Planet Money - Live: Anthropic co-founder on AI and jobs
Episode Date: April 22, 2026We talk with Anthropic co-founder Jack Clark and Chief Economist at Redfin Daryl Fairweather about two of the biggest issues of our time: AI and housing. We have been crisscrossing America doing live... shows to help promote the new Planet Money book. In each city, we’ve been doing interviews with special guests. And since we won’t be able to make it to every city in America (or most cities) we wanted to bring the tour to you! Live show tour and book info. / Subscribe to Planet Money+Listen free: Apple Podcasts, Spotify, the NPR app or anywhere you get podcasts.Facebook / Instagram / TikTok / Our weekly Newsletter.This episode of Planet Money was edited and produced by Eric Mennel and Emma Peaslee. It was fact checked by Sierra Juarez. It was engineered by Robert Rodriguez and Kwesi Lee. Alex Goldmark is Planet Money’s executive producer. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.NPR Privacy Policy
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This is Planet Money from NPR.
Hey everyone, for the past couple weeks,
the Planet Money team has been on the road on book tour.
Tonight, live from New York, the Planet Money book launch.
I'm in San Francisco.
What's going on?
So excited to be in Boston.
Hello, everyone.
Thank you so much.
We say hello Seattle.
Is that a thing we get to do on Book Tour?
We have been crisp-crossing America doing live shows to help promote the new Planet Money Book.
We've been in New York, D.C., Boston, San Francisco, Seattle, Los Angeles.
And this is a rare thing that we don't get to do very often.
We don't get to meet and talk with so many of you.
In D.C., we played this game with the audience to demonstrate a concept known as the wisdom of the crowds.
This is the idea that if you ask a large group of people to guess the price of something, like a piece of art,
the average will actually be pretty close to correct.
You all guessed that this piece of art is worth, oh, come on, guys, $693 trillion, I don't think that's right.
It wasn't a perfect study.
In New York, our host Amanda Aronchick and Mary Childs answered audience questions about how we choose what stories to report or not report.
It was weird to look at the list of episodes that I thought I was going to make, and one of them was just cocaine.
We also have a running thread where we just yell drugs.
each other because we keep wanting to make a, how does a drug become legal episode?
Yes, but the lawyers have said no.
And at every stop, we have gotten the true delight of meeting so many of our listeners
turned readers.
Some of whom it seems like maybe should be writing their own economics books.
My name is Ryan, and I'm really glad you were talking about cargo shipping because I'd like
to hear your thoughts on the Jones Act, which was briefly, and for the long, for those
who aren't like maritime shipping nerds, I'll just contextualize briefly.
The Jones Act is a subsection.
Yeah, actually, please do.
Do our job for us.
I love this.
Now, we do have a few stops left on this book tour, but obviously we can't make it to
every city in America.
Can't actually make it to most of them, really.
And so we thought, not everyone can come to the book tour.
Let's bring the book tour to everyone.
Hello and welcome to Planet Money.
Hello and welcome to Planet Money.
Hello and welcome to Planet Money.
Hello and welcome to Planet Money.
Oh, wow, that's good.
Hello and welcome to Planet Money.
I'm Erica Barris.
In every city on the tour, we've been doing these interviews with special guests.
They've been Planet Money regulars like economists Raj Shetty and Emily Oster.
And some people in the news, like the co-founder of Anthropic, Jack Clark.
By April 27, AI systems should be able to do tasks that might take a person 150 hours.
No, what is that?
That's almost a month's worth of work, which requires strange things to happen in the economy.
Yeah, but like what task is it doing?
What's the task are you thinking of?
What's the last bit of work that took you a month?
Writing these questions for you took more time than I wanted.
Yeah, yeah.
And also people like economist Darrell Fairweather,
who's trying to help regular people understand the massively complex housing market.
So I think a good metaphor for the housing market is musical chairs.
Like, the people who already own houses are sitting in their chairs.
and whenever there's a new spring housing market,
some people get up and they move and they select a new chair.
And if you're not adding more chairs in,
you can't get first-time home buyers into the market so easily.
Today on the show, two stops from our live book tour,
San Francisco and Seattle,
where we'll talk about AI anxiety and how you.
Yes, you could be the key to fixing the housing crisis.
