Conversations with Tyler - Jeffrey Sachs on Charter Cities and How to Reform Graduate Economics Education (Live at Mason)
Episode Date: March 31, 2015Tyler Cowen and Jeffrey Sachs discuss the resource curse, why Russia failed and Poland succeeded, charter cities, Sach's China optimism, JFK, Paul Rosenstein-Rodan, whether Africa will be able to over...come the middle income trap, Paul Krugman, Sach's favorite novel, premature deindustrialization, and how to reform graduate economics education. Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links, or watch the full video. Other ways to connect Follow us on Twitter and Instagram Follow Tyler on Twitter Follow Jeff 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.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Well, good afternoon, and thank you all for joining us.
My name is Dan Rothschild.
I'm the Senior Vice President and Chief Operating Officer at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University.
Thank you all for joining us for what is sure to be an interesting event,
the latest in our conversations with Tyler series,
with our special guest today, Professor Jeffrey Sachs from Columbia University.
The Mercatus Center is the world's premier university-based resource for market-oriented ideas,
And our mission at the Mercatus Center is to bridge the gap between academic research and real world public policy questions in Washington, states and local governments, and indeed around the world.
And today's event is in aid of that.
The Conversations with Tyler's series is all about bringing together world-class thought leaders who are thinking big thoughts about important ideas for conversations with the General Director of the Mercatus Center.
With that, it's my pleasure to introduce Tyler Cowan.
Tyler is the Holbert L. Harris Professor of Economics at George Mason University.
He also, along with Alex Tabarock, is the co-blogger at Marginalrevolution.com, one of the country's premier econ blogs,
and with Alex is the co-creator of Marginal Revolution University, an innovative online platform for learning about and teaching economics.
For those of you who are readers of Marginal Revolution, as you already know, Tyler's interests are many and varied,
which makes him the perfect host for this series.
Now, I don't know where he and Professor Sacks
are going to go in their conversation today,
but I'm sure it's going to be challenging,
it's going to be interesting, and above all, it's going to be smart.
So again, on behalf of the Mercado Center,
thank you all for joining us today,
and please join me in welcoming Tyler Cowan and Jeffrey Sacks.
I introduce Jeff Sacks. That's easy.
Jeff is one of the world's best, most famous,
and most influential economists.
There's more I could say,
but let's start with that.
But the purpose of these series is to have conversations
that you don't find other places on YouTube
and to ask probing questions
and have a far-ranging dialogue.
So what I'd like to do is a kind of overview
of Jeff's career and thought
and try to see how it all hangs together,
how the different pieces relate to each other.
So what I'd like to do is start with some of the early pieces
from the 80s and 1990s, and then we'll work our way up to the present.
So the first question, Jeff,
and we'll treat this as a dog.
but some of your best cited work has been on the natural resource curse, the idea that economies, when they have natural resources such as oil, that can harm their prospects for growth rather than helping them.
Now we're in 2015. How do you see this issue today? And do you think that has changed in any way since the first pieces you wrote?
Well, first, let me say thank you for having me, and I'm really looking forward to our discussion.
About 25 years ago, I started looking more and more in my own work at how economic structure,
geography, resource base, and so forth, affected development.
And I've been on a learning curve since then.
One of the early works that I engaged in at that point with Andrew Warner and others was looking
at this question of how resource well.
and resource dependence, one could say, affected development.
And we found back in the 1990s looking for the preceding 25 years or so that the oil-rich countries
had grown less rapidly, controlling for seemingly other factors that would be relevant,
and we started to speculate about that.
There's now a huge literature from many different points of view.
pure economics and so forth.
And I would say that it's a pretty rich subject
and not so simple to summarize,
but there really is a resource curse
for a lot of resource-rich countries.
And I would say at this point, looking back,
that I would put more weight on the political economy
aspects, probably than the pure market-driven Dutch disease aspects, which I talked about
a quarter century ago. The idea at the time was that if you have resource wealth, that
pulls you away from more labor-intensive and technology-intensive industries, so you don't
learn as much, you don't develop as much endogenous growth. Now I would say if you have
resource wealth, well, one problem is you're likely to be invaded. This is that you have more
vulnerability to geopolitics as well as to internal politics to mess things up. And is this a habit
you can kick or is it path dependence? So the price of oil now is quite low. And do you think,
well, those countries that have a lot of oil, now they're going to be better off because they'll be
put on this new development path? Or is it somehow too late that they're stuck with the bad
institutions? Well, first, I think one of the things that I've tried to emphasize and that I've
learned over time is it's always pretty complicated. So there are resource-rich countries that do
very well, thank you. There are resource-rich countries that have fallen apart a long time ago
and never gotten out of the mess. So any generalization is fraught with the problems. Norway will do
well whether the oil price is high or low.
Whether, on the other hand, last time the world oil price was persistently low, the Soviet
Union collapsed.
Russia was near hyperinflation.
So different countries under different conditions will adjust to these shocks, resource-rich,
Norway, Australia, Canada, I wouldn't worry too much about them.
Their currencies will weaken.
They will find other things to do, whereas some of the very vulnerable countries that have
never been able to kick the habit of dependence like Venezuela will probably go into a deeper
crisis.
And the Middle East has been in flames now for years.
and I don't see any easy way out there either.
Here's a tension I'm trying to figure out,
and it relates to a number of issues in your thought.
You've written some very interesting pieces lately
about how the role of institutions is overrated
in predicting growth.
But institutions seem to play a key role
in making the resource theory stick.
Because as you say, Norway has done fine.
The US in earlier times did fine with a lot of natural resources.
So does thinking about resources lead you back
to seeing institutions as important in some new and different way,
or are you still basically skeptical about institutions
mattering at all and wanting to look most of all
to geography?
Do you see what I'm getting at?
Of course, but I think, again, I'll say it repeatedly.
I've never said institutions don't matter.
I've said institutions aren't the only thing.
I find often that people take an idea
and carry it to an extreme.
And this institution's matters idea
is one of those that I found taken to extremes
by causing a kind of geographic blindness,
if I could say it.
Geography obviously matters a lot.
Resource-based matters a lot.
Institutions matter a lot.
The world's complex.
We're dealing with complex systems.
And so it's not surprising that different things
matter at different times in different places.
So of course institutions make a difference.
The art of good economics, in my view,
is trying to figure out what's important,
where, when, and in which context.
Here's a claim you've made.
It's very striking.
I think it's one of the most important claims
in development economics.
And personally, I think it's true.
When you reviewed Asimoglu and Robinson,
you said, if we go to the year in 1960,
even knowing who the winners and losers have been,
much less forget about forecasting,
It's very hard to come up with a metric of institutions
that predicts which countries end up doing well
and which countries end up doing poorly.
Now, when I read that, I tend to think
somehow we're mismeasuring institutional quality
and we really need a better measure of institutions
which we don't have yet, and institutions will someday matter again.
But I'm looking for this in vain,
and where does your thought stand on this now?
Do you actually think there's some deeper understanding
of institutions that will rescue
this proposition because when you throw out North Korea and some other crazy countries,
institutions don't really have the predictive power for growth.
