Conversations with Tyler - Noel Johnson and Mark Koyama on *Persecution and Toleration*
Episode Date: January 30, 2019How did religious freedom emerge — and why did it arrive so late? In their forthcoming book, fellow Mason economists Noel Johnson and Mark Koyama argue that while most focus on the role of liber...al ideas in establishing religious freedom, it was instead institutional changes — and the growth of state capacity in particular — that played the decisive role. In their conversation with Tyler, Johnson and Koyama discuss the 'long road to religious freedom' and more, including the link between bad weather and Jewish persecution, why China evolved into such a large political unit, whether the Black Death proves Paul Romer wrong, scapegoating, usury prohibitions in history, and the economic impact of volcanic eruptions. Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links. Recorded January 17th, 2019 Other ways to connect Follow us on Twitter and Instagram Follow Tyler on Twitter Follow Mark 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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Hello, today we're doing a Conversations with Tyler with two authors of a new book
called Persecution and Toleration, The Long Road to Religious Freedom.
published by Cambridge University Press.
They also happen to be two of my favorite colleagues at George Mason and Mercatus.
They're both very well-known economic historians,
and today we have with us Noel Johnson and Mark Coyama.
We're going to start with Noel Johnson.
Ready?
I'm ready. Thank you for having me on.
A lot of historians have suggested that anti-Semitism picked up in the Renaissance compared to medieval times.
Is that true, and if so, why did that happen?
So by the time of the Renaissance, anti-Semitism was picking up.
So one myth that a lot of people believe is that there was a tremendous amount of religious persecution that was going on during, say, the early Middle Ages to the late Middle Ages, up until, say, 1,200 or 1,300.
By the time you get to the Renaissance, there is more tension that's emerging in Europe, in part because of states.
growing more powerful, rise in state capacity. So states are expanding their territory. States are
attempting to impose themselves more in different parts of life. And this is starting to generate
certain tensions. This is sometimes called the rise of the persecuting state.
If I think of the Renaissance as overall more capitalistic than the Middle Ages, then there's
a kind of paradox that arises in my mind. It seems that across countries at any point in time,
the more capitalistic countries seem to be more tolerant.
The Dutch Republic later, the Netherlands, England, United States.
But when you view it as a time series,
it seems that you get more capitalism or more advanced state structures
and then more anti-Semitism.
How do I square those two tendencies, or am I wrong?
No, I don't think you're wrong.
So part of this whole process, as we go through in the book,
I like to think of it as three phases that Europe is going through.
And they're not necessarily the same phases that every other part of the world has to go through.
But in Europe, you have an initial phase where individuals are being categorized according to identity rules.
They're being placed into legal categories and social categories that it's based on things like their religious identity.
Jewish communities are one of the easiest groups to identify this with.
They're forced to live in the same place.
They're forced to wear different kinds of clothes.
they can do different sorts of occupations.
So this is an equilibrium at first, and during this time, you observe relatively little persecution of these groups.
And one reason is because they're just not, they're in their place.
And so there's not the same tension, you know, that's being generated there.
And also, they're serving a purpose in this often for Jews, for example, in the sense that they are raising money for non-Jews.
So for towns, they might grant Jews the monopoly right to lend money, but then, of course,
Jews make monopoly profit from lending at higher interest rates.
But of course, the Jews don't get to keep this money, and it's taken by, say, the town
burgers and then they're taxed.
This is actually a rather pernicious equilibrium because you also get a cultural byproduct,
which is that Jews are perceived as Shylock's, you know, lending at excessive interest rates
and this generates anti-Semitism, which in turn makes it easier for them to be taxed,
either by the secular authority or by the Christian authorities.
So that equilibrium, you don't necessarily see a tremendous amount of persecution yet.
However, every now and then that breaks down, and you do.
But then what starts to happen as you get into the Renaissance and as you have,
and especially as you get more towards the Reformation, you have states expanding.
So one example that I, and this is the next phase, right, you know, where you're moving out of these identity rules where importantly, you don't have to have strong states in that world. You can rely on, often, you mentioned capital, you can rely on market mechanisms often in order to run your state, right, tax farming, you know, or subcontracting to Jews, you know, to raise money for you, these sorts of things. This puts them in a precarious position, but there's not a tremendous amount of persecution that comes out of it. As you have the states, it's. It's. It's. It's. It's. It's. It. It's. It. It's. It. It. It. It. It. It's. It.
expanding their role, these sorts of institutional arrangements start to break down at the same time.
And this is often when you see the largest amounts of persecution that are taking place.
So what's the key change here that state power is being contested and it's pretty strong?
Or is it something else?
The key point is that you have a situation.
Well, first of all, you have economic dynamism, you know, so that there are other individuals who want to, say, trade, you know, long distance.
and they're running up against Jews for these sorts of things.
You have other people who want to be involved in, say, money lending, you know,
and they're running up against the Jews in these sorts of circumstances.
But you also have, over time, you have sort of, for example, the state may want to,
they might bring in more people, right?
You know, like, you know, conquer more territory.
So the French might do this, say, in the 16th century or 15th century.
And as they're doing this, they are also realizing that they have a lot more different
a lot more identities in their midst than they knew before. And this can generate more persecution.
An example that Mark Ryaman and I have written about in this case would be, say, the Albedegensian
Crusades, to take a non-Jewish example. So this is something that's building at the end of the 12th century,
so at the end of the 1100s. And then by the beginning of the 13th century, you have the French state
expanding its power into the South. And then as they do this, they run into
this group of
a different religious group
which becomes known as cathars
were not necessarily
really that different
but they were different enough
that they could use this
as an excuse to
conquer the territory
and take them over.
So this is a case where
the rules kind of run into
this heterogeneity
right?
And so you get persecution
and that's the state's building power
that's generating
some persecution.
So it's a cross connection
between states building power
there being something
at stake and there's more heterogeneity than there had been in the early or more zero-sum
environment. Right. And then at this point, a state, somebody in the state, because states don't
make decisions, but there's some group in it that has to make a decision, right, about do we want to
impose the old system? Do we want to have the same rules that we had before where we were getting
religious legitimation, but we were trying to adhere to some sort of dogma in doing this, or do we
have to relax the bounds of tolerance? Because we're either running into this more, this greater
heterogeneity because we're expanding or because we have to, in some sense, build our state in a
different way. Okay. So at least for a small group, maybe a small group of bad people, but
scapegoating is a kind of public good. You blame something on a minority say. How does that
public good of scapegoating get produced? So it can either come from the top down or it can come
from the bottom up. But in the period you study, what's the main mechanism? That a political leader
use of scapegoating to increase his power, her power?
Well, this is a complicated question. It can be both. I'll take in a specific example.
So again, if we stick to the 13th century, right, which is right before this Renaissance period
you're talking about, I forget the exact year, but I believe the Jews are expelled from
England around 1290 or so, and as the whole state, you know, does it. We don't know exactly
why this occurs, but there's a lot going on in the 13th century between nobles,
in England, say, and the crown, right? You have Magna Carta at the beginning. You have the first
Barron's War. You have the second Barron's War that are taking place at the beginning of the 13th century.
And what a lot of these wars, these civil disturbances are about, are you have nobles who are having
taxes extracted from them. They're having revenue extracted from them by the king. And these
individuals also know that Jews are involved in the extracer, right? And they want,
to exploit the Jews and take over both the revenue streams that the Jews have and also get rid of some of their debts.