So first stop, San Francisco,
where we got to talk with the co-founder of,
Anthropic Jack Clark. As you know, Anthropic and their AI models, Claude and now Claude Mythos,
are raising all sorts of thorny questions about what AI can do and what it can't. And we were,
of course, going to ask Jack about all of that. But we wanted to start with some writing he published
online several years before starting Anthropic, a series of short stories that give some
perspective into how he thinks about the future. Here he is with Planet Money host, Kenny Malone.
Is it fair to call these science fiction? It is fair to cool them science fiction.
I'd like to give people a little taste of what's in here. So the one I want you to read that
feels very Planet Money, it imagines in the year 2025, we'll forgive you because you're a little
wrong on that one. But in the year 2025, you imagine a factory in China. It is overseen by a robot
factory line and AI is overseeing the robots and then AI is also trying to imagine new types of
products and then if you just want to read. When new candidate products are found it runs for a series
of tuned expert systems and if it gets a high enough score simulates the product in a high fidelity
simulation. If it passes these tests then a candidate product is produced airlifted by drone to a nearby
by human focus group, and if it satisfies their criteria, is sold on an eBay-like auction site
frequented by the factory's thousands of distributors. A bidding process takes place,
and in a few days or weeks, data comes back about how the product succeeds in the market.
If it does better than the existing product, more parts of the factory are dedicated to
creating new products in this style, and the improvisation line begins exploring the latent space
have been to you products.
Okay.
So we imagine a world
where AI is able to both
control the robots that make the product,
innovate and design the products,
ship them off to human focus groups,
and then sell them to humans.
So here's my question for you.
Where are we the humans in this story?
Are we off in a field,
dancing, eating dates in the sun?
And maybe more importantly,
how do we have money
to buy the products that we didn't help
make
sort of a serious question.
That's a good question.
So I think if AI goes as far as people think,
you actually need to
re-conceptualize how capitalism
in the largest possible sense works.
I think if you end up in a world where
you have a closed-loop production system
with just machine-to-machine to machine to machine
and then people buy stuff,
people need money.
It's well-established.
That is the thing. Yep.
So you need to tax
the robots and AI companies
significantly and you need to somehow find a way to reallocate money from this machine economy
to the human economy.
Okay. Now, one of the things that occurred to me in reading this book is, can people get this,
by the way? Is this like a thing?
You can get it for free online at jackclark.net, but I haven't figured out how to sell the book
yet. Each time I try and make an actual book to sell, I get sidetracked, and the last time
was when I was starting Anthropic and then I got busy.
Surely someone will publish your book, Jack. I'm... It's on my list. It plagues me. I
I have a Google Doc that I stare at on my free moments.
Having gone through a series of reporting on books and how they get made, I suspect you'd
be an attractive candidate to a publisher.
One of the things that did occur to me in reading your book is that science fiction
writers, by definition, are imagining a future, they're predicting a future, but you may be
genuinely the only one that I can think of who is simultaneously shaping the future, and we
are all living in the world that your technology is creating.
And so I do genuinely wonder if that changes how I should read this book.
Like, should I think of your writing as a blueprint, as instructions, as a warning, as advice on how to live in Jack Clark's future?
Yes.
There's a band jawbreaker, and they have a lyric which says, my fiction beats the hell out of my truth.
And so the newsletter is mostly me writing about AI research papers.
But the fiction stories are where I'm basically trying to grapple with what's happening in my story.
my moral and ethical responsibility in it.
So you can read them, and I view it as like messages in a bottle.
I'm trying to throw out of this semi-frightening AI lab,
which I'm a principal character in.
Are you, and so you are warning us, and you're warning us, you're not warning us.
I guess that's why you said yes.
It's exciting.
Is it?
It's very, it's exciting.
I think it's very exciting.
Is everyone excited?
That's about the response I expected, to be honest.
Eerie applause.
But it's change, right? And with that comes some amount of trepidation, right?
Yes, for me, a lot of trepidation, personally. That may just be me. I don't know.
We talked earlier today. This was a very funny interaction. So Jack, I met Jack briefly early today,
and this is the greatest reason to run out of room. He's like, I must run and make some predictions.