And what are your thoughts on this?
Given that in the cross-country regressions, they can do so poorly within the set of semi-reasonable countries.
Well, you know, Asim Oglu and Robinson's book, Why Nations Fail, was one of my least favorite books.
I think it is just a bad book because it takes one thought,
tries to drive it as the only explanation of history.
And that's not a good approach, in my view, to history,
which is a very interesting, complex tableau.
And they missed one fundamental point right from the start,
which is that when you look at development,
there are at least two fundamental drivers, not just one.
The one that they talk about is innovation.
and innovation as being a fundamental driver of growth,
and there's a lot of truth to that in the history of the world.
But there's a second fundamental aspect
when we look out in the world and say,
who's doing well, who's doing badly, why, and so forth,
and that's what is sometimes called catching up.
And the phenomenon of catching up
is very different from the phenomenon
of forging ahead at the front of the technology,
horizon and when you take that simple distinction it helps to explain a lot of the post-1960
question that you're asking the most successful countries in the world in the last
50 years have been basically the East Asian economies and Southeast Asian
economies they don't look very rarely do they look like the textbook model of
of Asimoglu and Robinson of the free market economy and so forth.
In fact, the People's Republic of China,
they characterize as just, well, that's an anomaly
that is gonna collapse in the future,
so we don't have to explain it now.
I think that's a huge mistake and a misunderstanding
of the basics.
China's in a catching up mode.
The institutions of catching up
are quite different from the institutions
of being the technology leader, for example.
Just understanding that would give them
a little more clarity about institutions, per se.
And corruption, over or underrated
as a driver of growth?
It depends.
Some places are so corrupt, you first wouldn't
want to step foot in them.
And I've had the experience repeatedly
when I'm talking to,
head of state or finance minister,
and I watch their eyes glaze over and realize
they're not interested in what you're talking about.
They're in a different game.
And those places can be driven absolutely into the ground
by corruption.
Other places have been corrupt for a long time.
I'm thinking of New York, Washington,
Lagos, Beijing, and other places,
and you get a lot of economic progress.
So in that sense, there is no purity in the world.
And I'm not a fan of corruption for a lot of reasons,
starting with the ethics.
But China is massively corrupt, and it's grown at high rates, right?
China has a lot of corruption.
First person to say it is President Xi.
And the US has a huge,
huge amount of corruption and it has done reasonably well over the last 200 years.
Let me now ask you a question to challenge the audience.
And we're going to turn to Paul Rosenstein-Rodan, who's somewhat of a forgotten figure.
But I think still an important figure at George Mason, and maybe for you too.
So as you know, Rosenstein-Rodan was a development economist.
He was one of the pioneers of the notion of the big push of an extended move forward on many fronts,
many fronts all at the same time.
But when you look at the early years of his thought,
he studied with Mises, he worked with Hayek,
he was an Austrian, he was a subjectivist,
methodological individualist,
and he made some kind of theoretical shift in his mind.
So what is it that you think that Paul Rosenstein Rodan saw,
and presumably you think you see it as well,
that the people today who are still Austrians
at the theoretical level,
what is it that Rosenstein-Rodan
saw that allowed him to make that shift
or induced him to make that shift at the most basic conceptual level.
He was writing during and at the end of World War II
and he was saying, how are we going to get out of this mess?
There are so many pieces that have to be put together.
We have to get infrastructure built again.
We have to get basic markets operating.
There are a lot of interconnected pieces.
And so we're going to have to move on a lot of fronts.
So he was facing a here.
historical situation.
And I would say that his idea, I'd go back even,
well, actually it's not back, it was almost contemporaneous
within Alexander Gerschencrone, who was a very clever
economic historian at Harvard.
I came as a student just as he was retiring.
He was a great mid-century.
mid-20th century economic historian, he observed that what countries do for development depends
on how they stand in relation to the leader.
And this is a point I was making earlier, which is that catching up is a fundamental
phenomenon in development.
And there's a difference of growth, which we study as an economy, how does it grow, from
the question of catching up, which is a question for a country that is situated with weak
technology, weak infrastructure, weak training, and so forth, in the face of advanced economies,
what should they do? Now, that's been a question that's been asked for at least 224 years
since Alexander Hamilton sent his letter to the Congress
on manufacturing in the United States
because he said, we have to catch up with Britain.
And then Friedrich List said, we have to catch up with Britain.
And economic reformers from basically Hamilton on,
in countries that were lagging behind the lead,
said, what do we do to catch up?
Now, you can carry this too far,
because the insane version of this,
and the unbelievably destructive version of this was Lenin and Stalin.
We have to do anything at no matter what cost of life to catch up or Mao in the great
leap forward, which is insanity.
But on the other hand, and cruelty, but on the other hand, the idea that you do different
things to catch up by accelerating the process or by making the big push in a variety
of ways has been shown time and again to have a lot of merit.
And so it's a balance once more.
The first countries to develop Britain and the United States, take the U.S.
We've achieved almost continuous 1.8% per year per capita growth for the last 200 years.
Not bad if you do it for 200 years, but if you're an impoverished country today and you
say what's our aim, 1.8% growth?
No, our aim is 10% growth because we really need to catch up.
And it turned out, because of that catching up phenomenon, you can make a very, very rapid
advance in a way unthinkable for a country in front.
But how do you make that advance through pure government just stepping back and letting things
happen?
No.
Through a concerted policy to close gaps.
That's the difference.
I've been reviewing your work, including these books.
and a stack of papers here, which is a small fraction of what you've written.
I believe they all have your name on them.
And what I try to do with thinkers sometimes is boiled down
what they've been writing to the smallest number of dimensions possible.
So if you'll bear with me for a moment,
I'm going to try to do that with you, and then you tell me where I'm off
or what you would add to that.
So reviewing all the things you've written.
You probably know more about me than I do, so let's see.
Well, maybe.
Let's see how it goes.
But there are two phrases that strike me again and again.
One is when you mention your wife, Sonia,
and talk about differential diagnostics,
and the other is what you call the epoch of the Anthropocene,
which you could think of as the time
when human beings are in the world in an active way.
So when we start with primitive society,
everything is determined by geography and resources.
And economic development, in a sense,
is an ongoing process where human beings
impose their will and their reason on the world
in a kind of planning or voluntaristic fashion.
And then there's a belief that, first, this needs to be done
in a differential way, not the same recipe everywhere,
but a belief in the power of human reason
to perform these differential diagnostics,
to turn this era when humans are on the Earth
into a time when we're no longer ruled by resources
and geography and the prevalence of the world
malaria but brought into an area where human reason is in some sense running the
show and if I had to boil down my reread of you into a very short bulletin that's
what I would say now do you agree with that how would you change it and what
would you add to that well that's pretty good first of all so I would subscribe to
that summary I should explain this idea of clinical economics as I've called it
or differential diagnosis.
When you're married to a pediatrician,
as I have been for 35 wonderful years,
you get up in the middle of the night a lot
when patients call with a very sick child.
And I've listened to my wife take an oral history
a thousand, thousands of times perhaps.
