Conversations with Tyler - Paul Gillingham on Why Mexico Stays Together

Episode Date: March 25, 2026

Buy tickets for the live Conversations with Tyler recording with Craig Newmark at 92NY! Tyler calls Paul Gillingham's new book, Mexico: A 500-Year History, the single best introduction to the cou...ntry's past—and one of the best nonfiction books of 2026. Paul brings both an outsider's eye and ground-level knowledge to Mexican history, having grown up in Cork — a place he'd argue gave him an instinctive feel for fierce local autonomy and land hunger —earning his doctorate on the Mexican Revolution under Alan Knight at Oxford, and doing his fieldwork in the pueblos of Guerrero. He and Tyler range across five centuries of Mexican history, from why Mexico held together after independence when every other post-colonial superstate collapsed, to why Yucatán is now one of the safest places on earth, what two leaders from Oaxaca tell us about Mexican politics, how Mexico avoided the military coups that plagued the rest of Latin America, what Cárdenas's land reform actually achieved versus what it promised, whether the ejido system held Mexico back, why Mexico worried too much about land and not enough about human capital, how Mexico's fertility rate fell below America's, why Guerrero has been violent for two centuries, why the new judicial reforms are a disaster, where to find the best food in Mexico and Manhattan, what a cache of illicit Mexican silver sitting on a ship in the English Channel has to do with his next book, and more. Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links, or watch the full video on the new dedicated Conversations with Tyler channel. Recorded February 27th, 2026. Other ways to connect Follow us on X and Instagram Follow Tyler on X Sign up for our newsletter Join our Discord Email us: cowenconvos@mercatus.gmu.edu Learn more about Conversations with Tyler and other Mercatus Center podcasts here. Timestamps: 00:00:00 - Intro 00:01:30 - Post-Independence Mexico 00:05:18 - Peace in Yucatán 00:6:54 - Quintana Roo 00:08:24 - Mexican Infrastructure 00:10:26 - Oaxaca 00:13:54 - Great Food Outside Cities 00:16:39 - Leaders from Coahuila 00:17:50 - Military Rule and Civil War in Mexico 00:21:47 - The Cárdenas Regime 00:24:03 - The Ejido System 00:25:49 - Human Capital 00:40:59 - Doing Mexican History as a Brit 00:42:43 - Guerrero 00:48:37 - Michoacán Violence 00:50:44 - Monterrey 00:52:40 - Judicial Reforms 00:54:44 - The Best Mexican Film, Music, and Novel 00:59:42 - The Best Trip Around Mexico 01:04:05 - Outro

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Starting point is 00:00:04 Hey listeners, this is Dallas, one of the producers of conversations with Tyler. On April 14th, join Tyler at the 92nd Street Y in New York City for a live taping of conversations with Tyler featuring Craig Newmark, the founder of Craigslist and Craig Newmark Philanthropies. Tyler and Craig will discuss trust, cybersecurity, and the building blocks of resilient civic institutions in the digital age, along with plenty more, I'm sure. Tickets are selling quickly, so be sure to grab yours before they're gone. You can find the link to buy tickets at the top. of the show notes. Hope to see you there.
Starting point is 00:00:41 Conversations with Tyler is produced by the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, bridging the gap between academic ideas and real-world problems. Learn more at Mercatus.org. For a full transcript of every conversation, enhanced with helpful links, visit Conversationswithtyler.com. Hello, everyone, and welcome back to Conversations with Tyler.
Starting point is 00:01:07 Today I'm chatting with Paul Gillingham. He has a new book out, Mexico, a 500-year history. It is, in my view, the single best introduction to the history of Mexico and will be one of the best non-fiction books of this year, 26. Paul, welcome. Thank you very much for those kind words, and it's a privilege to be here. Thanks for the invitation. Now, after independence in 1821, why did not the rest of Mexico fragment the way Central America did a few years later, where it splits off from the Mexican Empire. Like, what determines the line, what sticks together with Mexico and what does not? That's a very good question, because it's one of the
Starting point is 00:01:48 things that really makes Mexico stand out in that period, those histories, is that after independence, the rest of the Americas, you get a series of super states. And so you get Gran Colombia, which is most of the Andes, and going across what's now Venezuela, you get the United Provinces of the Rio plate. And these are huge and very difficult to conceive of super states and they fail within a decade. And elsewhere, you look at other post-colonial states, thinking particularly of India, within a couple of years, you fragmented and failed. Mexico doesn't. Mexico actually stands up with the exceptions you put of Central America, which is formerly part of it, in fact, but leaves within short order. And so it's one of these questions, what I'm
Starting point is 00:02:37 Alvarenrie called the miracle that Mexico exists. And to explain it is a paradox. To make a try at it, I think that there is a common theme in Mexican history, which runs across most of those five centuries, which is a remarkable degree of hands-off government. It's imposed. Mexico has a lot of mountains. It's very difficult to rule from a central, any central pole. And so savvy governments, or governments with no choice, which are quite often, same thing, are very hands-off. Federalism is built into Mexico's soul, and I think that's one of the reasons from early on Mexico actually outpunches the rest of the Americas
Starting point is 00:03:20 in terms of sticking together as a territorial unit. As you know, in the early 19th century, there are rebellions in Yucatan, the caste wars, but Yucatan does not split off from Mexico. What keeps that together? Yucatan has always felt itself to be a different country, effectively. And that runs through to the present. You can see the cultural reasons, obviously, and the Maya and the other great, sophisticated urban culture of the 16th century and
Starting point is 00:03:48 before. And so it makes sense that they should feel themselves very different from the rest of what becomes Mexico. And in fact, it comes through in small but revealing ways, and back in the 20th century, people find themselves being asked whether they want a Yucatan beer or a foreign beer. And a foreign beer, and a foreign beer being anything in Mexico outside Yucatan. Why doesn't Yucatan leave? I think that it came extremely close. And in fact, there's a moment in the 1840s when Mexico and Texas form an alliance. And Texas is chartering warships out to Yucatan to try and prevent any naval incursions.
Starting point is 00:04:29 Why on earth does Yucatan stay? I think it's because of the absence. of an alternative capital, because Yucatan is profoundly racially divided. It's one of the, I think, few places in Mexico where you could say that really is a fairly stark racial divide. And you have a plantocracy, some ways like the U.S. South, for the civil war. You've got a relatively small white plantocracy centered in Merida. They have no interest whatsoever in leading an independent struggle.
