Pivot - How Paul Krugman Would Fix The Economy: Solutions with Henry Blodget
Episode Date: September 2, 2025What would an actually good tariff policy look like? Can the U.S. ever bring back manufacturing jobs, and should it? How bad is the deficit and what can we do to address it? In the first episode of... Solutions, Henry asks Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman about the most pressing problems facing the U.S. economy — and how he would fix them. Listen to more from Solutions with Henry Blodget here! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hi, everyone. This is Pivot
from New York Magazine and the Box Media Podcast Network.
I'm Kara Swisher. We're off for the holiday today
but we have an episode of a new show for you, Solutions with Henry Blodgett.
Every Monday, journalists, analysts, and entrepreneur, Henry Blodgett interviews leading thinkers
across business, tech, politics, and beyond about their big ideas for how to build a better
future.
In this episode, Henry asked Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman about the most pressing
problems facing the U.S. economy and how he would fix them.
I also recently sat down with Henry for an upcoming episode.
We talked about how to be excellent and successful in life and work.
Obviously, I have a lot of ideas.
and a pretty good track record.
In fact, I think it's excellent.
We also talked about politics,
and I told Henry how I think Steve Jobs
would have navigated Donald Trump's presidency
and terrorist policy.
It was a fun conversation,
and it'll be on YouTube in full two.
Follow solutions with Henry Blodgett
to make sure you don't miss it.
Enjoy, and we'll be back in your feeds on Friday.
Our economy is beset with at least concerns,
and we are being hammered with narratives
from two teams about smart policies and stupid policies and evil and good in the midst of this
and these concerns, we need to talk to somebody who can sort everything out for us and speak
in plain language who really knows what they're talking about. And there's nobody better to do
that than Nobel Prize winner Paul Krugman.
Hello, everyone, and welcome to the first episode of Solutions with Henry Blodget.
This show is not going to focus on the doom and gloom.
It is the very many problems we have in the world.
It is going to focus on solving those problems, or at least ideas, to do that.
For our first episode, huge privilege to have a Nobel Prize winner,
currently a professor at City University of New York,
a columnist for 25 years at the New York Times,
and now an extraordinarily successful sub-stacker,
Paul Krugman does not hide the fact that he often supports the left-leaning team.
However, I think what you will find in this interview in particular,
that he's actually incredibly credible, and he is driven by data,
and he says many things that, in fact, undermine the narrative that the Democrats are trying to tell,
and to me that very much enhances his credibility.
Without further ado, here's my conversation with Paul Krugman.
Paul, let's jump right in.
First of all, privileged to have you.
Thank you very much.
President Trump did not like some job number revisions and within minutes fired the head of the BLS.
And so let's just start.
So fair to say that the numbers were not rigged, which I think was the justification for the firing?
Yeah.
I mean, if you take a look, yeah, there's two ways to do this.
One is to ask, you know, how does.
the BLS actually do what it does, and, you know, it's a process. It's quite complicated. If they were
rigging the numbers, there would be whistleblowers all over the place. There would be all kinds of,
you know, we would know, and there was no hint. And, you know, what had actually, we've been
talking a lot of me and my sort of econ buddies. There was a little bit of dissonance between the
soft data, surveys, which did suggest that the economy was kind of.
losing steam, not in recession, but losing steam, and the hard data, which was still looking
strong. And guess what? With the revisions, now those things are in line. So this is not like,
wow, everything was looking great and all of a sudden these Marxists at the BLS say it's terrible.
This was actually, we were a little bit puzzled at why the surveys weren't quite, you know,
the official surveys weren't quite matching the other evidence, which happens. And now it, now it
all the picture all makes sense. And it's nothing new to have political parties fighting over
these statistics and claiming that they're biased one way or the other. But getting, stepping back from
that, why does the BLS matter to normal Americans? Why do we, why do we care that there is a
supposedly objective agency looking at these numbers? Okay. First of all, there's a lot of
business decisions that actually do hinge on, you know, where is, what do we, what do we
think is happening to the economy. And the BLS is just the scale of what it does is beyond that of
any individual. You know, you have purchasing manager indexes. Those give you some clue to
what's happening. We have ADP, which processes a lot of payrolls. They produce numbers on, but they don't
have anything like the scope of coverage that the BLS has. So if you want to know where the
economy is going, the first stop is BLS data.
And if you're a business, you want to make plans.
But the other thing is that ultimately you want good policy.
And policy has to be based at least to some extent on real data.
So if you start to politicize this, if you start to have Bureau of Labor Statistics
telling the president what he wants to hear, we've seen that movie.
That's how you get something, I think probably the closest parallels out there would be Argentina and Turkey.
In Argentina, for years, they fake the inflation statistics, which allowed the government to get away with irresponsible policies until finally they themselves admitted, you know, we've been taking these numbers, that's a problem.
Turkey, you had the leader Erdogan kind of, a lot of ways, Trump-like figure, who probably fiddled with the statistics and certainly politicized,
central bank, the way Trump wants to, and didn't finally start to back off until inflation
hit 80%. So, you know, you don't, this is, does this really damage business next month? No.
Does it damage your prospects? Does it make you think worse of what's likely to happen
over the next five years for sure? And so how does that play out? You mentioned Argentina.
Another example that's brought up as sort of in a comical way is Italy and Mussolini, who was
apparently obsessed with the trains running on time. And so force the trains to change the schedule
and add an hour or what have you to every trip and suddenly all the trains are on time. So how does this
play out? Assuming your fears and others' fears are that, in fact, now the numbers are going to be corrupted,
they're going to be faked, and we will now have the narrative behind it. How does that actually,
how is it likely to play out? Well, there are a couple of scenarios, and it could be both at once.
But the one I'd been worrying about mostly was that we, the tariffs, actually tariffs and deportations, which is a really big thing, really start to push up inflation.
Mostly, U.S. companies have been eating the tariffs so far.
But at a certain point, they say, okay, looks like the tariffs are here to stay.
We can't afford to do this.
So consumer prices start to rise.
But what if the BLS, which produces inflation numbers as well as jobs,
numbers, what if the BLS is told there is no inflation and you are going to report no inflation,
then nothing is done. Then Trump keeps on pressuring the Fed to cut interest rates, even though
inflation is accelerating. And it doesn't take, this is the Turkey example, where you do the
opposite of what you should be doing, partly because you have decided to buy into crackpot
economic theories, but partly because you're suppressing the data, and you wake up one day
and you realize that you've got double-digit inflation. And so that's one story. The other is
what would have happened if we'd had a politicized BLS in 2008? And we were plunging into the Great
Recession. And we had a BLS that had been ordered not to report bad job numbers. And a president who
insisted that the economy was hot and things were great. We would have been kind of motionless.