And it's a wonderful art, first of all,
because a mother called
with a crisis of a baby or a young child,
usually a high fever.
And the first thing that is important to know
is that there are a thousand possible
etiologies of that fever.
So my wife doesn't say institutions.
She says,
it depends.
Let's hear your problem.
Oh, you're in a desert, you're here, you're this.
No, when it comes to the child, it could be something as normal as a common cold
or something as devastating as meningitis.
And the purpose of a differential diagnosis is two things.
First, it is, of course, to try to get to the core reasons.
so that you can make a proper prescription based on a proper diagnosis.
Second, it's done in a way that you're minimizing serious risk.
The first question always that my wife asks is, is the baby's neck stiff?
Or do you notice that?
Because that's one of the symptoms of meningitis.
And if the mother answers that way, the next point,
is I'll meet you at the emergency room.
Don't stop, just go, because it could be something
that is fulminant and life-threatening immediately.
If it's not that, then it can go on for an hour.
But by the way, it's not just an hour of questions,
it's an hour of sequenced questions down a decision tree.
And it's fascinating to watch.
And I wish as economists we had those basic skills inbred.
I certainly didn't learn them,
and it took me a long time of seeing.
long time of seeing lots of patients to see that one needs that same kind of approach.
So that's what I mean by differential diagnosis and why it's so annoying to me the one
explanation fits all viewpoints because now I've seen a lot of places, a lot of crises,
a lot of challenges.
And one of the things that I discovered was how poor our people.
profession is at times in having that sense that the problem that you saw over there is not the same as the problem that you're seeing here.
Now, let me push on this a bit and see if you can convert me into being more of a Saxian.
So one of my worries is that the doctors are not actually in charge.
It may be the lawyers, which is, we're in a law school, but still, if I may say in some ways a step down.
and to some extent you have people voting on the baby,
not all of whom even know who the baby is or what the baby's symptoms are.
So the differential diagnostics may exist in a kind of platonic realm,
but you're more optimistic about them than I am.
So what would you tell me to address my skepticism and make me more of a Saxian,
given that I have this reluctance to embrace your view the way you hold it?
Well, I think I get what you're driving at, and I do have a fundamental view of at least how I want to proceed professionally.
But it's also based a bit on a theory of change.
And tell us that theory.
And I believe that knowledge matters, and that the more clarity, the more
evidence, the more appropriate an analysis, the more likely we can find a good outcome to things.
So many people are cynical. I tend not to be. I'm sometimes accused of being gullible as a result
or being too soft in the face of whatever.
But I believe that there's a way to reach an agreement, typically,
among pretty conflictual and often pretty antagonistic actors.
I tend to believe there's a way out of a crisis,
and I tend to believe that a lot of what poses as either pure zero-sum struggle,
or harsh ideological conflict is often resolvable by good clear ideas or good clear evidence or a good clear game plan.
So you're very optimistic about the power of human reason.
I believe that's where we should put our bets.
At the different claim.
See, I believe we should put our bets on human reason.
It's all we have.
But I'm not necessarily that.
Then we don't have to even disagree.
because we're going to act the same way.
Let me mention this book.
Reading this book, it really cleared up for me.
I think a lot of the things you believe.
It's called To Move the World, JFK's Quest for Peace,
came out last year.
It's received attention, but less so from economists
for obvious reasons.
And it's a book about leaders sitting down
and just doing something and basically getting it right.
Is that fair to say?
Solving, more or less solving the Cuban Missile Crisis,
diffusing tensions, avoiding nuclear war, right?
It's a book, yes, of this remarkable last year
of Kennedy's life, which included the Cuban Missile Crisis
and then negotiating the partial nuclear test ban treaty.
And it's basically, I find it a story of tremendous insight
and very moving also.
But it's a story, if I could put it in pure conceptual jargon,
it's a story of finding a way to the cooperative outcome
of a prisoner's dilemma.
And that's, to my mind, a crucial structural feature
of our lives, which is that we face constantly
this challenge of finding agreement.
And we face constantly the logic of,
of defection, as it's called in the prisoner's dilemma,
or the non-cooperative outcome that's worse for everybody.
And the question is what to do about that.
And the cynics say, well, the world's bound to disagree.
And the idealists say the world will always agree,
or we should always act that way.
And I find fascinating and compelling the idea
that we should try to find ways to move to cooperation,
knowing how fragile that is.
And this story, it really fits your model of change.
That's why reading the book, it was like a light bulb
went off in my head.
Well, for me, it also went off in my head,
as I learned more about this, which is that Kennedy
and Khrushchev, you know,
stumbled into nearly the end of the world in October 1962,
and Kennedy made his share of terrible mistakes,
and our USG, which I'm usually not too much of a fan of,
made its share of terrible mistakes,
whether it's being pigs or other things,
and one by one, we stumbled not to the desire of either of these leaders,
to the point where we were within the hair's breadth
of total annihilation, and so many stupid things happen in this world.
As almost happened again, some pilot gets lost over Alaska
and flies over the Soviet Union,
or Russian local commanders in Cuba
have the power to fire nuclear weapons.
We're so close to the edge.
So the Cuban Missile Crisis,
is diffused, I think, with real humanity by Kennedy and by Khrushchev.
And then they both basically reach the intuition.
This is insane the way we're acting.
This is crazy.
And they find a way to reach an agreement next year.
And it's an agreement in which typically the right on both sides that they face or the hardliners
the nationalists on both sides say you can't agree with each other and they find a way to reach an agreement.
So to me, it is a paradigm of how we can stay alive in this world and actually get somewhere.
If I thought more problems were of an evolutionary nature, had very large numbers of players,
didn't have clear channels of communications, didn't have elite advisors,
but were more of just a big, messy splat, should I then be more pessimistic about differential diagnosis?
Or do you think that as a model of social change still is going to hold?
Well, for me, the biggest, most complicated mess that we're in that is like the one you're
describing is climate change, which in my now 43 years of thinking about economics, so it's a long time,
is the most complicated mess that I can imagine. It's got every aspect.
attribute of just a terrible, terrible problem.
It's global, it's long-term, it's uncertain,
it's got vested interests, it's got hugely unequal payoffs,
it's got everything wrong with it as a problem.
And yet, so a lot of people do say, there's no chance,
we're just, you can't really do much,
If you ask me where do I stand, I say we can solve this problem.
There is a way to do it.
I would define solving it at this stage as staying below the 2 degrees Celsius warming, which
governments have agreed but not honored as an upper limit of warming.
And I'm taking an approach of how I think I can contribute to that in a very particular way.
And that way is by helping to define more clearly what that path involves and managing a
15 country project for the UN on defining pathways that satisfy that.
So to my mind, that reflects at least my style of what I believe is the way to do this,
which is to say, well, what does a solution look like?
comes back to what shelling called a focal point for bargaining.
Here's where we could go.
I think that is very important to identify in messy situations.
Here's where we can get to.
And don't you see for all of us that's an improvement?
That's better than the mess that we're on.
