THE ED MYLETT SHOW - The Liberal Perspective with Austan Goolsbee
Episode Date: January 14, 2020Let’s address the ELEPHANT in the room! The response to part 1 of this mini-series where I interviewed Donald Trump’s former advisor Stephen Moore was HUGE!!! We held NOTHING back as we challenged... one another to find the TRUTH. Now, I am incredibly excited to share with you PART 2, The Liberal Perspective with Former President Barack Obama's economic advisor, Austan Goolsbee! This mini-series is all about THE FACTS and the HARD TRUTHS that often get skewed and filtered by biased media stations and one-sided conversations. It’s our civic duty to VOTE but we must first be well-informed before we can do so with clarity and confidence. That’s EXACTLY why I created this mini-series… because you DESERVE the unfiltered truths straight from the mouths of the ones closest to the action! Austan Goolsbee formerly served as the Chair of the Council of Economic Advisers and was a member of the cabinet of President Barack Obama. This great American economist is currently the Robert P. Gwinn Professor of Economics at the University of Chicago’s Booth School of Business. As I warned you in part 1, we don’t agree with each other on everything... but I'm holding NOTHING back as we challenge one another to find the TRUTH. MY JOB IN BOTH INTERVIEWS IS TO ASK HARD QUESTIONS! I’M NOT POLITICAL. I HAVE NO AGENDA. I encourage you to keep your blinders off so that you can hear out BOTH sides to make an optimal decision. In this interview, the facts and truths uncovered from part 1 will be challenged, dissected and new truths and facts uncovered. We talk about everything from the economy and the realities of a looming recession to Obamacare, medicare, and how those are shaping the future of our country. Austan even shares his disappointment of missed opportunities during Obama’s presidential term. Also, what was it like to be w the President on a historic evening he was elected. I share these with you guys NOT because I have an agenda, but because I genuinely care about you, your families and this country. I learned so much in both of these interviews and I want YOU to be fully equipped so that you can VOTE based on the FACTS and make the BEST decision not just for you, but for your family and for the United States.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is the admiral show.
Welcome back to Match Out Everybody.
I'm excited today because last week you all heard sort of the more conservative perspective
on the economy and on money with one of President Trump's advisors, Steven
Moore.
And today I'm really blessed to have to my side here, Austin Goolsbee.
And Austin was a member of Barack Obama's cabinet, was also the 26th Chairman of the Council
of Economic Advisers.
And there's a whole bunch of other things I could do to introduce him.
But the reason I wanted Austin on the show is because I've been a fan of your work for
so long, some of the ways you think and the way you handle yourself and the various interviews I've seen.
So thanks for being here today.
And thank you.
It's a real thrill for me to get to meet you in person.
And likewise.
And we are at the University of Chicago, by the way, which is one of the most beautiful campuses
I've ever seen in my life.
So I really appreciate you.
It's a great place.
It's not for everybody, but if it's for you, it's certainly what wouldn't have been for me
with my grades or my SAT scores,
by the way, Austin's Yale undergrad,
Yale Masters and MIT PhD.
So we're on the pretty much even footing
intellectually here today, Austin.
You know?
And any event, I'm not adhering myself
to my audience with these interviews
because I'm gonna take the devil's advocate position in both interviews, right?
So with Stephen, I sort of took the more, I guess, more liberal kind of perspective on
the economy and challenge to him, and I'm going to do more of the conservative viewpoint
with you today as I ask questions.
So let's start out with the elephant that's in the room, which we're hearing a lot about
lately, which is socialism versus capitalism.
This is great debate that we keep hearing.
First, do you consider yourself a socialist or a capitalist,
and how do you feel about the debate that's happening?
Well, 100% capitalist, I'm a free market economics professor
at the University of Chicago.
So socialism doesn't work, and I found the debate a little
frustrating there.
It's true Bernie Sanders is a self-professed socialist. And I found the debate a little frustrating there.
It's true Bernie Sanders is a self-professed socialist.
I don't think if you look at the other democratic candidates, my point of view has been being
for social security and Medicare paid for by payroll taxes.
That doesn't make you a socialist.
Saying you think tax rates on high income people should be higher or should go back to what
they were in some previous period, that's not really socialism.
Okay.
Could I challenge that?
Sure.
So Elizabeth Warren has this wealth tax at 2%.
That seems like redistribution of assets to me, which is sort of a socialist concept. Socialism, as I conceive it, the thing that doesn't work is the government runs the means
of production.
And that, I think, is a terrible mistake.
And if you look around the world where the government runs industries, takes over the
industries and we don't have incentives or markets.
You got problems.
Tax rates, whether it's wealth tax, the U.S. has other than property taxes, we haven't gone
that far down the road of wealth taxes.
I could see why if you have wealth, you don't like to pay a wealth tax, just like if you
have income, you don't like to pay income tax, if you buy things, you don't like to pay a wealth tax, just like if you have income, you don't like to pay income tax, if you have, if you buy things, you don't like to pay sales tax.
Well, I have a wealth.
But that's not really socialism.
That's not socialism.
So let's just use that idea then.
Okay, fuck yourself, as it stands on its own.
I'm curious how you feel about that,
because I am wealthy.
But I also, well, I'm not gonna tip my hand
where I land politically, but I feel like
that's confiscation of assets.
I mean, that's something you've already paid income tax
on or capital gains tax on.
It's an asset of your family.
And then secondly, how the heck do you even,
how do you know, hunt down people's paintings
and how would that even work in application?
