Conversations with Tyler - Simon Johnson on Banking, Technology, and Prosperity
Episode Date: May 17, 2023What's more intense than leading the IMF during a financial crisis? For Simon Johnson, it was co-authoring a book with fellow economist (and past guest) Daron Acemoglu. Written in six months, their bo...ok Power and Progress: Our Thousand-Year Struggle Over Technology and Prosperity, argues that widespread prosperity is not the natural consequence of technological progress, but instead only happens when there is a conscious effort to bend the direction and gains from technological advances away from the elite. Tyler and Simon discuss the ideas in the book and on Simon's earlier work on finance and banking, including at what size a US bank is small enough to fail, the future of deposit insurance, when we'll see a central bank digital currency, his top proposal for reforming the IMF, how quickly the Industrial Revolution led to widespread prosperity, whether AI will boost wages, how he changed his mind on the Middle Ages, the key difference in outlook between him and Daron, how he thinks institutions affect growth, how to fix northern England's economic climate, whether the UK should join NAFTA, improving science policy, the Simon Johnson production function, whether MBAs are overrated, the importance of communication, and more. Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links, or watch the full video. Recorded March 21st, 2023 Other ways to connect Follow us on Twitter and Instagram Follow Tyler on Twitter Follow Simon on Twitter Email us: cowenconvos@mercatus.gmu.edu Learn more about Conversations with Tyler and other Mercatus Center podcasts here. Photo credit: MIT
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Hello everyone and welcome back to Conversations with Tyler.
Today I am chatting with Simon Johnson.
He's a British American economist, a professor at the MIT-Sloy
School of Management. He served as
chief economist of the IMF.
He's worked on Russian reforms, and
he's the author of numerous books,
but most prominently his new book,
co-authored with Darren Asimoglu,
called Power and Progress,
Our Thousand-Year Struggle Over
Technology and Prosperity.
We'll be getting to that book, but since we're
taping on March 21st, I'd like to
start with a few questions about
banking and deposit insurance for Simon,
who has written a book in that area as well.
Simon, hello. Hi, Tyler, great to see you.
And great to see you today. These are good, these are good Tyler topics, I would say.
Yeah, so a very simple question. At what size or level is a U.S. bank small enough to fail?
I think we're in the process of exploring that, Tyler, because, well, I actually testified to the Senate this 2015.
There was a big argument, as you know, over many years about this.
I said, if you let banks go over $50 billion, you're going to have to pay attention to them because there could be systemic knock-on effects.
And I talked about long-term capital management, which wasn't a bank, which was about $100 billion.
dollars. And we talked about other episodes in 2008. But I guess the consensus shifted. And so the view
coming out of the reforms or changes of 2018 was that $250 billion total assets was where systemic
attention should start to be paid. And Silicon Valley Bank was smaller than that. Signature Bank was
significantly smaller than that. So it's a very good question, Tyler, whether there's a minimum
size. We can talk about that, knock on effects. What does contagion mean in this context? But it's
definitely worrying when you think about what has been done and for whom over the past two weeks.
Many of us used to have this notion that if we only split up the banks, made them smaller,
stopped them from becoming large, they would be in a position where they're allowed to fail.
And it now seems there's no size where we can let that happen.
So should we give up on the idea of splitting up the banks?
No, actually, I think Sheila Bayer nailed this.
Actually, she nailed it in the Silicon Valley Bank weekend, if you like,
and she wrote about it last week in the Financial Times, which is what you could have done
was have the Silicon Valley Bank, uninsured depositors, take a haircut.
The assets of their bank were mostly high-quality government, long-term government bonds that
were underwater, but only because of the interest rate increase. So they probably would have got
about 90 cents in the dollar by reasonable estimates, I think, Tyler. And the FTC also pays out
about half of what they owe in that kind of recovery process in cash after just a few days. So they
would have had cash. They would have had a head cut. But then, Tyler, I think the key point that
Sheila makes says, you should have insured all the other banks. So that, in other words,
uninsured deposit of Silicon Valley Bank would have had losses. That would have addressed some of the
moral hazard issues that were now very worried about. And all the other banks would have been
insured. So you wouldn't get the contagion. Insured above $2.15.
You mean.
Exactly.
Sorry.
The Sheila-Bair proposal was to ensure all uninsured deposits.
We could talk about that.
I think a very sensible version of that would ensure business transaction accounts or operational
deposits, as the FTC calls them.
Basically small business, working capital, payroll, the account from which they make payroll
and so on.
I think those are a real issue at the moment.
I think ensuring all deposits is something you only do when you're absolutely desperate and
hopefully we won't get to that.
But it seems to be that's the world moving forward.
if we insure all deposits but SVB, then they're all insured, then those banks will take a lot more risk, right?
And the problem gets bigger. And you raise deposit insurance premium. More funds move outside the banking system to say money market funds, which are less regulated.
So doesn't it just postpone the problem and make it bigger?
It may do. I don't think we're going to get a consensus to insure all deposits, Tyler, for exactly the reasons you're flagging.
I do think that we might leave individual deposits at 250K where it is now, and we might have a sensible design.
of an insurance scheme for small business transaction accounts. I think if you have a nine-person
startup, telling them to spend time on financial management when they're trying to build, you know,
a new hot source company, whatever it is, it's kind of a distraction and rather unfair. And the FTC
already has this category called transaction deposits, operational deposits. So they could use that
and we can carve that out. And then, yes, you want to avoid a situation where hedge funds put money
on deposit with crazy banks that go off and take crypto risk or other risks that are not well
managed. Let me tell you my worry and see what your response is, that once you start playing the
credibility game, which ultimately you can't avoid, that even letting a truly small bank, much smaller
than SVB fail, it sends a signal. And then since about half of the deposits in US banks are not
FDIC insured, it doesn't matter how small the bank is. The signal is in a sense infinitely large
once it happens once. Is that a problem? And if so, how do we get around it? It's a very big
problem, Tyler, honestly. So uninsured deposits are about $8 trillion at the end of last year.
