Conversations with Tyler - Patrick McKenzie on Navigating Complex Systems
Episode Date: January 10, 2024Few can measure the impact of a blog post they wrote, in the millions of dollars a year, but Patrick McKenzie has the receipts. His 2012 post on salary negotiation is read hundreds of thousands of ...times each year, and he has a Gmail folder brimming with success stories. This achievement is just of his many contributions, which include starting several businesses, advising Stripe and other software companies, and spearheading the launch of VaccinateCA. Lately he's been writing Bits about Money, a biweekly newsletter on the intersection of tech and finance. Tyler sat down with Patrick to discuss signature fields on the back of credit cards, whether bank tellers or waitstaff are more trustworthy, the gremlins behind spurious credit card declines, how debt collection and maple syrup heists should change your model of the world, Twitter's continued success as the message bus for government and civil society, crypto vs traditional money transfers, the intended desolation of bank parking lots, why he moved to Japan and how it affected his ambition, why Tether hasn't collapsed, the internet as a Great Work, how he's experiencing reverse culture shock after returning to the US, what he'll learn about next, and more. Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links, or watch the full video. Recorded October 26th, 2023. Other ways to connect Follow us on X and Instagram Follow Tyler on X Follow Patrick on X Join our Discord Email us: cowenconvos@mercatus.gmu.edu Learn more about Conversations with Tyler and other Mercatus Center podcasts here.
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Conversations with Tyler is produced by the Mercatus Center at George Mason University,
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visit Conversationswithtyler.com.
Hello, everyone, and welcome back to Conversations with Tyler.
Today I'm honored to be talking with Patrick McKinsey.
Here is Patrick's own description of himself.
and I quote,
The broad through line of my work
is systems thinking applied to businesses.
I think the social organization of the Internet
and its impact on the world
are underestimated by almost everyone,
including Silicon Valley.
Everything important to you in the world
sits atop several infrastructure layers.
I am a storyteller for some of those layers
and the people who build them.
An alternative description of Patrick
that I might give you is
he's a guy who moved to Japan
for no legible reason at all, and became famous by writing on the internet, and now everyone
looks to him as a person who knows a lot about everything. His substack is called bits about money,
and on Twitter you can find him at Patio 11. Many people, in fact, call him Padio 11. Patrick, welcome.
Thanks very much for having me.
Why is it you still have to sign the back of your credit card?
So like many answers, the true thing is that that is a bit of a misconception.
You actually don't have to sign the bit of your credit card in the legal realism sense,
in that you can fail to sign the back of your credit card and go throughout your life untroubled by that fact.
And most people who do that will be untroubled.
The original reason for signing the back of the credit card was rather than authentication or authorization,
meaning that the store clerk would thoroughly apply their forensic judgment in determining
that the person signing the receipt and the person signing the credit card was the same person.
It was about solemnization.
You are making a solemn, legally binding promise to the bank when you receive your card
that you are good for charges made using that payment instrument.
And that was the reason for having the signature field.
That is also the reason for having the signature field on credit card receipts,
that you are promising to the merchant that you will pay them under the agreement that you have
have with your bank. Now that everyone understands that when you hand over your credit card, that is a
binding promise, we don't really have that much social need for that solemnization anymore. And so it is
this vestigial feature that is honored in the breach in a lot of places. The vast majority of
clerks won't even check signatures these days, which people are sometimes annoyed by they put on the
back of the card, ask to see my ID. That has no legal effect. The clerk is not a forensic investigator,
and the clerk also probably has far less knowledge with the credit card infrastructure than you do if you are writing asked to see my ID.
Although if you're writing asks to see my ID, you have a sort of bounded amount of knowledge about the credit card infrastructure.
So one of these little idiosyncrasies about the world that's probably someone antagonistic in a couple of years.
And you're giving them your signature, right, by signing the back of the card.
If someone stole it, they now have your card and your signature.
Yeah, a lot of what we would call pre-modern thinking about security and terms.
terms of payments was not, I won't say not all that well thought out. There are choices that were
made back then that were good in the era they were made that are disastrously bad right now. For example,
if I had, let's say, a bank account and I have a secret controlling that bank account,
and that secret would allow me to take all of the money out of that bank account, you might think,
like, how should I protect this secret? And the answer you would come up in 2023 is not. I want to
print it in machine readable type on every check that I give to everyone. But in fact, that is
what we did back in the day. And many, many tens of billions of dollars of check fraud happened over
the years because of that issue. And we sort of just like took the punches and developed a, you know,
vast shadow infrastructure to defang this like fundamental, irreducible security hole in the heart
of the checking system. So, yeah, outing your signatures that like the, the handwritten physical
signature has very terrible security properties. Anyone who has seen it can reproduce it. They are
very easily reproducible by computers. They are less easily reproducible by,
humans, checking them for correctness or consistency is terrible.
There are the forensic analysts to go to court and try to compare signatures against each other.
If I were to say they were practicing witchcraft, I think that would be an uncouth thing to say.
I don't think it is necessarily untrue, not a technology we would use in 2023 and going forward
to secure anything that we actually care about.
Whom do you trust more, your bank teller or the waitress to whom you hand your credit card?
a bank teller by a country mile, although it is ultimately irrelevant. The reason to trust your bank teller versus your waitress is that while those appear in, say, the United States context to be like jobs that are relatively similar on the social ladder, they in fact are not. For all of the reasons that correlate with class, et cetera, et cetera, on whether someone is likely to engage in malfeasance and also the built environment around bank tellers versus waitresses who are far less likely to get taken advantage of than a bank teller than a waitress. But it is also
ultimately irrelevant because in the case you are taken advantage of by either a bank teller or a waitress.
We have a extremely effective public-private regulatory state machine, which will make you whole for that.
It will be annoying, but you won't actually lose money.
