Conversations with Tyler - Alain Bertaud on Cities, Markets, and People
Episode Date: September 25, 2019Markets, Alain Bertaud likes to say, are like gravity: they exist everywhere. But while urban planners are quite good at taking gravity into account, they tend to ignore market forces entirely in thei...r designs, resulting in city development that too often fails to address the needs of their residents. Following the release of his recent book, Order Without Design: How Markets Shape Cities, Alain joined Tyler in New York City for a discussion of the politics affecting urban centers, his advice to Robert Moses, whether the YIMBY movement can win, why he loves messy cities, what he got wrong about Shenzhen, why the Moscow subway is so wonderful, whether cities can move, favorite movies about cities, the region of the world most likely to start a charter city, how to reform the World Bank, his top three NYC planning reforms, why Central Park is the perfect size, and more. Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links. Recorded September 9th, 2019 Other ways to connect Follow us on Twitter and Instagram Follow Tyler on Twitter Email us: cowenconvos@mercatus.gmu.edu Subscribe at our newsletter page to have the latest Conversations with Tyler news sent straight to your inbox.
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I am greatly honored to be here tonight, of course, with all of you,
but also with Alain Bertot, who is one of the world's great urbanists.
We'll just jump right in.
If you were to meet a 20-year-old Robert Moses
before he set out on his career,
what would you tell him?
This is a difficult question.
I would tell him
infrastructure is important,
but infrastructure is there to serve people
and just look at people
before you look at infrastructure.
infrastructure is there as a tool, not as a purpose in itself.
And if you could send the young Mr. Moses, say to Indianapolis and away from New York City,
to do his business elsewhere, and he would have a happy life, but New York would proceed without him.
Would you make that choice?
You mean making the choice for him?
You can give him a lucrative fellowship at Purdue University.
and he'll be very busy in Indiana
and New York will go along the track it was on.
Well, that will be his choice.
Yes, probably I will try to convince him to go to Indianapolis.
What do you think of the argument
that Airbnb is ruining either New York
or some other historic cities?
If you look at Florence,
it appears that about 20% of central Florence
is now Airbnb residences.
Does this concern you?
Yes.
this concern me because normally I will say, well, so what? But in fact, it is not the case. I think
that this is a case where we have to look at it a bit differently. It reminds me a bit
what happened in Switzerland at this certain time where to own a piece of land in Switzerland
was becoming valuable for a lot of people because it gave access, you know, a refuge, let's say.
And Swiss farmers who wanted to expand their field to have some more cow,
suddenly we're competing with a Russian oligarch.
And obviously, this is not traditional economics,
although I will be rather laissez-faire.
I think this is a case where, indeed, the Swiss government put a red line around certain area.
You can still buy foreigners, I think, can still buy properties in,
in Zurich or in Geneva, but they are not allowed to compete with Swiss farmers in buying land.
So I think I have not studied Airbnb as much, but I think it's a case where you have to look at it that way,
that you have a competition here in cities.
Tourism might be important and interesting, but it's not a sense of city.
The cities are other people.
If the people are gone from a city, it's not very interesting.
Why are so many contemporary cities depopulating within the core?
So Paris is slightly depopulating.
I've seen data that Los Angeles and Chicago are slightly depopulating.
And Chicago is not about the Russian oligarchs, right?
Manhattan would be depopulating, if not for new arrivals.
Why is that happening?
And is that some kind of failure of urban labor markets?
I don't think densities has gone down in all.
those cities. I don't think
in the case of Paris, at least,
that it is depopulated.
I think that you had
a gentrification of
central Paris, so
people were used to live in 10 square
meter or 12 square meter,
are living now is
120 square meter.
So you have a loss of
densities. It doesn't mean a loss
of population in this sense.
You know, New York
at the, you know, Manhattan at the
density, which
was two or three times higher than it is now, I don't think you can say that Manhattan is depopulated.
But you have yourself moved to Glen Rock, New Jersey, right?
Yes.
What has gone wrong?
How do you say in my dotage?
In Manhattan, will you find better food on the streets or the avenues?
In the streets, in the street, definitely.
Why?
I think you have a more specialty restaurant in the streets.
And in the avenue, you have more people who just are transient, you know, pass by and are looking for faster food.
I think so.
If San Francisco and Oakland had an ideal building code, they would bring you in to write it so there would be more freedom to build.
How much would rents be cheaper in the Bay Area?
Your intuitive guess.
Yes.
yes, they will be cheaper.
But how much?
Not much. Why not?
No, how much you say how much?
You might want me to give a figure?
How would you think about the problem?
Would it be you would simply get more building
and more powerful economies of scale
and rents would go up, but more people would have productive jobs?
Or could you actually make life there cheaper again
so the poor could move in and be upwardly mobile in economic terms?
I think that if you build much more, much more,
and regulation allows to have a variety of building and building size,
you could have a way where the poor outbid the rich
by consuming less in a very desirable location.
This is what you see sometime in Paris, by the way.
The YIMBY movement, yes, in my backyard, will it ever come about?
There's been a lot of force behind the YIMB movement over the last year,
but not that many concrete victories.
Is it simply the case that opposition will be mobilized
and the YIMBs will lose?
Or does it have a future?
I think it has a future.
Well, this is what this talk is all about,
and you're talking in general.
I think people have to understand,
to learn what is implied by a freezing city the way they are.
And cities are alive because they change constantly,
As soon as you freeze city, and this is what NIMBY is all about, you're freezing cities,
the city died, like a human being that you tied in a straitjacket.
But if we look around the world, we don't see that many traditional cities that have overcome NIMBY.
So Houston has done it. Warsaw, Poland has done it. There was so much destruction.
People were happy to get rid of old communist buildings.
Right.
But the so-called nice cities, have any of them overcome NIMBY?
and seeing Yimbi win?
And if not, why are you optimistic?
What will change?
I...
Ha!
Maybe I'm not optimistic.
I think that maybe
in cities where you have...
The house itself is not your only way of saving,
have a better chance of, you know, being Yimbi
than as soon as the only way, you know,
if people perceive that the only way of saving money
for their retirement is in their house,
you know, their house is some kind of an ATM machine,
then they will be, you know, they don't want any competition.
I remember in Washington some years ago,
there was a letter to the Washington Post,
somebody was saying,
oh, is it possible that in Fairfax County,
they allow more houses where my house has increase in value in the last five years by only 5%.
