Conversations with Tyler - Russ Roberts and Tyler on COVID-19

Episode Date: March 19, 2020

Tyler and Russ Roberts joined forces for a special livestreamed conversation on COVID-19, including how both are adjusting to social isolation, private versus public responses to the pandemic, the cha...llenge of reforming scrambled organization capital, the implications for Trump's reelection, appropriate fiscal and monetary responses, bailouts, innovation prizes, and more. Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links, or watch the full video. Recorded March 18th, 2020 Other ways to connect Follow us on Twitter and Instagram Follow Tyler on Twitter  Follow Russ on Twitter Email us: cowenconvos@mercatus.gmu.edu Subscribe at our newsletter page to have the latest Conversations with Tyler news sent straight to your inbox. 

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Starting point is 00:00:02 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 Mercadis.org. And for more conversations, including videos, transcripts, and upcoming dates, visit Conversationswithtyler.com. Okay, welcome everybody. Today is March 18th, 2020. This is a special edition of Econ Talk to be released more or less simultaneously with
Starting point is 00:00:37 conversations with Tyler. And that's because my guest, or co-conspirator in this conversation, is longtime econ talk guest, Tyler Cowan of George Mason University. We're streaming this live on the YouTube channel of the Mercatus Center of George Mason. Now, in general, I try not to do timely episodes,
Starting point is 00:00:58 but somehow something felt different this week. For one, I felt an urge to connect with my audience as we all are hunkering down, sheltering in place, self-quarantining, self-isolating. You know, I'm releasing e-contalk episodes every Monday, and they were recorded weeks and weeks ago, which is the way I like to do it, because there's nothing particularly timely, usually, in what I release.
Starting point is 00:01:22 But this seemed that there was a lot to talk and think about. And, Tyler, you are a self-described infivore. You're such a creative thinker. I want to try to learn from you about where we are and to share my thoughts when possible about where I think we are and to try to learn from each other and hope that that's of some value to those you listening out there. I want to start on a personal note.
Starting point is 00:01:47 My father passed away on March 2nd of this month, March 2nd of this year a little over two weeks ago. The last eight days of his life, he was on a ventilator, and we removed him from that contraption, and he lived for about an hour with his family in the room. was a very powerful moment. But I think that probably colored some of my reaction to this crisis when it started to ramp up. My dad had pneumonia.
Starting point is 00:02:14 He had MERS. At that point, he had a bad lung. And I'm starting to look at the data as they come out. And I'm looking at the China data and it says, you know, if you're 60 to 69 and I'm 65, you got a 5% chance of dying in that early data if you get the virus. And that's a pretty high. I don't think there's anything I do that has a 5% chance of death in my daily life or if there is, I need to find out and stop doing it.
Starting point is 00:02:46 So I think my original reaction, you know, plus the melancholy mood I was in and the natural tendency for media to overhype things. On Sunday, when I reached out to you, Tyler, I was in a pretty anxious state, felt an urge to encourage people to self-isolate. I got back on Twitter at that point. I'd been back on Twitter for a little bit after my father had passed away. And just was in a very bleak and crisis-oriented mood. I'm in a much more relaxed mood now.
Starting point is 00:03:19 We'll talk about that. But I want to just mention that because I think a lot of our reactions to this are colored by our own personal experience. So tell me where you're at. Well, first of all, Russ, my condolence is for your father. I know he was very important to you and a very sad event. So we're all with you and your family at this moment. Thank you. Thank you.
Starting point is 00:03:41 I've been hunkered down at home every day with some quick trips outside, typically to use the printer at work or maybe to refresh some grocery supplies as quickly as I can. But I wake up. I move to my sofa. I get into information absorption mode and just let it rip until it's time to go to bed at night. And I've been blogging and writing about this the whole time and really not doing very much else,
Starting point is 00:04:08 although I am spending more time cooking. So what I see as the data come in is we ought to have greater concern as to the possible risks here for this being a very large-scale negative event. I'm not sure my personal mood has changed that much, but I am taking this more and more seriously. Does that make sense to you? Yeah, and I want to confess another personal matter,
Starting point is 00:04:33 which is that I work from home every day. The only difference really in my life right now is that I have my two sons home from college and my wife who teaches high school math will be after our session is done. Tyler, she used to take our broadband and use it to teach online to her class. As well I, Yes. So when I encourage people to self-isolate, which I did in the early beginning as a response
Starting point is 00:05:01 to what I felt was a not much of a governmental response initially. I felt there's a lot we could do to reduce risk individually and voluntarily. And so I was encouraging people to do that, being aware of the fact that for me, it's not much of a burden. I mean, the whole crisis for me right now, other than anxiety and worries about the future the country and death of my loved ones who were even older than I am and other people's loved ones. You know, the main effect is that on Friday I impulsively went to Costco, which was better than Sunday, I think, and spent an hour waiting to check out. It was, you know, it was really a fascinating
Starting point is 00:05:40 cultural experience. The lines went to the back of the store and then snaked around a little bit. There was plenty of stuff on the shelves, except for maybe toilet paper. I think everything else is pretty much in stock. But it's not a hard burden for me. I think it's just important to say that up front. It's not hard for me to work from home. I have no financial worries in this crisis. And I think it's important to try to remember that other people are not like us. That's a good rule generally, but it's especially important, I think, right now. I agree with that. But I think it will become hard for you, most likely, and hard for virtually everyone. So imagine keeping on doing what you're doing through some greater number of months, imposing similar restrictions on your family,
Starting point is 00:06:22 having to make some number of fairly stressful decisions along the way. You know, let's talk again in June how hard or easy this is, right? So we're used to going outside and interacting with people face to face. Not so much, though. Mostly we're being cut off from that. Yeah. I'm instituting, I think Skype Coffee is a really good thing. I recommend that to everybody, people you might normally have coffee with, get a cup of coffee and sit on Skype or Zoom and chat with them.
Starting point is 00:06:52 That way, it's not so bad. It's not great. What are you doing to get into that quarantine state of mind, if I may ask? What do you mean by that? The understanding that it may be really some period of time before you were able to resume normal movements and interactions. Any given day, it may seem fine. But what mental readjustment are you making? For me, the things that I'm anxious about, you know, I usually spend the summer in California.
Starting point is 00:07:16 I wonder if that's going to be possible. My son's getting married in August in Australia. That seems uncertain. A good friend of mine's son was scheduled to be married. They just postponed the wedding. So, you know, those kind of things are, they weigh on me a little bit. The way I try to deal with that for me is it's just an adventure. And I don't mean that in the, I don't mean to minnowing.
Starting point is 00:07:42 It's just part of the incredible experiential life that we have this experience together with my, with my, the two sons who are home, with my wife. This is just something that we get to experience. I try to look at it that way. I don't know what's going to happen. It's obviously going to have cultural, social, economic, and political implications, which I hope we'll talk about. Here's the hardest part.
Starting point is 00:08:08 I was talking to somebody yesterday about this who's worried about her aging parents. I'm worried about my 87-year-old mom who just lost her husband and isn't as worried about this as I am for a lot of reasons. But I think the challenge is you're not in charge. Most of my life I'm in charge. I love that feeling. And the acceptance of the idea that you can't control your mom's safety and you can't control when your son's wedding will actually be is just hard to deal with. I'm not used to that. I don't like that feeling.