And so I go through my life spending very few cycles worried about either individuals in the financial industry or individuals in the restaurant industry taking advantage of my payment methods.
If I try to use my credit card and it's a false decline, that is they won't take it when they should.
What's the most likely reason for that?
Gremlins.
And it sounds like a joke, but say that everything I say is in my own opinions, and Stripe as a corporation does not actually endorse the existence of fiscal gremlins.
I'm not sure I don't.
Many people in the payments industry have spent a lot of time looking at the true source of false declines.
And eventually the best you can do is reduce it to some sort of error term where you don't know specifically what system.
is at fault. And the credit card ecosystem, while it might present to you as a, you know, a single
pane of glass that you interact with, just like you interact with a single pane of glass on your
iPhone, is actually a stitched-together patchwork collections of systems that have existed for the last
several decades. Somewhere in that stitch-together patchwork, someone had a hiccup, and then your
credit card gets what we call a spurious decline. The rate of spurious declines is something of a
trade secret, but it is much higher than any rational human being would expect is a tolerable rate
of spurious false activity within a system, that that has persisted for so many decades is an
interesting sort of collective action problem because it's a stitched together patchwork of systems.
There's no unitary authority saying you must commit to decreasing your rate of false
declines by 50 basis points within the next two quarters, or there will be consequences.
There is limited visibility into what is actually causing the problem.
Credit cards are an enormously lucrative business, and for the longest time,
all players were like, yeah, gremlins, I don't know what to tell you.
I know a little bit more to tell you than Gremlin's, but unfortunately some of it is trade secrets.
A thing that is not exactly a trade secret is that it is not the fact that, in fact, it's the case that problems are not solvable in the world.
You actually can move the false decline rate by having the right people in the right places actually work on the false decline rate.
Strait has a number of things.
You can read it from various PR announcements.
So much shockingly, longstanding multi-decade problems frequently have the rough form where like if one executive anywhere cared about this
and did the bare minimum of effort, you would have somewhat surprising results on them relatively quickly.
The thing that most surprised me on that score outside of the payments industry was when I had this long-running assumption that we're doing about as good as we can with rockets.
The laws of physics are a thing. We've dumped billions of dollars into this problem and the smartest, you know, literal rocket scientists in the world at it.
And then Elon Musk came around and said, actually, you know, I think we can cheat like the costs of getting things up to orbit by, oh, three orders of magnitude.
And then if you had told me that in 1990,
I would have been very young to opine about in 1990, maybe like 2005.
If you had said that was like possible in 2005, I'd say I had better guessed.
That seems like a priori, extremely unlikely to happen.
And now we have, you know, an existence proof of it happening.
And I'm reevaluating what I think about the world and how tractable various problems are in it.
If I buy a gelato for $7, they make me sign with my finger on the screen.
And all I do is run my finger on the screen.
and it has nothing to do with my signature.
Why doesn't the COST theorem eliminate this practice?
Can you refresh my memory of what the COST theorem is?
Well, just gains from trade or reaped.
People don't do pointless things that benefit no one.
They would agree to take my payment without running my finger on the screen,
and I wouldn't run my finger on the screen.
So ultimately, that comes down to a choice of various firms involved in the interaction.
It is the case that you can make a lot of credit card payments
without doing any finger on the screen or signing a receipt.
Small dollar, small yen transactions in Japan, for example.
There are various POS systems, point-of-sales systems in the United States that won't ask you to sign it.
If you're asking to rationalize this on why does a smart team, like I assume exists at toast, make a signature input thing anyway?
There are anchors in our social practice about doing things, and sometimes things persist in those anchors for,
far longer than they're actually required or produce any sort of value would be my like dominant
hypothesis. But I also think it is probably the case that toast could like build a flag to turn that
off tomorrow. Many people would not choose to turn it off for basically irrational reasons.
In a country of near full employment, why would anyone work in the debt collection sector?
It's ugly work. You feel bad. You have to abuse people. Maybe you try to intimidate them.
You might even make implied threats that if not illegal, there is.
in some gray area. Why do it? Is the wage so high? So the wage is certainly not so high.
As a background information for people, I used to work in the other side of debt collection.
I was this random internet nobody that ghost writing letters to debt collectors who attempt to get
low-s sophistication individuals to assert their rights under various U.S. consumer legislation.
The typical debt collector is a high school graduate. They make plus or minus $15 an hour,
perhaps that has shifted a little bit as inflation has hit the last couple years. But broadly speaking,
it's that. You have pay scale that is not too different from McDonald's for a much,
much worse working environment, etc., etc. One reason, and I think this is over-advanced in the world,
but is partially explanatory in this case, is that the existence of, I'm about to use the word
evil on that. I don't want to use the word evil. You're allowed to use the word evil on this
podcast. The existence of evil is an actual thing in the world, and our models of the world must
include evil to be accurate levels of the world. There are some people who enjoy inflicting suffering
on others. And if you enjoy inflicting suffering, a debt collection is a wonderful gig for you.
Some people who enjoy inflicting suffering going to, you know, the police, for example. It's not the
fact that all members of the police enjoy inflicting suffering, but that is like a major, you know,
source of utility for at least some people who get that job. Another thing for debt collection is that
in the places where debt collectors actually live, the economy as a whole can be near
full employment, but in rural New York, that might not be great.
It might not be quite full employment.
And for office jobs that are available, a debt collection call center or a more salubrious call
center might be the only office job available.
And so relative to the choices that are actually presented to you, that might be the
most rational thing, even if you hate the environment and turn out in your...
And indeed, the turnover rate for debt collectors is astounding.
It's on the order of, oh, I hate making up numbers.
sound like I know what I'm doing. It is higher than it is for fast food restaurants,
which is already close to 100% a year, meaning in the expectation they expect to turn over
the typical employee in less than a year. And you think they leave because they don't like it,
or they leave because they're bad at it and they're fired? Overwhelmingly, they leave because
they don't like it. There is a production function for debt collectors in a way that there is
far less of a production function for McDonald's employees. Certainly there are ways to be
a bad McDonald's employee, but if considering like just the, you know,
Are you physically capable of, like, making a burger or not?