Starting point is 00:05:02 And while the Maya achieve an underestimated level of sophistication as a state, it's still not at the point where you would get for more than a couple of years a really joined-up independence movement spanning all races, all areas, and the entire peninsula. Now more recently, Mexico has a reputation for being very violent, but Yucatan is especially peaceful. There are years where it's had a lower murder rate, I think, than Finland. Why is that part of the country, after this chaotic beginning, after. independence, recently so peaceful and so safe. Again, a good question, and it is, I think explains broader patterns of drugs and violence in Mexican history. The first is that foreigners in Mexico have carte blanche, or what in colonial time,
Starting point is 00:05:52 picolos, foreigners are untouchable. And because much of Yucatan, the Yucatan economy centers on tourism, the Riviera Maya, Kossumela, etc. There's an awful lot in these key populated coastal strips of foreigners. Killing them is bad business. Stability is better for business anywhere. In Yucatan, there's more of an imperative for that. So that's one. And the other is that it has ceased being what it used to be, which is a major transship and transshipment route. And so when I proposed to my wife on a beach in Kintaneru, We could go out at ATM next to Tulum when Touloum was a small dusty town. We could go out and twice a day we would see small planes coming up from Central America.
Starting point is 00:06:41 And we knew perfectly well as they headed north up through Kintanarul that this was a drugs run. As a transshipment route, it has been far surpassed. And so that other great reason for violence is absent. Why did the central government even create the state of Kintanaru now that you mention it? Oh, that's an extremely good question. Kintana Roo is very much its own country. And in fact, in the caste wars, which you mentioned, there's a very strong east-west divide on the peninsula. And the east is where the Maya rebels really survive the most.
Starting point is 00:07:17 And so I think that it's an attempt to sort of administratively corral the more unstable, difficult to rule parts of the country using Yucatan. That your point made as a country, it's an attempt to corral and say, okay, we can send army. in there, we can try and prevent contagion. And the idea you can do that by drawing a line on the map is obviously profoundly optimistic. It's more terrain settlement, which keeps Quintan the room different from the rest of the peninsula. But it worked, right? Can it be said to work when any sort of political project, can it be said to have worked when there are very few people there in the beginning. And Quintana Rue is historically really low population. Most of the Yucatan
Starting point is 00:08:06 was concentrated closer towards Merrila and that west coast. And Kintana Roo really takes off because of mass tourism, and that's because of state intervention. Relatively recently, Gankun was a village until the late 60s, early 70s. Before Perferio Diaz, why is there so little attention to infrastructure? in Mexico. Because the money's not there. But how does he get the money? What accounts for the change?
Starting point is 00:08:34 What accounts to change is, first of all, the final achievement of independence. And, you know, formerly in the history books, 1821, the Spanish leave, Mexico's independent, and new stage starts. And that's not actually true. I mean, just in terms of Spanish leaving, well, they don't. They maintain a garrison on the key fortress. in the main port controlling the entrance to Mexico from the Atlantic, the port of Veracruz. The Spanish stay there till 1829 controlling it. They don't really leave. Within two years of them finally leaving, you have a French invasion, a failed one, grant, but still an invasion, still
Starting point is 00:09:20 that instability. Then you get, obviously, American invasions, then you get a civil war, then you get, I'm sure we'll go into this in a minute. My point is that it's not 1867, when the Mexican independence forces take a European imposed emperor and shoot him, which is not done. You don't shoot emperors in, you know, global history. The Mexicans do. And this is a clear declaration of independence. And it's an end to other empire's pretensions. And it's the beginning of stabilization led by a brilliantly gifted. And this is a word I would always never use, but a brilliantly given. politician, Porfrio Diaz, who benefits from this being a time of a global boom when the rest of the
Starting point is 00:10:06 world, the industrial world, craves Mexican resources. And Diaz is very savvy to ride that into a new era where Mexico becomes the epitome of a successful, what used to be called, developing nation. And it's with that that you get the infrastructure. And you have Diaz, you have Guards, the other very important 19th century leader, and they're both from the state of Waxaca. Is that coincidence? It's only two data points, or does that tell us something? That is such a good question, because it is something which really stands out to add data points to that. At one stage, under the, somewhere at two sides of the congressmen are actually, effectively, from Wauaca. And while Congress is sort of a rubber stamp, nevertheless,
Starting point is 00:10:53 tells you something. And I think this goes back. This is the culmination of a very long-term trend of Wachaken political savvy and relative independence. Wachanegos are good at politics, and they are very politically engaged. If you want to make huge leaps, you say, well, that goes back to the conquest, the 16th century, where Spanish rules sort of flows around them. Why? Because people who live in mountains tend to be quite good. good at war and quite prickly, and the Wahakainos epitomize this. And so outside the main valley, Waxaca stays largely independent and very decentralized. And so it's a question of, it's almost like New England democracy, it's firstly independent, small cities, counties.
Starting point is 00:11:42 And every time Waxaca gets a chance, it sees it to really push for autonomy and political power. And you really see this, to wrap up this rather tangential explanation, the direct ancestor comes with independence, where suddenly towns are allowed to declare themselves counties with their own governments, their own elections, very competitive ones, and Oaxaca does it to an extraordinary extent. Every village in Oaxaca says, we are now a county. It's almost like Swiss cantons. It's this extraordinary democratic urge, and that trains people to be good at politics. And do you think that helps account for why to this day, Oaxaca State is so interesting to visit because there's so much local autonomy? I love that and I would say in part because one of the traditional tourist attractions of Mexico is precisely indigenous culture.
Starting point is 00:12:35 And because of this autonomy, Oaxaca is preserved, you know, a multitude of very strong indigenous cultures. I think, yes, that. I'd add to that that it's comparatively safe, a key consideration. But that's a recent thing. Tourism in Waxaca goes back a long time. I think it's also because you have this stunning colonial city. And Wahaka City is really beautiful. And we have in the US nothing at all.