Starting point is 00:08:44 So for me, it's trying to cope with that. How about you? With that in mind, I've tried to stay as busy as possible. And in fact, I don't think I've ever, ever been busier in my entire life. Reading materials, writing, passing along advice, just processing information. Every day feels like an enormous sort of rush of things I have to do, even though in the sense of my physical surroundings, it's quite static. I think that's given me, maybe an illusory sense. control, but it's made it bearable for me. And again, I don't think my personal mood has changed that
Starting point is 00:09:17 much other than just feeling much, much busier. About a week ago, my wife was a little concerned with how focused I was on it. I was on the whole issue. And I realized that's just the way I deal with it. You know, that's part of my anxiety control mechanism. It's, you know, it's just, I think, my human reaction to it, and it sounds like it sure it's too. One striking fact about all of these events is I think it really drives home the difficulty for people of thinking in exponential terms. So you and I have both three and plenty about the importance of economic growth, compounding returns over time, having an economy growing at 3% is much, much better over time than having an economy growing at 1%. How hard it is for people to grasp that. That's old news to
Starting point is 00:10:01 the two of us. And here we have a totally new event where, by some estimates, the number of actual cases is doubling, say, every five to seven days. In many parts of the country or world, it right now doesn't actually, quote unquote, look that terrible. And there are many people who have coronavirus, but no symptoms, and they'll probably just be fine. But nonetheless, if something is doubling every five to seven days, some very bad events are not so far away. But because they're not vivid, people, including a lot of economists, I know, they're not able to make that mental leap. And I think my background with thinking about economic growth is a significant reason why I think I've seen some of the dangers here coming. Well, I'm going to think about that a different way.
Starting point is 00:10:46 I, like you, I spend a lot of time thinking about uncertainty and risk and growth linear versus exponential. And I've been struck by how hard it is for me to get my head around this. I was alluding to that earlier. I have relatives who watch Fox News. And they were telling me a week ago, this is just like the flu, maybe eight days ago, 10 days ago. And I lost it. You know, I said, you know, 1.5 million people dying in America is not like the flu. And I was, you know, I was looking at these numbers, half American, 40 to 70 percent of Americans will will likely get coronavirus. Let's say that's half. So that gets you about 150, 160 million. And, quote, 1% will die. That gets you to 1.6 million, presumably extra deaths.
Starting point is 00:11:33 So that concentrated the mind wonderfully, or whatever the opposite is, right? I started to think, oh, you know, this is, we got to act right now. We've got to spread the word. People are underappreciating it. I think they did for a while. I feel like they've kind of gone back the other way now. I would not just, I think we have to be very careful right now. I think it's really appropriate most of the things that everyone's doing, staying in home as much as possible,
Starting point is 00:11:57 washing your hands, not touching your face, staying six feet away from people. Those are all crucial over the next. two weeks and maybe the next month, maybe longer, we don't know. But I do think there is an apocalyptic reaction to this that is also very natural, that is the opposite of what you're talking about, that people just, you know, they see the curve going like this. They say, we're 10 days behind Italy. I don't think we are. I mean, I don't want to be eight days behind Italy or 12 or whatever the right way to think about that is. But I think it's really hard to think about this. I'm not so good I think about it a lot. Keep in mind, this affects the world as a whole. Most countries do not
Starting point is 00:12:37 have a public health system as good as ours. Hours is far from the best we're seeing, by the way. We'll get to that. But also, I think it's now becoming fairly clear. There's quite a good chance that soon we will have, say, 20% unemployment. In financial markets, people are hoarding cash. Real interest rates are rising. Even if the Fed supplies as much liquidity as possible, there's a danger that either the liquidity is not deployed or the only way to get it deployed is to have centralized government as a truly major allocator of resources, far beyond anything we've seen so far, almost as if we were on a wartime footing. And the chance of those events happening seems to be rising. So, of course, we should take the deaths very seriously. Even many younger people might have
Starting point is 00:13:24 some kind of permanent damage to their lungs. We're not sure yet. There seem to be many open questions, but the risks do seem to be rising. And I would include the global front, the economic front. Tensions between the United States and China are much worse than they had been. China is calling it a virus from America. Trump is calling it the Chinese virus. It's even possible. That's the single worst outcome of all of these events.
Starting point is 00:13:49 So there are many different angles here. I think too many for any person to really take in and follow or grasp. But again, to me, the risks do seem to be. rising. Yeah, those other parts, I think, are very relevant, the economic and social pieces, political pieces. Let's focus for a few more minutes on the medical, epidemiological side of this before we move on. What are your views? Do you have anything to say about this accusation, which is true, that we've been very slow to roll out testing? A lot of people are arguing, you know, South Korea figured this out, solved it. They're basically almost,
Starting point is 00:14:29 done with this problem. We've been slow to test, and as a result, we've opened up a huge Pandora's box that we can't fix. It's very true that we have been slow to test. Some of that is because of FDA restrictions. Some of that is the administration simply not responding quickly enough. Some of it is reasons that still seems somewhat mysterious as to why we didn't have better tests, Andy. There was a very good article in Wired a few days ago on this. We don't know the full extent of what happened. But I would not be so quick to assume that South Korea or any of the East Asian nations have it under control. There's some very recent data suggesting that the number of cases may be rising in those countries. A downside of controlling it quickly is that you have a very large
Starting point is 00:15:13 pool of people who have, in essence, no immunity. So which countries exactly will do how well? I would say we don't know yet. I do think Taiwan and Singapore, most of all, and then South Korea, probably have had the best responses. But they are by no means in the clear. And the question of how many waves there will be, what kind of immunities are built up for how long does this stretch? What I'm seeing from informed opinions is just a high degree of uncertainty. And I find that worrying. We're in a position where we need really quite a number of particular things to go well for any country to be in the clear. It's just hard to know. I think what people seem to have missed in this testing conversation is that there appears to be an enormous number of
Starting point is 00:15:56 false positives. So I'm encouraging people not to focus as closely on the caseload as more perhaps on the death count, unfortunately. I assume there's false negatives too, but this idea that people are walking around, you know, who are asymptomatic, I'm sure there are some, but I wouldn't be confident it's all the people who have tested positive. And my thought, it's hard to have a libertarian moment or a classical liberal moment in these times. But it seemed to me, that when the administration and Trump underestimated the seriousness of the problem and downplayed it, which I thought was a terrible mistake. But when they did, people like you and me and others said, hey, this is a real problem. And the private voluntary reaction to the crisis was quite strong.
Starting point is 00:16:48 You know, the NBA shut down very quickly. The NCAA shut down very quickly. Baseball shut down very quickly. Nobody had to order folks around. And I think what's been underestimated in this, you know, in the demand for this sort of top down, fix it, solve it, make everybody whole, don't let anything bad ever happen. We've missed the role that we can play individually. It's going to be very imperfect, of course. People cheat on self-quarantining. I know that. But the idea that we could test perfectly is if that could solve it is unrealistic in a country of 330 million people in our number of square mile. It just seems that the advantage of this bottom-up voluntary response to the crisis is it allows for nuance.
Starting point is 00:17:31 The top-down says everything's closed. And that means that there's going to be enormous economic and human results from that that we're just sort of ignoring. The advantage of the private response is it allows for people to be more flexible to take into account when they can and should when things are more dangerous for some than others. and I just think that's been lost in this maelstrom. Maybe I have a different point of view on a number of those points. I'm not sure the rate of false positives is very high. I see papers arguing it both ways. If you look at the cruise ship testing.
Starting point is 00:18:06 50%, 50% in the one I saw. Well, there may be 50% who don't have symptoms and who are just fine, but I don't think there's anything close to 50% false positives for tests well done. So if you look at, say, testing in Singapore, I don't think they have anything close to a 50% rate of false positives. Might the drive-through tests in South Korea have a much higher false positives rate? Certainly, I would expect that. Even there, we don't know. But I think it's very important to be shutting down as much as we can right now.
Starting point is 00:18:41 Agreed. With a number of cases rising exponentially, if you're going to apply testing and isolation and giving people ICU care, and hospital beds and ventilators. You need for that problem to be manageable in size relative to your healthcare infrastructure, or you do end up being like Lombardi in North Italy. So we could end up in that position, say two weeks from now. I'm not sure we have to, but I think the single biggest thing we can do to stop being there, given that the tests are not in our laps at the moment, is just for people to interact with others as little as possible. And it's as if we're trying to put the economy in a coma, decide an analogy Larry Summers gave. So I think we should be trying to
Starting point is 00:19:22 put the economy in a coma. I'm okay with government doing that. But I think personally, we need to be doing that quicker than what the government is up to. Yeah, I mean, we put it in, a lot of things got put in, I would call it a deep freeze, you know, very quickly. Sports being the obvious one, Broadway, I think followed shortly after that. I think the place where the, the biggest hole was, you know, bars and restaurants. And the government did that. Most barred restaurant owners and goers, I don't think particularly we're excited about self-regulating there. But certainly, you know, churches, synagogues, mosques, all just very quickly shut down, which is pretty amazing. But plenty of religious ceremonies are still up and
Starting point is 00:20:10 running. You can walk around different parts of Virginia and see people intermingling at a large scale. We're not really quite there yet, in my view. And 30% of Americans, if you pull them, they say they're not even worried. So there's been a huge failure of communications. Some of that comes from our president. But it's really not just that. There's so many businesses, institutions in the nonprofit world that just have been very, very slow to respond. Yeah, fair enough. And I do think staying home is the single biggest thing we can do right now. And obviously, closing some things through regulation and government is going to make that happen Make it more likely than not.