Insured is about 10 trillion. So like you say, 50-50. And it's all about the signal, right? Because
if you believe that uninsured deposits are in jeopardy, which was the case during that Silicon Valley
Bank weekend, then you may be looking for other places to put your money. And I think that that
shift in deposits away from, if there is a shift in deposits, away from, let's say, regional banks
or mid-sized banks towards very large banks, for example, they're not going to be particularly good
replacing the regional banks in what they do in terms of lending to the non-financial sector all
across the country, for example. If the shift, by the way, is down to community banks, that'll be
interesting. They might actually be able to step up and fill some of the gaps, but I still think
that's going to be pretty disruptive in a lot of markets. Let's say you had been in charge
with Credit Suisse. What would you have done in advance to have eased the path of the mess we're
now in? Because they've been poorly managed for a long time, right? Yes, absolutely. And they've
had many cautions from the regulators, I think that the losses that have imposed on their
convertible bonds, the so-called cocos or 80 additional tier one bonds, we're going to see what
happens. But I think if that works and that sends a signal that these are additional, actually
going to be treated like equity or more than equity, right, Tyler, because the equity holder's
got some compensation in the purchase. They got $3 billion for a bank that was worth $8 billion
on the Friday before this happened. But the 81 bonds were taken to zero. That's the current
position.
Sure. But isn't that a huge problem? We're signaling the cocoa bonds don't make any sense. You ought to just buy the equity. So haven't we abolished cocoa bonds as an institution moving forward, at least in that context?
I think that's going to be a lot of repricing in that market for that reason.
But I think the concern, Tyler, was that the convertibility would not happen, that those bonds
would be protected precisely because of the kind of contagion fears that you mentioned a few moments
ago.
So at least the authorities felt confident enough to do that.
And that presumably means hopefully they know who owned those bonds and they were not owned
by highly leveraged entities that could themselves be in trouble.
I mean, so far, it's only, you know, it's less than 48 hours after that happened.
So far, so good.
But let's see exactly what the linkages are.
between various financial sector firms in Europe.
What's the likelihood in time frame for a dollar central bank digitally managed currency?
Is it ever going to happen?
I think it's pretty far off, Tyler.
I mean, look, you mentioned money market funds a moment ago.
I mean, one thing that could happen, of course, is people might decide to take their
uninsured deposits, which are a claim, a liability of a bank, and you know, you may have
different views about the sustainability or vulnerability of that bank.
And you could buy short-term government debt through a money market fund, and then you
could just sit there and wait to see what happens.
If you had a central bank digital currency, I think a lot of people would have migrated, if they weren't
already holding that, they would have migrated from the bank account into that central bank digital currency.
And that would be a big shift in the ability of the banks to fund their loan book.
And that could have serious and difficult ramifications in a period of stress like this.
So it's really, I think the complications of a central bank digital currency are more apparent this week
than they were a couple of weeks ago.
So we're just going to live with privately issued stable coins and that will be what we use?
or do we somehow abolish all attempts to make money programmable?
That's the right question, Tyler.
I think these privately issued stable coins are pretty unstable personally,
and there have been a number of pressures there and a number of disappointments, as you know.
I think they're not well regulated.
And the systemic risk council, which I'm co-chair now with Erki Lekhanon from Finland,
we've sent some letters really cautioning about that.
That's the main part of the crypto space that we think has systemic implications.
But you're right.
I mean, could we get programmable money?
Should we want programming money?
What could that look like?
That's the right question to be asking.
perhaps there are other better protocols that can be developed, given what we're currently experiencing.
Regulating who or what is a bank. Should that be expanded?
Well, it's already pretty strenuous the regulation on that. And I think supervision...
But I mean, who counts as a bank? So money market funds don't count as a bank in the same way.
Crypto exchanges don't count as clearinghouses in the same way. Financial regulation,
should we extend it to more entities?
Well, I think Gary Gensler's got the right... When it comes to crypto exchanges, I think he's got the right view, which is, you know, if it walks like an exchange,
and talks like an exchange, it's an exchange, doesn't matter what you call it. And I think there's a
pretty clear definition of also what's the security, which Gary is following up on. I think the bank,
non-bank distinction is a really interesting one, Tyler, because of course it all goes back to
allowing money market funds to appear in the 1970s, which in itself was a reaction to high inflation
and controls and interest rates. And once that genie's been let out of the bottle, it's very hard
to put it back in. I would not run around handing out a lot more banking licenses to things that are
not banks, but I'd also be very careful and cautious.
anything that provides bank like services without a banking license, and that's exactly what
the stable coins are.
The American separation of banking and commerce, does it still make sense?
Why don't we just abolish it?
Plenty of countries don't have it.
Maybe their banks have been more stable than ours.
Why have that form of the Glass-Steagall Act?
Yeah, that's a great question.
I think in America, one of the things we're really good at is allowing people to get really big
and powerful fast.
So if Amazon owned a bank or if Microsoft owned a bank or if Apple owned a bank, or if Apple owned a
Would the system be more stable or less stable, would it be more fair or less fair?
It's a very good question.
I think we're not going to do it politically.
I think that that separation is something that's sufficiently ingrained and people are accustomed to it.
But you're right to push them, Tyler.
Absolutely.
Universal banking, as we've had in Japan, Germany.
I remember the 1980s, parts of the 90s.
People said how great it is.
Were they wrong and overrating universal banking?
Those nations have not done perfectly since then, right?
Yes, exactly.
So the Japanese banks ran a big trouble, end of the 80s and the 90s and subsequently been pretty rough.
And the European banks are also regarded as an imperfect model.
Deutsche Bank, for example, is often held out as being very problematic, although it's backed by the German state so they can get away with a lot of things.
These Swiss banks that were struggling this week had universal bank features at some points in their history.
So I think banking is a difficult business and rife with problems for the rest of us, Tyler, however you organize it.
should very small countries be allowed to have such large banks? So if you look at
Credit Suisse liabilities relative to Swiss GDP, I'm not sure what the number is now, but those
two things are not so far apart, right? Yeah. So it's an issue. Can Switzerland even
bail out its own very large banks, credibly? Yeah, so Credit Suisse, when it was in serious trouble,
had a balance sheet of around half a trillion dollars. The Swiss National Bank has foreign
exchange assets of around about trillion dollars. So yes, size matters, Tyler, but size
relative to the ability of the government to stand behind its banks, including in foreign currency
when they're operating, not in domestic currency. And I think on that score, the Swiss did have
that capacity. But that's not always the case. So Iceland, for example, when Iceland had big
banks that failed in 2008, Iceland could not stand behind their banks. And that probably should
not be allowed. Well, Switzerland now has one really big bank, right? Bigger than it had been a week
ago. Said the Swiss be more worried? Should they split up? I mean, what's the equilibrium here?