We probably wouldn't have bailed out the financial system. We probably wouldn't have had,
you know, the Obama stimulus, which was inadequate, but certainly helped. We would have just
been sitting there pretending that everything was fine until things were much worse than they
actually got. And so this is a podcast about solutions. We lay out problems and then we talk
about what we can actually do about them. One of the things you've written recently is that you
yourself will be relying more on private surveys. Certainly if you're running a business,
you're on Wall Street. You want to have as accurate data as you can about what's happening.
It's like the instruments being accurate when you're flying a plane. What should everybody do?
If you start to not believe the BLS numbers, are there other numbers out there that we can trust?
And what will Wall Street and companies do?
So on inflation, there is something called the Billion Prices Index that was originally,
Argentine economists devised it basically scraping the Internet to produce an independent estimate of inflation.
We have one for the United States, which I relied on a lot during the Obama years.
Unfortunately, State Street Bank has acquired it.
It's now sitting there proprietary behind a pay wall.
So we don't have, maybe they can be persuaded to make that index available.
But there are others.
The Atlanta Fed Business Survey asks businesses how much their costs have gone up in the past year, and I'm going to be watching that.
We have purchasing manager indexes, which ask companies, have your prices gone up in the past month?
And that's a, it doesn't ask the rate, but the percentage of companies saying, yes, they're up actually is correlated really strongly with actual inflation.
And there may be other ways, and maybe we can get to some of the people who put together the original Billion Prices Index to start, you know, create a new independent one.
But we're going to probably need independent data sources, if only to check on the official numbers.
Terrific.
And then last question on the BLS and other agencies and numbers like this.
Assuming there is another election, and we have another president who has a different view of numbers like this.
Are these reparable if these agencies get warped?
Can we go back and fix them later?
Yeah, Argentina eventually admitted
that the numbers have been cooked
and went back and produced revised series.
You know, there are places.
Argentine numbers are okay now.
Argentina has gone, it's issues,
but Argentina, we don't now think of Argentina
as a country that produces unreliable data.
So this is not a permanent blow,
but wow, it's going to take a lot of, and hopefully, I mean, I think I should be really important for an open admission that, hey, we were, you know, this was politicized for a while and we're sorry and we won't do it again.
That is encouraging to know that it can be fixed.
All right, let's talk about tariffs, which is obviously another huge item in the news.
So initially, when President Trump came out with his big board, most people assumed that this was just a negotiating ploy.
He'd get everybody at the table.
He'd get some concessions, real or headline or what have you, and then things would sort of go back to normal.
And you've pointed out recently that, no, in fact, seems like President Trump does love his tariffs and that we are now in a regime that you have called Smoot-Hawley 2.
What does that mean?
And what is it going to do?
Okay.
So it looks as if, I mean, there have been effective.
There have been no deals.
There have been a few things that people call deals.
but they're really empty.
And basically the United States has put on tariffs
ranging from, for the most part,
from 15 to 25% on just about everybody
with no sign that they're coming down again.
And average tariff rate is something like 18%,
which happens to be just about what the average tariff rate was
after Smooth Holly back in 1930.
So we really are back in a world of high tariffs,
as far as the eye can see.
And now, one thing I did right, again,
substack over the weekend,
economists are to some extent guilty
of over-hyping the damage protectionism does.
If the damage is real,
the insight that free trade generally is good for,
you know, for not everybody,
but most people is right.
But if you actually try to plug the numbers
into the very models that we use to say free trade is good.
They say that the cost of permanent tariffs on this level are a fraction of a percent of GDP.
I say 0.4, you can fiddle with it to make it 0.5 or 0.6, but it's not, this is not a depression level event.
The whole, you know, smooth holy cause of great depression. That's a legend. It's not what really happened.
So this will hurt, it's not as, it's not as catastrophic economically.
If you ask me, actually, I think that the biggest issue is that everything we're doing on tariffs is illegal.
It's illegal under international law because we made agreements.
We have a free trade signed free trade agreements with Canada, Mexico, and South Korea.
we have negotiated tariff rates, binding tariff rates with most of the rest of the world,
all of which Trump doesn't even mention why he's violating these.
And these were agreements that had to be passed by Congress.
These are not just informal handshakes.
These are, this is law.
It's basically U.S. law as well as international law.
And then the president has the right to impose temporary tariffs under certain conditions,
none of which are met by the current situation.
So everything that's happening is illegal.
And the fact that the world's second largest or second largest economy,
depending on how you count,
has just basically said, oh, you know, those agreements that we've made, never mind.
Those laws we passed, never mind.
Basically, we are now, we used to joke about China.
Then China contract was a suggestion.
Well, America is now a place where a contract on the part of the U.S. government is a suggestion, which the U.S. government feels free to ignore. And that's got to have, in the long run, a real chilling effect on international business.
So let's talk a little bit about free trade because I think what President Trump would say is the reason we have not had tariffs in the past is that all other presidents have been stupid and weak and free trade means that the United States and Americans are being taken advantage of. Our jobs are being taken away. We're a big market. We should be paid to allow people to sell here. Why is free trade good? Why have we been moving toward free trade until this administration for 70 years?
or almost 100 years now, and why ultimately is the argument that, no, we should protect Americans first, not as sort of real as it seems, because it does feel to people when they hear it, you know, other countries taking my job away, there's a very visceral feel to that.
And it's no mystery to me, at least, why a lot of Americans say, yeah, I finally want somebody who's looking out for us.
You know, this is why, you know, part of the reason that economists makes such a big deal of our free trade,
probably bigger than, than its importance.
It is important, but we tend to blow it up partly because there's such a natural tendency to think that it must be a bad thing.
You know, if I buy stuff from foreigners, then that's jobs we don't get at home.
So the basic really important point is that, actually two basic points.
Whenever I start to do these, it turns into a Monty Python routine.
Nobody expects this matching position.
But anyway, but two things.
First, it is, you know, Trump says it should be reciprocal.
Well, actually, that's how we got to low tariffs.
It all starts with the Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act of 1934, where all of the tariff cuts that we
have done have been, none of them were unilateral.
They were all, let's make a deal.
You cut your tariffs, we'll cut our tariffs.
And so we got down to a world of generally low tariffs everywhere.
You know, European Union tariffs on U.S. manufactured goods were about 1%.
Right?
Basically nothing.
And the reason, now the U.S. runs a trade deficit, but the U.S. also, you know, when Trump
took office, we were at basically four.
full employment. We're at roughly a 4% unemployment rate, which is historically very low.