So you asked that in that case, we don't know for sure, but one reasonable explanation that's almost certainly playing a part in the eventual expulsion of Jews in 1290 is that this is a credible way for the king to give something to the nobles so that they...
So it's expelling the competition.
Spelling competition.
So you're really even to expel a useful scapegoat if you can hand out
Right. Although, yes, in this case, but I have to say, I think one of the more interesting questions that somebody can ask that I do not fully understand, and I'm not sure anybody does right now, is why do you expel Jews necessarily?
So we've done, Mark and I have done a lot of work on building data sets of Jewish persecution and Jewish expulsions at the city level and the country level in Europe over a very long period of time.
and a question that I for one don't fully understand is
you don't need to actually kill all the Jews or expel them
in order to extract resources from them.
And in fact, in some way, this is off-equilibrium path, right?
You know, you're no longer in some optimal equilibrium
for both the ruler and for the Jewish community.
And oftentimes, these Jewish communities would be expelled from a city.
They would be invited to come back and they would come back, right?
You know, in five, ten, 15 years, sometimes even shorter,
but that's a little bit easier to understand.
So that's actually, in the case I gave you in England, you know, in the 12-90s, I think I
understand a little bit, you know, about why it might have happened that way.
And I think it was signaling credibility in some political compact between the king and the nobles,
but I'm not sure.
But that's an example of top-down.
Other times, clearly, people are, you just have, say, guilds moving against these Jewish communities.
So an example of this would be in 1614 when the most well-known Jewish persecutions was in Frankfurt on mine.
It was called the Fetmilk massacre.
And Fetmilk was a baker.
He was in guilds.
And he was upset about the terms of the political deal between the city rulers, the city council, and what the guilds were getting.
Okay.
And one of the things that the guilds wanted were the Jews to be expelled, and this was competition in some sense.
And in your investigation, when the weather turns cold and the harvest gets worse, Jews and other groups are persecuted more in these societies.
Sometimes it suggested that the parts of Europe relatively close to Islam were more tolerant of the Jews.
Is that true?
And if so, how does it fit your model?
The Ottoman Empire, I can speak directly to on this, but that's not.
not what your question is you're wondering about parts of Europe. Yeah. So you're like Albania?
Possibly. Bulgaria after it's no longer part of the Ottoman Empire. Yeah, yeah. I actually don't know. I'm not sure I have a good answer for that. The Ottoman Empire, I could talk a lot about the Demi system, you know, and how that works into my thinking on this. But, I mean, aside from, I know something like Albania was part, you know of the Ottoman Empire at one point, right? You know in some of these regions. I know.
and this isn't closer to the Amun Empire in my mind, but Poland has a much different equilibrium
with Jews that emerges. And I have a story for that, but that's not about Islam. What's the Poland
story? And that's fine. I'm interested in the Poland story. Although now I've opened another
trouble. It's a complicated one. But at its essence. Yeah, yeah. In essence, in Poland,
you see over time a gradual movement of Jewish communities from the Iberian Peninsula's
where they initially come in, and then they're moving towards the west. And many are ending up
in Poland, and Poland is often claimed to be a state without stakes in the sense that it's not
a persecuting society in the way that other European areas were. And the story that Mark and I tell
about Poland, and I believe, is that they actually had very weak state authority in Poland. And
And Jews were, in Poland also never really, they experienced something called the second serfdom.
So after the black death.
Give us a time period?
Okay.
Yeah, sure, sure.
Yeah, so after 1350 is when the black death is occurring around then.
And Europe loses about 40% of its population to this bacterial infection that spreads through.
And as anybody who's taken, introductory economics might suggest, when the labor supply goes down by a lot, you know, with 40% of,
Europe dying, then wages are going to start going up. And this means bargaining power of
peasants relative to, say, landowners and so forth that are going to increase. However,
what economists often don't take into account is one response to this might be for people in
power to double down on keeping peasants under their thumb. So the second serfdom in Eastern Europe,
Poland, I'm thinking in particular, this is that instead of getting better,
deals, the peasants were made, they were put under even greater submission after the
Black Death because they were not able to get the market wage.
So power played a role there with the nobility.
And the nobility would often take advantage of Jews' skills and, say, monitoring labor,
keeping books, these sorts of things to help them run this situation.
So you have sorts of court Jews, right, Jews who were integrated into that power structure
in that area. Not all of them by any means. And the story changes dramatically, you know, as you move
into the 19th and 20th centuries. But Poland never really goes through these transformations of
developing state capacity. And Jews remain in this identity equilibrium in Poland, which insulates them
from the persecution that we observe at the time. Like so, say, 14th century, 1500s up to 1800s or
so that we see in the other parts of Europe.
But, of course, you don't get the emergence of a true form of tolerance,
and this comes back, much, much worse, in the 19th and into the 20th century.
You mentioned the Black Death. Let's go back to 1347, which I think is when it all starts.
What institutional changes did the Black Death bring to Western Europe?
That's a big question.
But kind of the simplest answer for someone who knows nothing.
Yeah, so the simplest institution.
changes that are coming about because of the black death are going to be related to. So what I've
looked at, or first of what happens to Jews in the Black Death, but more broadly, what's occurring
is you lose a tremendous amount of population. And it's a pure demographic shock in this sense,
which we don't often see in history. And this is going to change the bargaining power, the relative
bargaining power of people with workers, you know, compared to nobles, you know, or people who
are running states and cities and these sorts of things. And so you're going to see more power,
you know, for these individuals. Well, one of the biggest changes that's going to happen is you're
going to see the emergence of more trading cities in the north relative to the south. And this is
going to play a big role in generating the economic equilibrium that comes about for the next
couple hundred years. But the main thing that's going on with institutional change is going to be
this shift in the bargaining power that's letting peasants have more power relative to nobles.
If the Black Death raised wages, does that mean that immigration today lowers wages?
Not necessarily. So yeah. You would think, right? So the Black Death, first of all, this was,
we have a hard time, I have a hard time wrapping my head around the numbers. So this is almost half of the
population that is dying. And it's not occurring in a uniform way across all of Europe. Some cities
disappear. Some cities get hardly affected by this, which is interesting for other reasons.
But it's a huge shock. And I don't think we really have examples in the modern period of immigration
on that level. And I know from the literature on immigration, which I'm not an expert in, but typically
these movements are not so large that we...
see them radically affecting wages in the way that I'm talking about. I mean, these are, you know,
initially when the Black Death hits, it's a, the world is ending, right? You know, you have wages,
you know, wages don't go up. Production just breaks down, right? You know, like every second person or
so is dead, right? You know, and so this, there's, there's disintermediation, like, to use a
modern word, like in a massive way, right? Yeah. But, but wages go up at all.
Does that mean Paul Romer is wrong about increasing returns?
you might think, well, you lose half your people. Society falls apart. Everyone's wages fall.
Yeah, yeah. Clearly, that's not what happened, but it's what I would expect if you asked me a priori.
So Paul Romer's wrong. There are not increasing returns. You can just have higher wages and be much smaller.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. So I think Paul Romer's right. And in fact, I think one of the things about the Black Death that's nice is that we can test some theories of increasing returns using it.
Something that, again, Mark Graham and Remy Yedwaab and I have been working on is looking at the Black Death.
as a test of theories of urban agglomeration,
which is very much related to increasing returns
in the way that you bring up.
So one thing that you can look at,
if you want to tell whether or not increasing returns
are one of the main reasons why you have cities
in the place they are, that is, are people in cities where they are
because that's where all the people are, right,
is you can take the people away
and then see if they move to a different location
that might have something tied to geography
or tied to space, which is better.
