Freakonomics Radio - 599. The World's Most Valuable Unused Resource
Episode Date: August 1, 2024It’s not oil or water or plutonium — it’s human hours. We've got an idea for putting them to use, and for building a more human-centered economy. But we need your help. SOURCES:Nathan Dietz, re...search director at the Do Good Institute at the University of Maryland.Al Roth, professor of economics at Stanford University.Krista Wyatt, C.E.O. of Timebanks.org.Andrew Yang, co-chair of the Forward Party and former U.S. presidential candidate. RESOURCES:"The Employment Effects of a Guaranteed Income: Experimental Evidence from Two U.S. States," by Eva Vivalt, Elizabeth Rhodes, Alexander W. Bartik, David E. Broockman, and Sarah Miller (NBER Working Paper, 2024)."Where Are America's Volunteers," by Nathan Dietz and Robert T. Grimm Jr. (Do Good Institute, 2018)."Believe in People," talk by Edgar Cahn at TEDxAshokaU (2010).The Pencil, by Allan Ahlberg (2008).No More Throw-Away People: The Co-Production Imperative, by Edgar S. Cahn (2000).Time Dollars: The New Currency That Enables Americans to Turn Their Hidden Resource-Time-Into Personal Security and Community Renewal, by Edgar S. Cahn and Jonathan Rowe (1992). EXTRAS:"Why Don’t We Have Better Candidates for President?" by Freakonomics Radio (2024).“Andrew Yang Is Not Giving Up on Politics — or the U.S. — Yet,” by People I (Mostly) Admire (2021).“The Future of New York City Is in Question. Could Andrew Yang Be the Answer?” by Freakonomics Radio (2021).“Why Is This Man Running for President? (Update),” by Freakonomics Radio (2019)."Make Me a Match," by Freakonomics Radio (2015).
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Andrew Yang is a politician, an entrepreneur, an author.
We've had him on the show a few times, most recently to talk about voting reform in an
episode called Why Don't We Have Better Candidates for President?
He is enthusiastic about voting reform, especially open primaries and ranked choice voting.
He's also enthusiastic about the idea of a universal basic income,
which he brought to mainstream attention when he ran for president in 2020.
Yang is enthusiastic about a lot of interesting ideas,
which is a big reason I like speaking with him.
One of these ideas is something that I'm enthusiastic about too.
This idea has been around for a while, but it's still pretty obscure.
So today on Freakonomics Radio, we would like to give it a bit of exposure,
and maybe it'll catch fire.
This idea has a variety of names, so I asked Andrew Yang what he likes to call it.
I've been using multivariate economy, but...
That is sexy. Yeah, multivariate economy, but that is sexy. Yeah. Multivariate economy.
Okay. But we can use time banking. It's probably the most popular.
Time banking can also be known as time dollars or human dollars or labor certificates.
The idea is pretty straightforward. You set up a system in which people agree to use time as a measure of value, not replacing money, but creating a parallel human-centered economy.
You can imagine it being a time barter system on steroids enabled by modern technology. Talk about the mechanics of it, how it would actually work. Maybe just give one example, how this human dollar, let's call it, gets spent and shared. What are the tasks that create the value?
So I put myself out there and say, hey, guys, I'm not good at a lot of things, but I am good at tutoring kids in middle school math and reading. So if anyone needs a tutor for this, I'm going to be
your person. And you say, I'm offering X number of hours a week. Yes, I'm offering X number of
hours a week. Here's where I'm located. If you take me up on this and then I show up and then
you sign off and say, yes, he actually did show up and he did a good job. And here's a picture
of him with my child. And it's not creepy. Then I will have earned, let's call it 20 human dollars. Then I say, well, great,
what am I going to do with these? And then I look around and say, you know what? I could really use
a home-cooked meal because I'm terrible at that, which by the way, is a pretty real example.
And then there's someone that's like, I love to cook and I am happy to make surplus food and I will happily take those human dollars off your hands.