It's moved against the direction you want.
Right, absolutely.
I think they should be very careful and supervise that bank, extremely carefully.
Of course, part of why UBS is so big it has a very large wealth management,
and if wealth management is run properly, it's basically a custodian with fees for rich people.
And so when you strip that out, I think their total balance sheet is a bit more than the reserves
that the Swiss National Bank has, but they still have strong enough national balance sheet
and an incredible enough central bank.
Let's not forget the swap lines with the Fed, Tyler, really important in this context.
to be able to support banking systems.
Not that many people have open, unlimited swap lines
so they can access double liquidity whenever they want, but the Swiss do.
Sure, but if you believe in splitting up the big banks,
isn't that the first place you should look?
And the Swiss, say, two months from now, should turn around
and split up UBS into three, four, five different parts?
They might consider it.
But what do you consider?
I mean, what's your view?
I've always said, Tyler, that the US,
a strength of the U.S. system from its financial history
is that we've had a multitude of banks,
and we were always very suspicious of big banks.
The Europeans went for the big banking model universal banking a long time ago, late 19th century, actually, and what we're seeing, so there was a sort of a divergence there.
The US economy, universe innovation, US productivity was not built on big banks. It was not associated with big banks.
Large banks or banks that are large relative to our GDP are something that's developed much more recently since the 1980s.
And even JPMorgan Chase, which is about a three and a half trillion dollar bank, is not big relative to our GDP like Deutsche or UBSs in Europe.
So I remain very concerned about the concentration of economic and political power in the hands of those very large banks.
But I've always said and argued that that's not the only problem to worry about.
You also have to worry about contagion and weaknesses in contagion other parts of the system.
Given what a comeback housing prices have made in many countries around the world,
should we not think that 2006-2007 wasn't really much of a housing bubble?
Prices were a little bit ahead of their time,
but the actual crash was a kind of negative bubble in the shadow banking market.
And home prices then were close to rational, right or wrong?
I think there's a lot of validity to that.
I mean, it was obviously also at derivatives.
I don't know if bubbles quite the right word, but there was a view.
And I was at the IMF, as you know, Tyler, in 2007.
And we had a view that was completely wrong that derivatives had spread the risk around the world.
In fact, they concentrated the risk.
And it was that concentration of risk in these very large financial institutions in the U.S. and in Europe
that caused a lot of the panic, a lot of the problems, and that generated down.
downward pressure on house prices, the negative ball to which you're referring. And certainly in some
markets, maybe many markets, house prices did bounce back, but unfortunately not before millions of
people lost their homes. So that was a really tragic set of events that we need to try to avoid
in the future. Speaking of the IMF, today, how would you reform the IMF?
I would remove the Russians from the board of directors. I think that having the Russians there
in that role is inappropriate, problematic. I think the way that Russia has acted over the past year
and arguably longer is outside what's acceptable for nations. I'm very sad that this has not happened.
I think when autocrats behave badly and aggressively and invade other countries and otherwise mess with the
world and the world economy, you should not have them at the big table. If they want to behave better,
sure, let them back in. But I don't think the Russians belong at the IMF right now.
I'm fine with that, but how would you improve the positive program for what the fund does?
So I think that the fund has long been primarily engaged with emerging markets and developing countries.
I understand there's a rhetoric of even hand and this as a rhetoric of the IMF should speak to truth to authority in all countries.
I think they struggle with that just given the power structure of the world.
So their ability to lend when necessary to help people who are genuinely in trouble,
but not to get sucked into situations where deeper reforms are needed.
It reforms perhaps the IMF can't help deliver on.
I don't have any easy, easy answers, Tyler.
Luckily, it's not my job anymore.
They work hard on it.
They grapple with it.
But I don't know that there are imminent solutions.
But we have Pakistan entering, what, it's 23rd or 24th IMF program.
It surely seems something about the system is broken, right?
Should there be a way we can just kick countries out and say no more?
Well, you can.
I mean, the countries can be excluded.
But we don't very much.
Well, there's certain countries don't get excluded,
countries that have, let's say, some geopolitical significance,
and a good enough relationship with the G-Sexam.
let's say. Sure. I mean, maybe there should be a special, you know, recovery arm of something,
but it's very hard to create these new institutions. I mean, we haven't really done it or done it well
since 1944. So there isn't that much other than the IMF. But I agree, Tyler, it's extremely
awkward and not clear that it's good for the people of Pakistan to continue on this sort of trajectory.
Here's a reader question, and I'm quoting,
Ask him if Indonesia's money-financed fiscal program in which their central bank monetized
national debt has worked. The nation's currency has modestly appreciated. The program seemed to get them
through the pandemic without ill effects, unquote. Opinion. Well, I'm not an expert on Indonesia,
but I do think they come a long way in the past 20 years in terms of responsible macro management.
And of course, if you have a good reputation for keeping your budget under control,
the joke of the IMF and elsewhere is that IMF stands for it's mostly fiscal. So if you're credible
on the fiscal side, I think you do create space, Tyler, for extraordinary operations at a time
of crisis. COVID was a time of crisis. Pretty severe crisis in some places. So let's hope that the
Indonesians can keep that going. I think you've got to be very careful when it comes to money, finance,
deficits, anywhere, and use those kinds of measures only when there's no alternative. Okay, now turning
to your new book with Darren Asamoglu, Power and Progress. Could you please summarize that book for us
as a high-quality GPT-4 program might? That's my prompt. Okay, I haven't had a chance to ask GPT-4 of that,
but that's a great question. We're challenging, I think, some modern techno-optimism view,
which we have to be quite prevalent, Tyler, which is that technology just kind of happens.
It raises productivity. It improves how people live, including their health, and it provides
them with more opportunity, and everyone benefits eventually. Well, when we look back over the
past thousand, in some ways we can look back 10,000 years, we find it to be more complicated.
Sometimes technology is massively beneficial, absolutely. The Industrial Revolution did work out
well for many people, eventually, but eventually took more than 100 years. And so I think
getting better outcomes for more people sooner, including from, for example, artificial intelligence
right now, Tyler, is something we need to put our minds to. And we have a number of, you know,
recommendations about making technology more people-centric and more about generating new tasks,
helping people become more productive and creative, rather than displacing workers and pushing them out,
you know, just using automation to displace workers. That is not the way we recommend going forward.
