the prices are exploding.
And so it's like, okay,
what makes those three components of the American dream
have these exploding prices?
Basically it's two things.
Number one is, and these are interrelated,
but number one is technology
is not really touching them very much.
And you could say the tech industry has done a bad job at addressing housing and healthcare
and education, or you could say that those industries have been resistant to it.
But technology hasn't really touched them that much, which means that the productivity
growth hasn't happened in them.
And then the other thing is they're heavily regulated.
They're heavily dominated by the government, they're heavily regulated, and then in all
three of those sectors, the government both restricts supply, right?
And so zoning laws, university certifications,
and so forth, right, mean that it's very hard
to actually build new of those three things.
And then the government responds to the political pressure
caused by the rising prices by subsidizing demand.
And of course, if you subsidize demand and affect supply,
you get skyrocketing prices, right?
And so every time there's a housing crisis,
you know, it's perpetual housing crisis in California,
the answer always is subsidies for home buyers, which always has the effect of driving prices
up further and making the problem worse.
Right.
And so those are the microeconomics of what's happening.
I don't think there's easy answers on this, but I think the acknowledgement that this
is in fact what's happening.
And then I think the people have to decide that they do not want to live this way.
I think the marginal American voter needs to decide, look, it's just not acceptable
that if I can't spend $3 dollars, I can't have a house
that's in a good neighborhood with a good job attached to it.
And it's just not acceptable that a four-year college degree
is going to cost a million dollars,
which is what it's on its way to doing.
And it's just not acceptable that this healthcare monster
is running out of control.
And so in many ways, this is the fundamental policy
political question of our time
that kind of needs to be dealt with.
Again, these issues become much easier to deal with
in a high growth environment.
And an environment with very rapid technological development.
Let me give you the good news story on healthcare.
Everybody talks about healthcare,
you can't break these curves.
There's one area of healthcare
that is incredibly sophisticated,
technologically advanced,
and the price curve looks like Moore's law.
Price curve looks like video games.
The price curve is just a straight line down
and the quality of the service has gone way up.
And that's Lasik eye surgery.
And the reason that's the case is because it's outside the
system, it's a discretionary purchase paid for by the
consumer. Lasik Eye studios are in strip malls and they've got
three people and like a super advanced, incredibly advanced
like laser eye machine. And you go in there and you get zapped
and you have perfect eyesight and every year it gets better
and cheaper. And so that's like an example of what happens if
you're able to touch these sectors with technology and if
you're able to get them out from under all the regulatory and government overhang.
And so that potentially exists, I think, throughout the system.
But fundamentally, we have to decide we want it.
And fundamentally, the population of the country has to decide that it wants it.
Well, I'm optimistic more of the leaders in the tech and government sector are going to be on our
side and push through and fix these regulations and the technology is going to get us there.
So thank you, Mark, for being here. Appreciate it.
Good. Thank you, everybody.
Technology is going to get us there.