Almost everyone who McDonald's hires is actually, like, physically capable of making a burger.
There's probably at least an order of magnitude difference, perhaps more,
in terms of, like, productivity of the amount of dollars collected per hour by debt collectors.
And so it is possible to be a, you know, negative, productive debt collector.
And since your activity is tracked, your employer will eventually come to understand about you.
But most people who leave don't leave because this is a job that is beyond their intellectual capability,
or because the script they are given doesn't work or et cetera, et cetera, they leave because the job is sold destroying.
How did the maple syrup heist change your overall view of the world and of humanity?
What's the model update?
So going back to evil is an actual thing in the world.
I often assume that large, well-regarded, professionalized industries have a rate of crime associated with them,
which rounds to zero.
And so I would assume, like, okay, agriculture is relatively heavily regulated,
maple syrup is an agricultural product.
The only buyers of maple syrup by the container full are quote-to-quote real companies.
And therefore, I would expect rounds to zero supply chain fraud in maple syrup.
And it turns out that the amount of supply chain fraud in maple syrup is actually quite higher than zero.
And the chain of custody for cars of maple syrup is much less regimented than you would expect that chain of custody to be.
And there are smaller buyers of maple syrup, not on the scale of you or me,
but on the scale of like a antique maple syrup refinery,
who just don't do as many checks as the large producers or suppliers, etc. do.
And so it is possible to steal millions of dollars of maple syrup and sell it on the black market,
which kind of blew my mind.
This sort of rhymes with how Tide, the well-known detergent in the United States,
is used to say a commodity on the criminal and semi-criminal slash system D,
less criminal undergrounds, in that Tide can be resold.
Online marketplaces are getting a lot of the attention.
but like the traditional way to use tide as a currency for people who had less access to dollars
was to resell the tide to a corner bodega.
And since the corner bodega can easily verify that the tide hasn't been tampered with because the tide seals on it
and has basically unlimited willingness to do small dollar transactions that make money,
that was a way to recycle tide which had been stolen or which had been acquired in means that we're not stealing,
but also not exactly the official way of getting tied.
recycle it into the more or less legitimate economy insofar as we think that the, you know,
corner bodega is like more or less legitimate, which I think is a complicated story.
Do you ever encounter sectors where there's less fraud than what you had been expecting?
Or is there just more evil all around? And you were naive and now you're wiser.
So I broadly think people overpredict evil and underpredict competence. And then I thought
I was sophisticated for believing this and I got to my adult life and realized, oh, wait,
you know, evil actually exists. I need to increase my prediction, but maybe not to the level
that society generally predicts it. Places where there is much less fraud than I expect there to be.
One place where we detect much less fraud than I would expect us to detect is in insider trading and
other forms of obviously illegal market manipulation. I'm undecided on whether that is truly, truly rare
relative to the size of all market participation. Or we are just abominably glad at detecting people
that do it with like a B plus student level of execution ability. Because when the SAC announces,
like, hey, we got this person for insider training. Here is the evidence. They did it on their
work computer at Goldman Sachs after Googling, how do I get away with Google Insider Trading on their
work computer at Goldman Sachs? And that is barely an exaggeration, by the way. Then they left a
huge paper trail. This repeats in all the SEC's press releases. And so I'm wondering, am I
getting a biased look at the world, or are we only detecting the dumbest possible criminals? Or is it
that no one does insider trading after they achieve some level of competence because there are
easier ways to make money that don't involve going to prison. For a while, and continuing,
I thought that crypto was sort of drawing a lot of the fraud out of the more traditional sectors
of the economy, because if you do it in crypto, that wasn't fraud, but it was fraud that it
would get away with and make a substantial amount of money doing, and you could do it in broad
daylight and still get invited to the best parties. But I don't think that is fully explanatory.
And my model is that there should be much, much more fraud happening in the legitimate
parts of the economy, then there isn't crypto. And yet we can see, like, the obvious frauds in
crypto and the investigation of those obvious frauds. And we don't have nearly that level of
visibility into it and the real economy. And so I continue to be conflicted by this.
As we're speaking in October 2023, Elon Musk has suggested that he will take X, formerly
Twitter, and turn it into some kind of universal payments app. What's the chance he can succeed
with this? And if you're bearish on it, what's the fundamental problem?
If he hypothetically does that, he will likely hypothetically be attempting commercial negotiations with a company that I previously worked for, and so I'm absolutely not speaking for them in the following.
As a neutral market observer, it seems extremely unlikely that you will successfully embed patents into the Twitter experience, the X experience these days.
I feel journalists feel some sort of obligation to call X now that the official name is X.
Twitter will always be Twitter for me, so I'll call it Twitter.
The thing that users expect to get out Twitter doesn't infallowing.
payments doesn't typically involve interaction with businesses or even generally with
individuals that are on a repeated interactive basis. They get an entirely different basket of
goods out of it. And simply grafting payments onto that basket of goods will not make people
adopt the payments. And I understand from a product management perspective how you could believe
that that would be fantastically valuable if you got it to work because the super apps that
exist in large portions of Asia are fantastically valuable businesses. And they have figured out
loops that get users to adopt it for one feature and then adopt all the other features because
it's already on your phone and the biz dev to get it pre-installed on all the phones and
etc, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. This is much harder than that gloss I've just getting
of it. But yeah, the fundamental reason why I'm extremely bearish on it happening for Twitter,
and I would put the percentage that's below 1%, far below 1%, is that this is very, very hard.
It feels unlikely to me that the organization that is Twitter is resourced or competent enough
to make this happen, which I will say,
I'm an enormous fan of Twitter.