Now, in the, in Europe, where there are a lot of countries
that have had well taxes, it foundered on these problems
like this.
What the Warren, I haven't been advisor to Warren,
so I'm not a total expert on the plan,
but there's only starts at $50 million.
So if you have $50 million, you pay $1 of well tax.
I think it's not unlike property tax,
and when you pay property taxes on your
on your houses they stay they have to value what's the value of your property
i'm just saying
in a way
i guess my question would be what did you think was going to happen
if
donald trump selected
cuts taxes for big corporations and high income people by $2 trillion promising
it's going to bring down mana from heaven.
And it basically doesn't.
And it's the most unpopular tax cut in the history of American polling because people
look out and they're like we just gave $2 trillion for a thing that didn't do a whole lot. And so I think it's completely natural that there would be a blowback.
Okay.
When people would say, let's go raise tax on high income people back again because we
just cut them so much and it didn't do any.
I agree with you, by the way.
I do think that's part of the ebb and flow.
Having said that though, a guy like Stephen Moore would say, well, wait a minute, it's
working incredibly.
We've got unemployment lower than it's ever been.
There's seven million unfilled jobs in the country.
Wage growth is finally, the thing that I looked at, I've always felt whether it's under
President Obama, even all the way back to Reagan, there's just been no wage growth.
I mean, the quality of life for most people in the middle hasn't gone so good in the
last weeks.
It's been squeezed.
Now, a guy like Moore says, well, hey, unemployment's low, obviously crazy low.
There's 7 million unenfilled jobs. Wage growth has started to tick back up. GDP's back up.
What's so bad about what we did? Well, let's just back and unpack each of those. Okay.
Steve Moore has said that, and the administration has tried to say, oh no, it was everything that we
expected. I think it's tough if you just sit down with the data, it's not true.
You can take what they've predicted.
Here's what the tax cut will do.
That it will pay for itself, that it will generate massive business investment, that
it will lead to family incomes to go up $4,000 each family.
The unemployment rate is very low and it has been improving for nine straight years.
And if you look at job growth, it's just a straight line of improvement.
And that's the strongest part of the economy.
There's no doubt about it.
It's a very strong job market.
Consumers look pretty confident.
Wage growth starts to tick up in 2016. It's a bit in 2017, 2018. Pretty
good year. That's great. That's the best part of the economy. It didn't generate its own
revenue. Corporate tax revenue is more than a hundred billion dollars lower than what
it was projected to be before they cut taxes.
Okay. Steven said, told me tax revenues were at their all-time high.
You're saying that's overall tax revenue, not corporate.
It's overall tax revenue. And Steven, who is a guy that I personally get along with very well.
And we've debated many times. He is always prone to take nominal money.
That is, don't account for inflation.
Just there's economic growth.
And say, see, look, revenue went up.
So that's why I wanted to start us with, right before they pass a tax cut, the Congressional
Budget Office makes a projection of, here's how much tax revenue is going to go up over
the next five years.
We're coming in way below where it was supposed to be and where it's, where we're failing
is on exactly the spot where they said it was going to pay for itself.
That is corporate revenues way below what was expected and business investment, which was
supposed to be the massive thing that this
was going to do.
It's nowhere.
It's stock by back.
It's actually stock by back.
Right.
So you can see why people would be frustrated.
Now that doesn't automatically mean, oh well then it should be a 2% wealth tax on over
$50 million fine.
But again I go back to, if you try a $2 trillion thing
that basically doesn't do what you promise,
you can't really be surprised when people come back
and they're like, let's raise taxes to $2 trillion.
Yeah, because I am not a corporation,
I'm an individual, I actually pay a little bit more
in Trump's plan than I pay part.
He's that right, is your in California?
I'm a California, so I don't get to deduct my
estate income tax or property tax.
So that's changed.
But let's talk about that point from it.
Then I want to talk about the overall economy
and kind of go a little more basic.
But having said that, I agree with you.
The revenues aren't what they said.
They said it would pay for itself.
It hasn't paid for itself.
It hasn't even come close to doing that.
But GDP's been pretty good.
It's grown.
It's obviously a much stronger recovery than yours
was with president.
Go look at the GDP numbers.
Okay.
The, the much heralded, oh, well, Obama is the only president to ever not hit 3% growth.
Actually, there are now two presidents who have not hit 3% growth.
It's barely been any higher than it was under Obama.
Okay.
Post the recession so that you can't under Obama, post the recession.
So the, you can't count the agree the recession.
And now the projections for the second half of this year are literally in the one percent.
Now I, I will say I do not attribute that to President Trump.
So if the economy deteriorates or even goes into recession, we can talk about what would
be the dangers of recession and what would be the signals to look out for.
That's not Donald Trump's fault.
I, when I was in the White House, I used to say when we'd get good news, I'd say 90% of
what happens in the economy has nothing to do with Washington.
And so when it was good or it was bad, I feel like I have some credibility to say.
For the best parts of the economy, it feels like the Trump White House is trying to say,
we did that.
And for anything that goes wrong, they're like, that has nothing to do with us.
Absolutely true.
And you can't do that.
That's true.
I don't know that that wasn't true with President Obama either because he didn't inherit this mess.