So, for example, you might,
what I just mentioned is that there is a general shift towards northern trading networks. We know
because of what we've been looking at that the Hanseatic cities, which is a trading network
that exist on the Baltic in the north of Europe, those cities recovered much more quickly
than cities in the south. Cities tied to the old Roman road network that's centered on the
Mediterranean, for example. And this makes sense if you think that trade had been shifting with
wool trade, for example, over time, you know, since the collapse of Rome. But then if you have
increasing returns, you're not going to immediately see this shift in the urban network. But if you take
away, on average, 40% of the population of the cities, then this allows you to let people reshuffle.
Right. And in effect, this did happen to a certain extent.
Confiscating land from the church during the French Revolution, did it enhance economic value or not?
I believe it did. Why?
And so I get in trouble for this because on the one hand, so what happened, right, you know, during the French Revolution is that the state, well, the revolutionaries decided that they needed money, right, you know, to issue. And so they issued these things called Assignia. And they wanted to back it with a real asset. And so the real asset that they decided to back this paper money with was land confiscated from the church. They also took a bunch from emigre, but that's a slightly different story that we can talk about if you want later. But the church land they take.
And there's a tremendous amount of land owned by the church in France.
It approaches up to 7% or so of the land that's there.
And then they issue this paper money initially.
They backed on this.
Then they do this.
And then they have an auction, you know, to distribute this land.
So I get in trouble because sometimes people hear me say that the auctions of this land was good.
And they say, well, he's just a GMU economist and markets are always good.
And that's good.
But you have to remember they also confiscated all the land.
Right.
So there's two things going on here.
So they distribute this land by auction, okay?
And when they do this, auctions are pretty good mechanisms to put an asset into a hands of somebody who values it most.
And there's an active secondary market that goes on for this land.
And the way that my co-authors on this paper, who are Teresa Finley and Raphael Frank, the way we think about this process is that you have a set of feudal institutions and property that exists up to about 17, okay, 90, or something like that.
this, the French Revolution, early phases. And in that feudal system, you have lots of overlapping
property rights. So, for example, if I wanted to build an irrigation canal, you know, or make some
improvement to my land, I might have to negotiate with multiple parties to do this because they all
have some stake in what I'm doing to my land. So everybody is having these institutions wiped out,
in effect, you know, when the revolution comes. However, it's only a subset of
the properties that are immediately put on the market and then auctioned off to individuals and
falling into the hands of the people who value them most, which what we find is that those people
ultimately started to consolidate the land, and they also started making investments in things
like irrigation and drainage and having better crop rotation systems and so forth. So what that really
is, it's a story about what economists are familiar with the Coast theorem. So the Coast theorem stated
It simply says that if there are low enough transactions costs, low enough costs of trading,
then it doesn't actually matter who owns an asset initially.
People will trade it and you'll end up with the best possible arrangement.
We could grab a church on Fifth Avenue in Manhattan.
Sell it off and GDP would go up, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But what economists often ignore is that the transaction costs are very high, right, you know, to doing this.
And what we have in the French Revolution is a natural experiment where, for reasons unrelated to what I'm interested in,
the revolutionaries decided to use a market mechanism to put a whole bunch of assets out there with very low transaction costs.
And you see that the productivity of agriculture in places that had more church land that was auctioned off was higher than places that didn't have this happen up until the end of the 19th century, as we might expect, because over time, all these assets are being reallocated and investments are ultimately being made.
So I do think in that case, this was a circumstance where you had a land redistribution that led to greater efficiency.
Why is Switzerland so wealthy and successful relative to the rest of Europe?
That's a good question.
I had a theory about this once, and I didn't pursue it.
But my theory when I was in graduate school was that they were getting a large amount of specie flow because they had mercenaries out there.
And so they were being paid in gold.
And then this created nascent institutions for banks, right?
or gave them some advantage.
I didn't actually look into that more deeply.
So I don't know if that's true.
But Swiss banking has declined a lot, as you know.
It's also too early.
Like, you know, they were very poor, right?
You know, up until, you know, the chemistry
and these sorts of the chemical revolution and so forth.
So I said that was my old theory, right?
I'm not sure.
But it's much higher GDP per capita
than most of the rest of Western Europe,
maybe Luxembourg aside.
Yeah, yeah.
And I think they have a, it's a really interesting thing.
they are able to, they act like they're a culturally homogenous territory, which they are,
but at the same time they have four different language groups packed into a relatively small place.
They have a lot of ruggedness, but they still interact, right?
And there's also, if you look at the literature from, you know, people have looked at, say,
preferences over welfare.
And there are big differences between German speaking and French speaking and Italian speaking regions within Switzerland.
So I don't know the answer.
I think there's something in there that has to do with size,
that it can work in a place, the size of Switzerland.
They definitely have a national identity, which is very strong.
And I'm not sure exactly how that emerged.
One could tell stories about the Swiss being surrounded, you know, for so long
and cutting off the mountain paths, you know, and acting in this way that sometimes I hear these.
But otherwise, I actually don't know the answer.
Large volcanic eruptions earlier in history.
From an economic point of view, what's the single most interesting thing we know about them?
So I think what's very interesting about the volcanic eruptions is that we are discovering more and more that they may have played a large role in political change that occurred.
So Joe Manning at Yale and I believe his graduate student who unfortunately I forgot in his name have been doing work on
they looked at a series of volcanic eruptions that led to the end of the pharaonic empire,
so that ended around 30 or 60 BC, I forget, right around that time.
But that was an empire that lasted for 300 years before,
but they experienced all these crop failures,
and then when to look at it, you see that in Indonesia,
all these major volcanic eruptions were happening in perfect timing,
with these crop failures that were taking place.
And actually, they can tell from looking at the Nile, you know,
and how much it's flooding and things.
we also know.
But politics becomes nastier when the volcano goes off?
Well, if you think about the Egypt case, which is manning, this is a circumstance where you have,
I believe it's low rainfall, right?
And so this causes...
And which eruption?
Which year is this?
This is around 60 or 30 BC.
I forget exactly when...
But it's a series of them around that time.
And this is when you basically don't get the flooding of the Nile Delta, right?
you know, the Nile region, and then this creates a collapse in agriculture,
and then this creates revolts, you know, on the Nile at this time,
and that's creating political pressure.
Another example, you know, of this happening, although one has to be careful.
Another volcano that went off was in 1257, Samalas.
And so this one, I've looked at a little bit, and actually other people, you know,
have been looking at this as well.
The Samalas is happening right around the time of these bare.
Barons Wars, you know, that I was talking, particularly happens right before the second Barron's
War. And while people have been looking at it, you see that it's, the timing's not perfect,
but it did pile on additional agricultural pressure on these nobles at a time when they were all
discontented with the king's power. But they might have been individually upset before, but now
they're all becoming upset at the same time because you have crops failing. The king's still acting for,
revenues, right? And they all are feeling the pressure at the same time. And you end up getting a
coordinated political action against the rulers. Now, as it turns out, there happened to be bad
weather occurring in the two years previous to Somalus as well. And so this wasn't just the volcano
in that circumstance. It was the volcano in addition to some other bad luck. But it's the
environment, the climate, playing a role and taking an agency role in generating political change.
and then through coordinating activity that I think is interesting.
I think there's also something interesting to be said that these events,
these large climatic events and large epidemiological events that I'm talking about,
they also have a bias in that they tend to be worse
when you have places that are networked together and people that are integrated.