Starting point is 00:13:06 Or Canada, we've got nothing like that. Finally, and I actually believe this. Mexican cuisine is very, very diverse. People think Mexican cooking, tacos, well, yes, but. And Wahaken cooking is really a superb cuisine. One of the best. I would say Wachaken and Yucateko cuisines head and shoulders above the rest of Mexico. And so I don't know how much that draws. Well, I do actually. There's quite a lot of sort of culinary tourism, which tends to be rich tourism in Waxaca these days. And so I think that's another draw. It's extraordinary, in fact, how many people have realized that over the last 15 or so years
Starting point is 00:13:47 and formed these sort of expatriate almost colonies in Oaxaca. It's a fantastic place to live. A mere two weeks ago, I was eating barbacoa in Clackolula. Have you ever been there? I have not, but I'm starting to resent this story already, and you haven't told it, Tyler. Go on, do tell. Well, there's a fantastic church in town. I would guess it's, I don't know, 20, 25 minutes outside of the main city.
Starting point is 00:14:10 So it's easy to get there. You just take a cab ride. We asked our cab driver, Taxisto, you know, where's the best barbecue in a nearby Pueblo? And that's where he took us. It was unbelievable. First of all, very good strategy. The best meal I had in Yucatan by country mile was about half an hour outside Merida. And it was the same thing.
Starting point is 00:14:31 Ask a local taxi driver, come on. If you want a really good meal, where would you go? And you say, ah, it's a bit of a drive. And you say, okay, I can see perverse incentive. Not in my question. But when you end up in a sort of small warehouse, really in the middle of nowhere, stuffed full of Mexican people with the most incredible deer, you think, okay, you know, I actually think this was a fair reflection.
Starting point is 00:14:57 I envy you that meal. 20 minutes out of a Mexican town is such a good recipe for finding the best food. 20 minutes, 30 minutes. I'm not sure why. Or just the outskirts. Yeah, I think that's actually quite true. and maybe there's a book in this, Tyler. I'm not going to write it, but there's a book in this.
Starting point is 00:15:17 Sociologically explain the significance and quality of restaurants 20 minutes outside major towns in Mexico. If I could ask you while you're there, what did you think of Monte Alban? It's a little boring for me. I've been there twice. I didn't go there a third time. The other ruins I much prefer. And, yeah, it's fine.
Starting point is 00:15:38 It's funny. I say that to people and they go, This is heresy. But yeah, frankly, given the plethora of archaeological sites, I think Monti Alban combines is the most boring, large one by a country mile. It's extraordinary. So I'm so glad to you that endorsed. I hope there aren't too many Wahrakei and your listeners to this particular podcast day.
Starting point is 00:16:01 You know, there's that small tomb you can see. What's it called? Is it? Sachila is the city or the Pueblo? It's, again, like 30 minutes outside of Wahakia. Santa City, I think. We had some great food there. And just to see that one Sapotech tomb, where you walk down the steps and you have it all to yourself, to me, is better than Monti Alban was. And that's just one thing in a field. That's the way Kobar used to be,
Starting point is 00:16:26 Yucatan and Sochalko in Morelos, which they've really, and I'm glad about this, they've really expand in the last 20 years, the dig, the sort of tourism potential. So they should have, because it's stunning. Now, if we look to the earth, early 20th century, it seems there's some number of key leaders from the state of Coahuila. Is that coincidence? No. There's Medero, there's Carranza. Why does that happen?
Starting point is 00:16:51 Coahuila is one of the states which benefits enormously from this global boom of the turn of the century, which translates into the U.S. drawing investment and resources in a sort of unprecedented way. I think that it's taking half of Britishhood global investment at that time. and resources are desperately needed. The obvious thing in Kuala is copper, copper mines. But on the border in Kualaila has a geography which stretches everything from arid mining territory through to really, really rich irrigated lands. And so it's wealthy.
Starting point is 00:17:30 It's next to US. You get a class of big landowners who are very diversified, very cosmopolitan. So Madero was educated in part in Paris, in part in Berkeley, and they look southwards and think this is a slightly slurotic dictatorship. We can do better. This is a big, very general question, but after World War II, Mexico avoids military rule and they avoid civil war, unlike many parts of the Americas. What's your account of that? Well, my account of that, first of all, that's a major paradox which really lay behind the subject of my doctorate and my last book. How do you account for the fact that Mexico has a revolution, first of all, one of the great revolutions, which lays down radical prescriptions for equality, which are then produced by one of the most unequal economies in the Americas.
Starting point is 00:18:29 So you've got, talking the revolution, you've got massive enduring inequality. And yet you have this, as you point out, abnormal peace. Going back to 1929, with regular elections like clockwork, every six years. Every six years, there's a peaceful transfer of power. There is never any even imagination of a January the sixth moment there. And to make another comparison, there's after 1929 no assassination. Whereas obviously here, JFK, RFK, MLK, there's almost alphabet soup of assassination of leaders, progressive leaders. As you look at this and try and make it add-up, it's extremely difficult.
Starting point is 00:19:15 And I think it's in part because the inequality misses some of the benefits for the rapidly growing urban populations, which range from superb, dirt cheap, subsidized cinema to low housing, to health, to health care, Mexican healthcare, given its income band, is very, very good. So just looking at jinny coefficients for either income or wealth doesn't tell the entire story of what Mexicans get out of the revolution. And the final thing is precisely those elections. Because this is a one-party state and the elections are rigged. No question.
Starting point is 00:19:54 All the way until the last decade, really, the national elections are rigged. But the local ones are not. Well, yes, they are actually, but any group of people who feel strongly enough, like say, Wachainos, about their local autonomy, about ruling themselves, can make enough of a fuss about it that through the mechanism of election, backed up by riot, they can actually get their people in. And so there is this unconventional but effective route to popular representation, which a time outpunches the British, because in the British system, candidates just get imposed. from the party. The party says local Canada X will run for election in Surrey, and that's it.
Starting point is 00:20:36 Democracy is finished. Mexico's not like that. And I think that's something that helps temper this radical inequality in qualitative terms, this apparent national, what are the people called the soft dictatorship. And then the final piece, and I'm sorry this answer goes on, but this is just a central paradox which political scientists and historians have struggled to understand. understand for decades. And I think we're finally getting a handle on it. The final piece is the immense war weariness caused by a revolution that kills one in ten Mexicans. And the education that gives leaders all the way to the 50s in the absolute pragmatic imperative, whatever you do, keep the lid on, whatever needs doing. If it's repression, then, but generally conciliation works
Starting point is 00:21:28 better. And this extremely complex equation, I think, is what keeps the army out of politics, what keeps relative peace and relative buy-in to this unequal, single-party state. There's nothing like Mexico really is idiosyncratic in this, and it's extraordinary, as you can see, complicated recipe. And right before World War II, the Cardenas regime redistributes a lot of the cultivatable land. How does that fit into your story? That fits into my story in, it's always good to say a work in Trinity. So I'm going to say in three ways, but then reserve the right to say fourth. And the first is that one of the key reasons to the Mexican Revolution is land. Mexico is a strongly rural country with strong traditions of this autonomy, small freeholding or
Starting point is 00:22:15 collective landowning in indigenous areas. And the Porfirriato sees a revolution in this, extraordinary concentration of land. This entails obviously dispossession. of the peasantry. This is one of the key things that leads people like Miliano Zapata to rebel. And so you have this sort of pent up demand for land from millions of families. That's one. Two, it largely for many fails because they get land, but they get land on the condition that say they continue factory farming. Also, everyone's going to grow sugar, everyone's going to grow wheat. Not quite a Soviet colchords, but you don't have, the peasant doesn't have autonomy, which they want, quite often, to plant whatever they want, right? This is in many ways of failure from their point of view.