But I before I want to get out of the weeds a little bit. I just want to ask you as corporate
tax cut thing because prior to that those corporate rates being cut, I thought it was almost
kind of a bipartisan agreement that we needed to reduce corporate tax rates to be competitive
in a global economy because our corporate tax rates were so much higher. You could have
quoted me and you just say, wait, didn't you say that they needed to love it? They might
come back later in criticized them. No, because I'm not but my my criticism is not
that we cut the rate on the books. Okay. The great paradox or whatever you want to call
and of the US corporate tax system is we have the highest rate we had the highest rate in the world
and if you look at how much they actually pay, it was no higher than average.
And so you'd be like, how is that possible?
How do we have this high?
And it's because we had the goofy system, we had a very narrow base and a high rate, which
is the opposite of what you want.
So what I always said, and what I thought there was bipartisan consensus on was, let's
get rid
of a lot of deductions and lower the rate, but not cut the amount that corporations are
paying by $2 trillion.
Let's just try to cut the rate on the book so it doesn't give these weird incentives.
They took that on it, and then it kind of flipped it on his head.
They were like, oh, you said we need to cut the rates.
So we just cut them and just run the bill off.
Okay, fair enough.
That's a nuance I'd not heard before.
So let's talk about, there's something that frustrates me as someone who came from the
middle that's now a top earner.
And I know I sound like I'm crying here, but one of the things that's frustrating, and
by the way, it's one of these blowbacks both ways. Yeah. Is this concept that the rich don't pay their fair share?
And what I mean by that is I'm not a corporation, but I am a top earner, right?
And I looked at some data and I just, I feel like let's be real about who pays taxes in this country.
Who really pays federal income taxes?
The top 1%, and I know this is a popular thing to say, but the top 1% earned 21% of the country's
income and paid 38, almost 21% of the country's income
and paid 38, almost 39% of the tax revenue.
The top one percent, the top one percent,
the top one percent paid a greater share
of the tax revenue to the US Treasury
than the bottom 90% did combine.
Of income tax.
Correct, but what we're talking about here
is the taxes.
By the way, they also paid more in more in ink they pay more in property tax
but more in sales tax and more in sales tax
well there and not as a share of their income
but so the the only yes that's true about income tax
but the the big taxes paid by the middle class
um... they pay more in payroll tax than they pay in income tax
okay and so the the romney argument that like Um, they pay more in payroll tax than they pay in income tax. Okay.
And so the, the Romney argument that like, ah, there's 47% of people who don't pay any income
tax.
Yes.
So they're living off the state.
That's totally misleading because that's not counting the main taxes that they're paying
as tax.
Okay.
See what I mean?
I do.
I'm following you. And so, once we add the fair share, I agree with you.
Now we're into a, that's not an economic thing.
There is no economic definition of what is a fair share.
And so now we're just explicitly in the political sphere.
And some people are like, no, I think they pay enough. And other people are like, no, I don't think they, when I tell my friends that are in the political sphere. And some people are like, no, I think they pay enough.
And other people are like, no, I don't think they,
when I tell my friends that are in the middle
who want to get to the top earning brackets,
when I tell them what I actually pay in income tax
between federal and state, especially in California,
they tell me they think, wow, they had no idea
that they paid that.
I'm over 50% in between.
Is that right?
But now the thing is, I can tell from that,
that most of your money comes from direct earnings.
It does.
It's ordinary earnings.
And you live in California, so you gotta
hide tax from that.
Now, a lot of the very highest income,
highest wealth people in the country,
that's not true.
Capital gains.
They got capital gains, they have other forms of income. So then you get into these arguments about...
Which lands us, I think, I mean, or up to you, which lands us where people think, you know what?
The socialism idea may be a good idea.
But it's not socialism to say that we should have higher tax rates.
I'm with you on that.
I'll acknowledge that.
Whether I completely agree with that or not, I don't know, but I'll give you that.
But I think you would agree with me that your party has been starting to be hijacked by
a pretty large segment of people who at least think they believe in socialism.
It may not even be for sure.
Your Bernie is there.
He says, I would have argued, no, it's not as big as you think it's been mischaracterized,
but I can't deny.
Bernie Sanders says he's a socialist.
He criticized Liz with more publicly and said she believes in markets.
I don't.
I don't know, man.
So for sure, Bernie's folks don't like me.
And part of that dates back to 2016, he outlined a health plan that somebody had scored.
It was going to cost $20 trillion.
And they asked him how would they pay for it.
And they had an economist who said, well, it will raise the growth rate of the country
to 5.5%.
So it not only would pay for itself,
it would eliminate the national debt.
And I've wrote a letter with three other previous chairs
of the Council of Economic Advisors,
where we said, don't do this.
As it gets like,
don't do it.
When the Republicans go for tax cuts,
they do stuff like that.
And we're always out and saying like, wait a minute.
That's bogus.
So we said that to Bernie.
My experience was Bernie's people do not take criticism.
Very well.
Right.
But well, facts are funny things, right?
So you touched on something earlier, but I'd like you to speak on, which is, I asked
Stephen this question.
Where is the economy? Do you feel
like we're in danger of a recession? Because everyone listening just wants to know this.
They may not care that much about top earning taxes and some of the other things, but are
we, what, what signs are you looking for and where are we at on the economy?
Okay. Super important. And look, I'm, I teach at a business school, 90% of the economy
has nothing to do with Washington and 90% of what I think
about economics is not about politics.
So everything I'm going to say is I'm not tending in it any way as a valuation of the
White House.
Like I said, I am afraid I think there is a pretty decent danger that over the next year
we could be facing recession.