Starting point is 00:20:47 One of my proposals is we should have things that make it more fun for people to be at home. So some of the entertainment companies are having free streaming on cable of some of their back catalog. Maybe that's a marginal effect, but if it saves only a few lives, so whatever we can do so that people are willing or indeed maybe even in some cases eager to stay home, making childcare issues easier. If you just think through all the different logistical issues with staying home, it's actually quite complex. And I would like to see our nonprofit sector get on the ball very quickly with delivering supplies to people who need it and who shouldn't be going out or can't get out.
Starting point is 00:21:26 And we're starting to solve on this. But on almost all fronts, we're starting way too late. Ideally, we should have been doing this at some point earlier in February. Let's move to the more economic side of things. I'm not sure how important those things. I really like that, again, I have Amazon Prime. So I have lots of stuff to watch. I have Netflix.
Starting point is 00:21:48 I have lots of stuff to watch. But if you don't have those, YouTube has, what, only about a trillion hours of entertainment? I think the stir-crazy aspect of this. Now, you're right. You suggested earlier that after six weeks, this might feel differently than it does now. I think the financial side of this for people who are not being able to get to work, can't go to work is the much bigger issue, obviously. course. So let's turn to that. So, you know, if you said unemployment might be 20%, of course,
Starting point is 00:22:17 it's higher than that right now in a real sense, in a unmeasured, non-quantified sense, a lot of people, quote, aren't working. And as I'm sure you would, I'd encourage people to look at employment as opposed to unemployment in the coming weeks and months. But if the economy took a break, if we had announced, if government had announced irrespective of this virus, that everybody has a forced two-week vacation. Everybody goes home for two weeks, stays home. It's good. We're going to have more family time.
Starting point is 00:22:51 GDP would go down in those two weeks if we could measure it in a two-week period. We don't. Some of that would be made up for in the two weeks after because people would be buying or creating things that weren't made during those two weeks. Some things are not replaceable. The meal out versus the meal in, right? Eating out versus cooking yourself. You don't make that up.
Starting point is 00:23:10 Well, you could a little bit. But in general, what are your thoughts on that sort of extreme version of this, right? That would be a stylized way of thinking about what we're going through now. What would be the impact of that if everybody just stopped making stuff for sale, that commercial life stopped for two weeks or four weeks? Well, two four weeks, those are easy cases. If you think of many service sectors as having to shut down, say, until August, which is quite a possible scenario. In some cases, even later, that to me is greatly concerning.
Starting point is 00:23:48 And it may vary across sectors. So if you think about the NBA, whenever the NBA is ready to play games again, I mean, you know the players will show up the next day and they'll be ready, right? That will come back very quickly. But if you think of small businesses, say restaurants, the big chains aside, they're typically thinly capitalized. Let's say a significant portion of those are gone forever. And then when things are somewhat normal again, how does the economy re-scramble and reconstitute the organizational capital that was in those ongoing enterprises?
Starting point is 00:24:19 That to me is a hugely difficult problem. And whatever you think the government should or should not do, just spending a lot on fiscal stimulus will not ease that problem. That's the actual destruction going on. Is the relationships, the organizational capital, the intangibles that will decay, Not over two weeks, probably not over four weeks, but over four or five months or longer, then I think that's a matter really of great concern. Well, I'll make a bet with you right now, Tal, that four or five months or now won't look like it does now
Starting point is 00:24:48 in terms of the expectations of self-quarantining and self-isolation and things being closed. I think we're going to get to see Tom Brady in a Tampa Bay Buccaneer uniform. For example. On TV, but not with the crowd. Yes. It'll be on TV. In China, they're playing basketball games to be televised and people watch them. But even in China, where the number of new cases is really in most parts of the country,
Starting point is 00:25:14 genuinely very low. They are not returning with live sporting events. Keep in mind, we will have a pool of never infected people, which will be fairly large and absolute numbers, and what risks we will be willing to take. Insurance companies would allow our liability system and corporate lawyers would be willing to allow. when you think through all of that stickiness, I think we're really not so close to resuming many of these shutdown activities. Yeah, I have a different, I'm a little more optimistic than you, but if you said to me, how do you know? I'd say, it's probably just empty optimism.
Starting point is 00:25:49 But you agree there's far too much litigation in American society, right? Far too easy to see people for random reasons. Why won't that? I assume that's part of the reason. I assume that's part of the reason people are being, businesses are overly aggressive, about shutting down. You know, Disneyland, you know, my understanding was Disneyland got a special exemption. They could stay open and then they shut down anyway because, you know, that's just, that's a litigation, like nightmare, I assume. So I think the reopening decisions, especially in more
Starting point is 00:26:18 bureaucratic corporations, it will be very hard for everyone to sign off and agree, yes, we're going to go ahead. There's going to be, you know, an open Disneyland again. We're going to have spectators at NBA games, the risk of bad publicity. social media storms against companies where whether true or not someone might have died is the result of going to a game. You know, over some time horizon, social norms may shift, and a lot of people might just say, look, we're just going to take these chances and deal with it. But I don't think we're close to that. And certainly our legal system is not close to that. And human resources departments are not close to that.
Starting point is 00:26:56 I guess I disagree a little bit. I mean, I saw an earlier interview you did on this where you suggested some larger cultural changes. than I think are likely. And I base that partly on the idea that, you know, right now, people under the age of 25 are having trouble self-isolating. Part of it's because they think they're not at risk. Part of it is they don't, maybe they don't worry so much. They don't have as much of a forward-looking thought process.
Starting point is 00:27:18 Part of it is, hey, I want to have a good time. And I think the human impulse of that is going to be strong. But the legal part is huge. I agree with you there. I want to go back to your comment, though, about organizational capital. I don't fully understand that. and use the word destruction, I think it's important to make a distinction between,
Starting point is 00:27:36 you know, what we would call wartime destruction and economic, quote, destruction, a shumpitarian destruction. You know, the way I think about it is this real estate developer said to me, very successful. He said, he said this to be 10 days ago is when I started thinking, this is troubling.
Starting point is 00:27:51 He said, I'm going to lose all my buildings. I said, why are you going to lose all your buildings? So, well, people live in them aren't going to be able to get work. They're not going to be able to work. They're not going to have a paycheck. Some of them, not all of them. Some of they're going to keep receiving a paycheck anyway, but some of them aren't going to be able to get a paycheck. I'm not going to be able to pay my loans off.
Starting point is 00:28:07 The bank's going to foreclose on me, and I'm going to lose my buildings. Now, that's a personal tragedy for everybody involved. The buildings are not going to be destroyed, though, right? Someone else is going to buy them up at some point in the future, maybe the same person eventually. But the buildings aren't destroyed. Who owns them is destroyed. The stream of revenue that they provided for that person might be reduced or end. that restaurant that goes out of business, there's going to be a restaurant there again.
Starting point is 00:28:34 It just might not be the same person. They might not have the opportunity to do that. So when you talk about the organizational capital being destroyed, what do you have in mind? Well, think of the labor market as being a very complex matching problem, right? So after the financial crisis of 2008, 2009, unemployment was much higher. It took really a very, very long time for labor markets to come back. That was work over a decade, and that was not 20% unemployment, and it was not with any kind of public health crisis going on. So if you think of, you know, some workers will want to be laid off to collect unemployment insurance or collect it more quickly.