Starting point is 00:23:04 But there's always the psychological payoff that they have got land, and then in more straightforward terms, this is one of the reason that Mexico's healthcare system would have really nuts and bolts level works. It's because every communal farm, this is a heedle they're called, has a medical office. And so even though in the sort of apparent terms of giving Mexico's rural population a new level of wealth autonomy, it doesn't work particularly well, it brings a certain pride, it brings a certain independence, it brings good health care. There are all these less tangible benefits. There's nothing like it in the Americas. And one of the key reasons I think that, again, the countryside stays largely quiescent. while it is stripped of resources in the 60 years after Karnas leaves office. Hasn't the Ahito system held Mexico back?
Starting point is 00:24:06 Because without that system, many more people would sell their land to outsiders, move to the cities, just to have much higher real wages. For instance, as you see in China. Well, you do get massive urbanization, and it's people being pushed out of the countryside by a deliberate transfer of resources. What do I mean by that? I mean that food prices are capped. And so the really key one may is its prices kept artificially low. This means that you can have an urban and especially industrializing workforce on the cheap. You can have really low wages. You can have
Starting point is 00:24:41 quite low cost. And in Mexico, reasonably high quality industrialization, it all comes at the expense of the countryside. And so does the Aheado change that? No, not really. Also, the Achillo is used for precisely the sort of commercial farming, which generates the sort of profits, economies of scale that, you know, a sort of command economy or China might actually achieve. And at some instances, that's not just run by the government, but it's run by the government as a sort of almost shell company or front for the major foreign corporations. And the key example is from the US, Anderson Clayton, one of the giants in food production, cotton, etc. They are, through the Mexican government, instructing a helios exactly what to grow.
Starting point is 00:25:32 So in the end, functionally, what's the difference? And the pressure on the countryside and the attraction of the city means that you're going to get this sort of Chinese style and level of urbanization, irrespective of the agrarian reform. Has Mexico worried too much about land and not enough about human capital? No, I don't think so. But say you look at Lebanese migrants, right? They don't obsess over accumulating land. They have high human capital. They've done very, very well under the same regime.
Starting point is 00:26:03 You could say that the same about the Lebanese globally. I mean, you want the great diaspora merchants. You think Armenia. You think I'm Lebanon. And so I think they bring that. I don't think, I mean, you know, look at how much land there is in Lebanon. and the Bacar Valley is tiny. You can drive up and down it in about three hours
Starting point is 00:26:23 if you're feeling quite brave on any given day. And so I don't think you're absolutely right. Land is not a Lebanese aim. In Mexico, as a very strongly peasant economy, peasant society until 1960s, really, they want what every peasant globally wants before you get rapid economic change, which is what they call subsistency.
Starting point is 00:26:48 autonomy. What does that mean? I want the guarantee that I can grow enough food to get my family through the next harvest cycle. And you can see the logic to that. That's actually a more conservative and stable economic structure than relying on commercial food purchase when your own income is low and unstable. What I'm trying to say is it makes very good sense. Does the cargo system, which is common in Mexican pueblos, does it make any sense? Is it sustainable? Yeah, I think it is. Talking about human capital, I think that the cargo system actually, through its distribution of social capital, brings a lot of talented people to actually make the strange swap. I mean, the cargo system whereby you and an indigenous zone assume political office with absolutely zero payoff and at quite considerable cost in terms of cash and time. It makes sense because it, brings the sort of brightest and best into office over and over again. This is when it works.
Starting point is 00:27:55 This is a very broad generalisation. The only real downside is a gerontocracy. And when you look around our political system, it's quite clear that gerontocracy isn't limited to societies which work the cargo system. But say I'm a leader, commissario, I have to pay for part of the fireworks, part of the beer. Isn't my incentive as a talented person to minimize local state capacity rather than really having everything develop?
Starting point is 00:28:25 Oh, now that's a good question. I would say no, actually, and that generally cargo holders work as intermediaries with the state in the 20th century. And so by investing in fireworks, buying a share in a bull for a fiesta, and buying some pulke, whatever your local huge, and not just maintaining some stability, but doing it in part by bread and circuses, gives a level of control and local nuts and bolts of knowledge, which the central government then uses as part of this basic quest for stability,
Starting point is 00:29:04 and with stability going all the way back to Porphyriato comes through development. And I think that this is a vast generalisation. The cargo system has great flaw. but the reason it endures is it also has great strengths. But a lot of these villages, they seem quite dysfunctional. It seems not uncommon for, say, half of the grown men to be alcoholics, right? There's a major problem with imbalance. The men leave.
Starting point is 00:29:30 The women have to stay. They're abandoned or they can't marry or there's no one to support the kid. Wouldn't the central government do better actually just trying to minimize involvement in the villages? Sorry, I don't understand the last part of that question. When you say minimizing involvement, Do you mean just stepping back and letting villages get on with whatever their collective goals are? I didn't quite understand. Well, the village itself can make it hard to migrate because you cannot, in isolated fashion, sell your land to an outsider, right?
Starting point is 00:30:03 Someone's willing to bid for it, but the whole village, in essence, has a veto and whether you can sell your land. Wages are much higher outside the village. Alcoholism is lower outside the villages, typically. So should the villages be subsidized or in essence should moving to the cities be subsidized in terms of the net effect of policy? I think that villages should be subsidized and Mexican policy makers have realized that for a long time and done so. I think that land is no longer the question. Most people in villages, most. This depends very much where you go.