And so you could also look at, say, 1815, there's another big volcano that goes off that's called Tambora.
And in the case of Tambora,
you have market integration more or less within Europe by 1815, meaning that when you have idiosyncratic shocks, climate shocks, hitting places across Europe, you tend to have trade smoothing those over.
And so you don't see it in grain prices very much or anything like this.
But when you have something like Tambora, which is a VEI 7, it's a very, very large volcano, the largest since Somalas, right?
in the 13th century, would go off, it shuts down, it makes it snow in Maine and June, right,
and all over the world because of all the particulates in the air and so forth, blocking the sun
in April, both 1816 and in 1817.
And you see very much in that circumstance the markets can't handle it, right?
And so another project that I've been working on actively is trying to put together as much information as I can about that circumstance.
about that event, and to basically see what was the effect that it had on these markets,
what sort of effects did it have on how people were impacted with their health,
and basically to ask questions about how robust market institutions are to dealing with,
basically, correlated supply shocks that are very, very large.
And we really don't have many like that, you know, so I find that interesting as well.
Returning to your work on tolerance, a speculative question.
if you think of prejudice as having become worse when some stakes are higher, and in some ways,
states are stronger, and there's more heterogeneity on the table, are you optimistic or pessimistic
about tolerance today? That is, do you think we've cleared some hurdle and we're never headed back,
or do you think it's back and forth? I'm optimistic. Why? I don't think, so I'm optimistic about
the United States and other well-established liberal democracies. I don't think we're,
we're going to head all the way back to a situation where, I mean, so the biggest danger is a totalitarian danger, and we've already seen that happen.
And that is totally, that is completely a danger, right?
I do worry about some sort of Nazi type phenomena, you know, which could occur in like a Holocaust or something like this, and that's, that can occur.
However, I think there is a general sense that's been absorbed into the culture, you know, that,
this is no longer a thing that is acceptable. And I think that is a strong sense that still
exist. And I think there are a lot of states that also feel strongly about this. I mean,
even if you look at World War II, the worst atrocities that occurred against Jews, they
happened in the regions that had states that were weakened at the time during World War II.
And it was somewhat hidden. This is a point made by Timothy Snyder. You know, it's not my own. And so
that doesn't say, I mean, the Germans played a big role and they had a lot of
high, very high state capacity. But I mean, Hannah Arant also has talked about similar points.
It's stateless people that are the greatest risk, right? And if you have strong states in place,
you're going to tend to have less of the persecution taking place, especially in the states
can also work against each other. What I'm most pessimistic about is in a developing country context,
that I don't see any reason why a developing country, say, Africa, is going to decide to adopt liberal values about toleration just because they observe them in another place.
I think they have to go through a somewhat similar process of building up state capacity and running into these practical reasons why a system of intolerance doesn't work in order to get there.
And this can be very hard.
And I think we also push things too hard as a Western society in terms of development.
And sometimes, I like to tell my students about it. In England, the glorious revolution is in 1688, which is when we typically place them as having their representative revolution. However, they adopt things like the test acts, which are preventing Catholics from matriculating at Oxford or from sitting in parliament, you know, all the way up until, without, you know, being Catholic, right, you know, all the way up until 1828, you know, is when these things are eliminated. And so,
When we try to, say, jump the, jump the card, you know, go too fast in a place and say, well, you need to have women's rights now.
You need to have, you know, you need to respect all these different groups in your society.
In addition, you know, to adopting institutions of capitalism, these sorts of things, that's not the way it occurred, right?
In places like England, you know, there was actually a lot of restraint, you know.
And it doesn't mean we have to wait 200 years or 150 years, right, you know, to move through these phases and other parts of the world.
but I think it's often realistic and destabilizing for us to think we can.
I mean, the other thing to keep in mind is the amount of homogeneity that was present in a lot of these European states
when they went through these transitions was very high.
If you read about the United States, you know, for example, Albion Seat, right?
You know, you know, this basically four different groups from England that came in
and then were asked to eventually adopt, you know, the U.S. Constitution as we have it today.
and these were all white men who were Christian, right?
And furthermore, they were Protestant for the most part.
So this is an extremely homogenous group that we, and then they barely got it.
So if you look at the literature on voting at the constitutional convention, you know,
one of my favorite footnotes in the academic literature is from a paper that looks at
the economic and ideological factors that generate voting at the U.S. constitutional convention.
And it claims that, you know, according to their model, if three or four more back-conflicts,
farmers from Virginia had showed up, you know, it might not have worked, right? You know, so it was a
fairly close run deal. And so I think we often have a lack of appreciation for the amount of
homogeneity and the amount of time it took in order to get the political arrangements to take
seed, right? You know, in modern, what we are, the modern Western liberal democracies.
Close out your part of this conversation. Are you game for a quick round of overrated versus
underrated? Sure.
Okay, number one, amuter astronomy, overrated or underrated?
It is underrated, but it depends on where you live.
So amateur astronomy is hard to do in a place like Bethesda, Maryland, you know,
which is where you live.
Which is where I live.
You have to drive a little bit if you want to see the stars,
but you can still look at planets and the moon and things like this,
and I think people don't look at them enough.
I got into it for different reasons that I've stuck with it.
Initially, I got into it because I thought it was, you know,
with science, you know, and I would read, you know, the foundation series by Azagasmov for things
like this and I was very interested, right, you know, and just learning about the stars and it made
me feel good about myself. But then over time, it really does give you appreciation for
the scales involved, you know, with the universe, it gives you a sense of, a sense of proportion.
I mean, what they say, the closest planet to us right now is Trappist 1 or something like that.
It's 37 light years away. That means if we want to talk to them, it's going to take 80 years,
assuming we can. And so these are scales that I have a hard time appreciating, but I think
everybody has a hard time appreciating even if you sit under the sky occasionally and look at these
stars. So amateur astronomy is a dying hobby. You can tell that by going to a meeting.
Right. You know of amateur astronomers, they tend to be males who are about 20 or 30 years older than I
am, you know, at these. But nonetheless, I think it's something that, if we could get the lights to be
turned off like they do in Switzerland at 11 o'clock at night. I think we would all benefit from that.
Max Weber, overrated or underrated? Rated about right, perhaps overrated. I think he has a lot of really
good ideas and he had them very early on. I've used a lot of what he's written about. So rated about
right. Protestant ethic and spirit of capitalism had a lot of really good ideas in it, even if he might
have been right for the wrong reason, right? You know that Protestant's built more schools probably,
Right, and it wasn't that there was a true ethical change.
His concept of bureaucracy, right, and has been very useful for my thinking as well.
Jared Diamond's book, Guns, Germs, and Steel.
I think rated about right.
He received a lot of attention for that book.
I tried to switch in my teaching to using Yuval Noah Hari's book on Sapiens,
and I found it wasn't a good substitute for Diamond.
Diamond takes an approach, which I think is it's appealing.
and even if it might have flaws,
I still think Diamond is one of the best books out there
describing the overall arc of geography and history over time.
Last call, European Union, overrated or underrated?
It is overrated for economics, underrated for politics, in my opinion.
So when the EU was first being generated,
it was, to my understanding, for two reasons.
right, to basically to keep the Germans in check and for steel policy. And I think they do a lot of
bad things still for economics, and I'm not sure the instabilities that are generated because the
EU are not awesome, very sometimes. And they also have generated a new source of rent seeking.