Starting point is 00:29:13 Revenues for many businesses will go down. The ties between employers and workers will end up weakened. People will go off and do other things. So reconstituting an enterprise, you know, think of it as like putting together a great sports team, like those old San Antonio Spurs teams. That took them quite a few years of drafting and training and playing together as a squad, having the right coach in place. And our economy had been doing a fairly good job of that, but there's a big reset button being pressed on all those activities. And that's what I mean by the organizational capital going down. In some ways, it will spur efficiencies.
Starting point is 00:29:51 So firms having to get rid of their less productive workers, right? right. But in the short run, I think it will be fairly dire, and our bounce back could be slower than many people are expecting. Okay. I guess I'm not sure, you know, so much of the economy is going to continue humming along in the background like we're doing right now. But here we are producing this podcast. Where the universities can successfully teach classes online, of course, is a struggle. but I think a lot of things are going to stay in place, and I'm not sure how important is the organizational capital of a, you know, of a restaurant. They're going to put a sign out for waiters and people are going to go work there who used to work there before. I think restaurants.
Starting point is 00:30:30 I really think there's such a big, you know, the matching problem, let me say it differently. The 2000 end crisis was that part of it, a lot of pieces to it, obviously, but the labor market part was that we had two sectors of the economy, construction and particularly, and then manufacturing, that took a massive hit. And those workers had to figure out what they should do next. And a lot of them sat on the sidelines. They couldn't find anything that was attractive to them. It was a huge matching problem.
Starting point is 00:30:59 You're sitting in Las Vegas, and you're not sure whether you're going to have a job in a week, a month, six months for a year, and you kind of hope it'll be a week, so you wait. And you don't relocate, you don't move, you don't retrain. You don't imagine, realistically, that this entire industry that you spent your life in is never going to come back for a long time, at least, to the level it was before. And so you don't adjust. And that's a huge problem. This seems a little different, or do you don't think so? Well, now it's face-to-face services taking a big hit, which in America is significant.
Starting point is 00:31:31 I think an advantage the American economy has. We have more big business than just about any other economy or close to it. And big businesses will be much more stable than smaller ones, say, as you might find in Italy. But you mentioned university. Let's say come fall semester, universities are still online. What percentage of the students will still sign up and pay tuition or at what rate? I don't think anyone knows. Universities don't have a lot of control over their labor costs. When you apply these possible revenue hits to fairly bureaucratized segments of our society,
Starting point is 00:32:08 again, I think you're going to see serious problems much bigger than during the financial crisis. And again, that was only about 10 to 11% unemployment. Probably now we're talking something much higher. And the uncertainty of future waves of the virus, which may or may not happen, but I think it's unlikely that by July or August, we will know for sure they won't happen. That will be a significant damper on economic activity in a way that, you know, there was some point in 2009. Maybe things were quite dire.
Starting point is 00:32:39 But no one felt anymore that another Lehman Brothers event was around the corner. or, you know, Eurozone aside, that was its own story. But there was a point where we could all breathe a sigh of relief and then just wonder how well the recovery would be. How long should take, yeah. And this may not be that. There's not a clear end date in a way you usually see with financial crises. I don't mean to be the downer guy here, but our goals to talk these through, honestly. There are people I know more pessimistic than I am.
Starting point is 00:33:08 So those are some of the factors that worry me. And as you know, our own economy, labor markets are so overregulated, that will hinder our adjustment. Yeah, I think that's true. It's fascinating how many calls there have been in the last couple of days for relaxing various kinds of regulations. The most obvious being, you know, FDA approval for testing for the virus, relaxing HIPAA regulations, privacy regulations on telemedicine. so that older people can get medical care without having to go out into public. So some of these things, of course, you're going to have longer-term consequences.
Starting point is 00:33:50 We may decide some of these regulations weren't so productive to start with. I don't know. But you are painting a much more dire picture than I expected. I would say that if you are right, Donald Trump will not be reelected. You're suggesting he's going to be in the middle of a major recession, accusations that he bungled the opening of this. unemployment in the 20% range. He's cooked. I'm not sure that's true about Trump. If you think of this as analogous to a wartime event, clearly FDR did not manage Pearl Harbor very well, but he certainly
Starting point is 00:34:24 was re-elected. So some electorates possibly still ours have a tendency to stick with the incumbent in situations that feel like wartime. I don't know if that's still true, but I wouldn't leap to the conclusion that it's not. So on that, on that, very, tricky and again I think we need to think through other parts of the global economy so economic growth in China right now almost certainly is negative they are bouncing back but the Chinese economy has been sustained by momentum their kind of off-balance sheet municipal debts are very very high that's a major problem for them I know our economy is not so closely tied to Chinese economy but European economies are many European governments seem to be managing
Starting point is 00:35:11 this worse than the United States, certainly worse than East Asia. So this is likely more of a correlated global event than in fact 2008, 2009 was, though that had a fairly high degree of correlation. And that too is a concern. And there's much less what you might call organizational or cooperative capital internationally now than there was in 2008, 2009, right? Far more nationalism, countries not being nice to each other. The European Union has been in my opinion, highly ineffective in doing much. Everything has happened at the national level for better or worse. So leadership in the United States, again, I view that as not having been high quality as of late. I think there are many things to be concerned about. But I think that the view,
Starting point is 00:35:59 it's like all Trump's fault, that's very dangerous and it's important to combat that. Trump was very late to the party showing up to do anything. But if you look at Western European governments, if you look at a lot of governors, a lot of people, private businesses. It's China. There's been a systemic failure on this, and Trump is certainly part of it, but sort of just getting rid of Trump or criticizing Trump, I think that's very much the wrong way to go here. We need to have accountability more generally. Yeah, but I'm just going to make this observation. You can comment if you want, but I find it. I love Twitter. I have a bit of a love hate relationship with it as my listeners know because it can be a ugly sinkhole of attention
Starting point is 00:36:42 of acrimony and other things. But I think for me and I think for you as well based on our pre-recording conversation, it's a huge source of information. It's where I go to find out what's going on right now. And that's the positive side. The negative side is the number of people who are using the crisis to advance their ideological or political agenda. There are things to learn from this about the proper role of government, the relative level of responsibility of, say, a Republican or Democrat, but the zeal and ease with which people paint this situation as the result of problem X or Y that conforms with their preexisting worldview, and I include myself in this guilty party, it just, that's very depressing to me.
Starting point is 00:37:30 Does that get to you at all? Yes, I try to follow better people on Twitter, but even following better people. One sees quite a bit of this. But that said, I think we will have to make significant adjustments in a post-coronavirus world. I think the upside is to believe that at least biomedicine will be far swifter and better funded and less regulated in the good sense of that word. And our response capabilities, when all this is over for the next event, will be far, far greater. We may overreact in some 9-11 kind of ways, like we've done arguably with airport
Starting point is 00:38:09 procedures. But if there's one part of the economy that will get a huge beneficial boost, I think it is our biomedical capabilities and our public health infrastructure. And you might think we're going to make big policy mistakes in many other areas. I do expect that. But in that one area, I think we will end up in a much better place. And if you see that as a major sector going forward, in any case, completely aside from the issue of pandemics, that's one of the major positives likely to come from this. That the next time something like this happens, you won't have the FDA banning states from doing or approving their own tests. It'll just happen. That's true. Let's talk for a second about a possible upside of the story, a possible a cheerier story. Is it irresponsible to have this
Starting point is 00:38:56 conversation, Tyler? Are we risking that people will misunderstand this? I think not. I'm going to take a chance here and talk about what I think is a cheerier story. Is it possible that we've overestimated the death rate based on Italy and Seattle, Washington, because they're older populations that got infected? Is it possible that one of the things being tested right now for treatment will turn out to be fairly effective? That vaccine will be here in not 18 months, but more like something shorter, but that the treatment will carry us over until that happens, and that some of these more depressing or cataclysmic economic changes will be much smaller than you're worrying about.