You can wind up supercharging everyone's communal experience.
This kind of exchange may sound old-fashioned, like something we used to do all the time that didn't even need a name.
But the digital age has changed many things,
one of them being how accustomed we are to getting what we want with just a few clicks.
I think it's worth asking what may have been lost in this revolution of convenience
and as the old-fashioned barter system fades away.
There was the face-to-faceness of it, of course, but it also reminds you of a
time before the financialization of everything, which we've also become accustomed to.
So maybe it's time to give this obscure, old-fashioned idea a real shot. Maybe it's
time we start a time bank of our own. You know, we're going to need a catchy name ASAP.
I guess Yang Freak is not quite right.
Yeah, no, that'll just scare people off and have them running the other direction.
So we could call it time banking for the time being.
Okay, for the time being, we will call it time banking.
Maybe this idea doesn't sound very promising to you.
It's old fashioned, doesn't have much momentum, doesn't even have a real name.
Maybe you can help us with the name.
If you have an idea, email it to us, radio at Freakonomics.com.
As for the momentum, well, maybe you can help with that too.
At the end of this episode, I'll tell you what we're looking for.
In the meantime, we will hear from a time-banking booster.
It just blew my mind.
And a skeptic.
I just don't think of it as a scalable way to run a significant part of the economy.
But what kind of show would we be if we let a little skepticism stop us?
We're gonna freaking do it.
This is Freakonomics Radio, the podcast that explores the hidden side of everything. With your host, Stephen Dubner.
You could look at time banking as just another market,
and economists are good at thinking about how markets work or don't work.
Al Roth is particularly good at this.
I've done a lot of market design, and a lot of market design involves going and talking to people about their problems and understanding their problems.
Roth teaches at Stanford, and he has won a Nobel Prize for his work in market design.
Back in 2015, we made an episode called Make Me a Match about Roth's inventive system to match potential kidney donors with people who need a kidney transplant. That system has saved
thousands of lives and inspired a lot of Freakonomics Radio listeners to get involved.
I'm hoping this episode about time banking will also get some of you involved. I asked Al Roth
what he thinks of time banking. He suggested that before starting up some crazy new currency, we should appreciate what we've already got.
Let's take a moment to be astounded at how successful money is as a market design invention.
Someone wrote a book called The Pencil.
The thing about a pencil is it's a compound object made on different machines with resources gotten in different places, and it's cheap.
All of those interactions, you know, getting the rubber for the eraser and the graphite for the pencil itself, all of those are mediated by money. And
that's the miracle of money. It's quite a remarkable invention. So now you're saying,
can we do the same thing with time? So think of all the things that had to be done to make money,
money, right? There was coinage originally. And then you worried that people would cheat on the
coinage by scraping off little bits. Centuries went into figuring out how to organize trade in things like precious metals.
I appreciated Roth's points about money, and its advantages are clear. Money is fungible,
it stores value over time, it's simple to exchange. But years ago, I came across a couple books written by Edgar Kahn, a lawyer and social
activist.
One was called No More Throwaway People.
The other was called Time Dollars, the new currency that enables Americans to turn their
hidden resource, time, into personal security and community renewal.
I once went to see Kahn speak because I was working on my own book at
the time about the psychology of money. Back then, I was interested in learning how the standard
economy works and doesn't work, who thrives in an economy like ours and who struggles.
So let's hear how Edgar Kahn came up with the idea of time banking.
He was the one who brought modern time banking back during the Ronald Reagan administration
when a lot of the social services were drying up.
And he realized that we needed to come up with a different economy where individuals
can rely on one another and not just a public institution.
That is Krista Wyatt.
She is the CEO of a group called TimeBanks.org, which carries on the work of Edgar Kahn.
He died in 2022.
We asked Wyatt to read a key passage from a speech that Kahn once gave about the shortcomings of money and prices.
When we look at what price does, we see it devalues everything we define as a human being.