So they thought that was a legitimate case.
If your house increased only by 5%, then you should stop every other houses so that your house will go.
So I think if people consider that this is one of their, in a way, I think it's a question of property right.
We have a system which decrease your property right within the boundary.
of your lot or your apartment.
You cannot, you see this morning, for instance, in the New York Times,
somebody gets fined $15,000 because they install a dryer
and a washing machine in a basement.
So that's a decrease of property right.
And at the same time, you increase the property right outside your boundary,
but it's a negative property right.
You are allowed to prevent people from building,
what they want.
So, you know, this delusion
of property right, I think, is a big
cause of NIMBY. Or do we
reverse it? I don't know.
Because in a way, it
seems very democratic
and legitimate to have a say
about what your
neighbors is doing.
You know, you say, well, I'm preserving
the character of the neighborhood.
Well, if the character of the
neighborhood has to be preserved in
Manhattan, you know, if it was preserved
50 or 100 years ago, there would be no Manhattan.
Would the political economy work better if building regulations were either done strictly at the
state level or maybe even at the neighborhood or even the street level, as opposed to city and
county?
Right.
Should the scale be moved up or moved down?
What would give us a better outcome?
I think it should be moved up.
And what do you think would happen then?
Then the people who went in will have more say.
if you keep it at the street level,
I think the people who control it
are the people who are living there
and they are against everybody who want to move in, by definition.
I have another very easy question for you.
As you probably know, many of the switches
in the New York City subway system
date from the 1940s or sometimes even the 1930s.
How are we going to fix that system?
If NIMBY is ruling, how do we redo the subways?
The second avenue line, that was sort of started or planned in the early 70s,
and it just now opened, what, a year ago?
What's going to happen with the New York City subway?
I think that's one of the most terrible thing, you know,
the destruction of the transit system.
You know, the dense days in Manhattan and in New York are such
that you can have mobility only if a relatively large number of people
are using the transit.
And some cities can work very well without transit,
like Atlanta, probably, or Houston.
But that's not the case in Manhattan.
That will not be the case in Paris or London.
So you have to maintain the transit system
in the same way as you maintain the sewer system
and the water system.
I think that the destruction,
the lack of maintenance in the attention,
which has been given
to the subway is equivalent of lead in the water in Flint or thing like that.
Why is the Moscow subway so wonderful?
Because Stalin built it.
Like everything else Stalin built, right?
No, he had a taste for architecture. You have to recognize it.
Now, some of your best-known academic work is about the spatial organization of socialist cities.
Why were so many socialist cities,
relatively empty in their centers or cores?
Because,
because, you know,
according to Marx,
land has no value,
only labor has value.
So if land has no value,
and you are in the center of the city
where a lot of people
would like to leave or work,
but if land has no value,
you are stuck with the existing building.
Every time you want to move a building
or renew it,
you will have to have a planner
decided and it will be also a cash expenditure.
In a market city, it's a price of land which finance the development of new building.
Automatically, it is developers who realize that the land is expensive and therefore
they can build more who are asking the planners, please let us build an office building
there or something.
If you are in a socialist country, like I have seen China before the reform or Russia at the time I were in the early 90s,
you need the initiative of a planner to say, we are going to build something new here.
They will have to compensate not the owner, but the user, to move them somewhere else.
So to the state, this is a net cash expenditure, to replace a low-builder.
by high building is a cash expenditure that the city has to pay.
And where in the market economy, of course, it is done automatically in a way.
In a way, the system is reversed.
In a market economy, it's the planners who are slowing down the transformation,
where in a socialist economy, the planners realize that it's not a very good use of land,
but cannot find the money to change.
land use. If NIMBY is such a big problem, might it not in some bizarre second best regard
to make sense to put so much industry in the city center? Because as more growth comes, people will be
quite happy to get rid of it? Yes, normally, yes. But you see what happened with Amazon in New York
not so long ago was an interesting. Now, I don't know, you should talk too much about that. But, you know,
I think Amazon did a terrible approach to cities by having them bid for each other,
because I'm absolutely convinced being an urbanist myself that they knew exactly where they wanted to go in advance.
So that was a little unfair.
And there was a grassroots movement against high-income people coming to the city.
I found that very disturbing, because after all, high-income people create a lot of job for all sorts of income at the same time.
You cannot, you know, in the same way as you should not exclude poor migrants from coming from the city,
I don't see any rational for excluding high-income people either.
Now, the fact that the city limits so much the construction of new housing, you know,
In my book, you see there is a chapter which has the table of New York city zoning,
and it shows the incredible limit in the number of dwelling units
which can be built block by block with completely arbitrary numbers.
Now, on one hand, you have higher income people coming to the city.
On the other hand, the city is blocking the development of new housing
and controlling also the size of it,
privileging in effect, larger houses and the demand.
So when higher income people come in,
yes, certainly it will raise the rent,
but not because higher income people are greedy or whatever.
It's because the city is blocking the supply at the same time.
So you cannot have an increase in job
and it frees in housing at the same time.
So the problem is not the people coming in.
The problem is the city refusing to admit that they need to build more housing.
How well does the current version of Shanghai work as a city?
As a city, I think it works relatively well in the sense that, you know, the Chinese even, well, I say up to four years ago when I still could get a visa to go to China.
And, you know, up to four years ago, I think that the Chinese, at a local level, understood market better than Mayor de Blasio.
Oh, it's a low bar.
And, you know, why?
Because they were interested in the GDP of the city.
Now, it has also some drawback.
Many mayors in China told me, I'm the CEO of this city.
and in a certain way, it created certainly also some problem with pollution,
things like that, but I think they were very, very interested in the way city developed.
I remember in Cichuan, a city of about 600,000, where they wanted to develop, you know,
they had a high-tech industry, they were doing flat screen, they wanted to expand it,
But to expand it, they needed top engineers to do the research.
It was difficult to attract top engineers from Shanghai or the East Coast
to go to Sichuan in a relatively small city.
So the mayor say the only way we can expand this
is to have very good education and good environment.
So we can, as a selling point, an engineer in Beijing or Shanghai
or even Guangzhou,
would be probably interested to live with his family
in an environment where the air is pure,
the garden are well maintained,
and the schools are very good.
So you see, you had a mayor here
who understood really how to attract people
and out to grow the city.
How well does Shenzhen, China, work as a city?
And that's from basically nothing, right?
Right.
Something that people forget about Shenzhen.
the story of Chendendan.