So, for example, if you're a French farmer and you want protection for your cheese, you can go to the
EU for it. You don't have to go to France. So that's not always a good thing.
politically, though, I think there's still a great value to having an organization in Europe,
which is formally meeting from time to time, and discussing these sorts of issues.
And I don't see NATO doing that necessarily in the same way.
Noel Johnson, thank you very much.
Thank you.
And now we turn to Mark Koyama, also a colleague of mine.
He's an economics professor at George Mason.
I asked your co-author Null this question.
I'd like your take.
it's often alleged by historians that as the Renaissance came about, capitalism was more prominent.
Prejudice against Jews, other minorities went up when there was more capitalism.
Is this true? And if so, what was the mechanism?
It's an interesting question. So, whenever not capitalism is really on the rise, particularly in the 18th centuries, is it's slightly hard to ascertain in my view.
Because I think of actually the 13th century, the commercial revolution, 12th century, as a high point of expansion of New York.
city's being founded in northern Europe of
Italian merchants going to the
Middle East. There's the Crusades.
But the Crusades initially
kind of religious violence,
you know, except a lot of religious violence and intolerance.
But actually as a crusader's come back
to Europe. They're bringing with
knowledge of erratic numerals and
it's actually quite, it's a cosmopolitan flavor
to that period, to the high middle ages.
Then you get the 14th century in the Black Death,
which is a terrible economic collapse.
But it's an economic collapse which changes
the ratio between
labor and land and so incomes go up. Incomes go up and that gives rise to some of the
changing kind of that changes the nature of European economy in certain ways which does favor
the rise of art. Incomes are higher. People can afford luxuries so maybe cities are to some
extent growing. Whether or not the Renaissance is a period of dramatic economic change is I think
open to questioning. A lot of the merchant ventures.
and trading ventures are still controlled by chartered companies or by royal agents.
So I don't see it as a decisive break in the same way that I see, say, the post-18th century
or post-17th century industrial revolution period.
I see that as a seismic change in the scale of economic activity.
The Renaissance is not clear to me that's qualitatively different from what went before.
So the separate question is why is violence and intolerance?
religious violence going up.
And I see that in terms of more conventional, like non-economic factors, the printing press,
the reformation, those types, and other shocks you see.
That's what I see as being associated with this kind of a greater intolerance in the Renaissance.
So you think the best story we have about changes in toleration for this period.
It's ultimately technology-driven, printing press, communications?
Technology interacts with political institutions.
So it's hard to say they're totally separate, but yes.
There's a literature, historical literature, about the formation of religious identities in this period.
And it makes the point that people, the claimers, that people, John Bossy is one person associated with this, the Reformation Christianized Europe.
Because prior to the Reformation, people had their local saints and they knew they were Christian in some background sense.
but it wasn't at the forefront of our identity, whereas with the Reformation, it's like,
I'm Catholic, you're Protestant.
This is, this becomes more sanient.
And that's partly due to technology, a printing press.
If we take early modern Europe and we look at variations in the degree of toleration
of minority groups, what's the most reliable piece of knowledge or understanding we have
about the causes of that variation?
I'm going to try and explain it in a hopefully it's not too complex a way.
there are two different types of kind of state or society in early modern Europe and it's difficult we have to like almost view them separately so for example Poland Poland is sometimes celebrated by historians the state without stakes which is not exactly true there are some people who are killed for religious beliefs in early 16th century Poland but actually there are a lot of Protestants Protestantism is spreading and there's no repression of Protestantism and so it looks tolerant why is it tolerant well it's tolerant because there's no strong central authority
the inability very powerful.
So if a nobleman is sympathetic to Protestantism, he can protect it.
There's no state capable of enforcing religious conformity.
So that's a reliable predictor, like a weak state, federalism, fragmentation,
is a reliable predictor of an absence of persecution.
But what you see subsequently going forward is that's not a strong predictor of getting
a liberal state later or enduring religious freedom.
Whereas England and France are quite different, they see extremely.
religious violence in the mid-16th century as rulers attempt to maintain or restore religious
conformity. But in most societies, once the tipping point is reached where it's seen as
impossible, too costly, to restore religious conformity, then actually you've got to set about
this task of building society where there will be religious differences in religious pluralism.
This is 150, 200-year process. So England in the 16th century is nowhere close to being there,
but it's on this road, which is going to lead to eventually say by the late 17th century, early 18th century.
In British history, did the theoretical arguments for toleration even matter?
So there are a number of famous debates about religious tolerance, John Locke, Bale, in France.
Or is this just a side show irrelevant?
What's the power of ideas?
Yeah, so it's a great question.
So there's no evidence that the more radical kind of arguments for religiously.
toleration. So this is associated with people like Sebastian Castellio in the 16th century. There's no
evidence they have much influence. There's no evidence of a radical Anabaptist. The Anabaptists,
again, they want separation of church and state. And those ideas abhorrent to all right-thinking
people in 16th century England. So what gives rise to greater religious freedom? It doesn't
seem to be the personality of rulers, for example, their beliefs. So Elizabeth I,
in her private beliefs is we think, you know, she claims not to want to make windows into men's souls.
So she seems quite eclectic and sympathetic to pluralism.
But her state is basically a police state which kills up to 300 people basically for being Catholic in the 16th century.
So why does it change?
I mean, I don't think the intellectual debates are the forefront of what's going on.
The political economy seems much more important.
So Charles V. Second doesn't, again, he doesn't really.
care about persecuting non-believers, but parliament in his period is a royalist parliament,
they're desperate to maintain the Church of England, so they're very cruel towards Quakers and
so on. So, yeah, I down, me and Noel together in our book, we don't think the intellectual
ideas are meaningless. We don't think they pay no role, but they're always being mediated
through the incentives of the actors who have political power. I can see two possible
sets of cases. One is I see a number of somewhat weaker states that maybe persecute more or they're
less tolerant or they're maybe semi-fascistic. If you look at parts of Eastern Europe today,
you might see that trend, maybe in a modest form, but somewhat. And then there's other cases,
maybe like 17th century Japan, a relatively strong state for Asia, East Asia, and it persecutes
Christians a great deal, in part because it is a strong state. So if either weak states or strong
states can persecute minorities more, what's the variable that determines which of those cases you
get? Yeah, that's a great point. Yeah, so I actually think I don't really like, I need to maybe
find the perfect terminology of this, but like the strong state is not, I guess, my favorite
terminology. It's why I'm always prefacing this of something like a liberal state, a state which
is like in some sense committed to liberal values. The Japanese case is interesting. It's the most
thorough suppression, at least of Christianity, but I'm aware of.
historically and it's done precisely because of the state has, whether it's a strong state
is a difficult thing to measure, but it has sufficient coercive power relative to the minority
in question. And once they seal, they pay a huge cost, by the way. So the main motivation
for sealing off the borders of Japan is to stop Christianity seeping through. So this is a state
which is willing to pay huge costs to do this. It's not a strong state in the sense of the Tokugawa
shogun are actually only controlled part of the country. The independent Damia have a lot of power,
but they're strong relative to religion and that the rulers seem committed. They see Christianity
such a threat that they're committed to pay this tremendous cost of isolating the entire country
from trying to do so. And then obviously 20th century examples, you have a Soviet Union represses
Christianity very very comprehensively and you have the Nazis as well. So obviously the power
of the state is going to be necessary. You need a strong state to really completely suppress a religion.
On the other hand, as a precondition for enforcing liberal values or allowing liberalism to flourish, I'm just not convinced that you have many examples of extremely weak states where this takes place.
Because it seems to me that very weak states like, say, the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth are too easily captured by a few nobles or vested interests.