Starting point is 00:30:36 But the reason half the men aren't there is precisely because they have migrated to work, whether it be migrating to city. whether it be migrating to the north, and remittances are a key source. They are the lifeline for many villages, and that's the way it's been for nearly a century, and you get a certain amount of sort of small-scale cultivation, as always, of maize, tomato, squash, chilies, etc., your full sort of nutrient package.
Starting point is 00:31:05 That's a small portion of what people are actually doing in villages, and that's increasingly uneconomic on a sort of market local level. And this is why you get this outmigration that you talk about. It's not just male. It's also women ever since they set up maculadores. There's been huge outflow, the more entrepreneurial, to these factories on the border tax-free zones to assemble US components. Alcoholism, what remains the real economic stress
Starting point is 00:31:39 with this huge out-migration of young people, express itself as it does in a lot of people with drinking, with... What's interesting, though, is not with drugs. Alcohol is this very strong constant... I mean, you know, speaking as a Brit, speaking about other people's alcohol consumption is slightly hypocritical,
Starting point is 00:31:59 and I'm not going to really go there. But it is interesting that historically, well, Mexico is a hard-drinking society, and we're going back to the colony now. Say I look at India, a country with a lot of problems. India typically grows between 4 to 8% a year, depending which numbers you believe. Mexico is lucky to grow at 2% a year. What accounts for the difference? Like where is Mexico failing? Oh, I think Mexicans would see that as extraordinary success because Mexicans had the greatest demographic transition in history. You know, the way you get population growth and, you know, any species is basically an F-shaped curve.
Starting point is 00:32:38 in the right sort of right environment. And Mexico had this exceptionally steep curve, and its populationary 1910 and 2000 increases 700%. And that is steeper than anywhere in the world, that speed. And what does that mean? It means that you come to the 70s, and just as population control starts to be a global concern, Mexico has this very joined-up state.
Starting point is 00:33:06 It's impoverished, but it's pretty joined up, and takes a look at what they see as being a problem, which is population growth, putting too much strain on state infrastructure, social services. And okay, so we need to control that ASAP. And they put together this non-coercive campaign, unlike India. India identifies the same problem. I'm talking about per capita income growth, though. So India gets a lot richer every year. I thought you meant population growth. No.
Starting point is 00:33:35 Okay. Maybe we can go back. to that because that also fascinates me. Per capita income growth, again, I think that's an extremely good question. I think that Mexico has a overall impressive medium term GDP growth. And so at the end of the 60s, it's the 27th largest economy in the globe. Right now, it's the 13th. The question becomes really income distribution. So I think, that if you look at it not in question of a few years or maybe a decade, but over a longer term, a Mexican economy growth has been impressive. This isn't all down to hard work or smart
Starting point is 00:34:18 policy. It's down to the great advantage of being next door to the world's largest market, no. But what it does mean is that you have maybe not the sort of extremely accelerated economic growth of right now in India, but post-nafter, you actually do get quite a lot of quite fast, sort of take off almost speed of growth. So maybe it's just that Mexico has actually gone a stage beyond India. India is, if you want, playing catch-up. That's me thinking on my feet. What do you think? I think human capital is by far the biggest problem. And then the slow rate at which small informal businesses are willing to enter the more heavily regulated sector is a real violent. But Mexico has a lot of human capital. One of the reasons that this population
Starting point is 00:35:03 control works is because you get far more. people going through those critical first three years of primary school. Ideally, everyone goes through high school, no, but that's just not a global reality. And the key metric is how many people are you getting through three years of school, which teach you to read, write, and do rudimentary maths. And Mexico's record on that is far better than most middle income comparatives. There's a really good study, which says especially women, far more get those first three years than precisely, actually, in India, Kenya, and Egypt. We're looking now at this phase of takeoff I'm talking about of the 70s and 80s.
Starting point is 00:35:43 And so I think the human capital is really there. A lot of Latin America has above average years of schooling for their income level, but pretty low test scores, pretty low performance at the top. Just for instance that English, even getting by in conversation in Mexico, seems to be only about 7%. That to me is remarkably low, especially given how many of them migrate or wish to migrate. And I think education has failed Mexico.
Starting point is 00:36:10 Even though people, yeah, they show up at the building, the teachers often aren't good. Sometimes in the Pueblos, they're not even there. I think that Mexicans would absolutely agree with you, and I would beg to differ, part differ. The first thing I'd say is that since forever, a key skill in migrating has precisely been English acquisition. And again, this is kind of global.
Starting point is 00:36:35 No, I mean, you get this everywhere. There's this realization. And migration selects the most entrepreneurial, the most dynamic, generally. And so this sector goes to the US either preps beforehand or else learns very quickly here. It's one of the reasons that they're economically so successful. Back in Mexico, 7% speaking English, do you think by global comparatives, that's low? For a neighbor, it's very, very low. And what percent of the Mexican population has lived in the U.S. at some point?
Starting point is 00:37:10 Right? It's got to be at least 10 percent, probably higher. So that to me is stunningly low. I'd say that probably is part due to the urban rural divide, and Mexico's population is now overwhelmingly urban. It tips in 1960 for the first time there's more city dwellers than country dwellers. There is a chasm between education, in the countryside and education in the city.
Starting point is 00:37:36 So I would be interested in those numbers if you disaggregated them down to towns of, I would say, 4,000 plus and saw how that broke down because my bet would be that you would have far higher, globally comparative or even beyond rates in the cities, which, as you say, would make sense. You'd think, well, hold in a minute, you've got a country which invests by comparatives relatively well in education. You're a neighbour to the US. where's the English?
Starting point is 00:38:04 Good questions. I would disaggregate the data before I'm taking home the idea that there is a massive failure in that specific sector of the education system. To return to population, why is the Mexican total fertility rate now below that of the United States? Much poorer country, right? One thinks of Latin America as having high fertility, but it doesn't anymore. What's happened there?