It's not like there was a large pool of Americans out of work because imports had taken away
their jobs. We were doing different things. And when you import something, that's because it's
worth something to you. In fact, a lot of the imports that have been hit by Trump's tariffs are
actually industrial inputs. You know, we've now got 50% tariffs on aluminum and
steel you know we don't import the aluminum and steel because it's a pointless luxury good we import
aluminum and steel to make stuff and if you are saying well you know we could produce the
aluminum and steel at home but the fact that we're if you're buying aluminum and steel from abroad
at a 50% tariff that says that to produce it at home costs 50% more
than to buy it abroad.
So you're paying a real price in terms of higher costs
when you reduce trade.
And if you say, well, but we're going to, you know,
we're going to get jobs.
Well, we were at full employment.
If we do manage to create some jobs in manufacturing,
which is very dubious,
but they're going to be pulling people away from other stuff
that was also productive.
The fact that you needed a tariff to do that
is telling you that the stuff,
that people would have been doing otherwise was more productive than what they'll be doing
after the tariff. So this is not, it's one thing. I mean, the phrase, you know, bigger thy
neighbor tariffs and all of that stuff comes from people during the Great Depression arguing
that the usual arguments for free trade get a little bit dubious if you have mass
unemployment. And if we had mass unemployment, I mean, I was calling for, back in 2010, I
I wanted a temporary tariff against China for its undervalued currency because we had high unemployment and it was a real problem.
But that's not where we are now.
I mean, you know, maybe give Trump a year or two, we might have mass unemployment.
But at the moment, it's really saying let's take people off jobs that America, stop people from doing things that America is really good at.
and put them to work doing things that America is not that good at.
You know, Lutnik, the Commerce Secretary, screwing tiny screws into iPhones.
This is not a productive use of American workers.
Well, so let's talk about that.
I would say that in the business community, a lot of the frustration about the tariff policy
is that it seemed very haphazard and emotional and you can't plan because it changes all
the time.
Maybe he's negotiating.
Maybe he's not.
You don't know what it's going to be.
Apple and the iPhone is a great example.
Apple has a world-class supply chain that they've taken.
three decades to build. You can't just put that on a ship and send it to Texas.
Americans don't know how to make those things, do all that work and so forth. And so we've
had this century of comparative advantage. Each country does what they're best at. But the argument
for a lot of folks who do support President Trump is, yes, we had full employment, but we had
full employment at jobs that suck. And they pay little and they don't have benefits. And they're so
much worse than the manufacturing jobs that we used to have. And nobody is looking out for us.
And finally, President Trump cares about us. He wants to bring manufacturing back. The way to do that is to put up walls and Americans can make their own stuff. We don't need anybody else. Is there anything to that?
Not really. I mean, it is true that if you go back to like 1970, manufacturing jobs on average, not all, but there were a lot of good jobs in many.
manufacturing.
But they weren't good job because manufacturing inherently has good jobs.
They were good jobs because manufacturing had unions that negotiated for good pay and good benefits.
And right now, with unions far weaker than they were, if you actually try to ask, does manufacturing actually pay more than other parts of the economy?
And there's enough wiggle room in the data that you can say, well, maybe a bit more, maybe not.
But it's not dramatic.
If you actually ask, you know,
do manufacturing jobs generate middle class incomes?
In general, they do not anymore.
If you ask what happened to American workers,
it wasn't that we lost manufacturing jobs.
It's that we lost worker power.
And there are a lot of places,
anyway, we can go on about that some.
But if you were to ask, where are the,
where does our economy actually generate middle class jobs?
A lot of it actually would de-health care.
right? And not manufacturing. So the idea that by restoring, even if you could, which you can't, but we get, let's get there, but even if you could restore manufacturing back to something like its historical share of employment, given everything else in the U.S. economy, those would not be good jobs. They would probably be, if anything, worse than the jobs that Americans have.
And so let's talk about that on manufacturing, because I do think there is a general consensus.
that the decline of manufacturing in the United States is bad,
and we should do something to rebuild manufacturing.
Sometimes it's a security argument.
We should be making chips and all these things that are so strategically important,
shouldn't rely on China for that, our enemy and so forth.
Other times it is the jobs argument.
Is there something inherent about manufacturing that does suggest
that we should rebuild it as a country?
and then ultimately, yeah, well, I'll start later.
Yeah, well, let's start with.
I mean, the national security argument properly applied does make sense.
I mean, we do need to think.
One of the thing I think that, you know, my views on Section 232, the clause in U.S. trade law that allows the president to impose tariffs for national security.
And I think it's Article 22.
Anyway, they're relevant both domestic and international law.
We, you know, 10 years ago, we tended to think of those as being, you know, who cared?
And the world is flat and we don't need to worry about that sort of thing.
Now we've learned that the world is a more dangerous place than we thought.
And the importance of having domestic capacity in strategic sectors, that is a valid argument.
It's actually more of an argument for industrial policy than for tariffs, but it is an argument.
But that's a pretty small part of what we're talking about here.
And there's no way that a tariff on Canadian aluminum is defending American national security.
Everything else, I think the most important thing to say is that the decline in manufacturing is not mostly about imports.
It is true.
Yes, we want a trade deficit in manufacturing.
manufacturing. And our manufacturing sector would be bigger if we didn't run that trade deficit. But you can do the math on that and lose all of our listeners if I tried to go through it. But my back of the envelope is that if we could, right now about 10% of the U.S. workforces in manufacturing, once upon time, it was 25%. If we could completely eliminate the trade deficit, then
manufacturing might go up to 12.5%.
So it would be a little bit bigger, but not anything like what it used to be.
And we can look.
Actually, Germany has a huge trade surplus.
Their trade surplus relative to GDP about twice as big as our trade deficit.
And their manufacturing sector is like 17% of GDP.
It's about, it's still a substantial.
smaller than U.S. manufacturing used to be in the good old days, which is telling you that
there's a global decline in manufacturing. Even China, the share of manufacturing and GDP has
been declining. And that's basically because we're so good at it. You know, it's like, you know,
the United States is incredible agricultural producer, and there are almost no farmers. And the reason
that we have almost no farmers is that we're so good at growing crops that we don't, don't
need very many farmers. And manufacturing to a large extent has gone the same way. There is a role
for trade. It's not zero, but almost nothing. There is no conceivable way to get manufacturing
back to being what it used to be, nor should we want to. We're, you know, we're doing other stuff
instead. And even in China, which is exceptional at manufacturing now, there are dark factories
where there are no human workers anymore because they're getting so good at it. Yeah.
They, for, in terms of what robotics, AI may be,
I'm not sure we're using that that much on the factory floor yet,
but we probably will,
that can replace a lot of, a lot of workers.
When we do open new manufacturing plants in the United States,
they tend to be kind of ghost towns.