And I was like, what is happening? And you paused to briefly explain that you had made a series of
predictions, essentially that would come true in 2026 of September. And they had done
very well and you had to go make another set.
So what were your predictions?
Okay, there's two.
Share them with us now.
Two interesting ones.
If we see any of these on Polymarket though, we know where they came from.
Well, one, I think, again, if you do the time thing, it doesn't seem wild that by April
2027, AI systems should be able to do tasks that might take a person 150 hours.
No, what is that?
That's almost a month's worth of work, which requires strange things to happen in the economy.
Yeah, but like what task is it doing?
What task are you thinking of?
What's the last bit of work that took you a month?
Writing these questions for you took more time than I wanted.
Yeah, yeah.
So tasks like this.
Yeah.
No, I mean, tasks that might take a person a really, really long time, might be designing a
complicated piece of circuitry, doing a very, very involved research project involving
reading and cross-referencing many things, building a piece of software.
The kinds of tasks we currently pay extremely talented people, large amounts of money to do,
are exactly the type of tasks which AI systems are kind of creeping into.
So that has some implications.
Yeah.
The other prediction we made was, you know,
we've talked about how the majority of the code at Anthropic
is written by AI systems like Claude.
Well, all of us in the room thought by April,
maybe 100% of the code is,
which led to us say, what are we doing?
And I think that we invented a guild system
where we would sit around analyzing and critiquing
the code that Claude writes
and verifying with it's correct.
And I can't work out if this is like a really fun country club style job or if it paints some different picture.
Right.
You're going to tell me.
I don't know, Jack.
I find it all, I waffle between horrified and optimistic.
And I find I'm just, is that kind of where everyone else is?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Where do you do that?
I find myself staring into the face of change that we haven't experienced in perhaps a century.
And I don't know how we'll respond.
A hundred years ago, C.S. Lewis wrote a book called The Screw Tape Letters,
which is about a demon in hell, whose job is writing letters to their boss,
a senior demon, a manager demon, about their attempts to corrupt a person on earth.
And they have a letter where they say,
wonderful news, my human has just got an invention called the telephone.
And the telephone means that whenever my person is alone
and would otherwise introspect on themselves
and be drawn closer to God,
they will instead pick up the phone and call their friends,
which brings them closer to hell.
Now, what does that get right and wrong?
What it gets right is that things like phones
actually massively changed how people relate to one another.
Yes.
But I don't think that we're all like doomed to hell
because we have phones.
Well.
Well.
I realize now I picked the wrong example,
but it gets up a shape of this, right?
Like, we are going to experience immense change
and we're looking at it,
and we're trying to think through what it means
for how we relate to us as people,
and it will change how we relate to one another.
Yeah.
I want to shift gears from your writing for a second
because you made a lot of news lately, yeah?
I mean, you know, it's always exciting.
I mean, you've made a lot of news lately,
but most recently there's a new AI model called Mythos.
Please, Kirby, if I get any of this wrong.
So Mythos, and that seems to be really good at hacking
if someone wanted to use it for that.
And so you have not made this model public yet.
You've given it to something like 40 or 50 companies to, I guess,
gurd themselves from the tool that you made.
Yes.
Okay.
So that's companies like Apple and Google and Amazon.
And as far as we can tell, the only financial institution that I've seen reported is
J.P. Morgan maybe has it to test.
But I believe Treasury Secretary Scott Besson has called you asking for this.
So question one is, how have these phone calls
Ben.
I have a high tolerance for weird phone calls at this point in time.
Yeah?
I think the nature of the conversations we're having is we have been saying for years
that AI systems would get better and they would keep getting better until they got better
than people at most tasks and it started encoding last year.
Don't be surprised and they get better at other tasks as well.
And that doesn't go down super well on the calls.
So then you frame it as, well, what do we do about this?
And I think the challenge is, this isn't a special model, right?
This is representative.
This isn't your hacking model, is I get?
It's our regular Claude.
And it's really good at hacking.
Claude turns out to be good at hacking now as well.
Cool. That's cool.
Look, I'm, look.
Claude's cool.
I know, I know.
It's, look, we contain multitudes.
We can be optimistic and terrified at the same time.
But what it means is there will be many systems like this,
and the world is going to adapt to this.