Not from Donald Trump, not from any policy, but the way I view it, if you take a step back
and ask, since World War II, we've had 14 or 15 recessions, depending on how you want
to count some of the, like the double dip recession. And a very small number of things have caused all of the recessions in the United States.
The Fed, either raising interest rates, overly fast from what the economy can handle or keeping
interest rates higher than the economy can handle, is the major cause of recession in the
United States.
On that, we've gone through a long period, multiple years in a row, where the Fed has been
over optimistic in its predictions of how well we'd be doing a year or two years from
now.
In a world like that, where the Fed, as I'd say, is kind of 36 quarters in a row, 36 times
in a row, wrong in the same direction.
That's at least a yellow light that could be a cause of recession.
Two, asset bubbles popping, whether equity, the first internet bubble leads to 2001 recession,
housing bubble popping leads to our last recession.
I don't know if we're in a bubble, but the prices of a lot of things look pretty high.
You know, if you if you try to buy a house in Laguna, it seems expensive.
Sure does.
And so you at least got to give a yellow light to that.
Third, oil prices have caused recessions.
That's not as big of a danger. Oil prices aren't up that much.
And we became a big oil producer. So, you know, at least part of the economy would do well of that happen.
And then fourth category, a lump in hasn't really caused recession in the US, but has caused recession
outside the US, is major national policy action by the government.
And in that one, I would say there's at least a yellow light of caution around escalating
trade war between the two biggest economies on the planet.
So three out of four are at least blinking.
And we're in the longest recovery in US history.
So we're doing in the tooth, right? You know, in a way we're in the longest recovery in US history. So we're doing in the tooth, right?
You know, in a way we're, we're due.
So the strongest parts of the economy are the job market is very strong.
And the consumers still quite confident in consumer spending strong.
The weaker parts, if you look at manufacturing, so if you look at say, normally I would
tell you, if you say, what should I look for, I would say, look if the yield curve inverts, that is, if
long rates get to be below the short rate, and then I would say, look at the most cyclically
sensitive parts of the economy, like manufacturing, durable goods, business investment.
Manufacturing might already be in a recession.
And not just in the US, round around the whole world.
The manufacturing is kind of already in a recession.
Consumer durable still looking pretty decent.
Business investment looking kind of weak.
So all of those, I think are our points of concern. I think they're
points. And that's a consensus, right? I think most people that I've talked to, yeah, well,
it wasn't with Stephen. Yeah. But it with other people I've asked, who my respect like yourself,
and I respect Stephen too, but they that is the consensus. And one of the other concerns I hear,
and I want the audience to hear your thoughts on this too, is if we did slip into one,
yes, that perhaps may not be quite as deep necessarily
as the last time, but maybe longer because there's not a whole lot the Fed could do from
where it is now and that that's a concern I have.
I think that's a good concern.
I mean valid.
Valid concern.
I think that's a valid concern on two grounds.
One Fed to a box is smaller.
Or the runway shorter as they say.
Normally the fed cuts,
the cut's interest rates four percentage points.
And you get to do that if the rate is not,
you know, less than four percent.
Although I guess in Europe now they got negative rates.
Yeah, so, but I think the short runway problem,
the second, and I even wrote a little
thing about that in the New York Times. Often, one of the most powerful bits, economic
bits of a Fed rate cut, is the fact that there's pent up demand. So if the Fed cuts rates, and it leads mortgage rates
to go down, there's a mass of people who've been waiting,
ah, maybe if the rates come down a little,
I'm gonna refining.
I'm gonna jump.
We've had nine years of rock bottom rate.
So if anybody was waiting for rates to come down,
they already did it.
That's right.
So I think that's a valid concern.
The other thing I will highlight is,
and maybe it destroys my own credibility,
but economists are terrible,
not just at predicting recessions,
at predicting recessions that already happened.
They're terrible at predicting.
Okay, so in 2001,
I think that the recession began in April of 2001.
And in June of 2001, they had a survey in a Wall Street Journal and I believe only 7% of
economists thought we were in a recession.
Okay, but the recession has been going and it's almost done and they didn't see it.
So we only see recessions after the fact.
In the review mirror. You said earlier one of the four concerns was trade and I was going
to ask you about this anyways. Isn't there a part of you that is glad that President
Trump is trying to do something about China this way with our trade issues with that?
This way, not if you add the phrase this way. Okay. I saw, I saw Donald Trump say something to the effect of nobody's ever got asked the Chinese
to do anything and I'm finally am.
That's not actually true.
Okay.
So if you looked, if you look at the past history, one of the biggest confrontations, sources of friction or whatever with China that
we had in the past was that they were constantly devaluing their currency. And we got them to
stop devaluing their currency. And the way we did that was A, we had very specific demands. And B, we got all our allies on the same page.
And we went to them behind the scenes and said, look, we don't want to make a big public
battle about it.
But you're going to have to stop doing A, B, and C specific thing, or else all of us are
together going to come punch you.
And they stopped. Okay.
This approach that that the administration has taken, which is,
let's try to publicly humiliate and confront China to get them to do what they want.
That's not my, my, that's not like I'm the world expert at negotiating.
I was at the S&ED meetings.
I've talked to the Chinese economic officials.
This is a recipe to get them to not do what we want because they can't, if you're the head
of China, it's not a democracy, but you got to answer to your own people too.
You can't be like, oh, you know what?
I'm going to do everything Donald Trump said.
And you know, he's right.
And I should be ashamed of myself.
Right.
Publicly kneel down.