And there's a, there are a few people watching to make sure
the machines don't go crazy, and there are some janitors, but, and look, that's, it's like, you know, again, farms.
We have a lot of farmland, and some crops are being harvested still by lines of, lines of men, mostly non-American-born, but a lot of stuff is just done with farm machinery.
And so, which is fine, because there are plenty of other things that we need people for, and we have never had a problem.
of finding new things for employment.
But the idea that we're going to go back to having millions and millions of people in factories
doing the old kind of factory jobs, we'd have to lose all of our modern technology to do that.
And so given that, we still have this problem, which you've written a lot about,
and I want to start talking about inequality a minute.
But let me just finish one on China.
But we do have this problem that, yes, we have full employment.
but there's been a huge decline in the middle class and that's contributed to a lot of the anger that we've seen in politics. And I would say to the division we have now and the sort of declines of old ways of living and so forth. But one consensus these days seems to be that China is our enemy. Is China our enemy? And is it better for the world if we want to have a secure, predictable world where we have prosperity and health and,
predictability, is it better if our economies are linked or is it better if we build walls and
separate completely? Oh, no, you see, I don't think, I think that the Chinese economy and
Chinese manufacturing prowess and that whole Chinese industrial ecosystem, by and large,
makes the world richer, makes the United States richer. The fact that we trade with China
actually improves our lives on the whole.
Now, that's not true for everybody.
There are some industry,
and particularly when there was the big rush of China imports,
sort of between the late 90s and the late 2000s,
that was disruptive.
It came on so fast that it really undermined a significant number of communities.
So, you know, suddenly the furniture industry of North Carolina disappeared,
and that was hard to cope.
But that's the China shock.
That's all in the rearview mirror now.
And if we ask, would we be more prosperous if we didn't trade with China?
I think that's a very, very hard case to make.
I think almost certainly the opposite is true.
What is true is that China is a great power militarily, diplomatically, and is not our friend, does not share our values.
So this is having the world's greatest manufacturer.
power, which China definitely is, be also an autocracy that does not share, well, I was going
to say, does not share American values or does not share what we used to think were American
values anyway. You know, maybe, maybe we're headed for a world where there are two big
autocracies. But anyway, the, you know, the, the question of what if China tries to seize Taiwan,
which would be utterly stupid for them to do,
but historically that has never been a barrier.
And is the United States well positioned
for that kind of conflict
or some other kind of conflict?
And arguably, we have let some strategic parts
of our industrial base that we should have held on to atrophy.
So that's the, but it's a much narrower case.
But the argument that China makes us poor
really does not.
It's very, very hard to make that war.
work. And so two questions to finish that. One, with the strategic industrial base, if it's not
tariffs that fix that, how do we rebuild a strategic industrial base? Okay, you know, a tariff is a very
crude instrument. A tariff raises, you know, raises the possible profitability of companies,
but it also raises the cost to consumers. And we have, you know, you can subsidize, you can do
industrial policy. And it's gotten forgotten here, but under the Biden administration, we had
really two policies, the Inflation Reduction Act, which had nothing to do with reducing
inflation, but was mostly about green energy. And we had the Chips Act, which was about technology,
both of which were subsidizing manufacturing production in certain areas that we, either for
environmental or for strategic reasons we thought were important.
And they did a lot.
Manufacturing construction doubled under Biden.
It's now been falling off under Trump because tariffs are a very crude kind of ineffectual
way to promote industry.
And literally just subsidizing manufacturing, production, and investment is a much more
effective tool.
We can do it.
We demonstrated we could do it during the last administration.
Other countries have done it.
You know, the Chinese have, Chinese don't have a whole lot of tariffs.
They do have some, but mostly they have industrial policy.
Japan, and it's, you know, hey, they did industrial, so industrial policy.
So we can do this.
And tariffs are not the answer, especially, you know, putting a, there's nothing about
rebuild, even if you're concerned about America's underlying economic,
you know, strength and our ability to handle stuff, putting a tariff on bananas does not help, right?
This is, so this is, this is really, it's, Trump loves tariffs, likes the idea, but if you actually try to do any kind of economic analysis, what it really says is to the extent that we have issues and we do, subsidies and industrial policy are the way to go.
The Conjuring Last Rights on September 5th.
I come down here, I need you!
Array!
Array!
Array!
Array!
Array!
The conjuring last rights.
rights, only on theater, September 5th.
And on China, so much more comprehensive industrial policy, certainly China has subsidized
and plays companies off against each other and the government invests in companies.
There's been a lot of discussion recently of how it is that China has vaulted past the
United States and a lot of technologies and where do we miss it.
But just one philosophical question when I listened to the arguments about China, there seems
to be this conceit that if we can only get our China policy together, we can somehow keep
America number one, keep China down. When I look at the world from a very clueless position
or lay position, I would say, is there was a moment a hundred years ago when a lot of countries
in Europe were number one, the British and so forth. United States blew past a lot of the
countries in Europe. So we're number one now. But you visit Europe. You know what? People still
have pretty nice lives and they have jobs and they have prosperity and peace and it looks pretty
good. And yet Americans seem incredibly concerned with this idea that we have to be number one
forever. That means keeping China down, keeping everybody else down. Is that realistic?
And is it really going to matter if ultimately everybody in the world agrees that China is
way more powerful economically than the United States? Okay, from this point of view of prosperity,
not at all. I mean, I wish more Americans would sort of, you know, we talk about old Europe and
declining Europe. A lot of that's overstated. But it's true that they've lacked some. But, you know,
try walking around, try walking around Copenhagen or Amsterdam and ask yourself, does this
look like a terrible place? Yeah, hell of all. Yeah. And the, you know, actually, particularly
what's funny is
Denmark
I like
Denmark in some ways
does it better
than anybody else
in Denmark
they do have
lower GDP per capita
than we do
and the reason
is unlike Americans
the Danes take
vacations
it's all about
it's all about
how lazy of those
so
so no
from that point of view
and
look we are not
going to be able
to keep China
a
second-rate power or a significantly inferior power to the United States, for the simple reason
that there's a lot of Chinese. And they don't have to be as good as we are to have a bigger
economy. They probably do have a bigger economy now if you adjust for purchasing power
with probably about a quarter of our productivity, but they've got four times as many people.
So the only reason to be concerned is to be, is that there's possible geopolitical conflict.
And you do want at least not to be, to at least maintain some kind of parity in terms of overall power, if only because, you know, I hope, you know, given rational leadership in China, any kind of military conflict would be really.
stupid, but again, that's, history tells us that's no necessary bar.
Look, parallel, the rise of Germany before World War I, the German economy grew substantially
more than the British economy.
Did that hurt Britain economically?
Almost certainly not.
It almost certainly made Britain richer.