But say we take the Industrial Revolution. There's a new paper by Joel Mokir in the Journal of Political
economy, and he argues in the areas where you had an industrial revolution, wages went up a fair
amount pretty rapidly. Performance in England as a whole was mixed, but it was the areas that
didn't have the IR where wage performance was poor. So doesn't it typically happen pretty rapidly
that if you have sustained advances in technology, most people are much better off?
So we did talk to Joel a lot about the in writing the book, and he was immensely helpful
we used his work a lot. I think the distinct difference we would make just in terms of those facts is
that if you look at how people lived in cities, for example, at Manchester in the 1830s,
which Engels wrote about whether or not you like Marx and Engels, that was a really good
powerful description of working class conditions. It was bad, Tyler. And if you look at the
conditions of workers in children, working in coal mines in the 1840s, which was subject to a big
investigation in the UK, it was also absolutely terrible and much worse than the conditions
for children before the Industrial Revolution. So, sure, Joel is right that some people
definitely had some gains in some areas. But I don't think that the living standards taken in any
modern sense of people in and around the textile factories of Manchester or the coal mines of
Northumbria or town I'm from Sheffield, which was steel that was just starting to emerge at that
time. I don't think people really saw much by way of gains until after the 1850s.
Well, our view is it took 100 years for this really to pay off. Now, then it does pay off and
Joel's right about the importance of entrepreneurs tinkering with technology. Love that take on the
driving force, but that wasn't enough to generate share prosperity. It took a bit more than that.
So as we know, until fairly recently, there have been significant increases in wealth inequality
in many Western nations.
But don't they coincide with a period of relatively low, TFP, not relatively high?
So productivity growth is pretty slow since 1973.
Income inequality goes up.
But the story you're trying to tell in the book is, oh, you have a lot of tech advances,
and then income inequality goes up.
But we've been seeing almost the opposite of that, right?
Yeah.
The problem is not enough tech advances.
So wages are somewhat stagnant until lately.
We would like more tech advantages and more productivity growth, to be clear. I mean, we're not anti-tech at all, and you're quite right about the coincidence of what's happened since the 1970s. What we say is that a lot of the digital technology, for example, Tyler, was quite disappointing in terms of productivity, but it was nevertheless deployed because management thought it would be helpful to displace workers. Duron, as Simulgna, my co-author and Pascal Schrepo, coined the term so-so automation, where you automate, even though it doesn't boost productivity, marginal worker productivity, and therefore wages, but you do displace workers. And their favorite example,
example is self-checkout kiosks at supermarkets, for example, where you shift the work onto the
consumers, you're not making the work as more productive. You don't see increase in the wages
in supermarkets where they adopt self-checkout kiosks. So that, more broadly, you know, it lines up
with what you just described in terms of the macro phenomenon, which is technology changes,
doesn't become productivity growth, and it's also consistent with widening inequality.
What do you think of the claims of your colleague, David Outor, that now we're entering
an era of wage compression, say the last four or five years? I hope he's right.
David, Dron and I run a little center at MIT for the study of the future of work.
So we talk about this a lot.
And David is always really sharp on the money and into the latest data.
I think he would say, he does say that, you know, after coming out of the pandemic,
it's not clear if this is going to be, if this is a trend or a blip.
But I think some wage compression would be very helpful at this point, Tyler.
And if we look at wealth, if we look at the very wealthiest people in this country,
Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, it seems they're much less wealthy than they're.
were two or three years ago. You know, more than cut in half. Maybe they've lost three
quarters of their wealth. And if market returns are a random walk, that's more or less our
best forecast for the future. So hasn't this problem largely fixed itself in the last few
years? Right? Top wealth has really been cut down, a lot. Yeah, I've never been bothered by the
top wealth, Tyler. I mean, it's never been a major concern of mine. What bothers me more is lack of
good wages, rising wages for people who haven't completed college, say, or didn't go to
college. I think that's where it's the stagnation of that since the 1970s, which was quite different,
of course, from what happened for the 30 or 40 years before that. And I think that's unnecessary
and we can do better. But it's a very hard process to reverse. It's not a new process. And it's a
process that very rooted in the fact that earlier in the West Revolution, people like Henry Ford,
when they brought in automation, also created a lot of new tasks for workers that didn't previously exist.
And workers, even without a lot of skill, became much more productive. That productivity was
shared with them through higher wages, through unions and other things. That whole mechanism has
broken down more recently. And I think with AI, there's a lot of, obviously, huge discussion about
all kinds of dimensions. But the piece that we really focus on and are concerned about is that
more workers may be displaced from previously well-paying jobs. And without creating new tasks,
therefore, worker productivity doesn't go up. You may pay some people, maybe the designers,
designers of AI algorithms more money, but most people may well be paid less in real terms.
You've probably seen estimates that Chat CheapT is the most rapidly adopted computer application
in all of human history compared to any technology. Now, if that's the case, why is it that OpenAI
has only a market valuation of about $30 billion, which is high, but it's not close to Apple.
In a way, it's remarkably low. Doesn't that suggest most of the gains from AI will go to other
parties and not to the people who own and design the algorithms?
That's a great question, Tyler.
I suppose we should go back and look at when exactly people started to think Microsoft
was, or IBM was so valuable, Microsoft was so valuable, Google was so valuable.
There is certainly a lot of discussion about the value chain of AI and whether the place to
be is this more fundamental generative algorithm or whether it's going to be in the applications,
sort of the downstream part of AI.
I think it's all up for grabs personally.
And I think it's also correct that we, many times, it's a cliche, but it's a cliche, but
the correct cliche that we underestimate the immediate impact.
We overestimate the immediate impact of technology and underestimate the longer-term
impact of technology.
Presumably the stock price would reflect people's views of the longer-term impact.
And shares of Nvidia, they're definitely up, but they're not up by so much.
It's not become one of the world's largest companies.
And there seems to be more and more evidence that AI can be commodified.
You have a lot of competitors.
There's talk of training systems on a single GPU.
So doesn't AI mean we've entered this new age, again, where the gains mostly don't go
to corporations?