And I believe if you say that enough and you're clear enough about it, you'll actually
get there.
or not really, but you'll have the best chance of getting there.
And that that's a style of problem solving
that we should try to use in these non-cooperative games
that we play so-called, which is that there is no magic answer,
there is no one leader that defines the solution.
We have to actually agree on something.
And it seems to me to be a good idea to try to agree on something.
To pick a success from the past, let me mention Poland.
In my opinion, Poland has gone very well.
It's a great country.
It's been a success.
If I made the following claim, would you agree with it that you, Jeffrey Sachs, have done
more for economic liberty through the medium and history of Poland than almost any other
economists alive today?
True or false?
I'd say that things I recommended were, that was good advice I gave back then, and I'm proud of it.
And it worked out.
And it was a very remarkable period of my life and very remarkable moment.
And it was exactly one of these periods when you're just struck at the complexity and the mess.
and one needed to find a way out of that.
And just to tie that strategy in with how I'm explaining my general approach,
actually, you know, I made recommendations for a significant, rapid change of economic institutions,
structure and politics that had a very big effect in the internal dynamics of what was happening
and the international dynamics.
But the basic idea, of course, was not mine at all.
The basic idea was in the historical moment and the basic idea was also solidarity movement's
idea.
And here's what I mean.
I was asked at one point, write a plan.
And it was for me an unbelievable moment, which I remember as vividly
as anything.
I remember because I said, I'll send this to you
in a couple of weeks.
It was one of Lech Valenz's top advisors.
He said, I need it tomorrow morning.
And so one of the great life experiences
is the lessons of four years of Harvard all-nighters.
So I pulled an all-nighter, and I wrote a plan for transforming Poland
from a communist central planned economy to a market economy.
And if anyone's interested, I'll send you the document,
which I recovered from a box sometime a few years ago.
And what he told me was, he said, I don't care what you put.
I mean, you have to explain it.
But this has to be about Poland's return to Europe.
That was the message was like given a term paper or a one-nighter, write your essay on how Poland
can return to Europe.
Well, for me, that defined everything.
First, it was the right idea.
It was why I was there.
It was why I was wanting to help solidarity at the time.
It was what I believed in.
But it also defined, they had a clear vision.
We want to be a normal country in Europe.
And they are, right?
And they are now completely.
It's totally normal.
As one of the greatest leaders of our time in human rights,
Adam McNick said, we're boring.
They went from the great drama of revolution
to being a boring country in Europe.
But the point I want to make, Tyler,
is that the endpoint was clear for them.
Well, everything else fits.
Once you have an idea of that compelling focal point,
then I said, OK.
You know, like the guy carving an elephant out of ice,
take away everything that doesn't look like an elephant.
Take away everything that doesn't look like a European normal economy.
And then Russia, which I blame only on the Russians, by the way,
but they never had a comparable end point in mind.
Is that fair to say?
I think there are two things.
I blame a lot of it on Dick Cheney, so not just on Russia.
Russia itself, by virtue of Russia, 11 time zones of the Eurasian landmass, does not have a fixed focal point.
And half of Russian history is how we're a unique civilization, the third Rome, and half of Russian
history is being part of Europe and being part of European civilization.
They've never settled that question until now.
But the other difference which I found, I didn't understand it then, almost at all, by the
way, and it took me 20 years to understand it actually, was how weird it was that in 1989,
and this is geopolitics, which I didn't understand as it was happening, in 1989, I made recommendations for Poland.
And I said many, you know, several unusual things,
like don't pay your debts, get debt cancellation,
you need emergency, a billion dollars on this state,
and so forth.
And everything I recommended actually ended up
happening with US government support.
Then in Russia, two years later, I was asked by Gorbachev
and then by Yeltsin to help them, because
they saw what was happening in Poland.
They liked that.
They wanted something similar.
So I said exactly the same things.
And the US government kept saying, no, no way, no way.
And I kept saying, but that kept working there.
And I didn't understand it in some deep sense
for a long, long time how weird this was.
I knew it wasn't the difference of economic advice.
I understand what a financial crisis is.
Culturally weird, you mean?
No, how weird it was in the historical moment
that things that had worked extremely well
had shown themselves where I had Brent Skowcroft
and Bob Dole and others strongly supporting it.
All of a sudden, just no support from Washington.
The IMF saying, we're not going to do this.
And I said, but Bob Richard Irv, I'm sorry,
you did that two years ago and pulled it.
We're not going to do it.
Why?
Flap.
Okay.
What's the lesson of this?
Quite important, actually.
It's a little bit off topic, but very important.
We didn't want to help Russia in 1991.
We wanted our unipolar world.
I didn't know that at the time.
For me, I wanted to help Russia.
This is a chance for freedom, democracy, market economy,
normalcy.
Yeltsin defined, he said, December 11,
when I met him the first time, 1991.
We want to be a normal country.
I said, I will help you, Mr. President.
We didn't want that in this country.
So what I didn't understand was everything I said about Poland was immediately accepted because it was good advice
and because Poland was going to be a bulwark of NATO.
Everything I said about Russia, it didn't matter whether it was good advice or not.
Russia was on the other side.
But China did it without us, without American help, for the moment.
Yeah.
So what is it about Russia that meant Russia couldn't do it?
So the problem was not like a Khrushchev-Kennedy dialogue.
But Russia must have failed in some other way where China more or less did not.
And what is that element?
Many things.
First of all, Russia faced in 1991 an extremely acute financial crisis.
If you haven't lived through a deep, deep, deep financial crisis, it's hard to understand
what it is.
Now we've lived through something mild like that in 2008, which was frightening enough.
But I've now seen them many times and studied them for my whole career.
And they're very fominent.
They're like that meningitis epidemic.
they absolutely can rip a society apart before you turn around.
Russia had that.
It had that for all sorts of reasons, but one was that the price of oil had declined at $10
a barrel, and Gorbachev had borrowed tens of billions of dollars from 1985 to 1991 and run out
of money.
And so they ran out of reserves at the end of 1991.
So this was a macro, macro crisis.
And it was a very bad one.
And the same thing had happened in Poland in a different time dimension, but by 1989.
So that's why I called for debt cancellation, a standstill on debt payments, an emergency
stabilization fund.
So the first point is financial crisis is in and of itself a distinct category of pathology.
Russia had it.
China, thank goodness for them, didn't have it.
Russia needed help on a financial crisis, so that's number one.
By the time they got out of the financial crisis, which was several years later because we
completely stuck it to them in amazing ways and allowed the crisis to be fulminant for a number
of years.
The performers were gone, the corruption was completely out of control.
So I don't want to exonerate the Russians for the irresponsibility and so on and the lack
of good strategy.
But often in the historical context to solve a problem, you need more than just, you need both
sides operating.
There are other serious differences.
very major differences that are worth just mentioning.
We could go into length, but there's a big difference of being an industrial, urban,
industrial, broken Soviet economy.
Which was deindustrializing eventually anyway.
Which, you know, had so overgrown the industrial, heavy industry, and it was in a lot
of collapse, versus being an agrarian, impoverished country.
as China was in 1978.