And so the state in some sense becomes privatized, and the best you'll get is something like feudal.
it's some kind of feudal, almost feudal arrangement.
And that's not going to be, or historically at least,
that's not been a conducive environment for either markets actually to flourish in my view
or for human freedom more generally to flourish.
If I take your book with Noel and whatever it is you've added to our understanding of toleration,
if you were to boil that marginal contribution down to a sentence,
what would that sentence be?
general rules.
So in some sense, that's perhaps a truism.
So I'm going to have to break your, I'm going to have to like expand on one sentence.
So perhaps many people would agree.
We're not the first people to say that rule of law,
to general rules, treating people equally before the law,
is like the sine qua of a state which allows kind of human individuals to flourish.
And I call states like that liberal states.
What we add to that is then the religious story.
So that religion is at the heart of this.
this rise of liberal states, and it's of the heart of the rise of kind of these, the shift
from identity rules to general rules.
Again, I'm going way over one sentence.
I think, so that's the bottom line, what we add.
I'd also say that we, another contribution we make is distinguishing between states
where there's no persecution or there's like de facto, there's some bunch of religions
and people are not being burnt alive all the time.
We didn't distinguish that from the idea of a liberal state, which is committed to pluralism,
to free expression, free thought, and a multiplicity of religions.
And what's the single best piece of evidence for that marginal claim?
So I think we're contrasting the experience of, like, so Europe or the West, even today,
doesn't conform to our kind of ideals, liberal ideals, but there's something we can agree upon
about modern liberal societies, which makes them very distinct from, say, other,
examples where people like historians have argued there was so-called religious toleration,
such as the Roman Empire maybe or Spain under the Islamic caliphate, which people claim to be a
golden age of religious pluralism. When you actually look at the details, it's quite different
to what we see in modern liberal societies. And I think we're making the claim that political
philosophers, social scientists who are interested in liberalism or liberal societies haven't
actually done a good job of engaging with the actual history of how these societies emerged.
Sometimes argued that the West has less cousin marriage and thus is less clan-based and perhaps
more free, more democratic, more liberal. Agree or disagree? Broadly speaking, I agree. I think
there's a distinction. The difficulty is it's unpackaging the, there's a package of goods
which come together and prohibiting cousin marriage, which is, this is something the Catholic Church was
during in the in high middle ages or early mid-aged that's part of this package which seems to
seems to arise in western europe and seems to be associated with um with undermining kinship groups
that comparison really rests it's most persuasive when you compare the middle east or islamic
societies with europe i'm not sure it's as persuasive if you want to explain rise of europe
vis-a-vis the rise of or the experience of say china or japan why know less about the prevalence of
cousin marriage for example
Your most frequently cited article is on the origins of anti-usory laws.
Why are there still so many entry usury laws at the state level in America?
That's a good question.
So my best answer to that is just going to be trying to explain why these laws were common.
So there's obviously a widely held moral intuition.
So the initial cause, I think, is often a misunderstanding of why interest exists.
So Aristotle believed the interest was theft.
people think that a certain level of interest might be justified,
but there's some level can't be explained through underlying kind of economic fundamentals.
And it's a misunderstanding of kind of fact that we have different preferences,
different attitudes towards intertemporal smoothing.
And in some situations,
the only way I'm going to be able to get alone is if I'm willing to pay a high rate of interest.
So there's an atavistic, very common antipathy towards these types.
That said, I don't have a strong view about,
regulating them at some level. So the fact that we know that in general these
laws are bad doesn't mean in some circumstances like we might want to limit them.
So for example, one of the, you know, there's fair accounts. You can write down a model where
it makes sense under some circumstances if there's severe moral hazard or adverse selection,
perhaps there's some justifiable reason for them. However, just to come back to my paper,
I tend not to think that's the reason. So if you see these interest rates, restrictions in
European history, an economist can come forward with an adverse selection or moral hazard
story which will justify the restriction. But actually, if you look at the history, it doesn't
seem to explain why Europe, for example, banned all interest rates throughout most of the
middle ages. That seems to be a combination of rent-seeking by merchants who could evade these
laws, by rulers who might license some groups often Jews to lend their interest and thereby
collect monopoly rents from that practice.
Why was China as a nation or territory so large, so early in world history?
Yeah, so that's a great question.
So there are several potential explanations, one of which is geographic.
Another one would be, there's also an argument from like the writing system.
But I think the geography story is quite important.
And Jared Diamond was that what?
Gerard Diamond building on people like Eric Jones kind of argued that China's geography.
And essentially there's one, well, there are two.
core geographic regions in China around the Yellow and Yangtze River deltas, which produced a huge
amount of grain or rice. And so if you control those core regions, you can raise large
armies, you can have a large population and dominate the subsequent regions. Whereas the argument
is for Europe, these core regions are perhaps arguably more separated by geographical boundaries.
The limitation of that argument on its own is that geography is static. So it doesn't really
you anything about the timing. And China, the interesting thing about China, in my view,
is not just that it was once unified or unified early, but it's persistently unified. It
reunifies. And actually, interestingly enough, the periods of deunification get consistently
smaller. So there are always periods where it's fragmented, like the warlord period in the early
20th century, but over time it becomes smaller. Europe doesn't seem to have that centrifugal force.
Most of Europe is unified, or a lot of Europe is unified by the Romans, but it's not able to come back together along those lines later.
And the argument that I put forward in an article of Twan Hui Singh and Ju-Co of National University of Singapore is that it's not just the core geographical reasons.
That's part of it, but actually the periodic threat for a nomadic step is another key factor.
So this is geographic because China has a very sharp kind of slope from really productive agricultural land to land which is only fit for horses, for Eurasian steppe.
So China could be invaded very easily from the north by these step nomads, whereas Europe it was much less vulnerable to this.
And that helps to explain why the Chinese state is often a northern state.
So just if I can add, if you think about China today or even China in the past, the really productive land, a lot of
all of it's in quite far south near Shanghai, Yangtzee Delta. The political center of China is near Beijing
or it's from the north. And that's due to this political economy threat from the step. And it's
these periodic step invasions, which we argue responsible for the centralization and almost
the militarized character of the Chinese state through history. And would you be bullish on Chinese
political unity today? I'm not saying you need to think everything in the country will go well,
but just that it will hang together, not only bounce back, but stay more or less as a unified China.
I'm not really enough of an expert on China to have a strong view.
Is anyone?
When I talked to Chinese, I was surprised relative to my priors that they're more separatist than I would have thought before I kind of knew as much about the country.
So, you know, people from, you know, the Shanghai region or people from Guangdong and Hong Kong there, they have more of a regional identity than you might expect.
And they feel that the state, the Chinese state, is quite dominated by northerness.
So the most nationalistic pro-CC Chinese, often from the north.
And it's there that the identity of the Chinese state and the Chinese people are really bound together,
whereas for people on the periphery, it seems less so.
So I would not be, so put it this way, China has fragmented every couple of hundred years in its history.
The most recent one there was still not that long ago.
So I don't see it happening anytime soon.
but in the wake of a disaster or some catastrophic collapse,
you can imagine it happening.
What you can put your money on is the Chinese state is going to be,
it's unthinkable for them.
You know, that's why they're taking on Taiwan becoming part of China again.
Their ideology is based on one China.
Why did China and Japan react so differently to the arrival of the West?
So it's a great question.
I think that there are many factors.
I'll describe the one kind of I've looked at in some of my research with, again,
with Tony Hsiung and Chi Ma Mora.