But it did mean that Britain's ability to maintain the balance of power in Europe and
avoid war kind of went away because Germany got too powerful.
And so we do worry a little bit that a really powerful China might be a threat to world peace.
Now, I would have said, as opposed to the United States, which has been kind of a benevolent hegemon, but I'm not sure we're that country either.
But some kind of balance.
That's all that we would look for now.
Nobody, if you think that we can push China back into second rate status, that's delusions of grandeur.
We don't have that ability.
Yes, and one of the things that was unnerving to me after a lot of the initial tariff announcements is the way the rest of the world immediately started rerouting around the United States. And suddenly we get left out. And it turns out, you know, China can do business with everybody else directly. They don't need us in the middle. And so one of the questions that I have is, what are we doing to our own place in the global supply chains and economies?
Yeah. I mean, this is the whole thing. We are no longer the essential country. We are a big player. We have a big market. But the idea that we can dictate stuff to the world is no longer there. And, you know, the late Joe and I talked about soft power. A large part of America's ability to still have a disproportionate influence on the world came from the,
the fact that in a variety of ways, everything from technology, but also stuff like culture
and just a reputation of the United States as being a place that, rule of law, a place,
you know, you could go to America to do business and not be worried that the secret police might arrest you.
And what we're busy doing is we're throwing away our soft power.
We are much weaker relative to China than we were six months ago.
And you don't find that in the industrial production numbers.
You find it in the fact that, I mean, I have European academic friends who still come on visits to the United States,
but they leave their mobiles behind and take burner phones because they're afraid.
It's not very likely, but that they might get pulled over.
and some by will find that they sent some texts critical of Donald Trump.
And, you know, this is not the America we were supposed to be.
Let's talk about inequality.
You're writing an amazing series on your substack and publishing elsewhere on inequality.
It's really advancing a lot of the work that I've seen on this.
In your series, basically, what you start with is this observation that in the 1920s, we had the robber baron era,
and we had enormous inequality.
We went through the Great Depression,
and we actually had a period
in the middle of the century
of relatively reduced inequality,
and now we have come out
and we're this big U-shape
over the century
where we've gotten right back
to the levels of the 1920s.
So what is going on there?
Well, okay.
So there's some things that are kind of
normal, in this,
hand stuff, the markets.
No question that technological change increased to some extent the premium on high education,
although that's mostly an 80s and 90s thing.
Globalization contributed at least a little bit.
There were some labor-intensive jobs that were eliminated, and that reduced the demand
for labor.
But the more you study it, the more you realize that,
politics and institutions are really the big drivers of changes.
I mean, so I grew up, you know, in that middle-class era.
My father was a middle manager, and our street had a mixture of sort of like middle management
and elite blue-collar workers, plumbers and things, all on the same street,
all with similar incomes.
That was the world we lived in.
Well, that society did not,
that middle-class society did not evolve gradually.
That's one of the great discoveries.
I mean,
Claudia Golden, who won the Nobel recently
for labor economics,
as one of her great works
was showing that the sort of middle classification of America
happened not over the course of decades.
but basically in about six years during World War II and the New Deal.
So suddenly the great compression.
And what happened there was partly that under wartime control,
as new norms of equality were established.
And also, unions became vastly more powerful.
And unions ended up being a big force for inequality.
Just expectations.
How much would you pay CEOs?
And that lasted.
You might have thought, well, once the war and the wartime controls were over, that would go away.
But in fact, it lasted for 30 years and then gradually unraveled and then really accelerated post-Ragan,
which is you have the busting of the unions and actually even more important aggressive tactics that stopped unionization of the new big firms.
So we went from a world in which General Motors unionized was the big employer
to a world in which Walmart and Amazon not unionized are the big employers.
There's no inherent economic reason why Amazon and Walmart couldn't be unionized.
And in fact, in Europe, big box stores and so on are unionized.
So all of that means that the forces that kind of held inequality in check
were demolished pretty much place.
politically. And there's a lot more to it. The rise of finance, which is both a source of
high incomes and something that pressures companies into harsher policies towards their workers
is also part of the story. But I think you want to say that there's a lot more wiggle room.
You know, the invisible hands of the marketplace does not tell you how unequal your
society is going to be. Put some limits, you can't have, you can't have 100% top marginal tax
rates and, um, but there's a lot of room for differences in levels of inequality. And again,
if you look at, um, Scandinavian countries now, you know, they're competing in the same global
economy we are. They're using the same technology we are. Um, they have vastly, you know,
their levels of inequality look more like the United States I grew up in than like the United States we have now.
And you've done a lot of great work showing that it's part of what's happening is that it's not the 1% and the 99% but in fact it's really within that 1% it's the 0.01% who are running away with just an extraordinary percentage of the assets of the country.
I'm extraordinary 10%, I think, but it's also you-shaped, and so we're back in that area, it's a very small sliver.
But let me, before we really get into what, like how we can address this, why is that bad?
Because when I talk to people who are in the 0.01% who often are very good people and care about other people and are not rapacious robber barons and so forth, they will say, oh, you know, I'm not, I, why is it?
bad if I am particularly rich, you know, when the society gets richer and I create jobs and
companies and everything else. Why is, is this extreme inequality bad? Well, first of all,
there is, you know, you might say, well, if the country gets richer, well, you know,
we have not grown. The U.S. economy has grown, actually a little bit slower since the big rise
inequality began, it's
circa 1980, than it did
before. So it's not like we're growing
faster, and a
significant amount of the growth has been
siphoned off to a handful of people
at the top. So just in mechanical
arithmetic terms, yeah, well,
in some sense, your wealth is coming at the
expense of the other
99.9%.
But
it also, it distorts
it distorts our
politics.
I mean, I think I started that series by quoting Woodrow Wilson, of all people, who said, if there are men big enough to own the U.S. government, they are going to own the U.S. government, and we need to stop it.
And, you know, we kind of seen that. Well, you know, Musk has had a falling out, but the idea that somebody who is, has really no claim to political influence, certainly hasn't won an election, has no claim.
to it except being extremely, extremely rich, gets to lay off thousands of workers and
closed down government agencies. That's not a healthy situation. Then you get suckler.
I mean, I, this is just subjective, but I think people do feel it, that the high levels of
inequality mean that an amazing fraction of Americans feel like they're losers, feel that
they have left behind. There's a, it, it does, it does take some toll. I mean, and it's,
You can say, oh, people shouldn't be envious or whatever, but look, we're human beings.
And if you see that it does appear that a few people have made it and not me, that that does hurt.
I sometimes say that American society now, it's like those old Army Marine movies where the guy says,
look at the man to your left, look at the man to your right.
Only one of you three is going to make it.