We have a chance to use it to make much, much of the world much more secure.
But at the same time, we now have these new capabilities in the world we have to contend with.
Is it true?
There's just the one financial institution in the mix of people getting to test their own systems?
We announced 40 and we've been expanding it a bunch over time.
So I don't know exactly if it's just for one or if we've expanded it already.
But more people are being added all the time right now.
Do I need to be checking my banking account to see if money is going away?
No, unless you're spending it.
I mean, I might be.
San Francisco is a great city for spending money.
The food is good.
So right now, you're offering this tool to companies for free,
but there is this feeling in the back of my mind.
Like, you have invented both the weapon and the shield,
and so what happens when you want to charge for this?
It does feel a little bit like, hey, you know,
shame if something happens to that company yours,
if you don't pay for our product.
Yeah.
We think that business strategies which tend more towards mafia than anything else are probably not long-term resilient.
So we don't be doing that.
I do think that the shape of this in the future is parts of AI need to become actually a true utility
where you would expect things like cyber defense capabilities to be something that you provide like at cost or at the cost of it costs you to provide you with no margin.
I'm sorry if my financial officer is listening to me say that.
But it's the shape of where you end up in the future where there are all these capabilities.
that matter for society, you need to proliferate those into society without charging society
for it, or you end up in a really bad incentive structure.
Okay.
You now have two children.
You just got back from parental leave.
Yep.
So you're imagining a future for them as well.
And so I am wondering, what is the future you're imagining for them?
How do you think they will fit into the world that you are creating?
And what skills will you prioritize for them?
I mean, I imagine, if we get this right, a better future where people get to spend more time, more time with one another and less time being kind of atomized and driven away from their families and friends.
This requires you to actually solve the distribution problem.
Me personally?
Yes, you. Congratulations.
We're solving economics together.
But how you get there, along with the advocacy I've talked about, is actually thinking you're going to need to completely rethink education.
and sort of upend it.
You're going to need to upend how education works
in pretty fundamental ways.
And you're going to have to teach people
to be much more curious.
I am struck by how my child constantly asked me questions.
It's obviously sometimes very enraging
when you get asked the same question 50 times a day.
But sometimes it's amazing.
Like, you know, why are camels,
why do they have humps or anything like this?
I got that one too and I was like, I don't know.
But as you go into being an adult, you get kind of the skill of asking questions beaten out of you by wrote learning and working in regular jobs and your friends saying, for heaven's sake, Jack, like stop asking these insane sounding questions.
AI actually can answer these questions for you and can allow us to maintain that kind of childlike curiosity into adulthood in a way that I think is very mind expanding and wonderful.
And I think that's going to lead the world to like really exciting places where everyone has the inventiveness,
that you have as a child, but you can still use it and are encouraged to use it more as an adult.
That's my optimistic story.
Yes.
I do want to end with the final line from your preface, which I do recommend reading,
but the final line you have chosen is, good luck to us all.
Yes.
And I think we'll end on that one.
Jack, thank you so much.
Thanks very much.
Appreciate it.
Jack Clark, the co-founder of Anthropic talking with Planet Money host, Kenny Malone.
A quick clarification that reference to the screenings.
tape letters was basically correct. In it, C.S. Lewis does write about noise writ large as a
distraction to man. It was in a different private letter that he talked about the downsides of
gadgetry, including the wireless radio. After the break, what it's like to be a behavioral
economist for Amazon. Welcome back. We have another interview from the tour I'm going to play you
part of. It's with Daryl Fairweather. Daryl is a behavioral economist and author of the book,
Hate the Game, Economic Cheat Codes for Life, Love, and Work.
She's also quoted many times in our book, especially on the topic of housing.
Check the index. She's in there a lot.
Yeah. So please welcome Daryl Fairweather.
Daryl's currently the chief economist at Redfin, the realty company.
And she used to be a senior economist at Amazon in Seattle, which is where she joined us.
Here she is talking with hosts, Kenny Malone, and the main author of the Planet Money book, Alex Miasi, about how the work
of economists is baked into so much of our daily lives.
I think your career demonstrates something that I've found quite interesting, which is,
I think my standard image of an economist was always kind of a professor, and they do
research.
But when you went to work at Amazon, was your job title, behavioral economist?