Starting point is 00:39:44 I think those are very good questions. I think any conversation about these matters has an irresponsible element, no matter how carefully you do it. And I take that very seriously. I think ultimately you have to compare what you are saying or writing to what you think the discourse will be like without you. But I don't think it's possible to have a completely responsible conversation. A number of the specific points you raised, you know, a vaccine. So given that most people are not at all harmed by coronavirus, the safety of the vaccine has to really be very high, right?
Starting point is 00:40:20 So that will take a while. to the best of my knowledge, we've never developed an effective vaccine for any other coronavirus. Now, I do think from what I read and hear, it is possible to do it now, but it is not a trivial procedure. It is doing a something for the first time. It's doing it in an environment that is highly regulated and bureaucratized, where institutions are slow to respond. Simple issues like scaling up a ventilator, production, and distribution. We are still far behind. the curve, even though we are really quite sure that is an urgent matter. Even if you're relatively optimistic about this crisis, we are to this day performing poorly on that matter. So will we get the vaccine right? There's a lot of optimism out there. But I don't think it's
Starting point is 00:41:08 a likely scenario that simply four or five months from now, everyone is getting the vaccine and in essence the problem is vanishing. That seems quite unlikely from what I read in here. it's maybe more like 12 to 18 months. If we're extremely lucky, it could be a bit less than that. And then in terms of treatments that work, I think there's a lot of uncertainty. Many treatments are being tried right now. There's a lot of experimentation. Hard for me is a non-biomedicine person to judge. We'll just have to see. But again, there's still liability issues. There's scaling issues. There's distribution issues, possibility of secondary harms, given that most people are not killed or even harmed by coronavirus. Very complicated. Fair enough. We'll see. I guess, and I spent most of my life
Starting point is 00:42:02 as an optimist, most of that optimism ended, I think, around, it slowly started to climb through the 2000s as events made me more, and I got older. I think when you get older, you get to be a little more, you get crankier. I think the 2000s were not nearly as bad as people think, by the way. It's a separate matter. But they did not dent my optimism maybe as much as yours. Yeah, I find it in the face of your gloominess, I found my natural optimism re-arising. I don't know whether that's good or bad.
Starting point is 00:42:37 I guess we'll see what actually happens. It's kind of foolish to talk about it. I think it's, or to forecast, I do think there's a, interesting dynamic going on now between it reminds a little bit of other social issues climate change um you name it where people argue that we should be you know more worried than we might otherwise be because that otherwise will encourage people to be less worried and i think i don't know i that's i find that hard to be um sensitive to i think it's important and there's a big dust up yesterday on Twitter because Johnny Aniti's suggested we're in the dark here. We might be overreacting. We don't
Starting point is 00:43:17 have much data. And Asin Talib and others responded back. That's why you have to be extra careful. Yes, I agree with Talib on that. I would say I've become much more pessimistic about our ability to respond to climate change because what we're seeing with coronavirus is how unwilling so many people are to act until the very last moment, if even that. To make a sacrifice. Right. Sacrifices are hard. It's not easy. A big free rider problem there, obviously, essentially. It's in both those situations, climate change and this, right? The idea that I'm going to make a sacrifice of lifestyle for some promise of reduced external harm
Starting point is 00:43:54 is hard for people to, just hard to motivate people that way. I think the thing I'm recommending for a lot of people now is to find a sphere of activity, no matter how small or how local, that you feel you can control and you can do at home and you can contribute to. And this feeling of powerlessness may set in that will cause people to panic more or become too depressed or just make them much less productive or spread to their families or maybe cause them to go out and want to get drunk and become a spreader in some manner. So really to think long and hard, I'm not really counseling stoicism. I'm counseling a kind of action. Something you can do. And even if it ends up only being a placebo, you will feel more in control.
Starting point is 00:44:38 And of course, there's a chance that will pay off and have some benefits. So I think that's an important idea to promote at this point. Well, I like the idea that, you know, while you're home, if you're not usually at home, to try to have a project that you're alluding to that effectively, which is, you know, teach yourself a language, an instrument, learn how to draw. There's just so many wonderful things you can do online now without having to go out of your house. You know, you can make yourself get better at something. You know, that's your niche idea, right?
Starting point is 00:45:08 I get work at something. See, I'm doing a plank every day. Getting down on the ground, trying to improve my core. I'm taking a walk every day, which I didn't otherwise do. You know, it's a, I think it's great to try to create those habits for yourself in this, in this window of enforced unusual behavior. In terms of policy, what do you expect on the fiscal and monetary fronts moving forward? Well, your great minds think alike, Tyler.
Starting point is 00:45:40 That's what I want to talk about next. Well, I think there's some confusion between the abatement of suffering and what we would normally call fiscal stimulus. A lot of what people are proposing is fiscal stimulus isn't going to stimulate anything. People aren't making things because they can't go to work and go out of their house. Putting money in people's hands has no. impact on the overall economy, it will help them pay their rent, which will reduce that cascading worry that I mentioned earlier from the real estate developer I had talked to.
Starting point is 00:46:16 And that's going to be, I think, extremely important in reducing the set of economic readjustments that you were more focused on than I was in earlier part of the conversation. But the idea that somehow we're going to solve the economic disruption through traditional mean seems to be either monetary or fiscal seems to me to be very unlikely. You know, you can make a case for giving people cash right now. I like what people say quickly, as if we know how to do that. You know, the last time I think we did this, it took two months. It didn't do much for the economy. The Bush administration did that, that whatever it was called, tax rebate or whatever it was a long time ago now. We're back in, I think, 2001. So I'm not sure we have a lot of
Starting point is 00:47:02 weapons for this kind of, you know, the idea, come back to my earlier metaphor, everybody go home for a month, maybe six weeks, maybe two months, and when you come back, your business might not exist anymore, so find something else. And the idea that we're going to fix that with, you know, monetary fiscal policy seems to be unlikely. The idea that we're going to, quote, bail everyone out, make everyone whole is going to be really hard to implement. We can say it. You can talk about it like it's some, like it's a policy, but I'm not sure how you'd implement. minute. What are your thoughts on it? I worry that we don't know how many businesses are bouncing back and how many cannot be kept on life support. So again, if it's a month or two, I think almost all of
Starting point is 00:47:44 them can be kept on life support and we could throw money at the problem and then in two months just pick up the pieces and be the America we once knew. But if it's becoming, you know, five or six months or longer, then the amount of money you have to send and people just being kept in unproductive activities, like you actually want some of those restaurant owners maybe to end up as UPS drivers, right? And we don't know how many. So the degree of optimism or pessimism, it really seems to matter for economic stimulus. If you're a relative optimist about the progression of the virus, I think you should be relatively
Starting point is 00:48:22 pro-stimulus, like, oh, just keep it running for now. Things will be back. To the extent you have a more dire forecast, you even worry a bit about the government's own budget, constraint and you also start asking how many of these people, it's like a new world, need to be doing something else. And maybe you don't want to hasten that at the fastest possible speed, but you're not aiming to just keep every business going, say, with loans from the Fed either. And I see people making different arguments and I get very uncomfortable. I think we should be more agnostic than what I'm seeing. Agnostic doesn't mean you do nothing. But that to me is one of
Starting point is 00:48:59 the biggest uncertainties in this debate. That's hardly ever being acknowledged. knowledge. You have a document you put out and we'll link to it with a whole long list of policy ideas that might make things better. I want to focus on one for a minute that comes to mind as we talk about some of the worst case scenarios. And that's the idea of prizes. I know you're a big fan of prizes. I'm a big fan of prizes too. Let's put it in this context. So I know that the pharmaceutical company, Gilead, has a drug that remdesivir that's under possible consideration that might, you know, they're testing it now to see how it's going to do. I think they've created a pre-ebollah and it seems to have some mitigating effect.
Starting point is 00:49:40 We're going to find out. Let's say it doesn't. So let's say it does. Is Gilead then going to be able to charge whatever they want for that? Very unlikely, right? Right. Especially globally, right? Right. But at this moment, right now, I mean, I've talked endlessly now on any.