Yet these capacities, the ones we all share, are what enable our species charitable organizations. One of them helped
bring together women who had recently been diagnosed with breast cancer and other women
who had already gone through the same experience. I've been a nonprofit for 30 years, and I didn't
find out about time banking until about 10 years ago, and it just blew my mind. I'm like,
why is this not on every corner? Why are people not talking about it?
So why aren't people talking about it?
We did a survey in 2002, and we found out that we had over 40,000 members out there. And we
have at least 500 time banks in the U.S. And there are time banks in other countries. We have
22 time banks in China. There is a huge time bank
in the UK. We cover at least 42 countries, and we're working on one in Saudi Arabia.
On a planet of nearly 8 billion people, 40,000 members is pretty small,
especially for an idea that's been around for a while.
Time banking started in the early industrial revolution with an anarchist,
Joshua Warren. He opened a time bank in 1827 called Time Store in Cincinnati.
In the 20th century, during World War II, a Japanese woman named Teruko Mizushima gave the
idea a try. She traded her sewing skills for fresh vegetables during the Pacific War in early 1940s. And she started her time bank in 1973 called Volunteer Labor Bank.
She had over a thousand members.
Most of her members were women, usually housewives.
That time bank still exists, run out of Osaka.
But despite a few successes, time banking just didn't catch on.
You might think the COVID pandemic would have
revived interest, but it didn't. There are time banks that had closed because of the lack of
member engagement and the funding wasn't there. I'll be perfectly honest. We are not great in
funding. We have a private donor that really believes in the time bank community, and he's
the one who has really supported me through
the last four years. But we need to do better. We are struggling.
You said that you'd been in the nonprofit world for a long time before you heard about it.
Yes.
I mean, that sounds kind of like bad news, like it should be more prominent.
Why is it not, do you think?
There's many reasons. I didn't see enough marketing material out there.
I don't see it on the web.
I don't hear it from public speakers.
And then also the concept is so easy to some and so complicated to others.
There have been college towns and other communities that have adopted time banking.
That, again, is Andrew Yang.
The core of it is that we all have value.
We all have things we can contribute.
There are ways that other people can help us.
And one of the main things that we're combating really is a sense of isolation and desolation and loneliness. to reach out to each other, to help each other, to connect to their neighbors and folks in their
community, this would be a very, very powerful way to make that happen. And in my opinion,
there has to be some kind of mechanism that encourages us to help each other.
So you and I have talked about this. We're both enthusiastic about this idea,
and we've talked about actually trying to make this happen on a bigger scale or stage.
And granted, there have been a lot of people who've been doing exactly this on a small scale
in many places over time. Can you just talk about what you see as the most fruitful way to set this
up in terms of whether it should be a private-public partnership with government involved
to some degree? Is it primarily a software platform, or is it more of an in-real-life thing? Does it have a
local focus or should it be national or even international? What do you see as the best
structure? I think that it needs to be somewhat localized so that you encourage more in-person
interaction. Get people out of the house talking to each other and helping each other.
Traditionally, this sort of thing would be led with philanthropy,
and then you would bring in various corporates,
and then the last domino is government.
But if you were to choose a particular location,
let's call it New York City for the sake of this,
then there'd be public officials cheerleading for it right and left
because it solves a lot of
the problems that they're most animated about. You once wrote to me in an email,
I'm convinced that the monetary economy is going to grind us up. And you've argued that it really
already has ground up a majority of people in this country and that a multivariate economy,
caring and nurturing arts and creativity, fitness and wellness, etc., is the only way
out and will require multiple currencies to get right.
In addition to what we're talking about today, what do you see as other currencies that do
exist that we might want to draft off of or even borrow from?
Yeah, the best example I can use is that punch card at your local deli where you get 10 sandwiches
and then you get the 11th for free.