Well, possibly, and that I think could be quite positive. Of course, we thought that about crypto as well at the beginning. And there were many discussions, I recall, I'm sure you recall around the beginning of the internet where there were thoughts that, oh, this could become a more distributed model. Maybe power seeps away from large corporations. I think we tend to recombine things in this country, in particular, Tyler. We tend to, again, we get big quickly and we let people get powerful quickly. And I think in the case of social media, we kind of regretted that. I think it's very hard to stand in the way of these.
powerful social processes like the adoption of technology like GPT, we can maybe find some policy
adjustments along the way. I think we can certainly push people to find ways to use the technology,
develop ways to use the technology that would enhance creativity, enhance productivity
in a distributed way so all the gains don't go to corporations. But no guarantee at all we're
going to get that outcome. The people who said all along that social media are more competitive
than they look, haven't they been proven right? TikTok and Facebook, Google competing with Bing,
Amazon laying people off repeatedly.
Right, those companies have lost their lester.
They don't look like unassailable giants anymore, to say the least.
You know, meta shares were down, what, three quarters in value, not too long ago?
Well, sure.
There's definitely competition in that sector, and there's definitely been over-expansion
and over-exuberance.
I think the regret, actually, there, Tyler, is much more about the impact of social media
on political, economic, and social discourse,
the way that people talk to each other, the way what has happened to
civility and of course there's lots of concern which is still concern i'm not saying this has been
completely established about the impact of social media on young people young people's minds
young people's mental wellness and so on i think some of those social media companies could have
been and should still be much more responsible and much more careful perhaps it's just a natural
learning process perhaps we have to go through this and figure out how to be more responsible i think
there are some encouraging uses of technology out there and that's one thing we emphasize in our
book right tyler it's all about choices the choices that we make choices that we make social
and choices that you and I can argue about or discuss on this kind of show that can impact what
people develop and how they use it, in addition to whatever the levers the government may find
available that perhaps could be pulled or not pulled.
From my point of view, it seems that you and Darren overestimate how much market concentration
matters.
So there's one passage you have where you're criticizing the soft drink market for being
highly concentrated, Coca-Cola dominates and so on.
But I use Google, I use GPT, and everything I could find tells me.
me the price of soft drinks in real terms has been falling. There's also a lot more choice. You go to an
airport. You see this long array of hideous colored things that I don't even want to touch. But they're
not in general put out by Coca-Cola. So a variety is going up. And if real price is falling compared to
inflation, why be upset about concentration in the soft drink market? Oh, I think that was just an
attempt to illustrate what market concentration means, Tyler. I'll go back and look and see if we can
need to insert some mirage on that. But I think in general, we're just trying to,
get across the point that if concentration prevents innovation, if concentration prevents
development of varieties, the concentration keeps prices high. And of course, there's a long history
of concentration in various sectors where some aspect of that is true, then is problematic.
If it's fully satisfying the consumers and if you have enough progress in innovation in a particular
sector, then, yes, sure, there's less to object to.
What do you think is the main thing you changed your mind on over the course of writing this
book? The Middle Ages. And how did you change? I kind of brought into this idea that, you know,
you get from school books and so on about there,
there was a dark age of very little innovation
between the fall of Rome and the emergence of the Renaissance.
Turns out when you look more closely,
there was a huge amount of innovation
in agriculture, in commerce,
even in early industry. But what
didn't happen, it didn't filter down to regular
people. There was an increase in
wealth or money that was came to the church
and to the state, for example, in medieval
England, other parts of Western Europe.
But a lot of that was funneled into these massive
cathedrals that you see. And actually went in
and dug up some of the economics of cathedrals and
cathedral building, which is fascinating. I'd never paid attention to that. And you could sort of see,
because these were simple economies, how the money was squeezed out of peasants, this was not free labor,
obviously. They were coerced or pressed and restricted in their choices of employer. So they became
more productive, but they were also squeezed harder. The Normans were very good at squeezing,
the English, for example. And those resources came to that higher, let's say, 5% or 3% of society,
and they spent it building cathedrals. And next time you see a cathedral, next time you see a cathedral,
I mean, anyone sees a cathedral, think about them as symbols of medieval despair and increasing productivity,
but the failure to create shared prosperity in a very particular labour system that was with us not too long ago.
But wasn't your original view correct for at least 400 years, say centuries six through nine,
and the revival you're talking about, like maybe that's 10th century, and then for England, the Normans and 1066?
But if the view you held earlier is correct for 4 to 500 years, it's not that bad of view, right?
Good point. I think it was certainly right for several hundred years,
whether it started in 800 or 900, I think you know, you can sort of debate that. The record's not very good.
But I think the general idea that was put around by Renaissance scholars like Petrach was that nothing good had happened from the fall of Rome for 900 years.
And that turns out not to be true.
If you think about how you read your own book and how Darren reads the book, I'm not saying the two of you disagree.
But if you had to explain the difference and emphasis how each of you've used the book, how would you present that to your potential readers?
Well, I think Duran spends a lot of time thinking about the future of AI. He's very deeply in discussions with that community. He's always looking down the road. And Duran is very good at sort of seeing what's on the horizon, analyzing it and then putting a sort of structure at it. I think I tend to look back at history a lot more, Tyler. I'm reading a lot about, you know, I'm reading a lot about Henry Ford. I'm really more about use of technology in World War II. I like to go back and read some of those medieval type sources.
again and think about how that played out. So I found the book has helped me understand a lot of
things, but I tend to look at the historical experiences and try to drill down into those. Duran's a very
forward-looking person. And working with Daron, how would you describe what that's like? Obviously,
he's super productive, as are you, but he might be renowned as the very most productive person
in the entire profession. How does that manifest itself through daily interactions?
It's hard to keep up with Dron, to be totally honest. We talked about writing this book,
and we kicked ideas around for about five years.
And then all of a sudden, it was a pre-planned moment,
but all of a sudden, pretty much January last year,
Duran said, right, let's start writing.
You know, we'd got some pieces already,
but we worked flat out for six months,
and that was super intense.
And then we spent a lot of time doing fact-checking
and cleaning things up and tightening text.
But it was immensely, probably the most intense six months
of my working life, I would say.
And that's more intense than working at the IMF
during the financial crisis.
So that's quite a benchmark.
have you and he been surprised at how rapidly AI has evolved, large language models in particular?