I think it is actually one of the,
descriptively,
one of the most important products
that exists on the internet
because it is not solved
but ameliorated a lot
of cross-organization coordination problems
that happen in very important places.
It is broadly underappreciated
how Twitter is the message bus,
the sort of sub-Rosa coordination mechanism
for the United States federal government,
for every counterparty that the United States
federal government or any agency
or individual in faces for the media,
for everything. And so people like see Twitter and they see celebrities posting and, you know,
the phenomenon that is hosting and et cetera, et cetera. And to a very real degree, it is like an
integrated part of the operating system that is the world. But that doesn't mean that you can
graph payments on it onto it and succeed just because you want to. If I go to Western Union and
send a money to Mexico, why are the fees and transfer costs so high? It doesn't seem like it
should be that hard. So this is an enormously frustrating thing for me because the crypto industry has
been saying, why are Western Union fees so high? And yet very few people in the crypto industry
seem to do like the college undergraduate level thing that one would do to answer that question,
which is, why don't you read their annual report and see what they spend all the money on?
What they spend all the money on is retail points of presence by the customer in both countries.
50% of all revenue taken in by Western Union goes to have a physical point of presence.
by you sending it and by without loss of generality, Abuela in Mexico.
Do those have to exist?
Could you do them cheaper?
You might be able to, but the problem such it is is like most of the cost or most of the
complexity is by Abuela in Mexico and there is not one single like Abuela in Mexico where
you just replace this one branch.
You have to, you know, coordinate this worldwide change in behaviors to like materially
compress that fee.
That is why the fees are so high.
Another reason why the fees are so high is regulation.
And this one is, we as a society could choose to do things better and have not chosen these
that, and I wish we would.
Due to anti-money laundering and know your customer requirements, the amount of compliance
drag on small transfers of value in the world is very, very large.
The rationale for it, such that there exists a rationale, is that, well, if you can do
small transfers of value easily without proving your identity, then you could do large transfers
of value by breaking it up into small transfers of value that are unsurveiled. And then that would
enable crime and terrorism and tax evasion. And so even if you are sending typical transfer
might be $200 to Mexico, you have to go through this song and dance about proving your identity
to the transfer agent. They have to be regulated, yada, yada, yada. And that entire edifice imposes
a lot of costs and a lot of things that are undeserable from user experience perspective.
And both in terms of people will tell you that they don't enjoy them,
and in terms of if you were to implement two parallel procedures,
the one that didn't require that level of regulatory hoop jumping
would have a higher success rate by equivalently motivated people.
I'm a longtime cryptosceptic, and one of the things that I think I see eye to eye on with the
crypto folks is that AML and KYC impose enormous costs on society.
and then where we differ is they think, oh, I will make a technological solution to this and just ignore all the laws.
And I think, well, to the extent that we believe this is true, we should probably work on changing the laws and regulations and or changing how we implement them in products that are actually valuable.
Why your bank parking lots usually so empty?
Ooh, so this is a straightforward result from queuing theory, if you can believe it.
Queuing theory slash operation science, by the way, tremendously under understood by many people to whom it is professionally relevant.
be that as a name. When you think of your typical stop-in-ended bank, you go in, perhaps you deposit a check, perhaps you talk to the teller, you probably think I will have like three minutes of dwell time. So you expect to be in and out. But the thing that the bank really wants to optimize for is new account opening. New account opening requires 30 to 60 minutes plus plus of dwell time depending on what type of account you are opening. And then when you back out that variability, it turns out that gratuitously over-prevourable.
the parking space almost all of the time maximizes for not losing new account opening
at a few very limited windows per year. And those very limited windows can make or break the
branch's ability to contribute to their larger financial institution. The number of accounts
that bank actually opens per year in terms of checking accounts per branch is like that is a number
that one can have access to in various places. And depending on the bank and the locality,
etc., it's between 200 and 500. And so if you turn away like a single customer
or two customers in a row to open accounts because you had three parking spaces where you could have had seven,
you've done a very outsized amount of damage to your financial institution,
and thus over-provision the parking in all the places.
So I should infer that I shouldn't keep much money in my checking account.
That's a correct inference from that.
The margin for the bank must be fairly high, which means my return, all things considered is relatively low.
I don't think you even need any inside knowledge about banks to know that one.
should not keep much money in a checking account.
Or a CD.
One does for the bank.
Anything what might do with the bank.
To ask you the Willie Sutton question, why do people try to rob banks?
It seems like a low return activity, the form of crime where you're most likely to be caught.
It largely is a low return activity.
The FBI, so they published that some of this, and the median haul that a bank robber gets is about $8,000.
And it is the worst possible way to earn $8,000 because a career bank thief, the other word for that,
is a long-term guest of the United States government. It is impossible to get away with over an extended
period of time. Not to give people advice on becoming criminals, but if one wanted to describe
like a criminal that was using their faculties to the best of their abilities, credit card fraud
is so amazingly more lucrative than Robin Banks. You can do it without ever threatening anyone.
You can do it with only about as much sophistication about how the system works as the typical
bank thief has. Indeed, you do see like casual fraud.
by unsophisticated, let's say, non-professional criminals, high school students, etc.,
who earn or gain access to value through that casual fraud much more than they would if they
stuck up a bank. And therefore, you know, the people that actually do stick up banks are overwhelmingly
drug-addicted, they're overwhelmingly, well, disproportionately struggling with, you know,
mental illness, et cetera, et cetera. It is not a that big risk. That, by the way, is also
reason why banks, part of a few reasons, why banks are not optimized to, you know,
to defeat people doing bank robbery,
which is surprising to many non-specialists.
If you join a bank, one of the first things that they say,
in the event of a bank robbery, don't be a hero,
this does not matter to us at all.
Comply with all demands, get them out of the bank as quickly as possible.
Do not fight. Do not chase, etc., etc.