Starting point is 00:38:28 This again is the product really. two things, which we've already been covering. And one is this really joined up non-coassive population control of the 70s and 80s, which was a global model. Mexico hosted the global conference on this, I think twice or three times. It got a prize from the UN. And how could it do this compared to the rest of Latin America? Two things. First of all, by keeping Catholicism out of political life more than almost anywhere else. And so whereas you have priests invaying against the evils of contraception, again, across most other Latin American societies, the revolution and the 19th century before it meant that Mexico has a unique degree of separation of church
Starting point is 00:39:18 and state. As the church just doesn't say anything, as the government goes about aggressively pushing the pill, condoms, etc. Now, at this stage, the obvious question was, okay, well, hold on. so the church doesn't say anything, but on a micro level, inside families, conservative people used to until the 70s, the total fertility rate was nearly seven per family. And, you know, traditionally having children, especially male children, is a symbol of success. And, you know, economically it used to be useful to have the spare hands, not? So what changes? A micro level goes back to education. Women who are educated have far more autonomy to say, yes to contraception. And you see this really clearly in rates of uptake of the pill,
Starting point is 00:40:04 which in the 60s goes through the roof as soon as it is available. And we've got surveys from hospital, you know, people are there. Do you take the pill? Yes, no. Yes, you do. And even in really conservative societies, there's a village which has been very studied. It's wonderful called San Jose de Gracia in the highlands of Halisco. And there, we've got this really good qualitative sort of micro study. I wouldn't just say, yes, actually, we don't want to have 6.7 children, thank you very much. And so we will use contraception. And sorry, to the men, you're just going to have to like that.
Starting point is 00:40:38 And why is that that globally correlates to primary education? And women's primary education, how many women for all the floors, are getting through the doors for those first three years? By the end of the 60s, it's 73%. again, go global to what was then a band of middle-income countries. There's nothing like it. Now, most historians of Mexico, they're not British, and you are, where are you from in Britain?
Starting point is 00:41:04 And how do you think that's shaped, how you read Mexican history? I think there's a small group of, well, I know there's a small group of British historians and, you know, they're rather good at what they do. My own story is actually not wholly British because I grew up in Ireland in the southwest in a county called Cork. And I was actually thinking, that's the accent you have, by the way. So I was confused when you said you were British.
Starting point is 00:41:31 Yeah, no, it's a strange mix, isn't it? But the fellow is an Irish accent. Yeah, you've got a good ear. It's sort of a hybrid. Growing up in Cork, I was supposed to give a talk last month at the university there, and I was thinking, you know, what can I say to link the two up? And truth is, what I've been talking about, this fierce local independence,
Starting point is 00:41:53 local pride, identity. This is so cork. I mean, corp sees itself. And so I am also. Oh no, totally. And land, as you say, and hardship. Cork is one of the centers of the great hunger, the great famine of the 19th century. So there's that. But then I was educating Britain and I was lucky enough to come across the smartest historian I had ever met. A historian of the revolution called Alan Knight. And I was deciding what I want to do with my sort of, intellectual life. I met this person and thought, okay, that's what I'd like to do. And thanks to the Oxford system, I could spend one semester entire, just working with him, just on the Mexican revolution, and that changed everything. And then there's a flip answer, which is Mexico's weather is a lot better than England's. Now, when it comes to crime and violence, why is the state of Guerrero traditionally so tough, so violent, so difficult? Is it just mountains? Is it Something else? Low state capacity. Ethnic groups that are there?
Starting point is 00:42:56 Guerrero is a place which is very dear to me. I actually, from my doctorate, really tried to dive deep into two states, and Guerrero was one of them. So I went to villages and did sort of that level work in various places. And in part, yes, it's geographic determinism, it's mountains. But then you say, well, hold on. The Sierra Mani runs all the way up into the Rockies. Can you tell us a bit more? And I think it's because of a long tradition of the dry for political independence,
Starting point is 00:43:30 exacerbated in its intensity by a large Afro-Mexican population on the coast, who distinctly conscious that they have been discriminated against, who are good at violence. I think it's because Guerrero is next door, or it's relatively close to Mexico City, and so it's threatening to Mexico City in the way, say, Sonora or Yucatan isn't so much. And so when some fairly oppressive conditions, you can imagine them, land monopolization, political thuggery, etc., combine in a state with people who really are very keen on independence and are relatively close to city, the answer is this sort of reinforcing cycle of repression, opposition, repression. And that's
Starting point is 00:44:27 what you've seen in Guerrero going back really on and off across two centuries of Mexican independence, but specifically intensified from Porfirio onwards. And what's forgotten sometimes is really interesting is that those three families which really run de Guerrero Coast, And one of them is actually American. It's hugely successful, major landowners. And so you think of Guerrero as being, you know, slightly remote, etc. It's also got the major port of Acapulco. It's extremely dynamic.
Starting point is 00:44:59 It's multi-ethnic. There's a lot of competition. And there's a long history of, again, this desire to be left alone. What's your favorite part of Carrero? If you drive north at what's called the Costa Grande, So you go to Acapulco, you try and write, you go up what's called the Costa Grande, and you get to tourist towns Iwatnejo, Istapa. And after about four hours of driving, you get to a place called Saladita,
Starting point is 00:45:32 which is basically a restaurant with a surf break. And that and the village just about next door called Troncones. I spent a lot of very, very happy time there when I was a good. kid. So that's my favourite part. Did you spend any time in the Rio Balsas villages? No, I didn't. There was a couple of reasons. One of the key ones was that region was perceived as being extremely dangerous while I was there. And so there were horror stories like the Egyptian consul took a wrong turn. Instead of going along the coast, went up into that area and was sort of killed and dismembered, completely breaking the rule that foreigners are untouchable.
Starting point is 00:46:14 And no, I didn't, and I wouldn't put it at the top of parts of Guerrero. I would like to explore at length either. Why, have you been there? Yeah, I've spent a lot of time there. They're very beautiful. I used to go there to buy amates and pottery. The road in can be tricky, but they're very safe once you get there. Which period are we talking about with that?
Starting point is 00:46:38 I was mostly there in the 90s and early 2000s, which was safer than today. You and me both, yeah. But then they were completely safe. No problems whatsoever. I think one of that was the roadway. That was one of the roads like the Costa Grande, where you were told, okay, between basically dawn and dusk, it's not too bad as a sort of roll of the dice. But from dusk to dawn, that would be foolish to travel. Lack of a guardrail would worry me as much as anything.
Starting point is 00:47:09 But for a Nahuatl speaking villages, it's the best place to go in Mexico, I think, that I know of. There, and I would say the northern Sierra of Puebla is also strong concentrations. But was that just for the off-the-beaten track fascination, or was there a specific reason which took you there? I ended up writing a book about it, but mostly for art collecting. And, you know, one comes to have friends in these places, as I'm sure you have too. And you want to visit them and they regard you as a kind of family or compadre, whatever you'd call it. Well, I'm glad I wasn't more rude about him than I was already. Well, it's a tough place.