That has a place of honor in your wallet and you get really excited when you get close to
the free sandwich. If you can imagine a version of the deli punch card for showing up to all
sorts of things, that's the vision. Americans love points. Americans love rewards. Americans love stuff. I have these reward points on my Amex,
and it's mesmerizing, even though right now it doesn't cost them anything because I'm not going
to redeem it because I'm hoarding for, I don't know what I'm hoarding for. That's really the
core idea is that if you give Americans cumulative rewards for doing awesome stuff, you'll see more awesome stuff.
Okay, so who could possibly be against a scheme that rewards people for doing awesome stuff?
Well, there is a certain Nobel Prize winning economist.
Some people's time might be more valuable than other people's.
That's coming up after the break.
I'm Stephen Dubner, and this is Freakonomics Radio.
As appealing as the idea of time banking is to me and to Andrew Yang, most economists think that money is a much better measure of value than time.
Here again is Al Roth.
Time is an interesting commodity,
and we buy and sell it all the time.
When you hire a lawyer, he bills you by the hour.
You give him money for his time and expertise.
You might hire someone to house sit for you
and water your plants while you're away.
So we trade time a lot, but not for time. And part of the
reason is that time is sort of a clunky commodity. It's a lot easier to trade other things.
But why is it so clunky? I mean, just as a dollar is a dollar, an hour is an hour.
Well, one of the things we worry about with monetary markets is some people have more dollars
than other people do, and that gives them more access, and maybe we don't always feel great about that. And so I think some of the charm to people
who are charmed by time banks is that everyone has 24 hours in a day. But, you know, a working
mother of three kids has less time than a retired banker who has a cleaner come into his house and
a gardener. So not everyone has the same amount of time.
And it's clunky because it's also hard to transfer.
There's the joke about the lawyer who goes to see a dentist and dentist fills his cavity in 10 minutes.
The lawyer says to him, you make more per hour than I do.
And the dentist says, would you prefer that I took an hour?
So we solicited a few other economists to come on the show to talk about time banking. One of them, who shall go unnamed, wrote back to say, the more I think about it, the more I think it is the dumbest idea in the world. So do you hate the idea as much as that economist. By and large, I think that finding more opportunities for valuable exchange,
for exchange that improves welfare on both sides, is a good thing. So I certainly have nothing against swapping time for time. I just don't think of it as a scalable way to run a significant part
of the economy. The reason the idea appeals to me is because I've spent a lot of time with people
like you, economists, And when you get a little
bit off the beaten path, you start thinking about things like shadow time, right? The hours I have
when I'm not on the clock and what they're worth to me and how I could spend them. And then I also
just think about human capital, which economists are always going on and on about. It feels like
that's the purpose of a lot of economic research these days is to show how important it is for people
to build human capital through education and social networks and so on, because human capital
is indeed really valuable. But then when I look around the world, I see so much surplus,
dare I say, wasted human capital, people who are able to do things that may not be that valuable
in a regular market circumstance and may not even be that valuable to them, but might be very
valuable to other people. And wouldn't it be wonderful to find a way to give value to that
surplus human capital? I mean, if you add it all up, that could be the biggest natural resource
in the world worth more than all the petroleum and other mineral products combined.
And then I thought, well, who out there in the world would appreciate that more than Al Roth, who recognized that there is surplus sitting around in people's bodies, for instance, in the form of a second kidney and found a way to set up a system to make those extra kidneys available.
So does that make time banking a tad more viable in your view?
Well, I already said that I am in favor of looking for ways to increase valuable exchanges.
So when time for time works, that's great.
But when you talk about human capital, you're already suggesting that on some tasks, some people's time might be more valuable than other people's because they
have more human capital. And that's what makes time clunky if all we're doing is swapping time.
You know, I live on a college campus, so we trade time all the time by inviting people to dinner,
and then they invite us back to dinner. Dinner is sort of time you expect you're going to spend two, two and a half hours with people
and create connections that can't be monetized, and it's part of what makes life worth living.