Starting point is 00:50:01 on talk. I have an episode coming up soon on this question of this challenge we have of this semi-free market, this weird market we have in pharmaceuticals that I think is, is poorly constructed. The incentives are wrong. We're encouraging innovation that adds a couple of months of life at enormous costs of both research and then Medicare payments. It just seems like it's just a mistake. It's a bad system. At the same time, I don't want to take the profitability out of the medical, out of the pharmaceutical business. And I want Gilead and other companies, they have in Roche and others who developed this new test
Starting point is 00:50:35 that's relatively quick. I want them to have a big incentive to really solve this problem. And the normal way we do that is say, well, you're going to be able to charge a lot for it. And I think that's not going to happen either culturally or legally, for legal or cultural reasons. And with the externality of infectiousness, you don't want the price to be high, right?
Starting point is 00:50:53 Correct. Right. Well, you could solve that by letting them charge high price and the government funding it. But I think the move. Yeah, at the consumer side, the price should be low, and it's not going to happen. Right. So buy the patent rights at auction, give them a huge prize, tens of billions of dollars. If they deserve it, I'm all for this.
Starting point is 00:51:10 Even if you think it has no impact this time, this is not our last pandemic. It will matter for the next time around. So I think those prizes should be large and incredibly promised. And I would like to see us get on this. That would seem to be to be given our earlier conversation about the risk of a, a permanent disruption of social life because of the recurring challenges that this might lead, you know, we might be facing. That might be the one thing you'd want to really kind of focus on is to get a lot of really smart people trying a lot of different ways to mitigate the medical impact of
Starting point is 00:51:48 this. Do you agree? Yes, I do think you have to be a little careful in how you structure the prize. So a poorly specified prize will encourage people to work in small groups and not share information, right? Oh, I want all the money for myself. So some amount of discretion is required and you want to favor when you hand out the prize institutions that have been cooperating and sharing information. If you simply set up a very credible board of a half dozen people with real expertise, you know, to decide how to hand out, say, $50 billion. And you make sure there are people willing to write a check like to a big unpopular corporation. If that's who's done the good work, you know, I think that's what we should do, but simply saying, well, there's going to be a prize for the company that solves this.
Starting point is 00:52:36 You might get a hoarding of information when a sharing is appropriate. You know, I'm thinking about General Salk, the man who cured polio, and I think created the polio vaccine, I have read, I don't know if it's true, that he gave it away when he discovered it. people pointed out that, yeah, that was a time when there was an FDA testing that costs people debate what it's what it costs to get a drug approved, whether it's a mere $500 million or is it more like $2 billion. But obviously, we live in a world where it's very expensive to get a drug approved. Do you think, is there other things you would do to make a prize more effective? You know, a discretionary prize, like you're, I guess I was trying to say two things.
Starting point is 00:53:17 One is that these other pieces of the regulatory puzzle or part of the, it might be part of the challenge. The other's that in the old days, the non-monetary aspects are also pretty important. I mean, Jonah Salk is immortal. Maybe we should just say whoever comes up with it, we're going to have a set of baseball player playing cards that we give way to every American child to worship this person who saved their grandparents life. I don't know. I've written in the past, we don't respect scientists enough. And that may be hurting us now. One possible silver lining of this cloud is we will respect scientists a lot more.
Starting point is 00:53:51 if they come through with some pretty big and significant developments. I think that's likely at some point. But just to pre-commit as a culture to honoring those people is something we all can do. Well, I was going to ask you, if you were, quote in charge, if you were the coronavirus czar today or president of the United States, besides creating potentially a very large prize, the other ideas they're being bandied about, you know, or bailouts of various kinds for certain industries that are particularly hard hit,
Starting point is 00:54:21 by this. You think there's a moral hazard issue there in some of those cases. Obviously, in a lot of those cases, there's not much of a moral hazard issue. Somebody pointed out, I don't think you expect the Thai restaurant on the corner to prepare for a pandemic and act accordingly in advance so that worrying about the impact of a bailout there is probably not the biggest worry. Where do your thoughts on these moral hazard issues? Do you think the airline should get a bailout? I think that's a good thing. One has to be very careful with that word bailout. People mean so many different things by it.
Starting point is 00:54:58 Fair enough. I don't think our government should let all of the major corporations fail, which are likely to fail if we do nothing. That said, at this point, I remain agnostic as to exactly what we should do. On one hand, you don't want to be in a position of picking winners and losers, but on the other hand, I think one needs to realize maybe, you know, cruise ships are not really coming back in a big way, Maybe they shouldn't.
Starting point is 00:55:23 So there is something to be said for some sectoral targeting here. But I think the political economy consequences of just letting all of those jobs go away are too dire and we would end up with much more government. We'd have like a new New Deal squared. And I think some Band-Aid has to be applied. I've yet to see a plan that I find very convincing. And they're all plans based on the premise of these businesses just need some loans to to tide them over. That might be true. It might be the bet we end up having to take,
Starting point is 00:55:54 because maybe there's not any other bet. But I don't feel as good about it as the other people out there pushing these ideas. They seem a little hasty to me like they're taking tools out of the toolbox from the last crisis, things they thought should have been done and weren't, and saying now is the time to see I was right all along. It makes me very nervous. I'm seeing high levels of epistemic non-rationality. But that said, I really am not here trying to argue for doing nothing. I don't think we can let all the cards fall to the ground. What's your view on that? Well, I'm not sure what I'm like you. I mean, I want to minimize what we do that's, particularly if it's likely to be permanent, makes me really uneasy. We're at risk that this
Starting point is 00:56:36 becomes a watershed moment. I think it's, actually, it's probably too late. Everyone just expects the government to, quote, solve this. Again, they neglect the things that we've done on our own. I understand the things that we can't do on our own to fix, you know, macroeconomic cascades. I'm not suggesting that we're going to avoid all the problems if we just, you know, leave things alone. I know that's not true. But there are a lot of things happening. You know, people are buying gift certificates for their, from their favorite restaurants and other things to keep them going. They're doing takeout.
Starting point is 00:57:07 Obviously, that's not going to be enough. If people aren't flying, there's going to be airlines going bankrupt. But the idea that somehow we can make everyone whole. and the idea I really don't like the idea of being business as whole. I'd much rather make individuals whole. And I think that's just really hard to do. You know, this idea of giving everybody $1,000, I don't need $1,000. Presumably, you don't need $1,000.
Starting point is 00:57:28 Do we want to allow every American, you know, to make it easy? Should we do that? But it's clear there's going to be terrible hardship on individuals who can't get to work or shouldn't go to work. And I don't, there's no easy, there's no, quote, free market solution to that that's obvious. So, you know, there may be some of those things that are necessary to reduce the spread of the virus, but they're so blunt. And I just don't, it discourages me tremendously to think about the consequences of how that will be going forward,
Starting point is 00:57:56 both in how it affects behavior that everyone thinks, oh, I don't have to worry about fill in the blank because eventually, you know, I'll get a check from the government. Here's one of the tricks when it comes to bailouts. So it's a common line to say, well, we want to keep services up and running, but we don't want to bailout shareholders. and you and I probably share that intuition in a very significant majority of cases. But look, think about the airlines. Why do you feel safe flying?
Starting point is 00:58:22 To a modest degree, it's because of government regulations, but mainly it's because there's equity capital in those companies and the shareholders want to keep the flight safe because they don't want to lose their capital. So if you have major or for that matter minor airlines all operating at margins where that equity capital essentially has been wiped out, I think that's a world where flying is no longer very safe. So the old recipe of we'll just have the equity holders eat as much of these losses as they possibly can.