Partly that is due to the liability risk.
The way the U.S. system views these things,
the net present value of a young bank employee
is worth a lot more than $8,000.
And if they get, you know, shot on their way out the door,
the bank might be liable for millions of dollars of a settlement to that individual.
Whereas if the person walks away with $8,000, yeah.
But the other part of it is that the banks truly aren't at material risk from losing cash in robbers.
How old were you when you moved to Japan and why did you do it?
Moved to Japan almost right after university, so I suppose I would have been 20.
The original reason, and I wish I had a copy of this hour.
I should post it on my wall somewhere. I had gone to University, Washington University in St. Louis, to study computer science and was worried because the Wall Street Journal said, the dot-com bust means that engineering employment will cease in the United States of America. All future will be hired in China or India at a fraction of U.S. prevailing wages. I thought, oh, shucks. The Wall Street Journal was never wrong, but I really wanted to be an engineer. Clearly, successful engineers in the future will be playing a Venn diagram game where they do one hard thing that is engineering and one.
hard thing that is speaking a foreign language. And I thought speaking foreign language is hard because
it's the only class in high school that I did not get an A& for showing up Spanish. But I thought,
well, there's very little advantage for an American in my position to be Spanish because there are
many Americans who speak Spanish better than I ever will. The amount of trade in software between
the United States and Spanish-speaking countries is presumably lower than it is with other countries.
So I made a spreadsheet trying to quantify things like, what's a population of country, what
percentage of their professional adults are capable of doing business English, what's the size of
their software industry, how much software, just Microsoft sell there, et cetera, et cetera, et
et do, do, sort by column H descending, and Japan is at the top of the list. So I thought,
okay, I'm going to learn Japanese, and then I'm going to go to Japan after university for just
a few years to get better at business Japanese. Then I'm going to come back to America, get a job
at Microsoft in the Japan-facing role, and I will have a nice, safe job in the tech industry,
despite what the Wall Street Journal says about the tech industry, ceasing to hire Americans for
the positions that I actually want to do. And it turns out that there was a great deal of rigor
there chasing a conclusion that had absolutely no basis, in fact. It is not the case that the
tech industry stopped hiring Americans in the last 20 years. But it also led to what was ultimately
one of the most important decisions in my life. I went over to Japan. I lived there for 20
happy asterisk years. Met my wife over there, et cetera, et cetera. So I often mention this to people
as an example if you can have great reasons for doing something and have that utterly not matter.
And also, I tried to tell sophisticated people that other people who they have a high degree of regard for,
like some sophisticated people for whatever reason have a high degree of regard for me.
Even people you have a high degree of regard for sometimes make very large decisions based on very small amounts of data or like very small amounts of consideration with regards to that decision.
And therefore, you should update your world model about that.
And be very careful about saying things like, oh, the tech industry is so over, ha ha, as a joke.
Because it is quite possible that someone would listen to that and just perceive the surface level meaning of it.
And then the tech industry would lose the services of someone who, in expectation, it might very much want to have had the services up in 20 years.
How hard was it learning how to read Japanese?
It continues to be a project.
And this is after 20 years, right?
Yeah. Granted, my feelings on this are partly filtered through the lens of I'm something of a writer in English,
and so I'm not benchmarking myself against the typical student of the Japanese language,
but I'm benchmarking myself against my own proficiency in reading and writing English.
So I feel an enormous camp when my proficiency in writing Japanese is relative to my proficiency in English,
and that weighs on me. If you step out of the me view of the world,
the point at which I was an effective professional at reading and writing Japanese was maybe two to three years,
after I got to Japan, so after a total of six years of study, and I was not the most diligence
doing it during those six years. If you're not heritage reader of Japanese or Chinese, you should
benchmark it at least three years to be professionally capable at it. If you're doing a startup,
how is that evaluated in the Japanese marriage market? Extremely poorly historically.
Both in the United States and in Japan, one of the most influential works of fiction ever
is the social network. I bang the drum on this a lot, that the
The social network raised the status of entrepreneurship for proto-entrepreneurs worldwide,
and thus we can see it in the data.
There was a wave of applications to places like My Combinator that will disclose that data,
but also see it in the actual narratives of people who went on to found companies that became worthwhile.
Unfortunately, that gets expunged out of the public narrative
because you don't want to tell serious people,
oh, yeah, I totally started doing a startup versus going to Google
because the social network gave me social permission to doing so.
But that is a real thing.
Anyhow, to Japan.
I was once walking around Tokyo, and there was a group of preschoolers being led around by their caretaker.
And one of them asked me in Japanese, hey, mister, what's your job?
This is at about 10.30 in the morning for context.
And I said, I am an entrepreneur.
And preschooler, mind you, said, yeah, pari mussookka.
Which means, just as I thought he is unemployed.
That is like the form of too perfect anecdote to encapsulate a broader societal site guy.
with respect to entrepreneurship.
Like many things about Japan, this gets, you know,
there's all sorts of like asclerxes you can put on that too.
Like Japan loves entrepreneurs in the same fashion
that like Catholicism loves saints,
but they all happened a while ago.
These are things that are changing over time, et cetera, et cetera.
But broadly speaking,
entrepreneurs are extremely undervalued in the Japanese dating market.
You once cited the following idea on your blog, and I quote,
most people want to become wealthy
so they can consume social status.
Japanese employers believe this is inefficient
and simply award social status directly.
That's not you writing, but it's you citing.
Can you explain?
Sure.
People in the professional managerial class devote
an extreme amount of care into their career and time.
And so by their revealed preferences,
this matters to them exceptionally.