So the pathways were bound to be very, very different.
The geography is different, by the way,
because China's just filled with people who could do
low-cost labor right at the ports on the east coast of China.
Whereas for Russia, it's almost basically a landlocked land mass
that was running off of petroleum.
which had collapsed in global price,
which had collapsed in the physical facilities
in the countryside with collapsing steel mills,
collapsing everything.
It was a rust.
It just looked like a waste dump in 1991
when you went around Russia.
Absolutely cannibalized airplanes
at every airport just rusting away
ton after ton of,
steel rusting away wherever you turned, cement, melting away wherever you turned.
The place had just been a heavy industrial machine for the military industrial complex for decades.
Let's do some quick question and response.
I'll name some things.
You tell me if you think they're underrated or overrated.
Charter City's concept.
Haven't seen any result of it.
Are you hopeful?
Powers of human reason.
Krushchev Kennedy, sit down.
Look, cities are important,
if you're talking about Paul Romer's concept.
Well, yes, among others.
Yeah, I think they're...
And I have to put it this way.
I'm happy for the idea of cities to say
we should do something different.
I'm not happy to say we're going to take
an extra territorial place in your country.
It's not going to be governed locally.
it's going to have an external board.
There are lots of specific features
that never struck me as politically realistic,
and they didn't turn out to be realistic.
Export-import bank, overrated or underrated?
I'd vote for it.
You'd vote to keep it?
I'd vote to keep it.
Even though it's corporate welfare?
Yeah.
Okay.
Anthropole.
Yeah, because it basically sells useful things
to places that need useful things,
and I believe that in general,
our international capital markets underperform their role of financing international flows.
So I think we need institutions to overcome the inherent shortcomings of international finance.
Anthropologists.
Anthropologists?
They're often critical of economists and development.
You're an economist.
So am I.
In a very broad sense, you're representing the profession.
A lot of anthropologists criticize what he comes.
economists do at a pretty broad level.
Are you persuaded by what they say or not?
First of all, I think that anthropology in the form
of getting a very deep texture, thick description
of a society is a very important kind of approach,
one of many.
Second, we need an anthropology of economics
in the original literal sense of the word, which
a theory of man much better than we have.
We have an 18th century theory of humanity
in the world of 20th century, evolutionary psychology,
neuroscience, and a century of psychological understanding.
So we need a new anthropology in our field.
The economy of Mexico, overrated or underrated?
It's probably accurately rated, which is eh.
and really strangely underperforming for a long time
with a lot of difficulty,
but 100 million people living in a kind of middle income stasis,
and probably really facing the curse of so far from God,
so near to the United States, the paradox that somehow
the US has created as many problems
as its created opportunities.
It has created a militarized narcotics trafficking
and war on drugs, for example,
which has been devastating for Mexico in modern times.
If I said this, the core problem in Mexico
is there's too much labor in the informal sector.
Productivity in the formal sector is often remarkably high.
Mexico will become number three for auto exports.
They're going to pass South Korea.
But you can only squeeze so much more
productivity gains out of the formal sector and moving from the informal sector to
the formal sector for labor is a slow process it goes on slowly that's what we
see and to accelerate that Mexico needs in some ways to be regulate would you agree
or disagree I don't know Mexico is a little bit I would say just stepping back a
little bit of a mystery for me why it hasn't done better in development let's talk
about Africa now you must know Danny
He and I, maybe you too, he's worried about premature deindustrialization.
That in the old days, countries like the U.S. would have over a quarter of their labor force
working in manufacturing with middle-class jobs, often be democratic,
and then they would deindustrialize.
The new wave of emerging economies were often seeing them deindustrialize at 10 to 15 percent
of the workforce being in manufacturing, and it may be that service sector jobs for cultural,
cultural, economic reasons, some reasons don't give you the same kind of enduring, increasing
returns, ongoing self-reinforcing economic growth.
So when it comes to Africa or other parts of the world, are you worried about premature
deindustrialization?
Not very much.
Why not?
You know, I don't think that there's any magic to manufacturing.
What there is, crucially, is a need for all developing countries to export.
You need to export because you need to import technology.
Manufacturing has been a route to export earnings, to earning a place in the world that allows
you to import the technology which 99.9% comes from outside your country.
So the question to ask for Africa is how is it going to pay its way in the world, not whether
it's going to have manufacturing or not.
And that's why, by the way, import substituting manufacturing was no great health.
for countries that pursued that to an excess.
What has worked is export-oriented manufacturing.
So maybe it'll be export-oriented services,
mining, agribusiness, and other things.
In general, if I ask the question,
is Africa disadvantaged by having to catch up today
versus having to catch up 25 years ago net net?
I'd say better off now.
better off now because the basic tools for catching up with the information age are stronger
now than before.
But when you say mining, I worry about your own resource curse.
When you say services, India has done this to some extent, as we all know, but if you look
at Indian service exports, they're often done out of a kind of feudal bastion almost.
Companies which build their own roads, their own infrastructure, almost like small private
cities and if you're inside that sphere it works pretty well for you but it's actually a very small
segment of the indian population and that space they have a head start there so if you think what
percent of the nigerian workforce can be employed exporting services i mean do you think there's
an argument it could be more than three or four percent i think the question of how
any low-income country pays its way in the world as i said is an is a real-income country is a
real question. If it weren't for that question, there is no shortage of identifiable jobs
that Africa needs for the coming two generations. It needs teachers and it needs doctors
and it needs construction workers and it needs engineers and it needs public administration
and it needs everything because it's coming from poor, rural, over the overall over the
Overwhelming lay agriculture.
So I'm not worried about the job route,
but what I am worried about is the balance of payments, basically,
which is that like any of us, we thrive if we can sell our services
somehow, and that's true at a country level
as it is at an individual level.
And if you are in an environment where you have nothing to sell,
You may have a comparative advantage, but if you have nothing to sell, it doesn't matter.
Every place has a comparative advantage, but it doesn't necessarily make you prosperous.
So I worry very much about places like Chad, Niger, Central African Republic, Mali, because
they're landlocked.
They are in incredibly difficult physical geographic conditions.
very dry, drying most likely, warming, massive disease burden,
most of them with no easy natural resource base,
too far from ports to do any kind of assembly operations
as a stepping stone development.
So just extraordinarily difficult.
It's why I also worry about Africa's demographic
trends because obviously I think a lot about the difficulties of development and you're
mentioning some.
But I think they're as hard as it is for Africa now with one billion people in sub-Saharan
Africa, Africa is going to have 2 billion people before the middle of the century on the
current trajectory and it's going to have around 4 billion people on the so-called medium-variant
fertility trajectory that the UN population division puts forward.
And I find sustainable development in Africa in those terms not feasible.
I couldn't answer that question.
What is a viable path?
So when you think about the problems of development in very poor, difficult conditions,
as much of sub-Saharan Africa,
has right now.
The best thing going for it is this tremendous room for catching up,
and that means a lot of leapfrogging technologies,
and the fact that there is a true, phenomenal, wonderful,
powerful information revolution underway,
of which we're just in the early stages.