Yes, they hired me specifically to be behavioral economist because they didn't want people
at the part of the company that I was working at to get too nervous that they were hiring
some economist in.
It was going to like cut roles or make things harder for people.
So they wanted people to know that I had a softer touch.
And my training is in behavioral economists.
And I think that is a signal to people that, you know,
I think about things, you know, a bit more holistically than maybe the typical economist.
Yeah.
Why did Amazon need a behavioral economist?
Well, this was when they were getting a lot of bad press for all,
for the way that they were treating their employees.
There was this big New York Times expose about it.
Was that the peeing in bottles, exposet?
I think it was before that even.
Oh, okay.
The first one.
There are a couple exposés.
So my job was to work on employee engagement,
especially for our more frontline call center employees,
and to figure out how to keep them from quitting,
how to keep them happy,
how to give them career opportunities,
and we actually had data to measure according to that.
So that was my role as a behavioral economist.
Yeah.
And so I think, yeah, I've learned over time,
how economists are not just professors.
Many highly trained economists are out there
working on very familiar goods and services
that we all know.
One of my favorite examples is dating apps.
To a surprising degree,
the algorithms and dating apps that decide
who gets matched with who, who sees which profiles,
are based on Nobel Prize-winning economics research.
I'm curious if you have kind of a favorite
example or two of ways that economists have been very influential, you know, not in academia,
but by working at, you know, companies. How are you secretly influencing our lives, Daryl?
That's the question. Yeah, I think a famous one is ride share apps. How, I mean, it used to be that you
would just call a cab and the price you would pay was just whatever was on the meter. And then
economists got the idea to have dynamic pricing that was set by whatever demand was in that
moment and supply was in that moment. And a lot of people don't like that because it
feels a little bit unfair.
And now it's moving even into grocery stores,
this dynamic pricing.
I know there's a lot of pushback towards that as well.
I do see those little price tags that can change.
And I wonder, like, two seconds ago, was it less?
Like, is that what's happening?
Yeah, this is even true on Amazon.
Like, I was tracking the price of my book,
and my book is now cheaper than it was a couple weeks ago,
so you can get a deal because of that dynamic pricing.
I think this event will push it back after.
Yeah.
If you buy enough, then your friends will have to pay more, yeah.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah. I mean, and so I think we're talking specifically with the right share about like surge pricing.
Yes, yes. That there, that demand, if there is more demand that should, in theory, push up price.
Because if it doesn't, what you can have are shortages. And shortages are worse than paying more because then there are people who might be willing to pay a higher price who just don't get the option to.
But I think there's, I feel like there's kind of a backlash to that now. Like sometimes people prefer things to be allocated based on a wait list because it feels.
more fair even if it is more inefficient because it's not just going to the richest people.
So this is where my behavioral economist brain starts working and I feel like there has to be some at least nuance and when is surge pricing a bit grotesque.
We were talking backstage and earlier about the New York City Marathon one of the things I think is genius when you read the final chapter, everyone, is that it
optimizes for envy-freeness is the term I've heard, which is like less about one specific system of optimization and more about
will everyone be cool with this if they get left out for some reason and that is also a different thing you can optimize for
Surge pricing probably does not do that
Yeah, I agree. I mean it's not I mean willingness to pay would only allocate it to people who have the highest willingness to pay
But maybe willingness to not moan is another way to allocate it
I mean I think the thing that does get left out of the surge pricing in Uber conversation is there is a workforce that in theory is standing by and could
quickly jump into their cars and do more rides.
And so this is a price, what is the term?
The signal-market clearing price?
Yeah, there's a market demand price that would then recruit more people
and then would help the price drop.
And so in like that circumstance,
I think that's what gets left out of that conversation a little bit.
But I don't know that that applies to the grocery store.
If it starts raining and prices don't go up for Uber's or NIFs,
then you don't have this incentive for more drivers to come
and get more people where they need to go while it's raining.
Anyway, I try to think of that when I grumble.
about Uber prices, but I mostly just grumble anyway
during certain times. Let's finish
with the topic of housing.
Something, a part of the economy that so
viscerally impacts our lives.
What have been some of like the biggest
developments in housing in the last five,
10 years while it's been really the focus
of your work?