Starting point is 00:58:51 I don't know if that works for the airlines. You mentioned a check to each individual for $1,000. That is one thing I would do, if only to help people pay their rent or stock up on groceries. I think some of that is just symbolic. There will be other things we will need to do. Maybe we're not sure what. but if you haven't sent some aid to every American, you will be damned for doing those other things for all eternity,
Starting point is 00:59:15 and it will be harder next time around. I do think the $1,000 will genuinely help people, but I think it has to be viewed as part of a broader package, and that is what makes the entire broader package palatable to most voters. So I would do that. Well, as I suggested, I think it's palliative more than stimulative. I mean, I think it's, you know, it's defensive, I would say. It's not really going to stimulate,
Starting point is 00:59:37 But fewer people, yeah. You want to have forbearance on rents, some amount of forbearance on debt, forbearance on enforcing bank capital standards. These are all risky things. But ultimately you need to recapitalize the economy. And the traditional recipe of let all the equity be destroyed can slow down the rate at which you recapitalize, given that once the virus is more or less taken care of, the equity values of many things will bounce back.
Starting point is 01:00:05 So just how much we want equity to take a hit, what we have in mind is a recapitalization process. To me, that's like the big question about the bailouts, not really very well answered as of yet. I don't see that capitalization issue is an equity issue the way you do. I don't think American Airlines, United Airlines, Delta, et cetera, you know, want to take risks with their customers going forward because most of their equity isn't crashing that plane. It's their brand name. Well, then the share value would be high, but if we really let the equity value be wiped out by this recession or depression, it would be very easy for the share values of United Delta and American to go to, you know, a dollar a share. And even that would be kind of an option on the bailout, right?
Starting point is 01:00:52 And there's a lot of corporate debt in America right now. Corporate debt levels were pretty high. It worked fine under the previous level of economic activity where people actually went outdoors. I was not panicked over that. But corporate debt levels that high in a world with 20% unemployment, and we're all intentionally trying to shrink output and maybe have a quarter where output shrinks by, say, negative 13%. That makes me very nervous, and I start thinking the capitalization of those enterprises is really important. For sure, I don't know, but I'm pretty sure the debates I'm hearing are not sophisticated enough on this issue. Well, that's for sure. And I think, you know, the biggest problem that pundits, and I'll put myself in my class on this level of conversation, I mean, we just use words like bailout as if we know what we're talking about, or if it's well specified. As you're pointing out, it's not well specified. I mean, what that means in practice, what strings are going to be attached to it. And I think there will be strings attached this time that weren't attached in 2008, which probably might be a good thing. I think it was some of those things were not good.
Starting point is 01:02:00 in 2008 and I think of discouraged people's faith in democracy and capitalism, which has been as part of our problem going forward. But, you know, a lot of this, it's hard to imagine. Let's turn to, we've got about 20 minutes left. Let's turn to two issues that we've started to talk about a little bit, which are the, whether this is going to have a longer run impact on the way Americans expect government to solve problems versus individuals, Obviously, that trend has been going on for about 70 years or maybe 100 years, you could argue, that government should be doing more. This seems to be this is going to accelerate that trend, potentially. Yes.
Starting point is 01:02:42 And then culturally, so for people like you and I who wish it were going, at least in some sense in the other direction, are going to be increasingly irrelevant. The second question would be, you know, what kind of cultural changes do you think this will lead to in the short of? part-run version versus the longer-run version. The shorter-run version, we get some palliative effect of, say, medicine and treatment and vaccine. And this becomes a moment that we talk about with laughter that, you know, for many of us, it's the time we had to stay inside. It's when the lines were long at the grocery. It's when people were obsessed with toilet paper. It's when people didn't shake hands. They did some other weird little gesture with their elbow or whatever. But at the other extreme, you're suggesting a radical realignment of social life. So let's talk about
Starting point is 01:03:29 those two things in the last 20 minutes we have left? I think some schools, you see any of them. Yes, I'll give you my take, then you can give me yours. I think some schools will do online education well for a subset of classes and we'll end up in a world where 20% of what is now done face-to-face will be done online and that will be cheaper and better. And I fully get, you cannot do a face-to-face discussion, humanities class that way. But I think we'll see much more online education. We will see permanently fewer meetings, Zoom and Skype and how to use them, as we're doing now, will get much better. This will be a permanent change going forward.
Starting point is 01:04:07 I think in general pandemics make people more nationalistic, more what you might call right-wing in the cranky sense, not in the classical liberal sense. I think the progressive left, in essence, will die out as an intellectual force and actually already has as of this week, and we'll never really come back, that we'll have its adherence. What is that? When you say the progressive left, what do you mean? Who are those people? What viewpoint are you talking about?
Starting point is 01:04:34 And why is it dying out? People who support Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren, which is a pretty significant chunk of this country's intellectuals, that arguing for that kind of redistribution or splitting up big tech or whatever it's going to be, that is a kind of luxury made possible by people living on the coasts in comfortable circumstances who are well-educated. But when those people themselves feel threatened and America's middle class feels threatened, whether correctly they feel that way or it's a kind of paranoid overreaction.
Starting point is 01:05:03 But I do think that is coming and already here, going around talking about redistributing the wealth, letting in so many more immigrants, whatever you think of those points of view, I think they will have much, much less social impact. And we will be more inward-looking, more nationalistic, less cosmopolitan. And I think you see this already. And I think that is a semi-permanent shift that will last for at least a decade, probably longer. And that is already the case.
Starting point is 01:05:31 You really think, you know, Joe Biden is going to get up in the debate against Donald Trump and go on and on about immigration? Of course he won't now. You don't think he's going to go, you don't think he's going to be a lot more eager to. Charlie, you've already come. You just said we should get a thousand dollars. We will have much more government intervention. It will be with right wing toppings and flavor.
Starting point is 01:05:52 I'm not saying this is a good thing. There will be much more intervention in the health care system. but it will be a kind of triage and treating health care is scarce, not giving it away to everyone for free. And it will be brutal and we'll feel bad about it. And it will make the debates, again, more right-wing. I don't mean more libertarian. I don't mean more liberty-oriented.
Starting point is 01:06:11 I mean right-wing in a very particular direction. But those are my takes. You give me yours. Yeah, well, I don't see that, but I want you to keep going. Let's talk about the cultural changes. I'm going to go a different direction. And I think people have a great thirst for face-to-face. And I don't think Zoom is, I love Zoom.
Starting point is 01:06:32 I love Skype, big fan of them. Love the internet. Love talking to tens of thousands of people through my, through Econ talk once a week. At the same time, as you know, when you do a live event, people don't say, oh, why would I go? Like right now, I don't know how many people are watching this. But this is a crummy version of face-to-face, right? It's a screen version. But there are people who are watching this live because they rather do that than listen later when it's not live.
Starting point is 01:07:00 And if we were doing this in an auditorium, if it were safe to do it in an auditorium, we'd get a bigger crowd. Not a bigger crowd. Excuse me, we get an enthusiastic crowd. The scaling problem would keep it small. But I think there's still a tremendous thirst for that. I would much rather sit and have coffee with you than talk over Skype with you about this problem. I think how much more productive this is, right? Much bigger viewership than our coffee clutch.
Starting point is 01:07:26 But you're the guy who taught me. That's true. But you're the guy that taught me that I thought you were going to say it's more productive because I don't have to go to the coffee shop. But, you know, I think we underestimate. I think I learned this review that, you know, the value of those kind of time spent. Oh, sure. Process.