We're still on the first slope of the S-curve.
of the S curve in that.
And that's great.
But there are huge headwinds of which I would say
demography and climate change are two,
plus the traditional facts for a lot of Africa,
disease, tropical, very difficult tropical
environment, and 14 landlocked countries,
all of which make this a very special problem.
Let me give you another Dainee Roderick argument.
He says that once countries get a foothold in manufacturing,
their productivity levels converge pretty quickly,
but that in agriculture it takes much longer.
You've probably looked at those same numbers.
It at least seems true to me.
Do you agree with this, and do you think it's a major problem facing Africa?
And if so, what should they do about it?
It's an example of the ecological context and geography being important.
The reason you can get manufacturing convergence of productivity easily is that those are standardized technologies,
usually part of international value chains.
The specs and the equipment and the machinery don't come domestically.
They come internationally.
The procedures, everything about the production systems are basically part of an international system.
When it comes to agriculture, you're in a completely different world.
What counts is your soil, your pests, your climate conditions, your crop varieties locally.
And that's why technological diffusion in agriculture is much more complex.
You cannot simply take most of the time something that worked here and planted here.
The double miracle of the Indian Green Revolution was actually two miracles.
One was that crop yields went up quickly,
but second, that they were from seeds
from Sonora, Mexico, that Norman Borlaug had taken
to India, and lo and behold, after one year
of a little bit of experimentation on how to plant them,
he and M.S. S. Svaminathan found that you could use
Mexican seeds in the Indian context in the Punjab.
So the point that Roderick may be emphasizing here
is, or finding implicitly, is that technologies diffuse
at different rates depending on their capacity
for standardization.
And manufacturing is typically a very standardized global process.
You can make the phones, if you're making the phones,
you're making the same phones, whether it's in Thailand
or in China and Foxcom or wherever it is.
Whereas if you're controlling disease,
your disease burdens are different, your ecology is different,
If you're growing food, it's different.
And therefore, the context is much more complex.
Of all the wonderful music in Africa, you must have heard a lot of it.
What's your favorite?
Drums.
Drums, from which part?
Of course, everywhere.
No, it's beautiful.
And basically, it's truism and obvious, but how much of American music is African music?
So we have, we live on a culture that came from Africa through the Caribbean to the
to the Caribbean, to jazz, to so much.
And when you watch African music,
you see so much of the heritage roots
and improvements of culture and music that you see here.
From all countries, what's your favorite novel,
or which novel has influenced you the most,
and how has it shaped your thinking?
And how does it tie into the other points we've been discussing?
Peter Thiel said, Lord of the Rings and Master and Margarita.
I'm a complete sucker for Dr. Javago.
Dr. Javago.
Absolutely.
And what does it show about Russians and their future?
I love the basic idea that in the midst of this revolution,
Chavago said somebody has to just live.
And so it's the most human, wonderful story.
I am a complete sucker for it.
China and Chinese demography, what will happen
with China now and what do they need to do?
What's happened of fundamental significance for the world is that East Asia has become the third growth pole in the world, or arguably the second, because for the first 200 years of modern economic growth, it was all the North Atlantic.
You could call that two regions or one, depending on how you want to define it, but it was the U.S. and Europe that defined 90% of the technological advance that created the underlying.
dynamics to which the whole rest of the world would engage in catching up or
integration or falling under imperial rule or whatever it was now because of the
long history of Japanese development because of the 50-year history of
Korean and Taiwanese Hong Kong Singapore development and especially because of the
post-1978 scale of China
China's achievement, East Asia is an absolutely key, transformative growth pole of the world.
And this, I think, is a fundamental geopolitical and historical and economic significance.
But is China crashing now?
There's a real estate bubble, a lot of provincial debt, funny numbers, excess capacity.
What's your take?
My take is that China will be a great and successful country in the 21st century.
Summers and Land Pritchett say China will slow down and grow at 4% if they're lucky.
Do you agree?
Summers and Lam Pritchard have been wrong about China for 20 years.
And they continue to be.
And Kroogman too.
There was this feeling in Cambridge, for some reason, 25 years ago.
We don't like East Asia.
Too much.
I'm caricaturing just a little bit.
And China's a bubble.
the myth of the East Asian miracle,
remember Krukeman's article and so forth.
They just got it wrong time and again.
They have failed to understand.
And same with Asimoglu.
It's the same story.
It doesn't fit our model exactly,
so it can't happen.
It's got to collapse.
It's not right.
It's happening.
That's the story of our time.
It's happening.
That's one and a half billion,
2 billion people, 2 billion, say, including other parts of Southeast Asia, they're on an upswing,
and that's great.
It's wonderful.
It's the most significant, scaled improvement of material conditions in the history of the
world in a short period of time.
And it's deep, and it's great civilizations, great cultures, great capacity.
And you think they'll keep growing at 7% or not too far from that number?
I think that the general idea of Robert Barrow from 20 years ago that every time you approach by half the way to the frontier you lose about two percentage points of growth is about right.
And it will apply to them.
And of course.
What's your biggest disagreement with Krugman today?
Well, today, yesterday's column.
Please tell us more.
He wrote a ridiculous column yesterday.
But again.
But what do you disagree with?
It's an interesting story.
Yesterday he wrote about how horrible the UK government has been and how they're going
to possibly win an election by telling the story that they've done a decent job economically.
He's had a kind of venom for the government.
My response, which I'll publish soon, is called something like,
Krubman's anti-Camarin vitriol, because it really is vitriolic.
And what I did was just put the UK recovery next to the U.S. recovery, and they look almost
identical.
And he loves the Obama recovery, and he hates the UK, and he says, one's awful, one's great.
It's ideology.
It's not fact-driven.
And you're more skeptical about fiscal stimulus than he is, right?
Well, he has told.
his readers two times a week for five years the simplest version of the crudest Keynesian model,
which is the way out of a downturn is fiscal stimulus. I worked on macroeconomic adjustment
programs in dozens of countries and for 35 years. I don't buy it. And so I think he really took a complicated sub-
and said there's one answer and it comes back to the same approach.
Differential diagnostics.
Yeah, and basically, by the way, he did, in my view, two things wrong.
He misdiagnosed the 2008 crisis and second then gave the wrong prescription to it.
And the misdiagnosis in my view is that it was not a Keynesian animal spirits crisis,
meaning that suddenly there was just a collapse of investment and the
you needed fiscal stimulus to undo it, it was two things, I would say.
It was, if you want to classify it, it was a Hayekian displacement from a credit boom.
But even that wasn't enough to lead to a crisis.
it was Lehman Brothers failing in September 14, 2008,
that drove a financial panic.
And addressing a financial panic is a condition
that needs to be addressed as its own pathology.
And that's my view, that if you approached it that way,
because I remember arguing with Summers that weekend
and many weekends after that,
approach it as unlocking the financial panic,
not as the need for reaching a $1.6 trillion deficit in 2009.
Just get credit going again.
In that case, I think Bernanke, by the way, did the right thing,
which was flood the market with liquidity,
make extraordinary purchases, QE, all the rest.