I have been surprised. Dron has not. I think Duran again because he spends a lot of time with that
community and with computer scientists in general. I think he called this in our internal
discussion is pretty much right. We were lucky that some people gave us sort of a heads up on not exactly
what was coming with the GPT, but we did have some, let's say, orientation to that. So we were not taken by
surprised by some of the things that surprised many people, particularly in December of last year,
we took that in stride. I think it would have been quite disorienting if we had not had that
fairly clear in our minds already. How do you feel that the progress of AI will influence your
future career as an economist? I'm not sure. I'm planning to have quite a long future career,
by the way, Tyler. But it should change what you do, right? So if AI, I'm not saying it puts you
out of work, but you ought to want to work with it in some manner. If it has big impacts, as the book says,
It should have an impact on you.
Maybe.
Or maybe it should have an impact on a lot of people
and there should be niches for some of us
that are less impacted by AI.
I'm not sure, Tyler.
It's a very good question.
I was working this morning on a plane
editing a document that was shared with a colleague
over the internet.
And it just occurred to me how far we'd come
since the 1990s that I was actually using the internet
on a plane to edit a document
that was shared with a colleague on the other side of the world.
I mean, I didn't expect that 10 years ago,
let alone 25 years ago.
So I think it remains to be seen. I don't see the future that clearly, Tyler.
Perhaps you need to get drawn on the show as well.
We've had him on. A general question, what institutional arrangements protect a country from the middle income trap?
Well, I think if you think about countries that are really done well, but not entirely broken free of being middle income,
South Korea is one of my favorite because my wife's parents were born in South Korea.
I spent a lot of time talking with them and thinking about the country and talking with Korean economists.
I think that you need to spread an education system that really encourages creativity and really
helps you break from some of the strictures of the past. I think you need more entrepreneurship.
I think you need a lot of integration with the world economy, a lot of exchange of ideas.
Ireland, Tyler, is one of my favorite countries.
And a country that I would say is definitely broken free of the middle income trap.
They did it with a lot of direct foreign investment. You don't have to have that.
But they did it with an amazingly globalized people.
obviously a lot of integration into American society and other European societies.
And I think it's probably at the human capital and probably about language and probably
about being able to be productive in multiple different kinds of organizational settings and cultural
settings.
I mean, you find fantastic Irish leadership all over the place.
In fact, I believe the chairman of UBS, which we were talking about UBS for moments ago,
is Irish origin.
If institutions are the key to economic growth, as many people have argued, Daron and yourself
to varying degrees, why then is...
prospective economic growth so hard to predict. So in 1960, few people thought South Korea would be
the big winner. It looked like their institutions were not that good. It was a common view.
Oh, Philippines, Sri Lanka, then Ceylon, you know, would do quite well. They had English
language to some extent. They seemed to have okay education. And those two nations have more or less
flop. South Korea took off. It's now per capita income roughly equal to France or Japan. Doesn't that
mean it's not about institutions because institutions are pretty sticky. Yeah, I think of institutions
as being part of the sort of history. It's effect if you can get it in a positive way, that if you
grow and you strengthen institutions, which South Korea has done, it makes it much harder to relapse.
There are plenty of countries that had spurts of growth without strong institutions
and found it hard to sustain that. I mean, you make a very good point about the early 1960s,
there wasn't that much discussion that I've seen about institutions per se, but education, yes,
absolutely. Culture. People made the same comparisons. They said Confucian culture is no good or won't lead to
growth. And that's a problem for example, for South Korea. That turned out to be wrong. So I think institutions
are sticky. I think history matters a lot for them. They're not predestination, though. You could
absolutely carve your own way. But the carving your own way is harder when you start with institutions
that are more problematic, less democratic, more autocratic control, less protection of property rights.
All of these things can go massively wrong. But building better institutions and making them
sustainable. I think Eastern Europe, the parts of the former Soviet Empire that managed to escape
the Soviet influence after 1989, 1991, I think those countries have worked long and hard
with very mixed results in some places to build better institutions. And the EU has helped
them in that regard unquestionably. I'd say three years ago, I thought incorrectly that Ethiopia
and Ghana had reasonably promising futures because they were on good tracks. They had racked up
a number of years of high growth rates in a row. And now it seems both of my views are wrong.
I mean, what exactly is the predictive content of institution-based theories of economic growth?
Like, what's the prediction we would make now?
Yeah, it's a good question, Tadda. I think that if institutions have some predictive value,
it's fairly long term. I mean, this is something I worked on with the IMF, and we looked at other
people who are interested in this as well. I don't think it helps you that much.
Think about one years, two years, even five years. I do think it helps take a view on whether this is a more
robust system where the system that can handle crises, where the system that will suffer some
sort of relapse and major economic collapse. A collapse will be hard to reverse, of course.
So I think US has strong institutions. They don't prevent us from having a very bumpy ride.
And a ride that's getting bumpier, it seems, in the past couple of decades.
Here's a simple and easy question about growth. How do we fix Northern England?
Oh, that's a fantastic topic. I love the idea of more investment in infrastructure of connecting
the people of Northern England. So I'm from a town that's sort of on the border between the
Midlands and North of England. And connections to other more prosperous places, reducing travel time,
encouraging remote work, moving the high value jobs of headquarters and so on to lower cost real estate
places. These are all great ideas. Of course, they have been discussed many times over for decades,
and it hasn't happened. London is still an amazing magnet for talent, and that kind of swamps
everything else. But Manchester has two good football teams. I might turn things around eventually.
We've had a lot of autonomous advances in work from a distance that have nothing to do with Northern England per se.
Working over Zoom is one of many.
AI may prove to be another one.
I mean, are you predicting a resurgence in Northern England?
Or is it just too much the case that the high capital individuals want to leave for London and the South?
I would love to predict a boom for Northern England.
And it's certainly, it's doing much better now than it did in the 1980s when I left the North of England.
And, you know, to me it seemed easier to break in and have success.
in the United States and in London, actually, at that time.
It is a struggle for talent.
Absolutely right, Tyler.
Where do smart people want to live?
Where do they want to settle down?
Where do they want to have families?
And people are willing to commute, have long, arduous commutes, into London.
I think that it will be great if either the market or maybe the government could induce
and persuade people to move to other parts of the country, including further north.
But it has been a long-term struggle.
But if you compare, say, Britain to France or Germany, so the number two city in France would be
Leone. Leone is a very nice place. It's not as rich as Paris, but you wouldn't say it as
structural problems, different from those of France as a whole. Germany is plenty of cities that
are doing fine. Why is England in particular so unbalanced in terms of its urban geography?