Gucci, but I think there's several interesting features. So one is that Japan is, so we're going
focus on the size. So the size is very different. That's for stock. China's just fast.
And so even if the most developed parts of China, the Yangtze area, urbanized and commercialized
and I'm probably doing quite well until at least 1750, you have these peripheral regions
which are facing very different climatic and economic conditions. China,
is transformed by both China and Japan are basically insulated from Western threats until the mid-19th century.
Then they face them very, it's very stark.
So it's very quick that you have the ability of Americans and British, stale steam ships into the harbor of Yokohama.
But Japan, it's very small and it's all of Japan is vulnerable.
And so this is a geopolitical crisis of the highest order for Japan.
China, they can initially have, they don't necessarily care about the British.
They don't take them very seriously. It's huge.
And once they do take them seriously, they have to face threats from both Russia.
So the Russians are really pressing in on the Chinese in the 1850s.
And they've got these coastal threats from the British.
And it's very difficult for this traditional Chinese state, which has emerged and developed to protect and dominate the step.
It's extremely, there's no Navy, for example.
It's extremely difficult for that state to address.
adapt to face the threat from Britain and France. Agility is kind of a term, you know, we sometimes
think about it with respect to states as well as individuals, but pre-modern states are not agile.
They can't re-deploy resources, reprioritize. And so the Chinese state really struggles to do
this. Japan also struggles. So Japan undergoes political crisis for 15 years from Perry's arrival
in 1853, I believe it's when the black ships first arrive, to
1868, which is the Meiji
restoration. It's 15 years of total
chaos. And individual
Japanese kind of Damio and
like statelets are like basically going
to war with Westerners. English
ambassadors are being killed. But once
they overthrow the shogunate
and restore the emperor,
they're able, partly
I think because it's a cohesive
territory to
develop this modern state which can respond to
the West. That said, I don't think we have
a total explanation for it. It's still a bit of a
mystery, that they're as successful as they were. There's a large part of the, of that, you know,
we are squared of my explanation about the size and the political history is quite small, I think.
I think a large part of it is very difficult to explain. And one either has to make recourse to luck
to be amazing, you know, some amazing abilities of specific statesmen or to cultural factors,
which are quite difficult. But Cortez was also luck with the Aztecs. To me, it's striking that
you have the British and China, the Spaniards in Mexico,
pulling off miraculous military maneuvers.
And it seems there's some common element there,
maybe lack of a conceptual scheme almost for the victims.
Yeah, but you don't know how to interpret it.
That's definitely true.
The Japanese are, so one piece of research,
which, so the modern historography,
to the extent I'm kind of up to date with it,
on the Japanese,
it emphasizes that they're reading Western texts.
it's so called Dutch learning.
They're increasingly reading the Western text in the 19th century,
and they're paying attention to what happened to China.
So, for example, when the opium war happens,
the Japanese initially think that the British are just kind of like,
you know, they could be swatted aside,
and China would just destroy them.
And so they're shocked.
And initially, the Chinese, initially,
the Chink Court initially sends words to the Japanese
that they've destroyed the British,
and this is like, they're the victors,
and then the Japanese find out the real, what really happened.
And that's a shock to them.
But they get that shock in the 1840s, and they can, they have 10 years or 20 years to adjust to the new realities.
So maybe that gives them something of an edge.
A final thing is the Chinese are a minority Manchu state.
And so I think that really shapes their vulnerability.
They're really worried about a Han uprising, and they have a typing rebellion to deal with.
The Japanese are ethnically cohesive.
Why was England such a coherent nation state so early?
Some people say 13th century.
Yeah, Alan McFarlane is origins of English and a...
individualism. They're certainly, so it's hard to know how far back it goes, to be quite honest, in my view.
You can see nationalist sentiment in England certainly from the 14th century. That's Chaucer.
That's when the English elite start speaking English, the monarchy starts speaking English rather than French decisively.
They stopped speaking French effectively. Some 100 years' wars is important. Now, the question is how much further it goes back before then.
how much is the Anglo-Saxon experience crucial?
And I would bow to experts on this.
But certainly the Anglo-Saxon, England, seems to be a fairly cohesive state.
That's the state created out of Wessex in the late 9th and then the 10th century.
Now, I just don't know enough about how to believe.
English-Ango-Saxon historians think of this as a very modern,
there's a very powerful state for its age.
The Doomsday book testifies to the bureaucratic capabilities of the Anglo-Saxon state,
which the Normans then take over.
So there is something there, which is, yeah,
I don't know quite what causes.
What I should say is I don't know what the...
England ends up being this strong nation state,
and so I don't know if it's just an artifact of that,
but we then look back and see the antecedents
of this strong state in all this early medieval stuff.
Whereas it could be that Catalonia, you know,
had Catalonia become a powerful state,
we could find evidence of it in the early ages.
So there's an element of select...
of survivorship bias.
But I'm definitely always impressed by whatever I read about Anglo-Saxon in England.
What was the most undervalued factor behind the British Industrial Revolution?
There's plenty of theories.
You could cite 20 or 30 factors.
Maybe they all play a role.
But what's being neglected?
Okay, so let's just think about the ones which are not neglected.
So you have natural resources, you have coal.
You have this idea of high-wage economy associated with Bob Allen,
which now seems to be under pressure.
you have stories about imperialism and trade.
I think those are all people understand those.
Perhaps, I mean, I don't know if it's underrated,
but perhaps this cohesive nation state story is part of it.
One noticeable thing about the English Industrial Revolution
is it doesn't occur in a political center.
It occurs in the periphery in Manchester, Yorkshire,
kind of Birmingham, Derbyshire.
And so how many, if we look at like economic miracles or effervescences,
I don't know how many of them arise in the capital region, in the political center,
and how many arise in peripheral regions, maybe more than I think.
But something about English society that allows a bunch of entrepreneurs
to basically kickstart this revolution far away from what's going on in London
seems to be quite important to me.
And it takes many years of experimentation that these industrialists are self-funding,
many of these developments.
They're not borrowing money from...
So London has a sophisticated banking sector, but the London bankers are not financing the industrial revolution.
They're being financed out of savings.
And so it does take a long while to get going, and it's being neglected.
Like, not many people are talking about it in the 1750s, 1760s, 1770s.
I mean, famously, Adam Smith doesn't really talk much about what's happening in terms of industrialization at the time he's writing.
At least since Cromwell, England has been relatively tolerant toward the Jews compared to much of Europe.
and if you're trying to build out a broader theory,
compare some amount of English or British tolerance,
but then compare that to how the Irish are treated
or how the colonies or India is treated.
Is there a unified approach that ties this altogether
or the British just schizophrenic in some way
with respect to tolerance?
I mean, I think my quick answer would be that it's because it's
the British rules in Britain are very different
to rules outside Britain.
So, for example, slavery,
you couldn't have slavery in England, to best of my knowledge,
at least from the 16th century onwards.
So slavery is a huge part of a British empire,
and it's something which is done outside Britain,
but it's not something which is practiced within the kingdom itself,
even in the like 17th, 18th century.
I don't know all the ins and outs of why that's the case,
but the Jews are invited in a favorable time.
so there's a lot of anti-semitism in English.
Strange Shakespeare.
There's a crypto-Jewish doctor of Elizabeth for first
who's hunged drawn and cordial, or burnt alive,
I can't remember which, in the 1590s.
It's a lot of anti-Semitism,
but the Puritans and religious independence
of whom Cromwell is basically the leader,
they identify with Zion and Israel.