Chenzhen, may I tell a little story?
Absolutely.
You know, I was in Chenzhen probably in, what, in 84, 85 maybe.
And the city at the time, you know, it was basically not a fishing village,
but it was a small town.
It has all together about 300,000 people.
And the mayor of Chenzhen showed a team of the World Bank,
I was part of it.
a plan and they say we want to build a city of five million and would you finance infrastructure
and I did the back of the envelope calculation. I said 300,000 to five million. Are you kidding?
You know, try to do a city of a million and a half. Maybe two million will cost the infrastructure.
This is completely out of the question. So, Chenzen is now 12 million people. So that's one
skeleton in my closet. And but what people forget
about Shenzhen. A lot of people
think that Shenzhen was built
the way Brasilia was built or something.
The government decided, let us do this.
No, Shendan was
a perimeter for the
first time, Deng Shoping
say we are going to have a labor
market. Within this
perimeter, people are
going to be able to change job.
They are going to have
salaries which is commensurate
with their skills and their
employers would be
will be able to increase their salary or decreasing or fire them, depending on what they need.
So what created the success of Chenzen was the first labor market in China.
And that's why in Chen then, you had people coming from all over China.
That's why many people in Shenzhen are speaking Mandarin and not Cantonese.
Because this has attracted a lot of people who refuse, we're bold enough in a way
or confident enough to say we don't need the big ice ball.
We are confident in our own skill and we can make it.
There are some books actually.
There is a novel called Northern Girl,
which is written by a Chinese who came from the North
and semi-skilled and skilled.
And she tells the story of, it's a novel,
but I think it's very, you know,
it explains exactly the point of view of migrants
coming to a city, raised in the context of China where you had this guarantee of a job,
but you will stay all your life in the same job.
And then people realized that if they were relying on their own energy, they could do better than that.
So it's really, the success of Chenzen is really the creation of the first labor market in China.
Will America create any new cities in the next century, or are we just done?
Cities did good location.
This is a debate I had with Paul Romer
when he was interested in shorter cities
and he had decided that he could create
50 shorter cities around the world.
And my reaction, maybe I'm wrong,
but my reaction is that they are not 50 very good
location for cities around the world.
They are not many, maybe with a rodent belt,
maybe the opening of Eastern Asia, you know, the Central Asia,
maybe the opening, you know, of the ocean route on the northern, you know,
following the pole, will create the potential for new cities.
But cities like Singapore, Malacca, Mumbai are there for a good reason,
and I don't think there are that many very good locations.
Or Greenland, right?
Oh, yes, yes, yes.
What is your favorite movie about a city?
You mentioned a work of fiction.
Movie.
I'll nominate escape from New York.
Casablanca.
Casablanca.
Because, you know, why?
Casablanca?
Because it's a city.
I mean, you don't see the city very much in the movie,
but you see people coming in.
And, well, some want to get out, too.
But you see people coming in.
And it's kind of a refuge, you know.
So that's what I find interesting.
As you know, the Saudis are trying to build a new city.
Neum, one hears reports they're ready to spend $500 billion.
I'm not sure that's true.
But are you bullish or bearish on Neum?
I'm bearish.
Why?
You don't create city by just putting concrete.
But Brazilia worked.
It's not perfect.
Yeah, but it's a city of bureaucrats.
But I'd rather live in Brazil than Rio.
You know, the people who went to Brasilia were not the same people went to Chenzen.
You know, they were moved, I would say even manually military from Rio Janeiro.
And yes, and the taxpayer of Brazil paid for Brasil in Charlie.
Nobody in his right mind would decide to live in Brasilia just by choice.
You know, and, you know, it's one of the worst performing.
You know, it's not just my taste.
I mean, it's a worst performing city.
If you look at the number of deaths of pedestrian per 10,000 people, it has a world record.
If you look at the segregation by income, you know, the poor living at 30 kilometers of the city with not very good transport system and the rich living entirely in the center, it is one of the worst record in the world.
measure you can have. But of course it's a world heritage city and you know for the
50 years anniversary of the city I was invited by the committee or celebrated and I
told them but did you read what I wrote about and and they say yes we we want to
have several point of view so you see they are that tolerant. What will urban renewal
look like in a post-retail world. Let's say online shopping continues to advance. We have big boxes
all over the suburbs, now also in Manhattan. What will we do with the space? A lot of more restaurants
and bars and maybe barbershops. Barbershops? Yes. I mean, not so tiny.
Here's a question that's been bothering me for a long time. I feel only you know the answer.
If I think about Ethiopia, it has more than 100 million people,
yet its second largest city is only about 400,000 people.
So you have some countries where the distribution of cities follows unusual patterns.
So Thailand has an income more or less the same as Mexico,
but an urbanization rate close to that of Guatemala.
Do you have a sense of what accounts for these cases?
Politics.
You could say the same thing about France, by the way, Paris.
You know, 12 millions.
The next city, well, we claim, I'm from Marseille, we claim we are the next city,
one million.
The people from Lyon claim it too, but the next city is about one million.
So you go from 12 million to one million.
I think you cannot change this.
You cannot have a plan who say, oh, let us develop smaller cities.
If you have this pattern, it's because you have a political system
which gives such an advantage to the...
to the major city, that this is where people want to go.
And if you are in a secondary city,
you are so much penalized that, you know,
so unless you change the system, you know,
the political system, you decentralize,
you know, for instance, French decentralization,
you know, which was done, what, in the 70s, 80s,
has not resulted in a change in the pattern of cities.
You know, Paris is still dominant and growing,
And look at Russia also.
The only city which is really growing is Moscow.
And I think it reflects a political system.
And no, I don't, I think that planners trying to spread, let's say, cities without a change in the political system or even the culture.
Maybe, you know, centralization is a culture.
I mean, in the case of my country, France, I think centralization.
is a cultural aspect.
It's not only political.
Your own background coming from Marseille
rather than from Paris, of course.
I would not brag about it normally.
But no, maybe you should brag about it.
How is that changed how you understand cities?
Because high-ex characterization...
I'm very tolerant of messy cities.
Messy cities.
Yes.
Why might that be coming from Marseille?
You know, when I was this...
You know, when we were school children in Marseille,
we were used to a city which has
really there's only one big avenue, the rest are streets which were created locally,
you know, the vernacular architecture.
And in our geography book, we have this map of Manhattan.