And if they had to eat and run, it would be a less successful dinner.
We sometimes have the feeling we've now been invited to your house, you know,
three times and we haven't invited you back yet.
We'd better do that.
You could consider just saying, hey, here's a couple hundred dollars for those three dinners. Have you ever tried that?
That would end a friendship pretty quickly, wouldn't it? Well, it could be advantageous
if it's a friendship that's in a condition where they've had you over three times and
you haven't wanted them to come to your house once. Well, sure.
Supporters of time banking think it can be useful for more than just dinner parties among college professors.
Andrew Yang spends a lot of time talking about the so-called invisible economy,
the work some of us do that the regular economy simply doesn't count.
My wife, who's at home with our son who's autistic, that has immense value.
The market right now does not give that appropriate value.
If someone is painting a mural in their neighborhood and beautifying it, that has value that maybe doesn't show up in our current system. If someone shows up to a nursing home and volunteers, if someone is tutoring children, if someone is making people around them healthier and more active. All of these things have positive values
that right now would not get properly recognized
or rewarded in our current monetary economy.
What if I were to say,
Andrew, you're also a political player
and the reason that so much money is drawn into politics
is because there's so much leverage in the political system.
Wouldn't it be better to focus on that, to remake the political system so that all the
benefits that you want from this human dollar system were just there already and you wouldn't
have to recreate this whole second system to take care of it?
In other words, set up the political system to make the economy more human-centered in
the first place. Why isn't that the best solution? Oh, I love that solution too, Stephen.
You know, we should definitely pursue that. And I'm working on that every day, but there's no
reason why we can't demonstrate what's possible given current technologies and what resources we
have. I could imagine countless religious organizations and food banks and volunteer programs hearing us talk about this and say, hey, what do you think we're doing? What do you think we've been doing forever? So how is this different? you wind up having a lot of that energy flow through existing nonprofits and religious orgs
because in many ways they're the best situated to be able to encourage and monitor and benefit
from more people getting out and doing more things for other people.
Now I want to talk to someone who could tell us some more about volunteering generally.
One has to realize how important volunteering is
to the large national network of nonprofit organizations that are a backbone and an
under-recognized asset within U.S. society. That is Nathan Dietz. I'm the research director at
the Duguid Institute at the University of Maryland. And what is the Duguid Institute?
The Duguid Institute is a policy center within the School of Public Policy.
Our focus is on studies of nonprofits and philanthropy in general.
In his research, Dietz has found that volunteering in the U.S.
has been declining for at least a couple decades.
We can start right after September 11, 2001.
The first national data collection in a long time about
volunteering was done. Before then, data on volunteering was collected only every few decades
as part of the current population survey that's run by the Census Bureau. But researchers wanted
to know how the national tragedy of 9-11 would affect volunteering. In the early 2000s, they
found that nearly 30% of Americans were
doing some volunteering through formal organizations like non-profits or religious institutions.
And then we saw a decline. We've always read that as the decline that's kind of a result of the
wearing off of whatever feelings of unity and ties to community that people felt after 9-11.
Starting in about 2010-2011, we started to see declines every year.
And I don't think anyone really noticed the fact that that had happened
because the declines were so small every year.
It's a classic.
The frog in the pot of water.
Right.
Which I think is probably not a true thing I've read.
Oh, I hope not.
You know, for the frog's sake.
Okay.
So you're saying that the current volunteering rate in the U.S. is lower than what, in recorded history, you're saying right now?
Yeah, the 2021 volunteering rate is certainly lower than it ever has been in the last 50 years.
Why do you think there's been such a significant downward trend in volunteering?
That is the $64,000 question. Some trends that we've seen
when we started digging into this have been suggestive. One is that we saw declines that
were greater in suburban areas and rural areas than they were in urban areas. Maybe what we saw
there was the fact that people were moving out of those areas and taking their time and their
talents and their energies with them. And when that happens, you also see an increasingly aging population in those areas.