And in the United States,
it's often said that this is because we want to, you know,
earn a lot of money and buy like the big house so you can bring your friends over to the big house
and show them that you're successful. And so you have indicia of respected institutions endorsing you,
which is the sort of like more gets it feel of the world. The analogs of the U.S.
professional and managerial class in Japan are similarly overworked, treated even more terribly
to a substantial degree like there is an ingrained culture of abuse in Japanese labor-slash-employer
relations where that culture, there are parts of it in the United States, but not to nearly the
same degree. The thing that you are trying to do if you are a salary man is not to get the
promotion so that you earn more money because you will not earn appreciably more money. And indeed,
you will not earn appreciably more money than the false course of just taking social promotions
through your entire life. The thing you are trying to do is get a higher, both true and sounds
too good to be true. There was a chart of engineers at the company that I worked at back in the day
when I was a sailor man.
And there was a young man, I'll call him Tanaka San, which is not his actual name.
And Tanakasan had a couple weeks of seniority versus me in my role, the company.
And so in the default ordering of the social hierarchy at a Japanese company,
he would be above me on this chart that is paced down the wall.
And it's pasted on the wall for an actual business purpose,
because if someone's out of the office that day, you write they are absent,
or they are at a customer site or et cetera, et cetera.
But the order matters.
And everyone knows the order matters.
And one day, I watched two young O'L's office lady is the coinage in Japan going up to the chart,
and they had Tanaka San's name in one hand, and my name in the other hand.
And one of them asked the other, which of these goes first?
The first one said, well, Tanaka San has seniority, it should be him.
And the second one said, yeah, but Tanaka San really screwed the pooch on that last project.
And the other one said, oh, yeah, good point.
And there was like a literal, like, moving hands up and down and a significant glance between each other and said,
yes, that is the correct ordering with Patrickontop versus Docsson. Tiny little anecdote
that shows much more about the shape of the world. A huge amount of the effort involved in
the culture that is Japanese sailor man is convincing the people that matter to who are most
of your social network at work who will be there at your wedding, who your boss will give a
speech at your wedding, because that is the culture that we operate in, that you have made it.
if you are, you know, ambitious, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.
There are people who declined to participate in the same fashion
as people decline to participate in the United States,
but that is the broad accepted outline of the culture.
And how is it that your ambitions grow steadily in this environment?
You weren't beaten down.
You weren't discouraged.
You didn't just fly home either, right?
But you kept on setting your sights on something higher.
What was that like inside you?
Interestingly, from having the perspective of being around people
who are incredibly ambitious the last couple of years and whose ambitious had positive social purpose.
One of the great regrets of my life is that in my 20s I had so little ambition and was so beaten down
and didn't take more aggressive actions to exit out the situation I found myself in.
I remember, so after I quit the Salarman job, which, by the way, Salary Man is a full-time employee
of a Japanese company, the company owns you body and soul and return it to, at least historically,
credibly promises you to insulate you from all risk.
I worked at jobs that are described that for about six years, burned out terribly, made a socially
appropriate excuse to quit, which is the one thing that you as a salary man are not allowed
to do. And I remember April 1st, 2010, thinking, I could get on a plane right now with nothing
but the clothes on my back, closed the Japanese chapter of my life entirely, and walk into
Jeff Lawson's office in San Francisco, who was the CEO of Twilio. He doesn't know me, but I think
after walking into his office, I can beg, borrow, or steal a job there, and just do something much more impactful, important, personally fulfilling, et cetera, over the next couple of years.
It doesn't think that I've been doing the last couple of years. But I'm not willing to, like, call it quits on this Japan adventure yet. I do enjoy living here. Working here is terrible. I will try to, you know, carve out a little, some semblance of living from my tiny internet software publishing operation that I was running at the time and see what happens. And then indeed the thing that happened three months.
like hers that met the young lady who eventually became my wife. And so we were off to the races.
Wasn't it efficient in some regards that you had so many years out there in the wilderness, so to
speak, because you learned so many things. You're still young, right? You have a whole big,
long career ahead of you. And by avoiding becoming famous too early, you had this super
hyped up learning curve that you're now still benefiting from. Is that true or false?
I wanted to be true.
I think that it is
fulser than most people who would say that
would give credit for.
I know many people liked the musical Hamilton.
I also like the musical Hamilton,
but the thing about the character
where he feels like he's running out of time,
despite that maybe not being rational
as a struggle I've often had.
I know rationally speaking,
I have at least 20 plus years
in my career left.
I also know that there is a level of energy
and health that I had access to in my 20s
that I no longer have access to.
And so I feel some counterfactual regret
as to the things that I have.
actually spent that energy in health on, which was, you know, running a world of work at Raid Guild
and being a Japanese salary man for many years. I do not think that six years as Japanese salary
man optimized for me learning all the things. I think I could have extracted most of the
signal from that experience in six weeks to six months and then left, but felt myself socially
constrained from doing so. I definitely don't regret moving to Japan because of the other
non-professional knock-on effects on my life, but the degree to which my career slash impact on
the world, ex-personal life, ex-family, ex-raising two wonderful children and being married to a wonderful
life, the degree to which that is enhanced by my level of understanding of business Japanese
or ability to function in a Japanese office environment, etc., etc., seems to be, like, rather
limited versus, you know, my ability to write well in English. I will say one thing about
the experience is that having a lot of free time on your hands in the evenings and no outlet for
English was a great push in the right direction of writing more than most people do in their
20s. The compounding effects of writing more are responsible for both a lot of the good stuff
that has happened to me and a lot of the good stuff that I've been able to accomplish in the
world. Crypto questions. Why hasn't tether collapsed yet? Right. People have run at it many times.
Not too long ago, I think the price fell even to 93, which is dangerously low. It bounced back.
It seems they can always redeem. What?
if it isn't a fraud?
I pre-commit that if it is not a fraud, I should have enormous egg on my face.
On the other hand, there exists sufficient evidence on the public record in the CFTC case and
etc.
That at times in the past, it has been an out-and-out fraud that had essentially no backing and
that they had done forensic accounting on it.