Starting point is 00:47:49 Your living standard once you arrive is extremely low. Yeah. The place I spent longest in is a village in the north called Ichatiopan, about an hour and a half drive, at least back then, out of TASCO, where a lot of people go in a sort of silver city. Ichcateupan was about 1,500 people then, really very poor, and one cafe on the main square and very, actually well, very, very little else. I ended up like a feeble foreigner going with sort of a little
Starting point is 00:48:20 camping stove and many, many cans of Campbell's soup and tuna fish and saltines. Yeah, that's, those parts of the countryside then you had endemic threats to your stomach. Now, 30 years ago, I would not have thought, did not think that Michua Khan would end up so violent. and yet it has. What's the story in that state? First of all, me neither. A story in that state is a combination of production and transshipment. For transshipment, you've got the ports of Lazaro Karnas, which is a huge port.
Starting point is 00:48:56 There is a total white elephant. It was bought in the 70s, as a way of honoring the great revolutionary leader, Karnas. It was not connected ever to anything really. So you've got this fantastic infrastructure from both coastal but also trans-Pacific trade. So it's a very good place to begin precarceres and fentanyl more recently. Precors for meth.
Starting point is 00:49:21 So that's part of the transcription, the transshipment. It's also that whole Pacific coast, obviously, is a major transshipment zone. There's also the production, and methamphetamine was large recently, but in the highlands also, heroin, I mean, sort of poppy and marijuana. you've got the avocado industry, huge prize for extortion, which is increasingly many drug trading organizations principal or major part of their portfolio and avocado farmers and lime farmers are great to extort. And then finally, we come back to my favorite themes, mountains. It is quite easy to hide things like meth labs and it's quite easy to kill.
Starting point is 00:50:09 soldiers who come looking for you. Mitya Khan is sort of made for guerrilla warfare. This combination of a place where you can produce a lot of excellent illicit goods, you can transship them, and you can kill state actors who come after you and make Mishu Khan this recentral violence. The final piece is, over all these resources. It's been a front line over different cartels, shifting over the last 20 years as cartels come and go, but it's never had that single organization dominance, which makes places safe. Now, when your model of how Mexico is evolving, as you know, Monterey is quite a wealthy part of Mexico, and it's growing. 20 years from now, will that just be safe and normal?
Starting point is 00:50:55 Or is it still going to be in this in-between state where you have to worry what road you're on, are you too close to the border, or will it just all be fine because of the wealth? Well, already Monterey is one of the places where I would feel really quite safe. In town, but out of town, right? You have to ask questions. No, well, yeah. But yeah, noeverly on, the state, it's also not sort of, it's not front line. These things, as you sort of imply, shift rapidly. And so until quite recently, Colima, Pacific coastal state, was really quite tranquil. It's now the most violent state in Mexico.
Starting point is 00:51:34 until two years ago, Sinaloa, because it was controlled by a single drug trading organization, the Sinaloa cartel, was also counter-induatively really quite safe. It's not anymore because there's an internal scene war. Monterey. I think it's very bad business to have a war over drugs in somewhere which doesn't grow them, somewhere which isn't important to transshipment and somewhere where there are such fantastic possibilities of extortion, middle and small income businesses.
Starting point is 00:52:14 And so I would already be quite happy around Nueval Leon and I would predict because of those structural factors, nothing to grow, little to transship, that it will, and the wealthy point out, it will continue thus. and in 20 years, I would hope with an even greater sense of security in the countryside around it. Now, the recent judicial reforms, which spilled over into the more recent administration, a lot of outsiders said, well, that's taking away the independence of the Mexican judiciary.
Starting point is 00:52:50 Do you agree or how bad is it or does it not matter much? What's your sense? I think it matters greatly. I always found it strange the idea of electing any sort of judicial, official and so when I moved the US I thought well hold on you you do what the idea of electing judges is a really poor idea I think in Mexico because of the interest of local drug trading organizations in having sympathetic judges and it's a lot lower cost to get them elected than to threaten them Judges are people who it's generally a bad idea to kill.
Starting point is 00:53:30 The state doesn't like it. Happens really regularly, but still quite a high-risk strategy as opposed to just having them in your pocket. And while electoral turnout across Mexico is admirably high and remarkable, judicial elections have just been the glaring exception to that. I think turnout was 13%. And I think that in itself is a condemnation of the whole project. And so while recognizing flaws in, longstanding flaws in the Mexican judicial system, this is, I think, a disastrous reform.
Starting point is 00:54:07 Why did they do it then? They did it, I think, because of a desire to get the current dominant party, Morena, really further dug into regional power by having sympathetic judiciary. I think that Morena's local and regional activists were very keen on it. I think it was philosophical populism as well from the Amlo government, and I think it was absolutely, it's one of the most unfortunate things I've seen come out of Mexican politics in the last decade. For our last segment, just some rapid fire questions about Mexico. What's your favorite Mexican movie? Oh, I'm going to say winter light, but.
Starting point is 00:54:55 Your view may differ. Anything with Maria Felix in it. Name one. Donia Barbara? Superb. I'd also say, though, more recently, and tu mama, too. That's a great film.
Starting point is 00:55:08 It's difficult to stop laughing at. And three burials of Melchia des Estrada, I like very much. I think that's the black, dark humor there is profoundly Mexican. I think that's one of the reasons why the British can really appreciate Mexico is we've got a similarly dark sense of humor. Now, Howard Stern was famously rude about Mexican music. What in it do you like best? I like the fact that they do superb girly pop.
Starting point is 00:55:38 That's a terrible that I'm right, but they have really good from the last 20 years, women's singers who are extremely intelligent, tuneful, dynamic, varied. I'm thinking specifically of Julietta Benegas and Natalia Lafurtad, the latter, and this is in my book. and wrote a song back in the year 2000, which is a hilarious reflection on her sister's pregnancy, the state of the world, and called the First Lady of Mexico a Racist Worm.