So when people have to drop out of civic life or the volunteer workforce specifically,
there aren't very many people to take their places.
Social capital is the concept that connects all the activities that we call civic engagement.
I think we're seeing declines in social capital that are reflected
in the declines in volunteering rates. One of the most important ways in which trust helps build
social capital is to get people to realize that, you know, they can count on other people.
Let's say that time banking, time dollars, human dollars, whatever we want to call it,
might spur at least a small uptick in volunteering and maybe a small uptick in social capital,
social trust. How would you see that benefiting society overall?
I think the key is to get people to recognize that, you know, in many cases, receiving actually
is as good as giving. That's a key principle that underlies the whole time banking concept.
That's the idea that runs most counter to most people's intuition. You know,
the Bible tells you the opposite. It's better to give than to receive.
That's really interesting. I feel like I'm having a little bit of a breakthrough here,
personally, like I'm in a therapy session, Nathan.
I mean, I kind of feel the same way.
Well, what it made me think of is this. I mean, this is getting a little personal. I hope you
don't mind, but my father died when I was about 10 or 11. And, you know, I lived in a rural area where there
were quite a few people who really went out of their way to help me and my family. I was the
youngest in a big bunch of kids and I was the last one at home. There were a couple men who would
take me on fishing trips and whatnot. And as much as I enjoyed the benefits per se, I hated being seen
as and feeling like a charity case. I hated it. I'm not saying that was a good choice, a bad
choice. It was just the way my emotions worked at the time. But I think as I outgrew that age,
I compounded that response. And it strikes me now, speaking to you, that there's something very ungenerous about
being unwilling to accept other people's generosity. It's what you said a moment ago
that made me realize that there is something very powerful about not just giving plainly,
but receiving and about the notion of participating in reciprocity. So anything more you have to say about that?
Just that participating in reciprocity,
that's the norm that I think we ought to get people to buy into.
It doesn't have to be the case that receiving is just as good as giving.
I think the time banking people would probably be happy to relax that statement a little bit.
But receiving is perfectly okay.
And actually, when you receive,
you're making it possible for someone else to obtain the benefits of giving.
So it sounds like you might like to participate in our harebrained idea here. Is that the case,
or am I reading into your enthusiasm?
I'd be happy to help because I think this is an important, interesting concept. And I think that
nothing but good could come of an experiment.
Would it be a better idea to have like a New York City time bank than a U.S. time bank?
Would it be an even better idea to have an Upper West Side of Manhattan time bank
versus a New York City time bank?
Oh, I think so.
I think that's the way most institutions work best.
You know, even the Federal Reserve has regional banks.
Anything that brings the institution closer to the members of the community is going to
encourage participation. That's, I think, probably the only way in which a time bank would work,
is if it were located in the community.
Coming up after the break, if we can get this idea going, we'll need someone to run it. Is that someone you?
Keep listening for details.
I'm Stephen Dubner.
This is Freakonomics Radio.
We'll be right back.
After talking to Nathan Dietz and Krista Wyatt and Andrew Yang about time banking,
I was getting encouraged.
But then I read a new paper by researchers who followed a big experimental project that gave
people a guaranteed income. This is similar to the universal basic income idea that Yang promoted
a few years ago while running for president. He called it a freedom dividend. In this experiment,
1,000 low-income people were given $1,000 a month
for three years, and the researchers wanted to see how the money changed their lives.
They also set up a pool of 2,000 low-income people who got only $50 a month so that they
would have a comparison group. And what did the researchers find? The people getting $1,000 of free money a month worked a bit less, which you might expect.
They spent more time sleeping and hanging out with friends.
What they didn't spend more time on was either building up their own human capital
or volunteering to help out other people.
I interpreted this as not such good news. So
I went back to Al Roth, the market design expert, to see if he had any ideas to make time banking
a more attractive prospect, even though he's not a big fan of the idea.