I thought it was the right policy in 2008-9,
not the fiscal stimulus, because I didn't think it would work,
I didn't think it was necessary,
I thought it would lead to big diversion of attention
and public investment actually from longer-term things,
which in a way is how I would interpret our recent political history.
In other words, Obama used his political capital for the wrong thing
in that fiscal stimulus.
But in any event, I have disagreed with Krugman,
all through these years about this, and he kept saying,
we're in a depression, we're in a depression.
And then when we started to recover, I said, oh, we're recovering.
No, no, we're still in a depression.
And then when we really recovered, he said, just as I said,
we recovered because we had this 2009 stimulus.
We recovered in the context of a significant fiscal cut, actually.
Not what he recommended, because fiscal policy
wasn't the decisive element of this business cycle.
We have about five minutes left.
I'll give you two questions, and you can divvy up
the time for them as you wish.
The first is to tell us a bit about your new work
on rise of the robots.
And also, do you view this as a description of what's
happening already or a prediction for the future?
And second, tell us how to fix graduate education and economics.
The floor is yours.
We'll also learn something about your priorities.
Okay.
So, robots.
It may be the same answer for you.
No, very, very quick.
Yeah, robots could teach our classes too.
Very quick on robots.
Fascinating.
I'm a, you know, I'm a technophile and a techno-believer, and I do believe that we are in a very rapid assent of information technology.
And I believe that it is displaced.
lots of jobs and that it is one of the reasons for the low wages, the stagnation of real
earnings in the economy because the path of manufacturing employment, which we talked about,
has shrunk considerably, chronically. More will come. It will also spread through the service
economy as well. You don't need baristas in Starbucks.
We will walk in soon to a Starbucks, and our iris will be scanned,
and your default mode of a mocalate-venti will come out automatically of a machine,
and you'll take it out the other door.
They'll predict which days you're going to come, even, right?
Pardon me?
They'll predict which days you're going to come.
Yeah, they'll have a very good idea.
They'll welcome you by name, of course, as you arrive,
but we were expecting you're 10 minutes late.
Is everything okay, Mr. Sadd?
because Google will know where you are any moment anyway.
So that's coming, and it will transform fundamentally the labor market.
Now, the interesting conceptual question is, is this a good thing or a bad thing?
Now, as economists, we should say instinctively it's a great thing.
Are you kidding?
We can have the robots do all the work for us, and I believe that's what we've hoped.
ever since leaving Eden, you know,
when we were condemned to work in the fields 10,000 years ago
in the Neolithic Revolution.
We've been trying to escape heavy labor.
And if the robots will do it, fantastic.
But there is this actually deep conceptual question,
which is what is it, there is something right,
actually, theoretically, about the argument
that the demand for labor falls, the wages decline,
and that can actually lead to a downward spiral in our economies.
And so I have a paper from last year with Larry Kotlakov showing how that works.
I have another paper coming out in a couple of weeks that I really like,
showing in an overlapping generations context how you can get weird outcomes.
But what's always true is that with enough government intervention,
of various kinds from old to young, for example,
from capital owners to labor owners,
of course you can make everybody better off
because of pure technological change.
By definition, if properly handled,
can make everybody better off.
So this question of how we're going to handle this transition
is a really interesting one.
I believe it's happening.
I believe it's a fascinating subject for
analysis and research and I believe it's not been studied in very much depth yet.
And that leads me to the second question.
Because it is a good segue.
What do we learn in economics?
And I believe not the right things.
And I'll take just this question.
In my view, whether it's the geography questions or the manufacturing, you know, the geography,
question that you asked about or the robotics or whatever it is what's fascinating
for us in our real lives and in our societal choices is the change that we're
constantly living in during this past 230 years since Watt gave us the steam engine
and we've been in 230 years of relentless change technological change structural
change, societal change, cultural change.
And yet our economics models are basically static,
meant to be timeless.
And if we really want to understand the world,
we need to go deep into understanding what Baxter is doing,
or how Watson, Baxter the Robot, or Watson,
or what really is changing technologically.
Concretely, at the graduate level,
what would you do with that?
So economics, we avoid that, I think, conceptually,
because if you study anything too specific,
it's out of date in 10 years.
So we study general principles.
I think that's epistemologically the weakness of our field
because we want to be the four underlying natural forces
of the social universe rather than studying specific.
So more like the anthropologists?
No, more like the biologists.
So if Watson and Crick had written their 1953 paper saying, assume n base pairs, and they can match by n times
n minus 1 over two combinations, it wouldn't be a very good model of DNA.
But they actually said there are four base pairs and there are two natural matchings and
and it happens to be a double helix.
And we're going to study the detail out of that
for the next 40 years.
Yeah, it's arbitrary, you know.
There could be other DNA.
But we're going to study this one.
Now, economists don't do that,
because we have a harder job, actually, in some sense,
which is that we're not studying a stable environment.
We're studying a changing environment.
So whatever we study in depth will be out of date.
We're looking at a moving target.
To compensate for that by never getting into detail has been our approach.
But we're always behind the curve then.
We never have good answers when they're needed.
And that's what I would like us to study.
I would like economists to be working with engineers,
to be working with public health,
to be working with the medical,
professionals so that we're actually working on the real systems of our time and
adding our pieces to that but understanding and studying that so that we have an
answer to robotics not a pure theoretical model which is nice and fun but
something that can be helpful on that we will close the formal discussion thank you
Jeff we have a bit of time for questions we take those at the
two mics and I will alternate sides.
We accept good questions only, of course.
Also please, if you have a question,
make your way to the microphone.
While people are going to the mic, Peter Betke,
I see you in row two.
Is there a question offhand you would like to ask
while you have the chance?
Okay.
Yes, on this side.
Should I introduce myself first?
Sure.
Okay.
My name is Millette Daniel, and I'm currently
in the master's program for international commerce
in policy. My question is regarding robotics potentially or futuristic speaking, taking over
what would be like the low-skilled jobs at first. What do you think the implications would be on
immigration? The effect on... On immigration due to the like changing labor market?
Well, you know, yes, the robotics are a kind of immigrant, so they're competing with
They're competing with other workers that provide some services that are being replaced by the machines or by the artificial intelligence systems.
So there is a big distributional effect in my view.
Those who own the robots, as it were, whether it's Larry Page and Sergey Brin or others,
make a fortune and those who own the labor that is being substituted see a real decline of their income
Now again
Conceptually the idea that machines could do the heavy lifting for us is a good thing for society
And I had I don't know if it's a real insight or not but
I went to Varunga National Park in Rwanda and
a couple of years ago to visit the great apes, the gorillas.
And you spend this remarkable time in the bamboo forest watching them.
What do they do all day?
They play.
They lie around.
They eat some bamboo shoots.
A little sex now and then.
Basically, it's a pretty leisurely existence.
told by anthropologists that that's not so much unlike hunter-gatherer societies in the pre-Neolithic.
We got into a different mode about 10,000 years ago, became sedentary, human populations rose,
and for the next 10,000 years, people broke their backs trying to stay alive, growing food.