In the last five years, there's been a lot of
movement to eliminate single family zoning,
which is this idea that you can only build one house
on one plot of land in a neighborhood.
and single-family zoning is behind why there's a scarcity of housing in cities like Seattle
and many cities across the country.
But there's actually been a lot of progress to get rid of that and replace it with multifamily zoning.
It's been a very slow-moving progress, and just because you change the zoning doesn't mean
the housing changes overnight.
The housing has to get developed.
But in the last five years, there has been a big movement.
The YIMBies, yes in my backyard, as opposed to Nimbis know in my backyard,
the Yimbis seem to be winning this ideological fight, which is a big movement.
really encouraging to see because it is based on economic principles, supply and demand,
and people are, it's finally starting to click in politicians' minds and voters' minds that this is
how you get more affordable housing.
Can we come up with a metaphor for this phenomenon, which is like there's been more increased
density zoning, and yet people would see new houses built that were like expensive townhouses,
and they would be mad about it.
So like, doesn't make sense.
You're allowed to build more houses, but all I see over here are very expensive houses.
Which is a common objection about zoning.
It's like, well, you know, a new apartment building was built.
But it's very expensive to live there, and I feel like rents are still going up.
Everything's still so expensive.
Yeah, so I think a good metaphor for the housing market is musical chairs.
Like, the people who already own houses are sitting in their chairs, and whenever there's a new spring housing market, some people get up and they move and they select a new chair.
And if you're not adding more chairs in, you can't get first-time homebuyers into the market so easily.
but if you were to add some luxury plush, nice chair,
yes, it's probably going to go to a very wealthy person,
but then that wealthy person is not going to be sitting in the folding chair anymore,
and that chair opens up for a first-time homebuyer.
Or they're less likely to be sitting in the folding chair,
because we know some people will buy two chairs.
Sometimes, that is true.
Hopefully they rent it out.
Yes, yes.
I want to finish with a quote actually from the book,
which is something you said to me that really stuck with me.
So I'm going to read the quote here.
You tell me, I wish that communities have the mentality
that is their responsibility to grow
because we know there's going to be future generations
that are going to need housing.
I wish that people cared more about future residents.
Could you tell me a bit more what you mean there?
Yeah, my frustration with the way that housing works in this country
is that it's usually determined by local residents,
Usually people who are homeowners themselves who go to their local town halls or local city halls
and advocate for less housing because they don't want to see their neighborhoods change.
They don't want to see new condo buildings or apartment buildings going up.
And the people who don't get a vote are the people who don't live in that area but would like to move in that area.
Or the people who maybe are kids and one day they'll be adults and they'll need to get a house of their own.
Those people's voices aren't heard.
So I wish that the focus was less on what's best for.
current residents and what's best for the residents who might live here five, ten,
15 years from now.
Yeah.
So this is absolutely the focus of a chapter of the book.
I really love that because what could be more understandable that you choose a neighborhood,
you don't want it to change.
But there's a trade-off because of all the people who are new housing in the future.
And it does seem like there's a way economics is so much about incentives and laws and
policies, but this was something really about empathy that you're pointing out as important.
Yeah, empathy of economics.
It happens.
Darrell, thank you. You can find her. She's in the index. I had her sign my index in my book. I recommend that.
Darrell Fairweather is the chief economist at Redfin.
That's our show. There are still stops left on the book tour. I will be in Pittsburgh tonight, April 22nd, doing the Planet Money Game Theory game show as part of the tour. Then there are shows in Chicago on the 23rd and Toronto on the 20th.
Come by, say hello, maybe grab a copy of the book.
More information at planetmoneybook.com.
You can now find our book, Planet Money, a guide to the economic forces that shape your life in bookstores.
If you go spot it, please let us know what section it is in.
We'll have one more installment of our book series soon, where we dive into the secretive world of bestseller lists.
Thanks to everyone who came out so far and who picked up a couple.
copy. This episode of Planet Money was edited and produced by Eric Menel and Emma Peasley.
It was fact-checked by Sierra Juarez. It was engineered by Robert Rodriguez and Kwayzee Lee.
Alex Goldmark is Planet Money's executive producer. I'm Erica Barris. This is NPR. Thanks for listening.