I'd want some kind of reputational review system. You need some customary contracts. You need ways
of keeping account, right? We do
that with money all the time. You put money in the bank and they don't let you take out more
than you put in. Whereas with time, you know, the question is who does the reporting?
Let's pretend for just a minute that time banking or time dollars are a going concern
where you are and you were a member of this community, what would you offer as work that you could do?
And what kind of tasks or work would you look for for other people to do for you in exchange?
Well, you know, in fact, I'm a little bit of a member of that community because I'm a professor.
And one of the things I do is teach classes, and those are on a clock. And another thing I do is
I talk to students,
typically graduate students,
and a lot of scientific progress has its origin in just talk.
You talk about problems, you hear how they're thinking,
you tell them how you're thinking,
and sometimes directions emerge.
Are there any other physical tasks?
Can you fix my car or put on a new roof?
I cannot fix your car or put on a new roof,
so I could, of course, trade for that, but I don't know how long it takes and I don't know how much skill and risk and things like that are involved, all of which are things that should get priced into it.
So one of the advantages of having competitive roof fixers is you can get a couple of quotes
and find out what it costs to fix your roof. But I could imagine a scenario where,
let's say there's a person running a roofing business,
maybe they're second or third generation even,
and they've decided that the way forward is to do solar installations.
You're in California,
I'm sure there's a big market for that there,
but they don't really know how to set up their business
to optimize for that.
They don't know what kinds of partnerships
and maybe there's some tax strategy and just setting up the business that they're not clear on. But boy, Professor Roth,
he loves to talk to people about problems like that. And he also needs a new roof. So that sounds
like a really nice possible exchange that could happen in the time bank. Would you be open to
discussing that? I'd be open to discussing it.
He said reluctantly.
I say reluctantly because I certainly wouldn't want that to be the only way I could get my
roof repaired.
Okay.
So it sounds like you're not particularly enthusiastic about or interested certainly
in joining our project to try to make time banking a success or to pilot it. But assuming that you like me enough to not
want to see this project fail from step one, is there any piece of advice in particular you might
have? Let's say that we're going to try to do this with some kind of perhaps government cooperation,
some kind of nonprofit cooperation, try to find, let's say, a CEO who could really organize this?
I think the simplest kind of time banking is for people who are actually prepared to be in
relationships with each other and are going to repeatedly trade time with each other,
and they can evaluate the quality. Babysitting cooperatives, for instance, are a good example
because you also get some feedback from the kids if they're old enough. But as soon as
I'm earning time by babysitting for your kids,
and now I'm spending it on roofers, I want to know, is this a roofer who gives good value for the amount of time I'm putting into the bank? Given that I don't have a relationship with him,
what happens if the roof takes more time than any of us anticipated? Who pays for the extra time
that he actually spent doing a good job fixing my roof. There has to be some situation
where he doesn't stop with the hole in the roof, and now it's worse than when he started. He
finishes the good job. He gets a review of doing a good job, but someone has to pay him back the
time. The banking part of time banking is going to be important when there aren't personal
relationships. So you need reviews, and you need a way for him to say, it took me 12 hours. Who
would have thought? But there you know, there was a dragon
implanted in the roof and I had to fight the dragon. The things that you put up with in
California, dragons and roofs, I don't know how you deal with it. We deal with it by paying the roofer.
So first, let me preface this by saying, I'm convinced that AI is going to change a lot things in our economy, and it's going to make it harder and harder for a lot of people to compete.
That's Andrew Yang again.
It's getting stronger, faster, smarter, more powerful, and we are not.
So if you play out the way this is going, we already live in maybe the most extreme winner-take-all economy in the history of the world.
It's going to become more extreme with the advent of AI and associated technologies. And so the goal would be
to build an economic system that rewards people pursuing activities that right now would not
get properly rewarded in our current monetary economy.
And what share of, if it could be measured, what share of, let's say, GDP
would you like this entire separate version of the economy to comprise?