And our first reaction was, the people in Manhattan must have a hard time finding their
way because all the streets are exactly the same.
And in Marseille, we oriented ourselves by the angle that the street made within
other. And some were very narrow, some very, very wide, well, not so wide, but some were
curves, somewhere, you know, and that's the way we oriented ourselves. And we thought
Manhattan must be a terrible place. We must be lost all the time.
Now, in the middle of all of these conversations, we have a segment known as overrated versus
underrated. So I'm going to toss out a mention, and you tell me if you think it's overrated
or underrated. Okay?
First, cableways as a method of urban transport as used in Cali, Rio, La Paz, Mexico City, Medellín, Caracas.
I have not seen the detailed numbers, but my gut feeling that it's overrated.
Why?
Because cable, you know, I used to do a lot of skiing, and I know how much a cable car can carry, and it's not that much.
Le Corbusier, overrated or underrated.
Ah.
As a writer, he's underrated, as an architect, well, more or less, as an urban planner, of course, he's grossly overrated.
And what's your best Le Corbusier's story?
My best, well, you know, I met Le Corbusier at a conference in Paris twice at two conference.
and he was a at the time he was at the top of his fame
and he started the conference by saying
people ask me all the time what do you think
how do you feel being the most well-known architect
and you know in the world
he was not a very modest man
and and and he said
you know what it feels it feels that
my ass has been killed
all my life.
That's the way he started this way.
He was a very bitter man in spite
of his success and his
carter. And I think that his
bitterness is shown in his
planning and some of
his architecture.
Porto Prince Haiti, overrated
or underrated?
If you look at the food, it's underrated.
You know, the culture
is underrated. It's a
wonderful culture. The Krell
culture, you know, is one of
The Creole language also is extremely rich.
It has a lot of poetry.
Of course, after the earthquake, it has never recovered, I think.
And this is very sad.
I don't know if it will ever recover.
I don't know.
It seems that the political system is unable to evolve.
It's probably slightly better than what it was when I was in Port-au-Prince at the time of Baby Doc.
you know, but the city has deteriorated since that time
and the combination of the earthquake,
the deterioration also of the environment
due to overpopulation and deforestation.
You know, deforestation in Haiti,
you know that at the time of Duvalier,
one of the main source of tax for the government was kerosene.
So kerosene was for the relatively,
wealthy people the way of cooking.
The poor people then, because the kerosene was so expensive,
because of the high taxes,
were cutting every tree, every bush,
in order to, just to cook.
So, you know, this deforestation, again,
was a man-made, but, you know, a systematic political things.
E- scooters, overrated or underrated.
And will they last?
I think they will last, maybe in a different form.
But I'm a big fan of his scooter.
Why are they better than Segway, which did not take off?
You only see it in our nation's capital, right?
Because I could see my scooter bringing my scooter here,
folding it and putting it in it under my share.
I cannot put a Segway under my share.
Segway is just too heavy.
The popular music group, Limp Bizkit.
I have no.
My taste in music, like in literature,
stop in the 19th century.
The ideas of Hernando
De Soto, putting everything on
a property register. It's an
excellent idea, but it's not the only idea.
Are you afraid
that it will lead to more regulation,
more taxation, more confiscation,
and aversion,
in essence, of the Chinese social credit
system, if we make everything part of the
formal economy in poor corrupt countries?
I think that
I don't make such a difference
between the formal economy and
the informal economy, as most people do.
My experience is that if you go in Islam,
which is, you know, most planners will consider informal,
you have a market which works exactly like other markets.
You have also expropriation.
You have also, so I don't think that registering property in itself
will create a bureaucratic.
which will kill the...
Again, there are different way of registering property.
For instance, the way it was done in the compound, in Indonesia,
where, you know, by the way, another skeleton in my closet.
You know, in Indonesia, the World Bank participated in financing the compound, you know,
upgrading, which was basically slum, I mean, former villages,
which had to be, you know,
provided with infrastructure.
And our theory in the bank was that you can do that only if you provide property rights
to the people who are living there, whether they are squatters or not.
You just give them, you know, you survey their plot, you give them property right.
And we insisted with the Indonesian government that at the beginning we insisted that we would not
provide infrastructure unless there was also a program to provide property right.
The Indonesian insisted that this will cost too much.
We did a back-off envelope thing, and that it did cost too much, you know, to have a proper survey,
especially there were lots which were extremely small.
So we decided to go ahead and finance it because Indonesia was such a big client,
and the World Bank is still a bank.
You need to lend money, you know, at the end of the day.
So eventually what we found is that when people had the infrastructure,
They had the water meter, they had water, and they had a water bill, and they would pay the bill.
And the bill itself, with an address, you know, in order to have a bill, you have an address.
The bill was a proxy for a property title.
When some people made study about that, they found that a property guaranteed by a water bill was discounted maybe about maybe 10% compared to a formal thing.
You see, I don't necessarily make a, you know, I think property rights are very important,
but it's a guarantee that you will not be removed without compensation.
But I don't make necessarily a very, you know, strong boundary between formal and informal.
I think they can be a lot of property right, which are just there, and as effective, you know,
you want property right for transaction.
And I think those informal popular popular rights could guarantee a very fair transaction the same way as formal one.
Do you love graffiti?
In the proper places.
Why are so many cities in the new world so violent?
If you take Arabic world before some of the recent wars, it was quite safe.
So much of Asia.
Not every part, but so much is extremely safe.
Yes.
Europe is relatively safe for the most part.
But the new world, almost everywhere, has a higher level of violence.
And why is that?
I don't know.
I have noticed that.
I know it because, you know, I live in El Salvador.
But, you know, why there is such violence, for instance, in a country like Brazil?
I don't know.
Is it history, that, you know, the long shadow of history?
I don't know.
Yes, I have no idea.
But it's puzzled me a lot because violence in cities really decrease the enjoyment, the efficiency of city, obviously.
What do you think is the part of the world most likely to institute a charter city?
Not 50, just one.
The Middle East.
And why?
Because they will have to deal with their refugee problem, and it's not going to vanish.
and probably a shorter city
will be the only way to solve it.
Also, because the Middle East has a lot of desert
and a shorter city, you know,
it will be difficult to establish a shorter city,
let's say in Bangladesh, for instance,
where every land is cultivated.
But if you have a large piece of desert
which has no alternative views,
I think it will be a good way of,
start a shorter city.
And the demand is really the refugees.