Starting point is 01:07:40 Yeah, just doing nothing is very valuable. We underestimate what it allows us to do. But all I'm saying is that I think people like to hug. And that's not going to change. They like to shake hands. If anything, I think we've become more physical. who become more European? I think there'll be a huge wave of promiscuous sex
Starting point is 01:08:00 once there's the first break in the virus, for instance. There goes my G rating on Econ Talk. I'm sorry. That's okay. I do think there's a lot of, I think there's a pendulum here of people who will react to this. When I say this,
Starting point is 01:08:19 I mean the digitalization, the virtualization of daily life. People don't like it. I mean, we like a lot. of it. I love a lot of it. I know you do too. But for a lot of people, I think there's going to be a pushback. I see it in the, you know, my young people already and my kids and their friends, you know, they have problems dealing with the obsessiveness and addictiveness of online life, but they're also eager to stay away from it if they can. And I just think a lot of that's going to happen with this as well. If we really, I don't, here's what I'm trying to say. I don't think
Starting point is 01:08:53 that X months of self-isolation is going to change our habits. It's not going to change our nature. The revenue constraint will change us, right? So say you're running a university and your revenue's down 15 percent and you have a chance to buy a class online or try to create your own class. Which are you going to do? That's what I think will drive it. Is revenue constraints? Well, I think that's, you know, six years ago maybe whenever it was, you know, when the early MOOCs were coming out, you know, online classes. I was all excited that there'd be a revolution. That hasn't happened. Now, this is going to give it another chance. Maybe it'll spurred along. I think it's equally likely they'll say, well, that was incredibly ineffective. We've got to go
Starting point is 01:09:38 back to face to face. So I don't know. I'm very agnostic on this. I think the idea that we you don't need a coronavirus to discourage people from going to sporting events, right? The number of people who watch sporting events live is a very, very small number. It's a unique experience. A concert is the same way. A concert, live theater, those are all, they're extraordinary. There are substitutes for them that aren't nearly as good, but they're a lot cheaper and easier to access. So we access them, but I can't see those dying out at all. In fact, they may bounce back stronger than ever. I think we'll see a kind of polarization. Things will be either very face-to-face and very exciting and very extreme, or things will be very online.
Starting point is 01:10:25 The kind of average degree of onlineness may not change, but you'll demand more from your face-to-face encounters, and I won't use my previous point again, and then you'll be doing more on Zoom and Skype and other services. So I think we'll compensate for that by having our face-to-face be all the more huggy or whatever you think it might be. Well, I like the idea that norms are evolving now that will encourage face-to-face to be higher quality. I do think, you know, the idea that in the middle of a conversation, you can look at your phone or glance at your Apple Watch to see who's texting you, I think that's increasingly going to be seen as unattractive.
Starting point is 01:11:05 The etiquette of that's going to evolve, but I don't know how it will be, but I think increasingly people will put away their phones because they don't want to be connected, you know, 24-7. But, you know, we'll see. It's a bit of a, it's a bit of romance, maybe on my part that when we are face-to-face, we're going to do it with more focus, intention, presence. It's a nice idea. I agree completely. I agree completely.
Starting point is 01:11:29 Might be true, right? It's hard. It's not really the way we're hardwired, right? To suggest that we can interact with each other without distraction is a beautiful idea. But in a way, all that the digital revolution has done is to make it more obvious, hard that is for us. Yes. It's not simply that it's more, it's, there's new things to distract us.
Starting point is 01:11:51 It's that we were already very distractible. Now we're more aware how distractible we are. Maybe that'll help us. We're almost out of time. Do you want to say anything about more narrow fiscal monetary stuff that we didn't talk about that you think is either going to happen that you're horrified at or that you think is not going to happen that we should do? It's things that aren't on the table.
Starting point is 01:12:11 I mean, I think the prize idea is huge, undervalued. I think we ought to be promoting that with great enthusiasm. And we don't need the government to do it. A foundation, the beauty of having some really rich people who've created these foundations is they can offer that prize right now. And maybe they already have. I haven't been paying close attention, but that's really a really, really important thing. I'm running my own prize is through Emergent Ventures.
Starting point is 01:12:36 Oh, yeah. Talk about that. It is now at about $1.4 million with some other pledges on the way and other interest express. so I'm not sure. Describe it. Describe what it is for people who don't know. People who do meritorious things to contribute to the end of coronavirus problems,
Starting point is 01:12:56 whether it be coming up with a cure or online blogging or creating a website that tracks information, something that is otherwise underrewarded. So this is not a prize that will go to Gilead. The sum of money is not big enough to change their incentives, but for individuals who have done important things, they will receive this as an additional reward. Like a live streaming YouTube with a really important thinker about where we're headed?
Starting point is 01:13:25 Does that count? Whatever is effective. So these are not yet publicly announced. But as of now, there are four prizes awarded already, and I'm very proud of them. I hope by Friday the information will be out. And these are people who have done amazing things, and I'm pretty sure they haven't been paid a dime for it.
Starting point is 01:13:43 Can you give one example? Is this public? Not public yet. So some of these you've heard of probably. But in any case, I think the prizes will encourage more people and just generate attention for those who have done the right thing. And I think encourage them to do more because this is a marathon, not a sprint. And the people who have already done wonderful things
Starting point is 01:14:05 or maybe some of the people more likely to continue doing wonderful things. Let's talk about what advice, let's finish with what advice you can give people both personally and, I don't know, ethically for going forward. We talked a little bit of the beginning about niche behavior or trying to get better at things or talk about what information people might access where you encourage people to go or you encourage people to do to deal with this going forward. Well, on my own blog, Marginal Revolution, I'm trying to collect the information that I consider to be. either reliable or at least interesting worth reading, worth thinking about. So whatever I know I'm putting up there, and the volume of blog posting is much higher. So by definition, that's what I think is important. Clearly, it's not all true, and I try to indicate when something is speculative.
Starting point is 01:14:57 So I can't not recommend my own efforts, but I think the important thing is for people to be as safe as they possibly can and to develop that regimen. in a way that is psychologically sustainable, not just to say it, and then a week later be off gallivanting in the St. Patrick's Day parade or whatever. And that's very hard. The remedies differ by person.
Starting point is 01:15:20 Don't trust everything you're reading here. The degree of misinformation is very high. The degree of uncertainty from the best and most reputable sources is very high. So there's no magic bullet on how to figure out what's going on. I can't quite say, oh, trust the authorities. It's not exactly how it's gone. but there's not any single way to really know what's happening that's very frustrating.
Starting point is 01:15:42 I would say do your best and keep in mind that's a highly imperfect endeavor. There's a lot you won't know and some of the things you think you know are probably wrong. For you? A lot of people have, well, I've been thinking a lot about, you know, the so-called death of expertise. I was really going to ask you about that whether, you know, a lot of people have been crowing this week about how, ha, you know, see, you do need these experts. And, you know, I don't, obviously epidemiology and understanding the science of this is incredibly valuable and important.
Starting point is 01:16:21 I'm a big fan of science. I'm not such a big fan of experts. That would include you and me, Tyler. I'm not, I do think the internet has helped influential people influence people's behavior to be more worried about this, which I think is probably going to be a lifesaver for I think hundreds and hundreds of thousands of people. I think that's been a very, very good thing. I don't know what's going to happen if the death toll is enormously high or enormously low.
Starting point is 01:16:48 I think that's going to have a lot of ramifications. I think people are paying attention to this in a way that they don't pay attention to other things, obviously, and they're going to have judgments based on the outcomes that are, you know, probably not going to be not so healthy. So I don't know. I'm very interested in how that, what that's like going forward. You know,
Starting point is 01:17:11 I'm thinking a lot, we've talked about this before when we talked this last summer. I'm thinking a lot about how we're influenced by data and numbers. And we're so focused right now on cases or deaths. Or, you know,
Starting point is 01:17:26 there's so many other aspects of life. We have to focus on cases of death. I'm saying we shouldn't. But I find, it fascinating how that's almost all we're focusing on what this is going to do to the fabric of American life going forward you know we've spent the last hour and a half trying to get some idea of what that might be that's going to be kind of important too we're not we're not so focused on that because you can't measure it I think the internet and the scientific community will both come
Starting point is 01:17:53 out of this looking very very good political leaders not so much and I'm fine with saying go to the experts, but who are the experts? It's a bit totologous. You know, should you just turn on the evening news and listen to your president and prime minister and say, oh, they're channeling the experts. On that, I don't know, the record's not been so great so far. The true experts, of course, by definition, those are the people you should listen to. But this is an unprecedented event and who the true experts turn out to be is still a bit up for grabs, I would say. My guest today, to the extent he's been a guest, has been Tyler Cowan, Tyler, always great to talk to him. My guest today, to the extent he's been a guest, is Russ Roberts.
Starting point is 01:18:36 Russ, always great to talk to you. Again, my condolences with your family. Thank you. We should stay in close touch and wishing you the very, very best, and you take care as well. Thank you, Tyler. Thank you, Russ. Thanks for listening to Conversations with Tyler. You can subscribe to the podcast in iTunes,
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