And for their examination period was about 18 months and said that it was less than
act in more than 75 days in the examination period.
And so from one sense, I can claim victory.
It's a fraud. I was saying it was a fraud before it was cool that the government now acknowledges that they did frauding things at some point fast. But I think it should also collapse. Like it's not just a tinkering around the margins fraud, but there is actual, a huge amount of actual criminal activity there. One sort of the naive answer is like, do we expect frauds to collapse quickly? Probably no. Madoff was active for 17 or 18 years. The only thing that actually brought his fraud to light, well, various kinds of
innocent he knew about it. The thing that made it undenialed to all was being unable to meet
redemption requests in the wake of the global financial crisis, and Madoff, importantly,
did not cause the global financial crisis. Of all the crimes in the world, he was innocent of that
one. But people said, Bernie, you have all this money for me. You, alone among all people
I invest my money with, have avoided this crisis, which is great, because now I need money,
can you wire it to me? He did not have the money to wire, and that's how his crimes came to
light. So to a certain extent, it not collapsing is like, you know, the thing that we expect to happen on every day until it collapses catastrophically. The thing that we would expect the collapse to happen with is my dominant narrative is like some form of government action against their reserves that are custodied in some financial institution in New York, followed by the public disclosure of that action, which might not be a total freezing, but enough to start the domino and then a classic run on the bank. And then the pipes get overwhelmed, yada, yada, yada, and price goes down substantially.
below 93. In a famous interview on Bloomberg, Tether's character witness, one Sam Binkman-Fried,
said that he believes that it is astoundingly unlikely that Tether is worth a true sense, like 30,
but you could quibble to whether it's worth like 99 cents or a dollar and a penny.
I think there is a material chance that is like truly worth something like 30, potentially
negative after you, you know, had government fines and other actions on top of it. So I continue
to expect that to happen.
circa late October
2003,
Bitcoin is priced as high as 33K.
Why is that?
Surely it's good for many things then, right?
It's been through a lot of price knocks, right?
It's not a bubble in the sense
that no one has ever asked,
why is the price so high.
It's been crushed, what, five, six times
since its origin,
and it keeps on coming back.
Is it a proven asset class?
Some things have a price
and have liquidity at the moment,
and you can trade them.
On one hand, that is evidence, right?
And on the other hand, that is not necessarily dispositive.
I feel intellectually obligated to say,
I was saying that Bitcoin is overpriced at $17.
I still believe that to be true in a lot of senses,
meaning if counterfactually it was $17 today,
I would say it was overpriced at $17,
too, I believe it is overpriced at 33K
relative to the amount of actual utility
that's demonstrated in the world
and the tens of billions of dollars
that have been injected into creating infrastructure for it,
absolutely, yes.
But some sense of epistemic humility, we have been watching that ticker for over a decade now, and the ticker and, you know, market participants keep voting against my view.
Question, why?
Is it because of manipulation?
Surely yes, but that is not a full explanation.
Is it because of like some amount of utility?
I think the amount of realized utility by Bitcoin, and, you know, I'm a great cryptosceptic, but if you were to say, okay, hold your nose for a moment.
and steal land a case for crypto utility.
Tell me about your favorite projects, etc.
I would point out a lot of things that weren't Bitcoin
that involve some sort of like intellectual dissent
and like community crossover with Bitcoin.
But like Bitcoin as itself is clearly not the best product
that crypto has come up with.
And yet, you know, the market says it is by like a comfortable margin,
the most valuable product that crypto has come up with.
I don't know how to square that circle.
A hundred years from now, if we were all to look back
as historians and say, oh, the internet,
that was in fact a big mistake.
What's the most likely scenario that could bring about such a judgment?
I do not have a super developed point of view with respect to whether AI is going to end the world.
I think relative to most well-educated people, I think that can't be dismissed out of hand.
People who have spent a long time thinking about it have spent a long time thinking about it
and the arguments advanced against them by people who dismiss it out of hand are clearly less than powerful arguments.
but I wouldn't put a very high percentage chance on it, which I say to excuse the following.
If the human race does not exist in 100 years, it is almost definitely because some knock-on
consequence of the invention of the internet. And if the human race ceases to exist and the
internet was necessary in the causal path to get to there, then I would regret the internet.
In every other case, I would not regret the internet. I have an abulence and love for it in a way
that people in our social class in the United States
are aggressively socialized out of having
abulience and true love for anything.
I think that the internet is the capital G, capital of W,
great work of the human race in a lot of respects.
It is magical.
It is a encapsulation of the best things about our society
that is also tremendously instrumental useful
in making all the good things better
and ameliorating all the problems
over like sufficiently long time scales.
it seems like naturally to me that this is extremely important. This is extremely valuable.
It seems extremely underrated by almost everyone, including people who like would consider themselves, you know, great fans of the internet, but say, oh, you know, like I'm a great fan of the internet, but I'm a great fan of, like, penicillin too.
I think, like, in aggregate internet, the internet is obviously more important than penicillin by many orders of magnitude.
Is it more important than medicine? I will bite that bullet. The internet is more important than medicine.
like the entire institution of medicine, from time and memorial to reasonable extrapolations of what we can do right now, is it more important than writing. You couldn't have the Internet without writing. So writing was very important to get to the development at the Internet. That might be one of the most important things about writing, was that writing got us to the Internet. And that sounds like a little bit of, I know people will take that pull quote and say, oh, this crazy non-intellectual person, but I think that there is a reasonable case for it.
When you ran Vaccinate, CA, which helped people in California get access to COVID vaccines,
what is it you learned about talent?
What is it I learned about talent?
Yeah.
Because you had to run it with other people, right?
What did you learn?
Dealing with the people, getting them to cooperate with you.
What was the surprise?
It was a lot of non-traditional talent, right?
It was a lot of non-traditional talent.