Right.
Publicly kneel.
So do as I say.
They won't do it.
Right.
And they're not, we've declared and threatened trade wars with all our allies.
So they're not on board with our what we're doing.
And we don't have any specific agenda.
We're saying we want them to stop violating intellectual property.
Okay.
Well, how, like, what do you want them to do?
If you gave them a, they think that they've been making concessions.
They opened up their financial markets,
which is a thing that we, the US, have been asking them
to do.
And they're kind of like, well, if we do that,
what will you do?
And so I don't know.
So you like that it's being approached,
but you don't like the nature in which we've done it.
I kind of don't like the nature in which we've done it.
So I don't object, I don't object to the approach that says, Hey, we want to be tough on intellectual property and
China. Bearing in mind, if you get tough on that, they probably will go back to devaluing
your currency. But yeah, that's okay. If you decide one is more important than the other,
then just have a strategy about it. This strikes me as a lot of a lot of the
people who want to cover for the president. If he does some things, some of the things
that he does that you can agree with, they'll say, see, that was a good one. And then if
he does something that's a mistake, they want to come up with a rationale.
But how's that any different than President Obama?
That's what people around presidents do.
I don't know.
I thought or I at least tried to be more objective in when I was in the administration.
And certainly when I was out of the administration, if they asked me what was a mistake that you
made or that the president made, I would try to think through and say,
well, look, here are places where we made mistakes. I haven't noticed any willingness to do that.
Tell me one thing. Tell us all one thing about the President Obama that we might not know.
Something about him and all your interactions with him that maybe not, people may not know about him, about his personality,
the way he thinks, anything like that.
Um, I would say the popular view in my, I, I knew President Obama, when he, Michelle was way
more famous than he was, okay, here at the university, he had a major job at the university. He was my state senator here in Hyde Park.
And my oldest child is a daughter and she's right between the age of President Obama's
daughter and they were all in the lab school.
We had a bunch of common friends and I knew him as a guy from the birthday party. You know what I mean?
So he was teaching at the university and he ran for the US Senate and that's when I first
got to know him.
I got involved with them then and they called me and they said, could you, would you be
willing to help on policy?
And I was like, help Michelle Obama's husband.
Are you kidding me?
I was.
That was my, so that was my introduction.
So I feel like I've known him for a while.
I would say the popular conception
that he's not a guy who gets way lower, way high,
he's very even killed.
That's, in my experience, pretty accurate.
I would say maybe is not as well understood.
He's got a kind of an introverted side.
Okay, so he's amazing speaking, give amazing speech,
you know, when the teleprop are in the thing.
But he's sort of a private guy.
That's interesting.
And I heard, I wasn't in the Clinton administration, but there were a bunch of
people who were and I would ask them, well, what's the difference?
You know, is it, is he managed the same?
Well, like, what's the difference?
And they said, President Clinton was much more like he'd get to the residence and then
he'd like, he'd want to call you from the bathtub or whatever.
And be like, now, let's, let's let's let's tell me about this mortgage fund.
Oh, mom is not like that.
And the only puzzle and I had this puzzle about him through the whole campaign too is he's
kind of got the personality of like a writer.
Interesting.
And how did a guy who's got an introverted writer side end up wanting to get into politics
and run for president?
Very interesting. I never really sorted that out in my mind. It's incredible. All the time you spent with them even to this day
Yeah, we already it's like a
There's there's a
To me it feels like a little bit of contradiction
Sure, I feel I appreciate the insight and that doesn't surprise me ironically
I really only because a lot of the people that I know in my life that are
Incredible orators actually ironically Only because a lot of the people that I know in my life that are incredible
orators actually ironically are introverted. I'm talking about whether
they're a performer, a singer, a public speaker. I'm not in any way suggesting
that I'm on anyone's level that way, but I'm also introverted. I speak
publicly. It's surprising to me. What do I mean by like that? And you're introverted.
Very much. See, I wouldn't have pe that but so so then that that gives me a
that gives me a tool or something to analyze this a little different so if
you had a criticism of him
what didn't get accomplished or could have when he was president i asked
uh... steve and more this and he gave me pretty transparent criticism of
president trump
if you had a criticism of the of of president obama whether that be in
something that you observed a decision or just something it didn't go far
enough you wish you would have got done.
Anything like that?
I could take that two ways.
One, I could tell you the thing that's like the most disappointing or heartbreaking to
me that it didn't go that way, Or we could get into details of,
you know, where was,
what was some policy mistake
that if you had it to do over with you,
pick one, you pick it.
You pick it.
The most disappointing to me is that
through the campaign of starting oh six really,
but all of oh seven, all of oh way,
we have a horrible financial crisis.
We go into the thing, Obama really wanted to be a figure that was going to try to get
us out of these horrible battle lines that had been developing, at least since, you know,
the end of the Clinton years, but like they had gotten worse over Bush.
They had, you know, you mean red, blue it. You mean red blue them. Red and blue.
But just fighting and just, you know, it felt like every, every policy, every election,
every battle comes down to 50 plus one and you know, 49, a blow.
Yeah.
And for whatever reason that didn't happen, we did not transform politics to be kinder, gentler,
less kind of differentiation.
Now, if we then, you should go to say,
you know, who was at fault,
I can give you a list of a bunch of reasons
I don't really think Obama was at fault,
but I still, it kind of breaks
my heart.
That didn't, that like, the night of Grant Park that he wins the election.