Well, I'd probably blame the Norman conquest for that one, Tyler. I mean, just kidding a little bit
in terms of going back a thousand years. No, it's fine as an answer, but tell us how. Yeah, I think London,
I think London has long been this amazing place, this very dynamic place, a very entrepreneurial place.
I mean, if you think about what started to go right in England before the Industrial Revolutionary Revolution.
Obviously, Industrial Revolution was a British Midlands phenomenon, more than a southern phenomenon.
But the commerce of London, the power of London as a trading center, the openness of London to new ideas and new products,
that was a very important part of what made Britain susceptible to and open to industrialization.
So I think it's the appeal of London and the success of London over more than 500 years, Tyler.
the north of England had a very good run, let's be clear, but it was a run that was based on factories
and factories that, you know, concentrated workforces, and all of that turned out to be fairly
footloose, particularly after the empire declined and the British found they didn't have
quite enough scale to compete with the Americans and not quite enough government support
and corporate support, maybe financial support, to compete with the Germans.
They found themselves, you know, the north of England had a rough ride for a while.
Should the UK join NAFTA?
Which would mean chlorinated chicken, right?
But would it be worth it?
Look, the UK should join the European Union, but let's say that's impossible, or maybe they
won't take you because you can't pre-commit to staying, right?
But NAFTA would take you.
Maybe it would.
I mean, I think the people in NAFTA should worry about the British turning their backs on that,
too, honestly, Tyler.
But we wouldn't mind.
Our feelings wouldn't be hurt.
It'd be a much easier separation.
Oh, I see what you're saying.
It wouldn't be an emotional.
It wouldn't be an emotional breakup.
Yes, possibly.
That's a very intriguing notion and probably should be considered.
I think NAFTA or USMCA, as it is now, you know, has enough political baggage as it is in the US.
And the US, Tyler, we haven't talked about this at all, but I think trade and trade policy and the politics of trade remain immensely complex in the US.
And that's not getting easier.
So I'm not sure that adding a significant additional piece to USMCA would be helpful or even feasible.
My whole life I've admired the British system of government.
But lately it just feels to me that it's not working.
You have how many prime ministers and how many years?
Is it four and seven years?
I've lost track.
What, if anything, has gone wrong and how would you fix it?
Procedurally, at the so-called constitutional level.
I know you don't have a formal written constitution.
But what would you change?
And what's gone wrong?
Well, there is no constitution exactly.
There's just heuristics and there's just what happens and then establishing traditions.
Look, it's not unusual in the British parliamentary system, certainly for one party to gain control
and keep control for a long period of time.
that's what happened that the Labour Party did previously. And so now the conservatives have had this long run. And you kind of run out of steam, I think, Tyler. You've run out of ideas. Alternation and power will be good. But the parliamentary system is one in which, well, for you first, you can get a majority with a minority of the vote. And also relatively small shift in the vote can give you a big majority. And those big majorities are unassailable. So I think it's, it is the unfortunate downside of what is otherwise a pretty robust and definitely entertaining parliamentary system.
Now, I'm a big fan of your book, Jumpstarting America, about science and science.
science policy. It's with Jonathan Gruber. I have a few questions about science policy. So you argue
for a kind of place-based policy to jumpstart different regions in America. And I suppose I'm worried
in the same way that you're worried about Northern England, that we could do a lot of good things,
which I would be in favor of. But most of the gains will go to the coast. So since you wrote the book,
we've had MRNA vaccines, well, Moderna, you know, that's in the Boston-Cambridge area,
Open AI, that's in San Francisco. Those are phenomenal developments. But, you know, they're not in
Rochester. They're not in Iowa. So are you now more despairing of our ability to use place-based
policies to jumpstart these other regions? No, actually, we've kind of gone the other way.
We're a bit more encouraged, Tyler. I mean, you're right about, of course, about those big
breakthroughs, and we are all about the breakthroughs there. But I think one of the things that
strikes me as being strength of the U.S. is the depth of the bench. And all these other places where
real estate prices are not so high. There's plenty of towns of people who want to live. And of course,
there's massive spillover effects from investing in basic science, which is the basis of our argument.
So why not, when we make those public sector investments, I mean, that's to get the spillover,
is why not look more broadly outside of Boston, outside of New York, outside of San Francisco or Seattle
and attempt to make those places more central, tap into the talent that already exists in those places.
And I think the shrinking of distance or our different view of distance,
Tyler, after the pandemic, has got to be a helpful part of that.
Reading the book, much as I like many parts of it,
but I feel you're underrating the benefits of sunshine.
So when you list your most promising places for regeneration,
the top three on the list are Rochester, Pittsburgh, and the Syracuse area.
Now, Pittsburgh's may be done okay, but Rochester is still losing population,
Syracuse area not doing so well.
The entire southeast, not the entire, but most of the southeast has done well.
Nashville is star performer, not on the list.
most of Texas doing well.
What if we just had a simpler theory that said it's
Sunbelt and a good university helps?
Isn't that a better predictor for the up-and-coming places
than like Rochester, Pittsburgh, Syracuse,
Cleveland is on your list,
Ithaca, New York, Cincinnati.
They're all in your top ten.
They don't seem like winners to me.
Well, I think what we're flagging there is potential
and the potential that could be tapped.
On our website, jumpstartingamerica.com,
there's an interactive map,
and you can put in different criteria.
So if you like the idea of ranking, you can change the ranking or change the weight on different elements.
We did not put hours of sunshine in there, Tyler.
Maybe we should in the next version.
And then you could put that in the index.
Totally valid point.
I think the bigger argument that we're making there is look beyond the eastern west coast.
There are some really great places full of talent in the US.
Which ones will surge to the front?
I don't know.
That depends a little bit on who gets their act together and who gets focused on this.
I do think the importance of a good university should not be understated.
but that university should also feel pushed to engage with business, engage with finding jobs for
graduates, helping startups, the kind of things that my university does and your university does
very well, Tyler.
Circa 2023, with some more years behind us, apart from wanting to spend more money, how would you
improve US science policy for any given level of expenditure?
I think that looking for places where you can invest in the basics and you can imagine
that there will be commercial application.
So the Human Genome Project is one of our favorites.
That was actually turned down by private venture capital in the 1980s because they said,
you know, yes, you can do this, map out the human genome, but we don't know how you can monetize it.
But that turned out to be a brilliant moneymaker and a great job creator because the basic science
then could be appropriated in an appropriate manner by downstream firms who could build
technology-based solutions.