Especially in the Middle East, you have a mix of refugees
with all sorts of skills,
some are skilled, but some highly skills.
And that will be perfect for a shorter city.
Would you care to nominate a specific location
for the land speculators in the audience?
This is Wall Street, of course.
Well, certainly not Saudi Arabia,
but probably Jordan,
seems to me, or maybe even part of Syria,
if I don't know if there was some change of government.
Now what about the idea of relocating parts of large cities?
So it's often claimed that Jakarta is sinking.
It's one of the world's largest cities.
It's choked with traffic.
And the idea of relocating at least the capital city functions
to Borneo away from Java, is that feasible?
If it's just few bureaucrats, yes, of course,
why not.
But it's more than a few bureaucrats in Jakarta, right?
In Jakarta, I mean, if we take Jabotabakh area, the metropolitan area of Jakarta,
now it's about 30 million people.
Those 30 million people live together, have developed relationship together.
You cannot move them.
I think it will be much more efficient to look at, you know, maybe some part of Jakarta,
the part which is closer to the sea, you know, the old Jakarta,
maybe have to be sacrificed, but certainly moving Jakarta, I think, is impossible.
And it's not feasible.
What I fear with the new city is that a lot of resources will be taken away from Jakarta
and put in the middle of Kalimantan, you know, instead of, you know, involving.
Again, it's possible that Jakarta needs some kind of operation, you know, cutting a limb or something.
But there are still many areas which are completely viable.
the hills toward Bogor, for instance, are completely viable.
So it's possible you could have a translation,
some maybe 5 million people moving slightly south,
you know, from the sea toward Bogor.
But I think that, you know, Bangkok had the same problem some years ago
because for the same reason,
people were pumping water, the water tables,
so the city was sinking.
And eventually they managed to stop that.
And so Bangkok is still flooded from time to time.
It's not quite on the seaside the way Jakarta is.
But I think that technology should be the solution for Jakarta.
I think that it would be a terrible mistake.
Don't forget that Jakarta was all its traffic jam,
enormous traffic jam, pollution and everything.
still is much more productive.
The productivity of people working in Jakarta is much, much higher than a city like Bandung,
for instance, which is rather pleasant to live in.
So there is something about this agglomeration of people used to work together with different talents,
different things, which make it efficient.
I don't think you can translate, you can move this efficiency in the new Brasilia
in the middle of Calimanta.
Now, you've worked about 20 years for the World Bank.
Let's say you were put in charge
and you could reform the World Bank any way you wanted.
What changes would you make?
Wow, this is a difficult question.
And would it be harder or easier than moving Jakarta?
I think that, you know,
I think that institutions like the World Bank are like people.
They age and they deteriorate.
And at a certain time,
you have to bury them
and then build a new one.
I'm not saying, by the way,
that the job that the World Bank is doing,
still doing, is not useful.
I think there are a lot of useful things.
But I think that creating a new one,
you know, it's a bit like a shorter city.
It's shorter World Bank.
Yes.
How will self-driving cars change cities?
You know, I was extremely optimistic
about self-driving car.
remember being invited with Marianas, we were invited at Google twice and to discuss precisely
what would be the impact on cities of self-driving car. And at the time, what Eric Olson,
I think, was the head of the self-driving division at Google. And when we ask him, when do you
think this self-driving car would be operational, we find them in cities? He said, well, I have a
daughter who is 10 years old, and I think by the time she's in the age of having a driving
license, I hope that the Google car would be operational in the city.
So that was about 10 years ago.
And so I think that eventually it will come.
One of the most positive aspect of a self-driving car is that they will consume much less
real estate because if you go on Fifth Avenue at 25 miles an hour, which is the speed limit,
you know, you need about, if I remember, well, 85 square meter of road because of the distance
between two cars, because you need a two-second reaction time. If you have a self-driving car,
you could have a self-driving car within half a meter of each other.
So you save on real estate.
Urban transport is a real estate problem.
But would the roads simply become clogged?
So I would have a self-driving car,
and I'd have a robot that does my shopping for me.
So I'd send my self-driving car to Whole Foods every four or five hours,
every time I wanted a snack,
and the roads would essentially become clogged and you couldn't use them.
Or is that not the equilibrium?
No, yes, exactly.
you will not because you will never get your food if the road is clogged, you know.
But someone will clog the road, right?
Or can we only have self-driving cars with congestion pricing?
Yes, of course.
We will have congestion.
You know, the roads, you know, the road is a finite, you know, within the city,
as soon as it stays built, you cannot expand the road system unless you can have one or two tunnels from touch time,
but that's about it.
So the only way to better use this road is to price it, you know, in a way to control demand rather than supply.
You cannot expand supply.
You can expand the supply of housing as much as you want.
You cannot expand the supply of existing road.
So pricing, yes, is the only way to do it, yes, probably.
So that's why your food, if you order your food every 10 minutes, your food is going to be very expensive.
Is there any good argument against congestion pricing for Manhattan?
No.
What bother me about the approach is that they are saying congestion pricing as a new tax on people.
It's not a tax.
It's a way of efficiently using road.
If you look at it as a cash car, it doesn't work.
It doesn't make sense at all.
you have to maximize the use of road.
And so you have to price it differently depending on the hours.
I will even go to the system of Singapore.
When you look at the discussion of pricing in Manhattan,
we're far from it.
Singapore, which now is going to price car
not only different part of the city,
different price at different time,
but also how long you use the road.
That means if you park,
car in a private parking, you don't pay anymore, you pay for really the use of the road.
I always, I don't think I put it in my book, but I always say that urban roads should be
priced like a cheap motel, you know, by every 10 minutes you address the price depending
on the demand and the thing, and the location and the day of the week.
How do you feel about congestion pricing for residents in cities?
So as you know, the Chinese have a permit system, Huku system.
It keeps people out of cities, but at the same time,
many millions of people violate the system,
but they pay penalties in terms of benefits and schools for their children.
So it's a kind of congestion tax for a city connected to the number of people
rather than a car.
Good idea or a bad idea?
It's a terrible idea.
The way you see it in the Hucco system is clear.
it's just a tax on poverty
because people come to the city to work
and they will pay whatever tax.
So you are just paying for being poor.
It's not, it doesn't restrict people.
It has also, instead of bringing their children,
very often they leave their children in the countryside
because in the countryside, you know,
the school will be free.
And then that means, again, that young people
who could be integrated in the city much faster
if they came as children
will come much later.