It's kind of, yeah, but on a much expanded scale.
The scale, it's a weird thing.
I actually find living in New York City is oddly relaxing in financial terms.
Because no matter how much money you make,
there's somebody a mile away who makes so much money
that whatever you make is ridiculous.
So it just does not make sense to measure yourself that.
And the other way, we'll make so.
little money that you feel incredibly fortunate.
Yeah, no, so it's, but for the most part, that's not how it is.
We are a society where we have, it's just very clear that there are winners and losers
and in which people with a great deal of influence don't live in the same material universe
as the rest of us.
If you've been watching, you know, they say, you know, Howard Lutnik, our Commerce Secretary,
who was an endless source of comic relief,
but still him saying,
well, you know,
people are worried about disrupt no social security,
but if my mother-in-law missed a social security check,
she wouldn't complain.
It's like, yeah, because her son-in-law is a billionaire.
Most people don't have that, you know,
but there's complete inability to,
when people who have a Greek that power
had absolutely no idea how normal people live,
that has got to be a corrosive for,
the society. Let me just ask you, like, okay, so here we are, and it seems to me that the
current administration, the policies are actually designed to increase inequality, make it even
easier to make massive fortunes and so forth. What could we do to actually make things less
unequal? And one thing, I think, which we saw in 2008, is if the stock market,
crashes, that actually rejiggers on the wealth side a little bit. But in a happy way,
what could we do as a society? Well, you know, the old-fashioned, rather boring tools,
progressive taxation and social safety net programs are pretty big deal. I mean, a lot of people,
I'd say a lot of people on the left
start saying, oh, Obama didn't change anything.
And, you know, he didn't change the fundamental
trajectory of American society,
but he did give us something
a lot closer to universal health care,
and he paid for it largely with capital gains taxes
on the wealthy.
And if you were to go back and ask,
there was this whole phenomenon of Obama rage.
People just hated him on Wall Street.
And some of that was because they felt that he
He didn't respect them, but a lot of it was just, hey, they were paying somewhat higher taxes, and it was being used for a good purpose.
It was being used to provide health care.
Now, if you ask, how did we get from?
There was a great old article in Fortune, like in 1955, about CEOs, and it was comparing CEOs with the way they lived in 1955 with the way they had lived in 1935 and saying, you know, their lives are a lot more modest.
so on. And first of all, it basically said they're just as happy as they used to be. But it also
said that, you know, how did we get there? And it was taxes and unions. So you don't have to
have a revolution. You don't have to have, you know, the Soviets, an expropriation, just plain,
restoring estate taxes, restoring high tax rates on top incomes, and spending the money to help ordinary people.
And then unions, where they flourish, again, you know, unions have almost disappeared from American life.
In Scandinavia, generally 60% of the workforce is unionized. And it matters.
So it's nothing
The only
The obstacle is how do you get there
Politically?
I think we have the tools
And, you know,
a lot of us kind of thought
that 2008 would be a turning point
Would be like the second coming of the New Deal
And it turned out to fall a long way short of that
And we can think about reasons why that was
And I hate to think
It's also true that the New Deal
A lot of what a lot of the equalization
Actually took place during World War II
And I'd like to see us become a more equal society, but not the cost of a world war.
But, you know, you push on it.
The important thing to understand is that this is largely a political problem.
It's not as if we don't know how to do this.
We do know how to make a substantially more equal society.
We just need to figure out a way to get it through Congress.
And on two of those points, certainly from the perspective of somebody who has built a business and so forth,
I think there, for a long time, there was a lot of rhetoric about unions as to highlighting the problems.
And I think there are problems.
And I think if you go back to the 1970s, it's possible that unions contributed to our car companies and others not being as globally competitive as they could have been and as nimble and so forth.
So there was a lot of pent up frustration with that.
And we went to this, okay, let's just free everything, fewer unions, so forth.
One thing that's been very disappointing to me is that more companies.
haven't voluntarily basically said, look, you know what, we are an incredibly rich global company. We generate tens of billions of dollars of operating income. Nobody who works for this company full time is going to be poor. And yet, for some reason, we seem to have thought that that's okay in this society. Hey, it's, you know, someday you'll work your way up and you won't be poor. And so what? It's disappointing to me that our sense of fairness and the remembrance of stakeholders.
capitalism or the idea wasn't. It's not just about the shareholders. It's about customers and
employees and a great company takes care of all of them. I think we went way, way too far away from
that. But one of the points that you made about unions that I had not seen that I thought was
fascinating and great is that it's not just the people in unions who are helped. It's that
everybody else adjust to those wage levels and so forth. Yeah. When we had 30% of the
workforce were 25% unionized, even non-unionized companies, kind of said, well, you know,
if we are utterly rapacious, we're going to get unionized. And they said a norm. There's a lot
more, again, we think of the invisible hand and the laws of economics, but economics is about
people and senses of what you should do. If you ask, you know, CEOs have always
basically, you know, there's a compensation committee typically that's basically appointed by
the CEO. So for all practical purposes, CEOs have set their own pay as far back as the eye can
see. But in the 60s, that meant setting their pay at sort of 20 or 30 times what the average
worker made. And now it's 300 or 350. And what changed? Well, partly, they used to worry about
what the union would say, but mostly it was just there was a sense that it was,
sort of uncouth and looked bad to basically hand yourself an enormous paycheck.
And we lost that.
And now things that were, you know, if you ever read, you know, the old barbarians at the gate,
Ronald Reagan called up the people who were involved in this,
enriching themselves through the buyout to sort of express his misgivings and say,
I'm worried about how this looks.
Ronald Reagan.
And you can't imagine that, you know,
certainly not going to see Donald Trump calling somebody up on the saying,
isn't that pay package looking kind of excessive?
So there are these changes and the norms have really changed in ways that are,
I think, make us a worse society, just make us as a brutality about America right now
that we didn't used to have.
It is definitely true that the norms have changed.
And I will say, knowing a lot of CEOs and having been a CEO, I don't think that all CEOs are greedy people want to treat everybody bad, step on everybody. And in fact, a lot of the way they look at it in the compensation is, yeah, okay, but I didn't design the system. And there's no reason that I should be paid in the bottom 20% of my peers when I'm good. You know, I should be paid at least in the top half. And then they go out and get consultants and the consultants say X. And then everybody's in the top half.
off we go. And yes, and I don't know how to stop it, but you did mention one other thing
that I thought was great on progressive taxation. So again, I'm not crying here, but I do know a
lot of people in New York and California who are not oligarchs by any means, who are lawyers,
who are bankers, who make a few hundred thousand dollars. And in New York City, what you do find
is that you're taken home, I don't know, $0.45 cents maybe at the end on that. And again, not crying here. It's incredible privilege. These are great jobs. All incredibly lucky to have them. But what does smart progressive taxation look like? And I'll just add one more thing, which is when I was a kid, I remember being persuaded that whatever the marginal tax rate was at that point on top incomes, something like 90%, that Reagan very effective.
said, I don't have any incentive to earn any more money because it's all gone.