My wife and I are there, we're standing 20 feet from him, you know, in the stage.
And it was an amazing night.
And it felt like, you know, as bad as, the financial crisis is, bad as all the stuff is
happening,
maybe we can open a new door and do something different.
It didn't happen.
And that's the, I find most disappointing.
When Donald Trump came in,
when it was first running,
there were people who said,
well, it's Obama's fault.
Obama gave us Trump.
There is a sense in which I do think that's true, that there is this inevitable pendulum
swing.
And in reaction to Bush, we elected Obama, and in reaction to Obama, we elected Trump.
I do sort of feel that way.
And I do think there is something to that.
And I don't want to be overly critical of either the two presidents, because I have admiration
for anybody who seeks that office and and and leads our
country so i don't i want to make sure i've said what i thought on that yeah look it's fair
you and you were very you were very fair i've heard a lot me yeah that they didn't put it
this way he didn't fix it it's certainly it's not fixed certainly we go back to president
i would say right look if you still i think he's going to be remembered as the Democrats
Reagan and they are going to point to that there was no depression despite the massive
crisis that we experience that they put in Dodd-Frank and re-regulated the financial system
and that they passed them a massive expansion of healthcare care coverage for millions of people in the United States
Those are gonna be we say on that last one. I thought those are gonna be major
era making but historians whether conservative or liberal are gonna remember that is that first two years of the Obama
Administration were a period of massive doing like the first year of the Reagan
administration, like the first year of the Lyndon Johnson administration.
Yeah, I certainly agree with you on the first point.
No question about it.
The third point though, and I wanted to ask you a question about this anyway.
I thought when I asked you what he didn't get done or that you were disappointed in, that
you were going to tell me that what he really wanted was probably universal health care
or Medicare for all, but he just couldn't go there so he sort of
you know obama care was sort of a compromise of what he assumed could probably
get done realistically in that short window period of time and in that
question
how do you feel about universal health care medicare for all as a program on
its own
well
i think the aca
is going to be remembered as quite an important move.
And I mean, the number of people in the country losing insurance was rising by the millions
every year.
For year after year, the ACA has passed and millions of people get coverage. I think it's a tremendous achievement.
It's one that many Democratic presidents before tried to do and were not able to do.
As part of the guy, you know what I mean?
It came down to one vote.
So along the way, they did have to get rid of things like they started wanting a public option that
it would be like a medicare you could choose medicare.
And there were Democrats who said they can't support it.
Right.
They're saying that's in there.
So it was like, goodbye.
You know, that's not going to be in there if the Democrats can't vote for it. So, um, so I am a little frustrated to see the critique
from the left, let's call it, of Obamacare, that it's, that it's like, oh, well, obviously
we should have done five times more. Right. Because that's a purely academic exercise.
Yeah, but I think everyone knows. And I don't want to get into the five times more because that's a purely academic exercise.
I think everyone knows.
And I don't want to get into the reenots.
I think a lot of people feel like it wasn't a very effective,
well-done piece of legislation in terms of some of the things that were promised
with about keeping your doctor that rates were going to be precipitously lower.
However, on my side, or from my perspective,
one of the great things about it is the idea that these pre-existing conditions
are no longer
going to be an issue.
I think that that is a winner.
I think that's right.
And look, the step back from the politics of the specific bill, the basic concept of
what was going wrong in the insurance market.
Everyone knows.
And that is, rather than like in every other business where the companies
are competing by getting better and faster and cheaper, what was happening is the insurance
companies were getting better at figuring out who was going to be expensive and dropping
them. And they, we won't cover you. You got pre-existing condition, whatever your dad had terrible heart problems, we're not going to cover
you.
And the ACA fundamentally changes that.
And that is an important vision for me.
That's the big one.
And look, there's details on what I should do.
What about Medicare for all the Austin?
Okay.
So now, major candidates in your department.
So now let's move to the Medicare for all. Everything hinges on what does that mean?
Okay.
Okay.
The Bernie Sanders version of Medicare for all is not Medicare.
Okay, that's not what Medicare is.
So that is all mental health, physical health, dental care, optical care for free with no copay.
Okay, that's what one version of Medicare for all is.
That costs $30 trillion, I think.
And then the question is, could you save money?
It is true if you look at single payer systems
around the world, they're way cheaper than the US system.
So if you could get their costs, while by doing that, that would go a long way to paying
for it.
The only thing is there are a lot of things about the US system that are not the same.
You know, doctors are paid more.
We pay more for prescription drugs.
We have a different lawsuit in the tort system.
There are a lot of things are different.
And Medicare has a private option in it,
the Medicare advantage.
Sure.
And it's not, everything is not free.
It doesn't cover all of that.
And you've paid into it for many, many years.
And you're a pretty good boy.
It's the biggest, if you add up what you've paid into it for many, many years. And you're paying it. So if you add up what you've paid into it,
agree. It doesn't nearly add up to what it costs. But yes, you have paid in. So that's why I say,
to me, the phrase Medicare for All on the Bernie Sanders bill is mistitled. It's just a misunderstanding. That's not what Medicare
is. Now, if you, I was in favor when we did the ACA of having a public option, and I
still favor it now, that is to say, there are subsidies in the ACA if your income is
middle income or below middle income, you only pay a share of your income
and you get a subsidy.
And if you use that subsidy to pay up the premium for Medicare and you could just buy, like
you went to an exchange and you could buy into Medicare just like you buy a private plan,
I would be in favor of that. And actually that's cheaper, that doesn't cost anything.