So it's a terrible system as a whole point of view.
I don't think it's the equivalent
of a congestion tax because it doesn't
prevent people from coming to cities.
And actually, the Chinese economy in city
is working based on people not having hooko.
If all the people having hookahs
were kicked out and pushed back in where they belong in the countryside,
the Chinese economy will collapse.
But Chinese cities are not that dense.
So if I'm Chinese and I say, well, without the permit system, Beijing would be like Delhi.
And Delhi is in some basic ways unworkable in terms of pollution, traffic.
Not because of density, because of deficient infrastructure.
Yes, and because of the monopoly of Delhi Development Authority on land development.
Google Sidewalk Labs is trying to build a smart neighborhood in Toronto.
This may or may not happen.
Four or against?
Well, you know, I have nothing against a real estate operation done by Google in Toronto.
I have a problem when they say that on a piece of land,
which is basically the size of Washington Square,
they are going to solve housing problem, poverty, transport,
pollution. I have a problem with that. I think that the salesmanship, again, a bit like the
Amazon thing, the salesmanship was terrible. If they were saying, look, we are going to do a real
estate operation, we are going to monitor what is a real cost of, for instance, building five-story
building in wood, whether it makes sense or not. That's fine. When I visited it, you know,
Marianne and I visited it a few months ago.
And I see a lot of gadgets.
You know, they call it smart.
I call that gadgets.
Some are interesting.
Some are probably very interesting.
But it is at a stage where it's only if it's replicated at a city scale that we will know if these gadgets are really interesting or not.
So I think they oversold it.
And it's going to probably blow in their face.
That's my...
Well, facial recognition
come to major U.S. cities.
I don't mean in the 7-Eleven,
but done by the government
on public streets.
Yes, I am afraid
we can't avoid it.
And how will this change cities?
Well, I hope.
It depends if we keep tab
on our own government.
I think it's our control of the government.
We cannot avoid
when technology is
invented, you cannot
disinvent it. But why can't we avoid it? So San Francisco
passed a law banning facial recognition. We could have the
entire country, or many parts, if it passed such laws.
It reminds me of, you know, the Japanese
in the 16th, 17th century, they ban
firearms because they thought that
it was unfair for somebody who was a good
swarmanship to be killed by
somebody with an acubus who have no skills.
And so they managed because they were in Ireland, very well control,
to keep the technology out for some years.
And then Commodore Perry came, you know,
I don't think you can disinvent technology.
I don't think, you know, if, you know, you could say you could have a law
which prevent the government from having cameras run by government,
But then you will have cameras run by department store, and you will see that the police have access to it eventually.
So you cannot disinvent it.
The only way we can control it to preserve our freedom is through precisely the government using it and having extremely strict rules about how to use it.
So that we don't end up, like in China, to have your personal files.
fed by the picture taken in the street.
America is a much safer country than it used to be,
and our bus and rail lines are mediocre at best.
So why is hitchhiking declined?
Ah.
Topic to your heart, yes?
Lawyers.
Lawyers, why?
Yes.
When I was in chiking, you know, when I was a student,
I was hitchhiking all over Europe,
and obviously sometimes there would be an accident.
you know, a chiker will be hurt.
It will never occur to anybody to sue the driver.
And sometimes, you know, I had, you know, I took hike in cars where the driver was completely drunk.
I mean, this happened.
But it will have never occurred to my parents if I had died to sue the driver.
And I think that came slowly, probably from the United States.
States. And as soon as, you know, you are not, as soon as you are liable for your passenger,
and then first it can be the accident, after it can be something else, it can be, you know,
all sort of things, that the guy is smoking and you have inheld the smoke or something
like that. And all that, the guy drops you in the wrong place and you get mugged, and so you can
sue the driver. So as soon as you do that, you completely discourage this free-loading.
I think it's, you know, again, we will see that not only, I think, for, we'll see that
for mountain climbing also, I think. You know, there is a tendency before, you know, I have a
lot of friends who died in Avalanche. It would have never, never occurred to anybody to sue
the village or the mountain with Avalanche took place.
Now it's a common thing.
I see recently, you know, in Italy there was a hiker who gets lost.
He was alone.
He gets lost.
The family now is chewing the entire region because they thought that they didn't look for him fast enough.
You know, they were tens of helicopters, but they, you know, they say they didn't look at him fast enough.
I think that as soon as you have a liability like that, you destroy any initial.
personal initiative, like some, you know, hitchhiking was a form of freedom, which was very interesting.
And for our final closing segment, a question or two about the Alan Berto production function.
What do you feel has been the comparative advantage you've brought to your work that has made you successful?
Being born in 1939, I was brought up during the war.
so comfort, you know, I knew that you could adjust your comfort to whatever is available
and you don't die from it.
Then the other advantage for my wife and I was that we graduated at the time of decolonization
and the law of countries were absolutely desperate for people were just,
you know, the minimum skill you have when you just get out of university.
You know, in my book I talk about even I was not graduated in Algeria, two years after independence, I was inspector of urbanism, you know.
I was 25 years old.
Nobody now graduating from any school will be inspector of the urbanism at 20.
Not that I wish him to be inspector of urbanism at 25 years old.
So, you know, this idea that you graduate from a Western university at the time of decolonization, this gave you an opportunity.
When I arrived in Chandigar, you know, I was 23, I had taken a year off from the Ecole de Bozar, and I arrived at the office of Pierre Jean-Reux at Chandigar, and I say, you know, I'm looking for a job.
It gives me a job like right away, you know.
okay, it was 60
rupees a month, but
you know,
it was a job.
And now
a French man
going to
Idarabad and say,
I'm looking for a job,
I'm 23 years old,
you know,
nobody will take him
and be kicked out
of the office right away.
But there were other people born
in 1939,
right?
So what is your unique skill?
No?
Not that many.
Not that many.
And my parents were not thrilled, I tell you.
I was born three months before the war, you know, so started.
But yes, okay, then we go back.
My father at a cult of travel.
I traveled a lot himself.
And he always, you know, he would bring me,
when I was 13, 14 years old,
he will go for his business to Italy,
for instance, to Palm or Bologna.
I was 12 years old, I guess.
He will give me a map of the city.
He will say you have to go there, there, there, there.
Here you probably could have a good lunch,
and I meet you tonight at a restaurant with my clients here.
And so I will spend the day with my map going around.
And then in the evening, my father will say, okay.