Word learn is funny because there's some.
embedded expectation of surprise, like you didn't know something and then you came to know something.
There was a thing that I would have put a high probability on prior to vaccinate CA, that vaccinate
CA increased my credence on, which is that relative to credentialed talented institutions like
throw a dart as the dark board about it, let's say, county health departments, for example,
and they're heavily educated in their field, they are credentialed. There's a democratic process
that ultimately backstop the decision of county health department. Jay Randow person on the
internet. Can they be better at, like, important phases of pandemic preparedness given two to six
weeks versus a, like, county health department that is prepared for exactly this problem for their
entire professional career? Yes. Straightforwardly, yes. And that is the thing I would have believed
in 2018, but now I have an existence proof of. And now the work of county health departments
continues to be important, et cetera, et cetera. I do want to eventually be able to make coalitions with
people who are necessary to achieve impact in the world.
And part of being able to make coalitions implies not throwing them under the bus all the time.
But it is extensively underrated how effective non-specialists can quickly become to be
and how sort of spiky talent is distributed and how the internet can act as a force for bringing
together the right spikes in a very fast fashion and creating leverage good with it.
If you had to explain or express in its most basic fundamental terms,
why people are afraid to negotiate more and negotiate harder?
What's that explanation?
There is a societal script against being greedy,
and it is such a fundamental script in so many societies for so long that,
like, I have a strong suspicion,
it might literally be baked into the operating system that is being a human.
The notion of negotiating for salary or negotiating for anything else
is something that you have to kind of like go against that culture,
and possibly even biological programming to be able to do.
Now, humans go against their cultural and biological programming all of the time in many
important ways, but it requires an immense amount of effort, and most people don't devote that
effort or don't perceive themselves as being allowed to do that in ways about salary negotiation.
This creates crazy inefficiencies in the world, like, until quite recently, so I wrote one
blog post about salary negotiation back in 2012.
I wouldn't call it a blog post, but between you and me and the internet, it's a blog post.
And hundreds of thousands of people read that every year, and many of them choose to write me an email and say,
hey, I use the advice that you wrote in this, I can't believe it's not blog post, and it resulted in a plus, you know,
$25,000 to $125,000 delta in the salary I got.
And I keep a folder in Gmail of the aggregate impact of that and stopped counting some time after
it was like $10 million plus a year for like economic impact from one blog post.
And what do I come to believe about this?
One, I clearly under-optimized my selection of picking things to write about because that was the shining star in my portfolio for so long.
And yet, I never attempted to take the knowledge that it was the shining star and do more stuff like that in the future.
Two, society was hideously under-optimized in that it took, like, one guy of no special skill in this field, like writing for one day on the topic to unlock tens of millions of dollars of value.
And that's just the stuff we know about.
presumably there are people who get a salary grade and do not email me about that.
And then three, like, this implies that there are a lot of sophisticated afters who are making
huge, huge mistakes that could probably be ameliorated for about as, you know, as much effort
as that blog post took to write, but whoever have not taken that effort.
You've left Japan.
You've returned to the United States.
You chose Chicago.
Why Chicago?
Straightforward reasons on this one.
My parents live in Chicago and my family grew up here.
I feel a little bit of pain at the phrase I left Japan.
I'm an American who lived in Japan for many years, and I expect it to at the future to, at some point, be an American living in Japan.
But at the moment, I'm an American living in the United States, mostly for family reasons.
What is most surprised you about returning to Chicago?
I am having more difficulty with dealing with culture shock than my children, who have never known a nation other than Japan or my wife, who has not materially spent time outside of Japan.
And the shock is coming in little ways and big ways at the same time.
As those of you who have been present in the United States for the last 20 years know,
the United States is a different country in 2023 than it was when I kind of sort of left in 2004.
And so even though I'm like someone who followed much of the news about this on the Internet,
a lot of it as hitting me like quite hard in the face all at once.
But there are some things that like creep up over time that are not that noticed,
but really obvious if you only experience living in America
and once every 20-year increments,
one of those things is like portion sizes
are so much larger than they were when I was growing up
to a degree where there are many restaurants
that attempt to serve me things that are,
the act of attempting to serve that would put me off the notion of eating
because it does not seem to be designed to be an amount of food edible
by a normal person with my anchor
for what normal people ate in like the late 19,
90s. This is not just me saying this, by the way, you can look at pictures of McDonald's portion sizes over time and track them as they go up into the right. There are a lot of little things that Japan does, right? It seems to, I call it the will to have nice things. In the United States, many places, lacks the will to have nice things and suffers the consequences of that. You know, these are just a million little paper cut annoyances, like the delivery company deciding to deliver my bed to the middle of the front yard. And
because they couldn't get into the house.
We are a rich and powerful nation
that puts up with such obviously suboptimal things like that.
And I'm hitting a lot of them all at once,
and it is causing a degree of culture shock,
or versus culture shock, rather.
Last question. What is it you plan to learn about next?
Hmm. I have an answer to this question.
It is more of the engineering reality of geothermal heat
and electricity extraction between 6 and 10 kilometers
below the surface of the earth,
because I'm going to be doing a tiny bit of pro bono work on behalf of a nonprofit organization
that is attempting to popularize that technology as part of the energy mix of the next couple of years.
And you're bullish on it, I take it.
I think I'm bullish on it.
Matt Jamie, who's the founder of this organization two years ago,
and it was the, if you ever had that idea that just sticks with you and, like, torments you in your dreams,
and it's the thing that you can't get out of your head, even as you go through many other things in life.
Like this has a little professional connection to all the things that I've ever done.
done, but it is the idea that will not let me alone in my quiet moments.
And so I will have to exercise it by learning about this and seeing if the field deserves
to have its current hold on me.
And if not, I will find something else to rattle on.
But if yes, then you should probably do something with that knowledge.
Patrick McKenzie, thank you very much.
Thank you very much.
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