I think we've got 300,000 jobs out of that, most of which are good-paying jobs.
Now, that requires some imagination, that requires some commercial orientation, but we're not saying
that the government should do what the private sector is already doing in terms of financing
ventures. We're saying look for those big potential breakthroughs that could have commercial
applications and seek solutions that address anything that the private market's not able to do
along the way. If the private market can build it, Tyler, let them get on with it, and then we'll
figure out later if there's consequences we need to do with. But I think the problem is we
don't do enough of the basic science and we don't convert enough of that into commercial
products in the US. A few questions about the Simon Johnson production function. What is your most
unusual successful habit? I don't know. I play tennis. I find playing tennis to be immensely
mentally challenging. It just makes you clear your mind. If you have anything else in your mind
at all, you miss the ball and you embarrass yourself. And I just find that to be completely
refreshing. What's your favorite novel and why? Oh, Neil Stevenson's Snow Crash. First of all, because
Paul Kruebman said in 1992 or something that it was the best possible predictor of the future,
and it turns out to be pretty much right. But I think Stevenson predicted the metaverse.
Stevenson predicted a bunch of things that happened to the sort of political social level.
It's an exaggeration. It's a fun novel, but I think I'm still looking for any science fiction
of any kind that's a better predictor of the future than that one.
We have an episode with him. Do you think our actual future will be as dystopian as his novelistic future?
Well, he wrote the book 30 years ago, and I think we've had some dystopian moments along the way, Tyler.
I mean, I think the key idea that he has is that technology-powered future will lead to a fragmentation of society and to a collapse of the United States and sort of political disunion.
And there's been plenty of pressures that were, you know, maybe even the pressures of today were unimaginable compared to when he wrote 30 years ago.
I don't think it ends up quite so bad.
I think, you know, I'm an immigrant to this country.
I like a lot about this country.
I like the American political system, Tyler, which I know is a deeply unfashionable thing to say.
But I like the fact that, you know, people are always taking swings to each other.
that we don't have a closed elite, didn't have to go to Oxford and study a certain degree
in order to become prime minister. I like the intensity of the back and forth in American politics.
And I think, wasn't it Winston Churchill who said, it was a little condescending about Churchill's
mother was in America. And let's remember, the Americans always do the right thing after first
exhausting all the other possibilities. What's your favorite movie and why?
I did like everything everywhere all at once. I know that's just the most recent movie I saw also.
It did give me a headache. I'd close my eyes at a certain point. But I did like the whole idea that
we have multiple empowering personalities that we can draw on in different circumstances. I thought
that was supremely wonderful. And I did really like the fact that the Asian actors won so many
Oscars. I thought that was outstanding. Now, I'm quite sure the position of MIT is secure in our
future. But what's the future of the MBA more generally beneath, say, the top 10 or 20 schools?
Will we still have MBAs in 20 years? Will anyone go and pay all that money? It's a great question.
I think a big part of what went right in the era of Henry Ford was the so-called engineer managers,
the people who created the new tasks, the people who designed companies, the people who built these
organizations. I think they got a little bit of a bad name later, Tyler, as like middle
management. Perhaps that was deserved. Perhaps things became too bureaucratic. But I do think that
people who come from engineering or people who like engineering and people who want to be managers,
they want to organize things and make things more productive. I do think that's a very important
group of people. That's the people who I spent most of my time with in the classroom. And I push
them to think about this issue of, you know, what's the social angle, what's the task creation? Why does
that matter? You know, if you're just focused on automation and displacing workers, what are the
consequence of that? I have to say these people are extremely engaged in that conversation, Tyler.
Of course, that's just a classroom conversation. What will they do in their careers 10, 20, 30 years from now?
Remains to be seen. I hope I get to see it. My intuition is that I would rather hire people with technical
training and no MBA rather than hire people with the MBA, maybe even now. Again, not Harvard, not
MIT were a lot of its selection and networking. But in terms of what you actually learn, it seems
to me the other backgrounds are more valuable. I think an engineering or science undergraduate degree
is a very strong preparation for the modern world. I also find that for the right people where it's a
match, an MBA type qualification, and they come in many shapes and sizes, as you know, I find that
that can be really quite helpful to them. I know some remarkably talented people who fit exactly
that description.
I'm sticking with a business model, Tyler.
Last two questions. First,
when you're evaluating students,
not just who will make a lot of money, but someone you
might want to work with, or you think
will change how the rest of the world thinks about
ideas. What are the non-obvious
qualities you look for in those students?
Sure, they should be smart, they should work hard, but what
else? Ability to communicate.
So, Daron and I have a course, based on the book,
teaching MIT undergraduates right now.
It's a communications elective, Tyler.
We have a fantastic writing coach working with us.
and some superb TAs, and we're trying to help the students learn how to write persuasively
about technology. Technology policy, sure, but about technology more broadly. It's a lot of fun,
and I think a good compliment to their other parts of their education, which are obviously
much more technical, much more mathematical. So I'm interested in, can people communicate
ideas? Can they communicate with me? Can they communicate with other people, particularly
about technical topics, and do it in a way that isn't condescending, a way that explains things
clearly, a way that invites further debate and conversation, and then do they listen?
to the feedback they get and sharper the messages.
Last question. What will you do next other than promote the book?
Again, to repeat everyone, power and progress, our thousand-year struggle over technology and
prosperity, Simon Johnson and Doron Asamoglu. But what next?
Well, talking to me about the book is a big part of what's next, Tyler, because it's immensely
fun. You get to go around the country and some other countries and really get feedback and hear
the sorts of questions and pushback that you've been giving me today. So that's immense.
But I think the next thing I'll do is write another book.
I like writing books. I like working with my friends. We've got various ideas and things to explore.
And it takes three or four years to bring one of these books to fruition. And then at the end of
the day, people might not be interested. Maybe the news is something completely different for a while.
So it's a big bet in terms of your personal time. But it's also fun. It's also fulfilling.
And I feel it makes a contribution that I enjoy. And I really enjoy talking to people about
the book, Tyler. And I've really enjoyed talking to you, Tyler. And I really appreciate this,
this opportunity. So hopefully when the next book comes around, you'll have me on your show again.
A pleasure to chat with you, Simon Johnson, and very good luck with the book.
Thanks a lot. Thanks for listening to Conversations with Tyler. You can subscribe to the show on Apple
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