This was a paper map, right, not GPS.
It was a paper map.
There was no GPS.
You said, you know, you enter this church there.
what did you see on the left of the entrance?
So I better remember the Tintoretto was there, you know, because...
So my father always told me, you know, when you travel, you don't look enough.
Every time he traveled a lot, they say, I have not looked enough.
I've not looked enough.
And this was ingrained in me all the time.
Now, another comparative advantage was to marry Marion, yes.
you know, there are not many women
when we had this nice job
with the city planning commission in New York
in 68,
yes, 69.
And I told her, well,
there's this opening for a job
as urban planner in Sana Yemen
and she says, great, let's go.
You know, I don't know,
again, I don't know if any woman
would have her with such enthusiasm.
You know, I didn't have to prodder anything.
She was absolutely.
as enthusiastic as I was.
Alan Bertaud, thank you very much.
And I recommend to you all his book,
Order Without Design, available
on Amazon and those remaining
bookstores in New York City.
We do have time for questions.
There are two microphones.
This is question time, not to make
a statement. If it is not a question,
I will cut you off. We are here
to hear our guest.
First question, at the mic.
Yes. And I will take
iPad questions as well.
Well. Should the largest business city also be the political capital in countries?
I never thought of that. I don't think it matters. I don't know. I will have to, yeah,
that's a good question, actually, when you think of it. I never thought of that.
You know, it's difficult to imagine Paris not being the capital city, but on the other hand, or,
Is it that the capital city
become a business city?
Like, say, Washington, for instance, now
expanded much more beyond,
you know, if you compare, say, to Canberra
or Bysilia,
it has expanded much more in that.
You know, I won't think about it.
Sorry, I cannot answer this.
Next question. On this side.
I'm from Indianapolis, Indiana,
the first example of the talk.
Growing up there, I didn't think it worked very well,
but I'd love to know your opinion on how you think Indianapolis, Indiana works,
and what you would do to make it work better?
I never comments on a city where I've never been or never worked.
So I have difficulties, you know, talking about Indianapolis in this case.
I think that every city has a chance, but it's a chance.
I mean, it's luck sometime.
And they can develop or stagnate.
cities are very much like individual.
We all have the same physiology,
but we have different culture,
but we have also different luck,
like being born in 1939.
And so I cannot really comment on Indianapolis again
because I never comment on cities, I don't know.
Next question from the iPad.
When you arrive into a city you've never been to,
what and how do you prioritize,
what to see.
So before Google Earth,
I will just walk
randomly through the city
and usually start from the center
and to have a cross-section
toward the suburbs, and I would just walk
for hours.
And just, as my father
recommended, look.
And with the idea that
nothing in a city is random,
that
if you see
a barbershop at a corner,
it's because the owner of the barbershop found that it was the best place for his business to be there.
And if you see a tall building next to a short building, it has a reason to.
And you have to try to understand why it is there.
Do not think, you know, one word I hate that the World Bank use all the time is the report is urbanization is haphazard.
There is no such thing.
urbanization is done by people
and they have a very, very good reason for doing it.
Sometimes distorted by regulation or something like that.
That's true.
Discrimination.
But you have to understand why this is it.
Now, after Google Earth, then it's very different
because now I look at an image of Google Earth
and I select some neighborhoods in advance that I want to visit,
which intrigue me.
why are they there?
They seem particularly dense or not dance at all.
So I will select, rather than going at random,
I will select places based on my interpretation of Google Earth.
Next question at this mic.
The Irish government has introduced rent controls across Dublin
to combat increases in rent over the last couple of years.
What policy prescription would you recommend as an alternative to them?
Well, yes, land control.
Sometimes, you know, I compare market to gravity, and gravity is always there.
Sometimes you want to counter gravity, you know, the outcome of gravity is not always, you know,
you want to break it.
For instance, you invent airplane or you invent helicopter or balloon.
That means that you understand gravity very well in order to,
to solve a problem.
If you look at...
So you have some people
who say, well, I don't
believe in gravity and they invent
flying carpet.
The flying carpet has advantage on an
helicopter or a plane that
it doesn't pollute, it's more comfortable.
It costs nothing.
It's land in your backyard.
And rent control
is a flying carpet.
You see,
it's...
As soon as you
try to find a solution to affordability and you look outside the market or the market
work, immediately you end up like somebody who say, I want to invent an airplane, but I'm
going to not take into account gravity. You don't want to fly in this airplane.
So as soon as you, if you, when there is a problem of affordability,
you know, and many cities now have this problem.
You have some people who are very poor and cannot afford,
cannot afford a standard of housing which is above what is, let's say,
the minimum socially acceptable in this city.
So you have to establish how many of those people are there.
And usually, if it is more,
than 2 or 3 or 4% of the population, you'll have to adjust what is minimum acceptable, socially
acceptable standard. For the rest of the population, housing should be provided by the market.
I don't, what do I mean by that? I mean that if you look for a house and you have to be on a
waiting list on 10 years to go on public housing or to go on inclusive zoning, you know,
know the house is provided in New York by inclusive zoning,
or you have a lottery, inclusive zoning,
you have usually 120 units,
and you have a lottery, you have 150,000 applicants.
This is not serious.
You know, waiting list is not serious.
The market should provide,
the market means that there are people moving in and moving out.
When you are in a subsidized house,
you don't, you know, if you are in rent control house,
you will never move.
because your subsidy is entirely so you have no market, so you have no mobility.
The idea of housing is mobility.
A different time of our life, we want to move from one type of house to another and a different
location.
If we have a system which tie the subsidy to where we live, we lose this mobility and it doesn't
benefit anybody else.
My criteria for affordability is that not to look at very poor people, which indeed, if they are bad health or bad luck, the country should take care of them.
I have no problem with that if they have subsidized housing.
But if you have, for instance, a schoolteacher, no job is more indispensable to the life of a city than a schoolteacher.
If this school teacher cannot get a decent health within, I would say, 40 minutes commute from a school or air school, there's something wrong in your system.
And it is not range control and it is not inclusive zoning which will solve the problem because for each of this solution, they will have to be on their waiting list.
You know, for rent control, the school teacher will have to wait for somebody who is under
rent control will die, even maybe not, because rent control is usually inherited from...
So you see, we have to find a solution for this, and the solution is usually increased supply.
Now, increasing supply means increasing supply by removing, you know, absurd regulation.
I'm not talking here, by the way, about fire regulation or sanitation regulation.