They give their kids, Israelite and Abrahamic and Old Testament names.
And the Jews who petitioners,
and Cromwell to settle in England.
A Sephardic Jews from Amsterdam,
they have capital, they have money,
they're allied in the war
against Spain and the Spanish Empire.
And so it's a very politically opportune
moment for them to come and they secure good terms.
And then,
subsequently, there's really not many
problems with them. There's a little bit of,
there's some issues, there's some riots,
but in general, they're allies
with the Protestant state.
They're not many, and they're small,
they're small community. So at least until the late
18th century, there's not really much reason to be really hostile to them, unless you're like
a virine, anti-semit. Whereas other cases, it's a little bit different. So the Irish are coming in
large numbers. They're Catholic and the Catholicism is seen as suspect because of the geopolitical
consequences of it. So they're just less favoured for those reasons. Similarly, the British
behaving in the colonies is very repressive often, but that's, again, the schizophrenia is not within
Britain. It's between what's inside and what's outside.
Today, why have so many parts of Northern England declined so steeply compared to the industrial
parts of Germany, parts of the Netherlands, arguably France? It seems worse in Northern England.
What's your account of that?
So Nick Craft has written some good stuff on this. So the only period when, like,
the South is not the centre of English history of Industrial Revolution. And the wealth of
these industrial cities was remarkable in the late 19th century. And so, and I've been,
to like, you know, a lot of these places.
And some of them, better than others.
So, like, the ones which are big, like Manchester and Liverpool, virtually, you know,
they have cultural amenities, which mean that they're still flourishing parts of them.
And they've actually revived a little bit in the last 20 years, I would say.
It's places like Doncaster and Barnsley, which were often, like, mining towns or one industry
towns, which have really fallen into disrepair.
I don't know enough about the, I mean, Germany, I'm not surprised because German
manufacturing has survived to a much larger extent than British manufacturing. I don't know if
comparison with France or America might be more sanian because you've like coal towns, for example.
And I think coal towns in, you know, in Pennsylvania or West Virginia have done very badly as well.
So the German example would be manufacturing, which has survived much more compared to, say,
these British towns, by the way, have been declining since World War II. So Britain lost,
these are so-called the industries of the first industrial revolution.
They're driving Britain's progress in the 19th century.
We've been in decline since the 1930s, 1920, you think.
If you think of, just take South England for now, the last maybe 30 years,
do you see that as a time of fundamental break where South England has become a fundamentally multicultural society
in a way that will never be reversed and is unprecedented in English history and that will just be swallowed?
Or will that in some way be undone and Brexit is stage one and speculative?
But what's your prediction?
So I have to just first off, I did not predict that Brexit would happen.
And I'm someone who's from the South of England and all the time I spent in the UK, most of it, with an exception of one year in York, was in the South of England.
So this is a, so I have a favourable and optimistic reading of that.
And I think this, the British society, at least what I observed of it, observed of it, is actually fairly successful in integrating most migrants.
But everyone gets a vote on that, right?
Yeah.
Including Northern England.
Yeah.
And my experience is obviously jars with like what you read or see about, you know,
backlashes or antagonism towards European or non-European migrants in the rest of the country.
And so the question is, is it, I don't see how it's reversible.
So, for example, there are many, there many E.E. nationals currently residing in Britain.
And I think Theresa May was pretty bad and not immediately granting them kind of basically
permanent leave to stay. And there are many high school people leaving, but I think there's just
too many of them. Like, there's no way these people are returning to their countries. They've
made their lives in the UK. And so long as they're there, there's, you're not going to go back
to the England of the 1950s, which is like, which is quite boring, at least anecdotally.
You're up for a closing round of overrated versus underrated? Sure. Okay. Number one,
home team advantage in English football, overrated or underrated? Now overrated. So it's saying it's
very sane in the past. It's definitely gone down. And if you look at like the best teams like
Manchester City, they, they'd be very well away from home. And why did it go down? Homefield advantage?
I mean, this is very speculative. But my hypothesis with Jimmy Reed was that in a, so team sports.
So team sports are different to individual sports and home field advantage seems to be more
prevalent in team sports. Now, probably the biggest reason for home field advantage, and it's still
relevant, is swaying the referee. So that's not something we talked about. So you influence the
referee. That's a big deal, especially in like soccer because there's a lot of discreferies a lot
of discretion until very recently there are no video replays. So referee pressure is huge. The other
factor we talk about is when in team sports, there's a shirking problem. And so each individual
player might have an incentive to at the margin, shirk a little bit because they're in a team. And so
if their teams go win to know anyway, they'll under and rest a little bit. And so the argument is
is when you're following your team just by reading the scores and the news,
newspaper or maybe hearing it on the radio.
I don't know who's, I just know the team 1-2-0.
I don't know the individual performances very well.
So that might describe English soccer or football in the 1980s or 70s.
The idea is now with every game being televised.
And also not just that, to be honest, it's also the internet where you have every player's
performance can be rated.
And they know with statistics now how many, how many kilometers each player is running,
then it's much harder for any individual player to shirk.
And the idea was that the high.
the home fan base or audience or stadium, they can observe or they get much better information
on each individual player's performance.
Max Weber, overrated or underrated.
Why?
Well, because most people just know the Protestant theory and they miss report it, whereas actually
his most interesting stuff on like Chinese religion and like ancient Judaism and just the
role of...
The history of music, right?
Yeah, he wrote so much, right?
So, yeah.
Could you pick a well-known person?
painter whom you regard as somewhat overrated?
Plenty. Monnet.
Tell us why.
Well, geez, so it's hard to say.
So I think for anyone who becomes,
if you go to an art gallery, like an art gallery,
you'll see people, I mean,
so people always look at the paintings,
but we always look at the name tag.
And so there's always this tendency if it's like Monnet,
like, oh, it's Moni.
So go look at this one.
Whereas actually it might be the Sizzley or the Manet or the Pizarro.
That might be the better painting sometimes.
That said, this goes back to something you like to talk about.
It depends if you're judging the high points or the average.
The high points have won a fantastic and it's hard to overrate them,
but the average is not that special.
The movie, Schindler's List, overrated or underrated?
So I saw this recently, we saw it recently.
And yeah, it's been underrated.
It's been, I mean, it deserved to be reissued.
It's an amazing piece.
of cinema. I think it's not a perfect piece. It's far from a perfect piece of cinema because
the problem with it, just to say what's wrong with it, is that it's a happy story about
survivors, about an event for which the vast majority of people do not survive. So it cannot be
the V. The Holocaust movie for those reasons. The second half is too sappy for me, but I think
the first half is exactly right. The first half is amazing. And it reminds you that
Steven Spielberg is just technically an amazing film director. He just says,
sentimentality is his problem. And it's a shame that he hasn't done more serious movies.
Final question. What is a conceptual or philosophical or historical movie you would recommend
that we all see other than Chandler's list? So there are tons. I'm quite a big fan of historical
movies. I saw Loren Mago recently. In 1994, Isabel Arjani moving about being a St. Barfamil
use they massacre and French Wars of Religion.
Queen Margot is the forced to marry, Henri of Mavar to kind of patch up this piece.
But really, it's a lure to get the Protestants in one place so they can be massacred.
And it's a movie about how the French monarchy kind of unravels.
But there are many, many others.
I think the Americans and British don't do as good a job of historical movies
compared to like French, Japanese, and any other cultures, Italians.
Mark Koyama, thank you very much.
Great.
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