That's actually cheaper than the system we have now.
In my world, you should be able to call that Medicare
for all because allowing anybody to buy into Medicare,
but now we're into this semantics,
you know, fighting within the democratic primary,
everybody's gonna fight about.
Right.
Well, no, that's Medicare for everyone.
That's not Medicare for all.
And I don't know.
But you'd agree with me.
If you went somewhere like Bernie's plan,
middle class, middle class people
would be paying more taxes at some point.
I think so.
They would have to.
I think so.
Now, so it is worth saying,
if you wanna call those middle class taxes premium, because in
a way, it's like you're paying taxes for premium, you do have to think about, well, if you
wouldn't have to buy health insurance, you might, isn't there a better option?
There's a lot of part of you that thinks like I do that, my gosh, like 70 something percent
of the country at least is really happy with their health care.
Do they get through their employer?
They like their doctor, they like the plan, they like how it works.
Why are we, why is this such a significant topic?
Why mess with that?
The vast majority of people look at this stuff and go,
I really like my gig.
Why are you people messing with this?
And I wonder that.
And I wonder that.
The only thing I will say is a lot of people like their insurance
and nobody likes how much they have to pay for it.
And the prices go up each year.
So if by having a public option, let's say,
it applied more competitive discipline
so that prices did not rise as fast,
I think a lot of people, that's why
that is a very popular thing.
And maybe short term that's true,
but historically, every government program ends up lacking those
disciplines long term, right?
Yes, and no.
I would be a little careful now, because once you get into health, because of this cream
skimming problem, it actually is the case that in most of the, unlike most industries,
if you look at single payer government-run plans, they tend to do better in other countries.
I'm not necessarily referring just to costs.
I'm talking about efficiencies too,
an application of the healthcare.
You ask people that live in Canada,
I travel up to Canada.
There's a pro mix bag up there about how they feel
about what they get in terms of service,
wait times for surgery, wait times for certain things like that.
And I'm not gonna be, it's not a scare tactic.
I'm telling you.
I'm not disputing that people look, everybody is fundamentally uncomfortable with the healthcare
system because we all get sick and we all die.
And so it's like being at hospitals and we're prone to not like that system.
It's not, if you look at Canada, it's dramatically lower cost.
They have better life expectancies than us.
And the Canadians,
if you ask them, would you like to have the US system, there's massive, non-support.
They do not want to switch to my friends. Well, one of my friends have their own means
by private plans because they want to have a job. And that's why I say, in Medicare, we
have private plans. But if you, if you have in your mind that government a government option is socialism.
I think you got to kind of figure out why is Medicare as popular as it is, why social security is popular as it is.
It's because
universal coverage is
in a way the cheapest of all coverage.
Okay, so let's put a bow on this and we're almost done for everything.
That whole this whole discussion, if we just step back for a second, and this is, I mean this too,
when is there a point eventually where entitlement programs in general aren't always going to
be the fix for things?
In other words, how many of these can we have?
Once this is done, I'll point.
Once this is done, I'll point.
And then what's the next big government program?
And I mean that from both sides, but it just seems as if there's one after the other,
after the other.
Does it become a point where the government can't fix all of these things all the time?
Yeah, look, this is the...
And have a capital society.
This is the Yin and Yang are and pull or something of modern capitalism,
which is we're unbelievably productive compared to whatever.
We're going to go back to 1500 or something.
Right.
Talk to the peasants and show them like, hey, look, I can drive to the corner and fill up
my car with gas and drive.
I got a phone to tell me where to go.
Like, so we're massively productive.
We have high incomes.
But we have every rich country
opts to have a safety net.
And the safety net includes retirement security,
includes health care security.
We have unemployment insurance, we have food stamps,
we have mandatory, if you walk in the emergency room,
they gotta treat you.
You know, so we got a bunch of,
we got a quite a robust safety net.
And one point of view of that safety net is it'd be like,
well, how can we pay for that?
And shouldn't we skimp it down?
I kind of think the 500 years of history tell us
it's almost the opposite.
What makes us rich is we get more productive.
And one of the things we buy with our wealth
is a safety net that we don't have to, we don't have to, either we ourselves
don't have to go below or nobody in our society has to go, we're rich enough that nobody does
that.
So I think the answer is, there's vastly, our capacity for safety net is vastly in excess
of where it is.
I mean, it doesn't mean that we have to,
and that's not social, insurance is not socialism.
No, I don't think that.
I think what I guess we're referring to is,
and what you said about we're very productive,
I think one of the reasons we're incredibly productive
is because there's an incredible incentive
still to be productive.
And if the safety nets get bigger and bigger
and bigger and percentage of income
has taken greater and greater
but those incentives to be productive
go away and that's a very nature of a capitalist society is that there's incentives to be productive
all i will say is be aware there are also some arguments on the other side that say
the existence of a robust safety net
actually
enable people
to start their own businesses and not be
nervous.
I just have to work for the man my whole life because otherwise I can't get health insurance.
If you can get health insurance on your own, you can go start some company, try it out.
And if it works or doesn't work, is on you. And the, if your worldview is that the thing that makes us
innovative and entrepreneurial is the lack of taxes
and the lack of regulation, then I kind of think
the puzzle you got to answer is what is the deal
with California where they've always had the highest taxes and
they've always had the highest regulation and why is Silicon Valley there and not out
on the island of Vanna Watto where there's no taxes of any kind.