I'm talking about regulation that the consumer can see.
How large is a house, or large is a land it is using, and this location.
User should be able to make trade-off between those three things,
and they are able to make it visually.
user cannot make trade-off between good fire regulation and battery regulation.
We don't know what to do that.
So I am not, again, it could be that some fire regulation or maybe over-design or something,
but I have no opinion on that.
But I don't see that there is any purpose in limiting artificially the amount of flow space,
the amount of land in a certain location.
Most of our regulation do that.
They reduce flow ratio.
That means that they force people to consume more land
than they would otherwise, if not, there would be no reason.
At the same time, they put a minimum floor space for apartment.
In New York now, if I remember, well,
is something like 40 square meter or something like that.
I'm still metric here.
At the same time, they do not, so they force people to consume more land and more floor space than they will want.
At the same time, they reduce the supply of land by not developing enough infrastructure or transport.
We have been talking about the deterioration of transport in New York City.
That affects directly affordability.
That means that our school teacher will have to leave at maybe an hour and a half.
from his school, and so one way, that means three hours.
You know, the new proletariat now in cities are not the people who are starving or have no clothes,
like during the industrial revolution.
The new proletariat are the people who are commuting, you know, back and for three hours
or four hours a day.
I've seen cases in South Africa in Johannesburg where a woman was fully employed
at a subsidized house, so she was not poor by any standard,
and she had a regular job above the minimum wage,
but she was commuting five hours a day.
Her life is ruin.
This is a new proletariat.
There is no possibility of having a family life.
All the advantage of a city disappear if you commute five hours a day.
So I think that here, urban planners or manager of cities
Sometimes I use urban planners as scapegoat, I mean, in fact, anybody who is involved in managing cities.
They have a responsibility for that.
They should have indicators about this commuting time and standard of housing and affordability.
And when this thing deteriorate, they should take responsibility.
And the only action they can have increase the speed of transport expanded.
and increase, you know,
let the people decide where they want, you know,
to live how much they want in terms of land and flow space.
And this should not be regulated.
Next question at this, Mike.
Many of the examples in your book,
counter examples, were from New York City,
whether it's the Affordable Housing Lottery
or trading FAR for, say, benefits like fountains or parks.
if tomorrow you stumbled upon a magical genie,
give me three policy recommendations and they shall become law.
To maximally benefit the citizens of New York, what would they be?
I will remove all-floor ratio, restriction.
I will remove the minimum floor space.
And I will make sure that no developer ever get a holiday on property.
attacks. I think this is
too convenient for politician. It never appears in the budget.
It's just a decrease in the revenue. And I think that
part of the problem we have in infrastructure is precisely that.
So I think that that will be what I would recommend.
Now, does that have a chance to be, you know, again, you ask me something
magic here, so I'm a magic answer.
A question from the iPad.
Quote, I work for Uber.
Tell me what you think we're doing wrong, end quote.
I don't think Uber is doing anything wrong.
I mean, maybe at a certain time if they don't pay their driver enough, they may run out
of driver, but then the market will show us that very quickly.
So I think that Uber has increased, again, probably even increased affordability in a certain way,
because it has made some area of New York, which we are not, you know, again,
accessible to job in two or three hours, suddenly much less.
I see only
Now, some people say, well, they are clogging streets, you know,
so the traffic has, you know, slow down a bit.
Wait a minute here.
If you look at the street of New York,
I calculated it in my book.
I say, I think something like 25% is used by cars
which are parked full time, free of charge.
in the street.
So if you are serious about congestion
and the congestion created by Uber,
you leave the curb for loading and unloading
and you still have two lanes for circulation
where in fact you have now only one lane
and usually you have loading and unloading,
by the way, not only Uber but Amazon and all the thing,
and so you are blocking.
So again, if really the concern is about congestion,
that congestion and traffic, please use a valuable space for traffic,
and not, or pedestrian, by the way, or bicycle, whatever.
But parking cars on street is a scandal.
Next question at this mic.
With rising support for just global authoritarianism,
is it possible that we could see a 21st century Robert Moses?
Why or why not?
Well.
Yes, definitely, yes.
No, we should not, unfortunately, yes,
you know, we should not consider that progress is a linear thing.
Some of my colleagues even think that the Enlightenment
might have been just a fluke in the history of the world,
and that within 20 years we may all be under regime
which are authoritarian, it's quite possible.
And then, of course, yes, Robert Moses would have, you know, I mean, it was, I mean, let's say,
you know, after all, yeah, institution reacted to Robert Moses and limited, you know,
the damage it did, but he did some positive things too.
So, in fact, it's institution, yes, you're right, it's institution.
and those institutions could deteriorate faster than we think.
I'm afraid so.
We see that now in some country of Europe's,
and as it could happen here.
From the iPad, should Central Park be larger or smaller?
No.
It's just the right size,
because the important thing of Central Park,
Central Park. The same way, you could say the same as the avenue, have the avenue too wide or to narrow, in the street too narrow, or should the block be longer? It doesn't matter. What matters was that when they established the grid and when they established Central Park later, they clearly established property right.
And they separated what was public and what was private. And that allowed the market to work with a complete symmetry.
of information.
Anybody, even when, say,
85th Street
was just a field,
everybody knew
that it was 86
Street. And they knew
whether, so anybody buying
a lot there will have a complete
symmetry of information.
And this symmetry of information
in the market is much
more important than agonizing
whether, you know,
an avenue should be a certain meter,
a 35 meter or 25.
Eventually, we will adjust.
If the avenue are little too
narrow, we will adjust to it.
We'll put congestion pricing
and
or we'll expand the city further.
The important thing is to establish
we should not agonize
on, is it the right?
We should, of course, try
to have the right decision, but we should
not agonize on this thing.
The important thing is to have very clear
proper to right long in advance.
So it cannot be manipulated by people who move streets as they pay politician or something
or whoever urban planners in order to move street.
This is the most detrimental thing which can happen to a city.
Quick last question from this mic.
The Rick Burns documentary about New York City, should that have been longer or shorter?
Sorry, sorry, could you repeat?
The PBS documentary 15 years ago now that Rick Burns did about New York, should that have been a longer story or a shorter story?
I don't know this story.
This is a documentary, but I haven't seen it either.
So I guess it should have been shorter.
But with that, please all subscribe to the podcast series Conversations with Tyler.
Alan, thank you very much so much.
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