And so that was persuasive. So, like, what is a good progressive tax scheme look like?
So, and the answer actually is 73%.
That's actually the, there was this funny thing where AOC said, you know, the top tax rate should be 70% and people thought, oh, ignorant lady, she doesn't know.
Well, she'd actually, she'd been talking to Joe Stiglitz.
who referred to the classic paper by Diamond and Sayas
that estimated the optimum top tax rate at 73%.
On what level of income?
So that's very, very high levels of income.
So one of the things about that,
it doesn't exactly tell you where.
But I actually, I take New York as actually telling the opposite story,
which is, yeah, in New York,
And, you know, I live in New York and I've got my, uh, my textbook royalties on my, you know, substack.
Your substack is going to be pumping out real money pretty soon at the rate you're going.
It was never the plan, but it's actually.
So, um, which means that I'm actually in the class.
You can go back to the movie Wall Street, you know, uh, 400,000 a year working Wall Street stiff, uh, inflation adjusted.
I'm in that class. And, um, and do pay effectively a marginal tax rate.
of more than 50% between the federal state and city tax.
And so do, and not, it's funny, the oligarchs,
the private equity guys don't pay that.
But the highly paid white-collar workers in finance
and some other fields are in that class.
So this must mean that New York is full of lazy, slow-moving people
because what's their incentive to, and, you know, that's not what New York is like.
New York is actually a clear demonstration that you can have marginal tax rates in excess of 50%.
And people still really work very hard.
Now, when it was 90%, that could have been a really serious disincentive,
except the way things were structured, nobody paid it.
There were tax shelters, but you can get, I mean,
You look at European countries that have a combination of value added and income taxes and, you know, that collect 45% of GDP and taxes.
And two things.
One is people still work.
Labor force participation in Denmark is higher than it is in the United States, although they do take vacations.
But also people get something for it.
If you ask the day and they say, yeah, I pay a lot.
taxes. By the other hand, I've got good health care. I've got good public services. There's a level
of security. So I don't think that there's a, I mean, if you wanted, if somebody wanted to have
Eisenhower, you're a tax rate in the United States and actually make it effective without all
of the tax shelters that people had, even I would say that's too high. That's, that's, you do need to have
some incentives in the system. But I think New York is a excellent demonstration that we could have
as a nation considerably higher top tax rates and things would go fine. And then last question on
that. And then we'll go right to the debt and the deficit, which is another topic I'd love to
ask you about. But just on taxation, one thing that happens in New York in California, every time
a politician talks about raising rates a little bit, is that a lot of people who are doing really well,
I'll say that's it. I'm moving. And from what I can tell, a lot of that actually does happen that, in fact, a lot of people have moved out of California to Wyoming and other places that are very low tax relatively. People have left New York for Miami and New Hampshire where they're low income taxes. So it seems like one of the challenges for the United States is that we do have a state system where often there's a big difference and money can move and so forth. So does that affect your thinking?
on that at all? I mean, the optimal tax rate in New York City is set unilaterally is lower than
for the United States as a whole, because people can move. Although my understanding is that if you
actually start to dig into it, there's a lot fewer people moving. It's not nothing, but there's a lot
fewer people moving. And we're starting to accumulate stories. You know, Miami is not actually
turning into Wall Street South. Some people have moved, but some people have moved. But some people have
moved and moved back.
One of my favorite quotes
was actually from a Bloomberg article
where somebody said
the trouble with moving to Florida
is that you have to live in Florida.
Or there's a real story
about the Austin
tech boom.
It seems to be kind of fizzling,
not imploding,
but it turned out that the advantages
of actually being
either in Silicon Valley
or for some of the AI stuff
being in New York, outweigh the lower taxes and, and all of that.
So it's, it is an issue and it's even, it's even an international issue.
I mean, Britain, they have had this, you know, tax breaks for non-dum.
I still don't quite understand what that means to be living in the country, but not be
domestic.
But anyway, they did have tax breaks for billionaires in Britain.
They still do to some extent.
Some of those people have moved.
But it's actually, it's one of those things that gets overstated, again, because think of a, there are, you know, it's kind of, you know, they would say that, wouldn't they?
And the extent to which it actually happens, it's not zero, but it's not as big a deal as people imagine.
So, all right, so let's talk about debt and deficit very briefly, which is that, and first let me start by going back to 2000.
and eight, middle of the financial crisis, there was enormous fear and very confident
predictions, including from people like me who said, this incredible stimulus is going to cause
runaway inflation. We're headed for Zimbabwe or at least the 1970s. It's terrible. We can't be
doing this. We're bailing out Wall Street, all this stuff. You very strongly came out and said,
respectfully, people, you have no idea what you're talking about. Inflation is a wage phenomenon
until we see it start to bleed into wages. There's going to be no inflation. You are
100% right. You are also 100% right that the U.S. debt capacity was a lot bigger that people
like me thought at that time, and we've done fine as our debt to GDP has more than doubled
over time. But a lot of people, including some people who were optimistic and thought that
it was fine to take on more debt in the financial crisis, have recently begun to say,
Okay, whoa, it is too much now. And we have gotten into this policy where in a good economy, we are running a wartime or emergency stimulus deficit. And that's going to be as far as the eye can see. And we have these entitlement programs and health care. And we are getting to real trouble. And we've also started to see interest rates move. Lots of fear around that with tariffs and so forth. So where are we on debt and deficit? Is it?
it sustainable? And if it is not, how do we address it? Okay. So, and I am much more worried
about debt now than I was in 2008, partly because the debt is bigger, but actually, in some
ways, for more intangible reasons. So advanced countries with stable governments have
enormous debt-carrying ability.
I mean, Brick and came out of World War II
with debt that was 250% of GDP
and there was no crisis.
The reason that they have that ability
is that investors
basically assume
that they have both the capacity
and ultimately, at least,
the seriousness
to bring things under control.
and that advanced countries are able to raise taxes, you know, if they're able to collect taxes.
They don't suffer from massive tax evasion if they choose to enforce the law and that they typically have some room for more taxes and maybe some spending cuts and they can not pay off the debt but grow out of it, which is what happened to post-war debt around the Western world.
And the capacity stuff is still true.
Look, if the United States were to impose a 5% VAT well below, you know, lots of European countries have 20% or more,
if we imposed a 5% VAT and were to try to control, actually the big item on entitlement spending is health care.