I would think of it as a parallel instead of a percentage of GDP, but our current economy is around $24 trillion.
And if you think about how much we could benefit in education and nurturing and health and wellness,
I mean, we're spending maybe 17 or 18%
of that $24 trillion on our healthcare right now. So let's call that $4 trillion. And we all know
that we could generate immense value if we all took better care of ourselves and had preventative
care and everything else. So just in the healthcare space, you can see trillions of dollars,
environment, trillions of dollars, education, trillions of dollars, arts and creativity, I would argue you could
also get up to that level.
So you can imagine something that gets up into the tens of trillions of dollars that
mirrors the size of what we consider right now the economy.
If we want good things for ourselves, our families, our communities,
we have to actually build the mechanisms for those good things. And if we don't,
then we kind of know which way things are going to head.
So are you willing and committed to join me slash us for Economics Radio to try to
actually make this work?
Oh, yeah. The great collab is beginning. We We're gonna freaking do it. You can count me in 100%.
Let's actually build this in real life so that people can experience it, point to it, and say
people are good. We want this in more places. What would success look like to you in five years, let's say? Success would be thousands of people living better lives and a model that other people
say that's totally replicable.
We can do that where we live and work.
So, Andrew, if we want to get this thing going, we need someone to run it.
You'd probably be good at it, but you're busy with 18 million other things.
I'm pretty busy too, but even if I weren't, I'd be terrible at running something like this.
So I think what we really need is a CEO, someone who hears this episode and is as enthusiastic
about the idea as we are, and actually has the ability and the courage to get it done. So what
kind of background or characteristics
would you suggest that the ideal candidate has? I'd say that person is comfortable going into
a room of people in a community in Queens or Staten Island or Brooklyn and saying to them,
hey, this is what we're doing and this is why you should sign up and this is why it's awesome.
And then feel equally comfortable going into a room of marketing executives or foundation grant writers and say, this is what we're doing and this is why you need
to get on board as quickly as possible. So the profile that comes to mind for me is someone who
has run a nonprofit, someone who has had some kind of role in public service would also make
sense. An entrepreneur would make sense. Those three profiles appeal to me. Does that sound like you or someone you know?
Andrew Yang has built a bipartisan political operation called Humanity Forward, and the Yang
gang still has a lot of assets that would be useful for time banking. But still, this would
be a big operation, and we'll need some help. Let's start with someone to run it.
If you'd like to nominate yourself or someone else,
or if you have any other ideas that might help make this work,
please write to us.
Here is an email address, time at humanityforwardfoundation.org.
That's time at humanityforwardfoundation dot org. We will keep you updated
on how this project goes. For now, big thanks to Andrew Yang, Krista Wyatt, Nathan Dietz, and
even Al Roth, the skeptic, for speaking with us today. And thanks especially to you for listening.
Coming up next time on the show.
There is a freedom in being in a religious institution
where I don't have to be afraid to talk about values
in my out loud voice.
Tanya Tetlow used to be a federal prosecutor,
which toughened her up for her current job,
college president.
What we navigate with them is, you know,
you don't point bullhorns at the library
during study session.
Tetlow is president of Fordham University in New York.
She's the first female president there, as well as the first president who is not a Catholic
priest.
The Jesuits here laugh that you say all the same stuff, Tanya, but people listen to you.
Another conversation in our ongoing look at what college is really for.
That's next time on the show.
Until then, take care of yourself.
And if you can, someone else too.
Freakonomics Radio is produced by Stitcher and Renbud Radio.
You can find our entire archive on any podcast app,
also at Freakonomics.com,
where we publish transcripts and show notes.
This episode was produced by Zach Lipinski.
Our staff also includes Alina Kullman,
Augusta Chapman, Dalvin Abouaji,
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Gabriel Roth, Greg Rippin, Jasmine Klinger,
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It's always fun to talk to you, Al.
You too.
And, you know, spend your time well.
Cheers.
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