Sure.
And the answer is it's not that they go to Silicon Valley because it's cheaper.
They go there because they can't afford not to.
And if you cut the taxes so much that you can't invest in education or your people, you've
done a terrible disservice.
And I'm sure you don't disagree with it.
I don't disagree.
And I don't disagree that you could overtax and over regulate your prosperity.
There's no question about that.
I do.
I, of course, you go. I, I question about that. I do. I do.
I do.
I haven't lived in California.
By the way, I think a lot of the firms that end up out there, guys went to school in those
areas more than anything because you could also argue that Microsoft ended up in a state
of Washington and there's no income tax there, right?
That's true.
That's true.
So I think that might be more through circumstance than necessarily they went there to grow.
Although those companies, you know, obviously have been there a long time having said that,
though, I don't know, you though, I look at California as a state
and I'm concerned about what I see in our state.
If you go into the cities of California,
the homeless issues we have and the overpopulation issues
in California, this is a really significant thing
and I know a lot of our players leaving that state
because they feel like there aren't incentives
to stay there to start up new businesses.
That does happen and that's what it look.
You can definitely, and we can find hundreds of
examples where government being too aggressive in taxes and regulation and whatever, destroy the
golden goose. Right. The question is, for example, now is a tax rate going back up for high income people
to something that it absolutely has been many, many times post-World War II in the United
States.
Is that so extreme that it should be called socialism and it's going to destroy the American
dream? and it's going to destroy the American dream. I think Steve Moore or others are a little too, maybe it's Dr. Nair, they're a little too,
it's almost a religious conviction to them.
And my thing is, hey, let's just go look at the data.
It is not the case that I don't want to have too many negatives in the sentence.
It is true that we have had tax rates well and excess of the rates that we have now and
high income people.
They've paid more and we've been deeply innovative and it certainly doesn't seem like these
tax cuts for billionaires or magic mean stock means for anything.
I mean, Bush cut them more than they've ever been cut.
And we had measly growth followed by real crisis.
And now Donald Trump has cut them $2 trillion.
And growth is barely, the second half of this year's,
might not even get to 2%.
So I mean, that's not a magic one.
Yeah, that's why I wanted to have this type of discussion
because it hasn't been about who's,
I said this to Steven, I, President Clinton said something,
I don't know that he believed it or not.
He said, politics shouldn't be about,
in fact I don't think he believed it,
but he said, politics shouldn't be about who's good and bad,
but about who's right and wrong.
And I think the kind of discussions that we've had today,
and obviously the discussions that I had with Stephen, help people at least think through some of these issues.
And I wanted to have you on because I wanted to be able to challenge your perspective like I did see this.
I would have been disappointed if you didn't.
And look, in society, if you could even have one conversation, civil conversation where
you engage on ideas with people who disagree.
One thing about the University of Chicago is that we've always had that this was what Milton
Friedman was from here.
Which is Steven's hero.
Yes, Steven's hero.
And we've got behavioral economists like the guy dick thaler who just won the Nobel Prize and
We're in the same room
having the in in in higher education like in politics. That's gotten rare and rare that you will have people
disagreeing
It works because fundamentally
We all kind of love each other, you know, I mean? And so we're fighting about content.
I'm not, I mean, it's not all just milk toast to happiness.
We are fighting about it, but we're not trying to kill each other.
We're family.
And so I hope people can do that more.
I do too.
Real quick, armchair forecast here.
We got the armchair.
Yeah, we got it. By. Yeah, we got it.
By the way, there are also Bernanke's Fed chair sitting right over here too.
And it is.
It's pretty cool.
Last question will be an easy answer.
If you had to predict right now, here we are many months out.
Yeah.
President Donald Trump is reelected or one of the Democrat whoever it ends up being the nominee
ends up winning.
You had to predict right now.
Oh, Democrat or Trump?
Yep. I feel like Trump barely
won last time. And he's gotten less popular. So if the Democratic nominee is more likable,
is a better candidate than Hillary Clinton
that Trump's in trouble.
That's what I think.
So I actually, I don't know, not the vote share,
but I think probability of victory 60, 40
for the Democrats.
I enjoyed the day.
I did too.
I really did.
I really liked it.
I did too.
I appreciate the conversation so much.
Everybody, now listen, for my audience,
I don't wanna be here and then I was too hard on him
or not hard enough or not nice and difficult.
They're gonna say, why did you have that pose on there?
How come?
No, I doubt that.
It is a good guy, you know that, don't hold against.
So as Austin is, so guys, please,
I'm trying to ask questions that are fair and down the middle.
If you're conservative, you feel like I didn't push him
hard enough on different things, give me a break.
And if you're a liberal, you feel like I pushed them too hard.
I just try to get the best answers I could out of Austin.
So you could hear his perspective today, not mine.
And I'm hoping between hearing both the conservative
perspective from Steven and the more liberal perspective
from Austin, that it's just making you think about
what each side has to stand for.
And maybe it'll help you make some of the decisions
you need to make as you vote.
And as you move through your life
and decide whether you're gonna start a business
or not start one, stay at your career or not.
And so thank you again Austin.
What's it?
I wanna remind you, every day on Instagram,
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Every day when I post at 730 Pacific, 1030 Eastern,
you've got about two to five minutes to make a comment.
If you do that or make a comment on people's comments
or third, just comment every day on every post I make at the end of the
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follow me on Instagram and participate in the max out two minute drill.
God bless you, max out.
you