And actually, miraculously, we've been doing pretty well.
on that front. Medicare, Medicare outlays have been growing much more slowly than the old projections
said they would. So, if we can control health care costs and raise a modest amount more
revenue, we're fine. We have no problem technically in dealing with the current level of debt.
Problem is, one of the chances of that kind of program actually being enacted by Congress.
what are the you know obviously under the current administration even if by some miracle
Congress passed significant revenue enhancing measures other than tariffs which are not going
to do the trick he wouldn't sign it and even if imagine a an actual sensible Congress and
an actual sensible president it's still a very steep climb to persuade people
to do this, but it's like inequality.
The problem, even more so, the problem with debt is political, that we, you know, we have
run up enough debt and we have high enough deficits that the, we don't have the luxury
of putting it off for another 20 years, probably.
So we would need to act.
And then we have a political deadlock.
We have, even people on the left want to.
They want to raise taxes, but only on, you know, 400,000 a year plus, which is not a trivial amount, but not enough.
People on the right, they're happy to slash social programs, but only social programs that help the poor.
They're not ready to take on the middle class entitlements, which is where the money is.
And so it's the political deadlock.
So essentially, a first world advanced country with a stable, reasonable government.
can easily deal with the kind of debt levels that we have.
Are we still a first world country with a competent, reasonable government?
And that's where I really have my doubts.
We will see.
And so from your perspective, best way to return to sustainability is a combination of tax increases and spending cuts?
Or are the spending levels fine?
And I'll just add some context there as one of the justifications for,
for Doge. And I think the hope of some in Silicon Valley and the business community, we're
pointing out that spending has gone well above trend thanks to the COVID stimulus and has not
actually gone back to its range of GDP, that government spending is significantly higher. And that's
why they're saying, you know, we do need to cut spending. So, but what is the Paul Krugman
answer there? Look for savings. I mean, if the generic, let's look for, let's look for
savings in government. That's right. But Doge systematically went where the money isn't. It was
Willie Sutton in reverse. They went for, they went for government payroll, federal payroll.
There's actually a tiny part of the budget. They went for discretionary spending, which is
non-defense discretionary spending is a pretty small part of the budget. And they, I would say
inexplicably, except we understand it perfectly well. I can tell you,
right away where we can probably save $80 billion a year.
And that's by eliminating overpayments to Medicare Advantage plans.
It's a scandal.
We know that the insurance companies are upcoding and making their clients look sicker
than they are so as to extract money from Medicare.
And so there's $80 billion a year that we could save somehow never even made it into Doja's sites, right?
So, and look, we've already had, we've had substantial success in containing the growth in Medicare spending, but U.S. healthcare is vastly more expensive than other countries without delivering better results.
So clearly, real reforms in health care could save significant money.
I mean, I used to say, and that's still more or less true.
I used to joke that the solution to the U.S. debt problem was sales taxes and death panels.
that, you know, that something, an additional revenue source, which probably does have to include in the end, some middle class taxes, and it's probably not so much inefficient, we have just some plant, rip-offs overpayments to insurance companies, but also we do not, we spend a lot of money on medical procedures that are probably not actually doing any good.
So there's significant health care savings that could be achieved.
And so it's not that hard.
Again, if you could shave 2% of GDP, I'm making these numbers off to some extent,
but you could shave 2% of GDP off spending mostly with health care efficiencies
and raise 2% of GDP through higher taxes,
mostly but not entirely on high-end.
income individuals, then we're fine. Then the U.S. budget situation. So it's not a really heavy
lift economically, fiscally. It's just a heavy lift politically. Well, I am tremendously
encouraged to hear that at least it's not a heavy lift fiscally. All right, Paul, you've been
incredibly, Jen, with your time. Let me just ask you one more topic that I know you've spent a lot
of time thinking about. We recently had somewhat of a political earthquake in New York City.
that was cheered by a lot of the city and sent a lot of other folks to be aghast and worried,
which is that a mayoral candidate, Zoran Mamdani, who has been called a socialist and who certainly
the moneyed class in New York wants to brand a socialist was won the primary and is in a good
position to maybe become mayor. And this has triggered a national debate about whether this is
the future for the Democrats. Should they embrace the AO?
wing of the party and go full left and much more socialist Bernie and AOC are being
bandied around as a presidential candidate team, perhaps just in fun. Or should the former adults
in the party, the Clinton, Obama centrist, retake control, and they were the pro-business
party and that coalition worked. So first of all, two questions. One, is the potential
next mayor of New York, a socialist, and will that hurt New York City's economy? And then second,
what should the Democrats do? Which way should they go? Okay. So what we call socialists in America,
even the people who call themselves socialists, you know, they look slightly left to center by
European standards. I mean, this is, you know, nobody's talking about seizing the commanding
heights of the economy or anything like that. So, so, you know, I kind of wish,
She didn't call himself a socialist, but from my point of view, he isn't.
He's, um, mom dany is a, is a, it's kind of a, she also calls herself a socialist.
And it's, and we don't know how he would govern.
Some of his ideas look good.
Some of them, maybe not so great, but nothing that is really outrageous.
And I think if AOC is an interesting precedent because she has, you know, it was all this,
She's a crazy leftist, but she's actually been a pretty effective member of Congress when she actually listened to her on policy.
Like I say, you know, she gets her economic ideas from talking to the likes of Joe Stiglets.
She's actually quite sophisticated and it turns out to be a serious political talent with a good reality sense.
She knows when to compromise.
And if Mamdani can be like that as mayor of New York, you'll do fine.
I think this panic is telling you more about the stodginess of the Democratic establishment.
Yeah, I mean, it denies to have actually the same ideas coming out of a heavy set white guy named Joe Smith, right?
It'd probably be easier politically, but I don't find it at all alarming.
And I do find that the hysterical reaction is really saying more about his opponents than about him.
And do you think the Democrats will eventually just rally around that economic position?
Well, this economic position, again, it's really, you know, he's a social Democrat.
And the fact of the matter is the Democratic Party as a whole is becoming and has moved to left a little bit.
Not nearly the extent the Republicans moved right, but Democrats, and the Democratic Party right now, and you can actually quantify this, Democratic Party now looks like a European Social Democratic Party.
And Mamdani would be sort of on the lefter part of that, but not that far off.
And I think the Democrats need to stand for something.
I think that's what's really important, saying we're, you know, we're basically like the Republicans only less so.
And to some extent, that's been the Democratic brand.
That's not going to work.
Great.
Paul, is it privilege and a pleasure to talk to you, as always.
Thank you so much for your time and your substack, which is remarkable.
Thank you.
I'm having fun, although I'm working too hard.
All right.
Well, keep it up, please, because it's terrific.
Thank you again.
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