Starting point is 00:56:03 This is music which, you know, it's thought-provoking and tuneful. And so I like that. I think at its best, it's a very clever music. And what for me is it's worst with apologises to everybody who likes, and the Tires de Norte, Norteño music, I cannot stand recorded. But if you've ever heard it live, in a night spot, suddenly the polkers, the wheezing,
Starting point is 00:56:32 the songs which sort of a mex conversion of gangster rap, you think, actually, yeah, this is quite good. I was an Ensenada a couple of years ago. And up in this bar with a sort of a masked guy with an M-16 on the door, and three Norteno bands inside, and it was fabulous. So, you know, even,
Starting point is 00:56:49 my least favorite has some legs to it. It can be very good fun and very evocative. What's the great classic Mexican novel? Has to be La Mvue de Artemio Cruz, the death of Artemio Cruz. Pedro Pardomo, for me, or even Savage Detectives. I know Bologna's from Chile, but to me it's a Mexican novel. Totally, and I'm glad you say that, because Savage Detectives is very much a sort of insider's novel of Mexico. I mean, the mockery of the UNAM, and specifically its faculty, its faculty of law and philosophy, is just so spot on. And yet, in part because it is so close to what I study, to the mystery of the origins of the one-party state and the pre. And in part also, I think it's one of the first Mexican novels I read and things you read or things you listen to between the ages of 14 and 18, they mark you and stay with you fairly or.
Starting point is 00:57:46 are unfairly. And why Artemio Cruz as your pick? Artemio Cruz, because of the real human complexity of it. So it's the story of a young revolutionary who manages through violence, luck, business smarts, extortion to move from being very, from very poor beginnings to being a major Mexican mogul. The story skips between his life in sort of decadent old age, and he's made it, but in the classic sort of the hollowness of wealth, he's made it, but in human times, he's totally emptied. And then the beginning, the story if he got there, and I find it so moving, so tragic and so deeply evocative of the Mexico I read about, the Mexico I study. I say, if I'd read it 10 years later, who knows, and if I'd read it last year,
Starting point is 00:58:42 I might actually be ranking it below the recent novels of Alvaro Enrique, who two novels really stick out. One is like a modern Werte di Artemio Cruz. It's called decency, decencia, which anybody who sort of likes Mexican humor, likes Mexico City will just get. And the other is your empires have been dreams in English,
Starting point is 00:59:06 which is a retelling of the conquest as this glorified heist by a bunch of fortunate thugs, which I think most historians would agree with and has some twists in it which are stunning. And Alvara, of course, has the advantage of he actually reads quite a lot of history. So when he writes history, the details are there, and you find yourself nodding, oh, yeah, yeah, can believe that. Ezra Klein is a big fan of the Conquest book.
Starting point is 00:59:31 I think, well, it did very well, and I can see why. It was clever, complex, it was provocative, and it had a killer twist to it. What's not to like? Let's say an educated person comes to you. They live in the United States, and they have two weeks to spend, and they want to learn Mexico.
Starting point is 00:59:48 But put aside Mexico City and put aside the ruins. They want to learn Mexico, Mexico proper. Where do you send them? What's the ideal Mexico trip? Okay. I'm thinking ideal in terms of educational, not necessarily. But it should be fun and interesting too, right? Okay.
Starting point is 01:00:04 So I would send them across the border in California in Tijuana. I would then tell them to fly to, I think, probably Zacatecas, because the sort of Baroque splendor of Mexico, it's not captured anywhere with the same intensity. I mean, this was the center of the sort of financial, the wealth-producing world. Because it had the biggest mine in the world under the colony. That translated into this absolutely just, it's beyond words, architecture, it's stunning. You get buildings. There's a style called the Chiriguresk, where,
Starting point is 01:00:37 Every inch is carved with extraordinary detail. So I think Tijuana, Zacatecas. And from Zacatecas, I'd go to a town called Aguas Calientes. And I would make sure to go there during the annual feria, which is notable for two things, apart from the fact that it's a great week-long party. And one is you get some of the best bullfights in Mexico, and two is this is one of the very few times
Starting point is 01:01:03 when gambling is legal temporarily there. When you combine that, again, it's a pretty colonial town, and I'd make sure and go and see our symphony orchestra, which is superb, Argentine conductor. From Aguos Calientes, I think I'd take a plane and go to, I'm trying to do math now, three days in each place. So nine days, two more cities. I would go to Halapa in Veracruz, precisely because it's particularly untouristed for its quality as a city, and their surroundings are beautiful. sort of temperate climate. And then the final one is really cramming things in. I'd hope to have a private jet on this or else a driver. I would go to San Cristobar Las Casas, the colonial capital of Jappas. Great trip. Last two questions. First, what's the best Mexican restaurant? Inner near
Starting point is 01:01:54 Chicago? In or near Chicago, I'm not sure for the simple reason my family is actually based in New York. And so when I go out for dinner, it's usually in New York. In near New York, then. So, oh, now that's great because I just found a place. East Harlem or where? No, it's downtown. It's called Santo Loco. And it's a tacheria, which is exceptional. And in case you find that to be in v. Snobbery,
Starting point is 01:02:20 I would say that underneath the tacharia, there's a hidden quite smart restaurant. It's an almost a sort of speakeasy restaurant. Both of them are superb, and I intend spending a lot of time in both of them. So that's my answer for New York. Get to Santo Loco. and have their two of that.
Starting point is 01:02:36 You have to try two. One is their mushroom taco, which is a revelation, and the other is their carnitas. For the last question, just to plug your book again, Mexico, the 500-year history, everyone should buy and read it. Finally, what will you do next? I'm writing a book which is a prehistory of money laundering, and it's based on a document I found in the British Foreign Office,
Starting point is 01:03:00 which is a query from a director of the great bullion. dealers Johnson Mathy. And it says, I've just been in touch with a person on a steamship lying off in the Channel Islands who has five million pounds worth of illicit government, Mexican government silver on board. I'd like to buy it pennies on the pound. And what would your advice be? And the first bit of advice is check that the silver actually exists and don't tell the Mexican government. I would like to know what happened next at that end, because I think I know at the Mexican end, where it came from, and how it got onto the ship in New York Harbor. So I'm hoping to reconstruct using Mexican, American, there's FBI involvement, and British
Starting point is 01:03:51 archives as much as I can the path of this silver in this decade, the first great decade of money laundering, which is the 1920s. Paul Gillingham, thank you very much. Tyler, it's been a pleasure. Thank you for the invitation. Thanks for listening to Conversations with Tyler. You can subscribe to the show on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite podcast app. If you like this podcast, please consider giving us a rating and leaving a review. This helps other listeners find the show.
Starting point is 01:04:22 On Twitter, I'm at Tyler Cowen, and the show is at Cowan Convo's. Until next time, please keep listening and learning.

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