So we got into a kind of mode where basically very, very, very hard labor.
And the big quest of modern times is actually to get out of that hard, heavy physical labor.
That's what everyone in the world wants.
And as soon as you can get out of agriculture, people do.
That's why we're down to 1% of our labor force in agriculture.
It's very hard work.
And when you watch people bent over for eight hours in the fields in Africa today, it's no joy for their lives.
It's extraordinarily difficult.
I say all of this because what machines do, what smart machines have been doing for 200 years, is allowing us to ease that physical burden.
And what robots, we've had robots for a long time now, they're just getting smarter and smarter because they're
of microprocessors now and artificial intelligence,
they're allowing humanity to escape from a very heavy load.
So in principle, this is a nice thing.
This is where we would like to go.
But if it leads to turmoil, massive inequalities
of power and income and wealth, or, by the way,
the other dystopian possible.
possibilities that, which George Orwell depicted,
we already have a mass surveillance state in this country,
probably not so far from here.
I hope they're listening.
I expect every time I pick up the phone,
I used to say, I know, hello NSA, I know you're listening.
And then I was told it's probably six intelligence agencies
listening.
Now, all I'm saying is, like all the things we discuss,
I believe that artificial intelligence and robotics is real, deep, transformative,
potentially for the good, possibly for the bad, and therefore a matter of analysis and choice.
On this side.
California, Governor Brown has recently discussed water issues in California.
When I'm down in Texas, they have dry lakes around Austin,
and they're rationing the last two or three years around there.
I think you mentioned Africa and the dryness in the countries.
How is the water going to do?
to impact our global economies now and is that being yeah so the the water issue is a
pervasive global issue colleagues of mine published in PNAS a few weeks ago and then
another article one on the fact that with climate change the models show that the
the American Southwest and Great Plains are likely to dry very, very significantly during
the 21st century.
The climate models basically show massive water problems in many places in the world.
And for two big reasons, many dry places now, which are often on the descending zone of
convective forces like the Hadley cell.
become drier with climate change because these convective forces become more powerful.
And second, in general, with higher temperatures, evapotranspiration, is faster so the soils dry out.
All of this means that water crises will intensify.
Even without the climate change, water stress is pervasive because population increases
and agricultural demands are huge.
We have 60,000 major dams in the world diverting runoff.
already.
And that means that places, famous places like the RLC,
which dried out irrespective of the climate change
in the past.
Then I can tell you about recent research,
and it absolutely comports with what I see with my own eyes
in many places.
Syria had a huge drought, the biggest in its modern history,
from 2006 to 10.
It led to many social, racial.
ramifications that contributed to the explosion of violence starting in 2011.
And this fact of these ecological crises turning into social catastrophes, I think, is a very real phenomenon.
And we should not presume that somehow we'll just be able to handle this stuff, because I'm talking
told constantly, you know, crisis leads to innovation and solution.
And the truth is that's sometimes true and sometimes crisis leads to catastrophe.
What I'm going to do, I think we have time for two more questions.
I'll take the two sequentially and then Jeff can address the two together as he sees fit.
So don't answer the first right away.
A question here, a question there, and then back to Jeff.
Yes.
So given that a goal of economic development policy is to help low-income countries catch up,
what do you believe the XM bank's role and export subsidies more generally have an economic development,
especially with the knowledge that many of the beneficiaries of XM assistance are firms in countries with rich economies like Mexico, India, Hong Kong?
And the second question.
You said that economics should, in a sense, be more humble about its models,
and economists tend to think that there's a certain knowledge of economics that they know that they have a value at it.
Do you see that that is justified that economists, their economic way of thinking, has some value at it?
Yeah.
So I guess the question on Exxon Bank, I'll just make it more general.
The big returns to investment in the coming decades, in my view, are largely in the low-in-the-middle-income.
countries, not surprisingly, because they're capital scarce,
because they have a big capacity to catch up.
They have a big human need also.
And so in an idealized world, a tremendous amount of finance
would flow from the savings in high-income countries
to capital stock in low and middle-income countries.
Of course, some of that happens, for instance,
to China or to Mexico in the past.
But it's relatively constrained because there are huge institutional barriers, not the least
of which is getting repaid for these loans when they're cross-border.
So institutions which facilitate that kind of international capital flow can be very good at global
improvement.
In my view, we have too few of those.
That's why I'm constantly arguing for both.
more aid, which are grants, but also more financing through institutions because I think
both of these can improve the human condition, make the world safer, help poor countries
get out of their crises and so forth.
And Exxon Bank is not my favorite institution, but I think it's fine.
I think it should be improved.
There are many specific issues of this financing, which I'm not too keen on, but I would
like longer term 20 or 30 years.
loans for infrastructure mainly to low-income countries and Exxon Bank is a little bit of a
model for that but we could do we could do better in terms of what do economists
know a lot is is the answer there is really a lot of powerful insights into two kinds of
issues that are core to economics one is managing scarce resources is a general problem
and the second is how markets function and so both of those are provide a wealth of
useful knowledge for human betterment but what economists tend not to do is
is to get into the details, as it were.
And we think that the general knowledge is sufficient.
And that, I think, is a mistake, because as I've tried
to describe in our conversation now, and as I've
learned in 35 years of work in the field in more than 125 countries,
the context is essential, because we're dealing
with very complex phenomena.
And the complex phenomena do not lend themselves
to slogans or to easy answers
or to single solutions.
They're more like engineering problems
or agronomy problems or health problems.
You have to understand the context,
the technologies you have at hand,
the choice sets that you really have
in order to be constructive in this.
Now, there may be room for a few pure theorists in a field like this.
In my life, I've met a few brilliant geniuses, very few who could sit in an office and think great thoughts and contribute to the world.
It's a very small number, by the way.
And then I've met lots of people who generalize, which doesn't move me because I don't find it helping.
I find it distracting or confusing or misguided or misplaced.
And so for most of us mortals, I think the deep engagement in real problems is crucial.
I wouldn't want to train doctors without the medical students walking the wards with their mentors.
I don't like training economists without them grappling with real problems in real.
places and learning the complexity of the interacting physical, technological, political,
economic, natural systems. It's the complexity of these interacting systems that defines
how we need to respond. We're not training students that way. We're training them in general
principles or in very fancy statistical exercises that actually missed the students.
point and just a final word about that we have so much statistical machinery to ask the
question what can you learn from this data set but that's the wrong question because
the data set is always a tiny tiny fraction of what you can know about the
problem that you're studying and so if you want to know about the problem get
out there and learn about it and don't think that you're going to find it in your data set.
And for that we need a different kind of epistemological approach and a different kind of teaching
approach as well.
I want our students out on the hospital wards, as it were, but that means being out in the
world, working and solving problems and dealing with people across many different fields
and many different parts of our social systems to be able to be able to be able to be able to do.
to aggregate to and integrate into meaningful holistic solutions.
Jeff has a new book out, The Age of Sustainable Development.
He'll be doing signings outside at the reception.
And Jeff, thank you again for so much of your time.
Thanks a lot.
Thanks.
Thank you.
