Paul Krugman: Economics of Innovation, Automation, Safety Nets & UBI | Lex Fridman Podcast #67

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  • čas přidán 1. 06. 2024
  • Paul Krugman is a Nobel Prize winner in economics, professor at CUNY, and columnist at the New York Times. His academic work centers around international economics, economic geography, liquidity traps, and currency crises.
    This episode is presented by Cash App. Download it & use code "LexPodcast":
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    PODCAST INFO:
    Podcast website:
    lexfridman.com/podcast
    Apple Podcasts:
    apple.co/2lwqZIr
    Spotify:
    spoti.fi/2nEwCF8
    RSS:
    lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/
    Full episodes playlist:
    • Lex Fridman Podcast
    Clips playlist:
    • Lex Fridman Podcast Clips
    EPISODE LINKS:
    Paul Twitter: / paulkrugman
    NY Times: www.nytimes.com/column/paul-k...
    Arguing with Zombies (book): amzn.to/2RBZoSb
    OUTLINE:
    0:00 - Introduction
    3:44 - Utopia from an economics perspective
    4:51 - Competition
    6:33 - Well-informed citizen
    7:52 - Disagreements in economics
    9:57 - Metrics of outcomes
    13:00 - Safety nets
    15:54 - Invisible hand of the market
    21:43 - Regulation of tech sector
    22:48 - Automation
    25:51 - Metric of productivity
    30:35 - Interaction of the economy and politics
    33:48 - Universal basic income
    36:40 - Divisiveness of political discourse
    42:53 - Economic theories
    52:25 - Starting a system on Mars from scratch
    55:11 - International trade
    59:08 - Writing in a time of radicalization and Twitter mobs
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 825

  • @lexfridman
    @lexfridman  Před 4 lety +119

    I really enjoyed this conversation with Paul. Here's the outline:
    0:00 - Introduction
    3:44 - Utopia from an economics perspective
    4:51 - Competition
    6:33 - Well-informed citizen
    7:52 - Disagreements in economics
    9:57 - Metrics of outcomes
    13:00 - Safety nets
    15:54 - Invisible hand of the market
    21:43 - Regulation of tech sector
    22:48 - Automation
    25:51 - Metric of productivity
    30:35 - Interaction of the economy and politics
    33:48 - Universal basic income
    36:40 - Divisiveness of political discourse
    42:53 - Economic theories
    52:25 - Starting a system on Mars from scratch
    55:11 - International trade
    59:08 - Writing in a time of radicalization and Twitter mobs

    • @breacohan309
      @breacohan309 Před 4 lety +11

      please kindly interview Sir Roger Penrose or Edward witten, I would love to see them in your podcast and I'm sure a lot of your audience would love too !

    • @lexfridman
      @lexfridman  Před 4 lety +16

      @@breacohan309 Definitely will.

    • @Homerw00t
      @Homerw00t Před 4 lety +3

      Would you be open to trying to get Richard Dawkins on the podcast? That would be such a treat. And if possible go in-depth into evolution and stay away from religion (although it will go there). Thank you for the amazing content. My mind feels expansive every time I watch your channel

    • @lexfridman
      @lexfridman  Před 4 lety +6

      @@Homerw00t Definitely. A few conversations about evolution are coming up.

    • @vinster9165
      @vinster9165 Před 4 lety +2

      It’s Really disappointed that Krugman seems mystified by the inherent or potentially dangerous outcome of AI.

  • @Kodopitharos
    @Kodopitharos Před 2 lety +217

    10/10. I've never heard Krugman talk for that long in this manner and now I have a newfound respect for Thomas Sowell. Thank you Lex.

    • @Lebronwski
      @Lebronwski Před rokem +15

      😂

    • @robertzehm
      @robertzehm Před rokem +11

      Sick burn 🔥

    • @sn3aky_pants593
      @sn3aky_pants593 Před rokem +3

      😂

    • @christianilkjr6771
      @christianilkjr6771 Před rokem +29

      Thomas Sowell has like one published study and a very low h-index. I don't think I've ever had a professor with less than 10 times as many citations as Sowell. Fine, go ahead and be right wing, but people who use "Thomas Sowell" as an example of a serious academic economist seriously makes me cringe hard. 😂

    • @jms974
      @jms974 Před rokem +12

      Sowell's deconstruction of John Rawls conception of justice is beautiful. For Krugman to claim there is no "objective way" to choose one view of justice over the other while blindly accepting the Rawlsian view puts Sowell above him. Sowell intricately breaks down the consequences of both views while Krugman appears to simply align with whichever one fits his worldview without regard for the consequences.

  • @5280ryan
    @5280ryan Před rokem +35

    Pretty soon Krugman and the world will find out that debt is not just “money we owe ourselves”.

    • @syourke3
      @syourke3 Před rokem +1

      Steven Keene is right.

    • @koho
      @koho Před rokem +1

      That was said often around the time of FDR.

  • @unocios0
    @unocios0 Před 4 lety +105

    would it be possible for you to have Nicholas Nassim Taleb on your podcast? Your ability to bring interesting, thoughtful and relevant people to your show is beyond impressive, keep up the good work, amigo.

    • @edehe2370
      @edehe2370 Před 4 lety +11

      I don't think that Nassim Taleb would come on this podcast after knowing that he invited Paul Krugman lol. Paul stands for everything Nassim despises.

    • @migkillerphantom
      @migkillerphantom Před 4 lety +11

      It would devolve into a frantic tirade about how Phoenicians are Greek and Aryan.

    • @dds3524
      @dds3524 Před 4 lety +8

      Would be such a great guest ! And indeed N. Taleb despises Paul

    • @steven-el3sw
      @steven-el3sw Před rokem +1

      Lol.. Well he did try to get him on...

    • @TTZ316
      @TTZ316 Před 13 dny

      Talib stated he was invited many times and wasn’t interested (in a very Nassim Taleb way of saying things)

  • @lorenzodiloreto3708
    @lorenzodiloreto3708 Před 2 lety +50

    Loving these economics related podcasts, would love to see more of it!!
    Thank you Lex and Paul!!

  • @anton2672
    @anton2672 Před 3 lety +57

    Good talk! It would be great if you could get Nobel Prize-winning development economists Esther Duflo and Abhijit Banerjee on the show. :)

  • @maxbonn9306
    @maxbonn9306 Před 4 lety +6

    I have to say that this channel is quite a gem by providing viewpoints form a broad range of specialists. This channel is not about creating a common agreement on a given subject but about proposing enlightening content from people usually taken out of context.

  • @Travthewhite
    @Travthewhite Před 4 lety +82

    Thank you for who you are as a human being Lex. The world needs people like you, stay you.

  • @kipling1957
    @kipling1957 Před 4 lety +11

    I’ve been following your channel since the get-go. It grows in status on every level. I’m always educated in fields I’m a non-expert in and inspired by your ability to be smart but never loose the “common touch, “ both as an interviewer and in talking about your area of expertise. Let’s just not mention your humility and relishing the poetic perspectives of humanity. Hope you never loose that. Before I wrote this I was just giving a thumbs up but thought it high time I justified that.

  • @sethbracken
    @sethbracken Před 4 lety +5

    Poasting up the title page to the paper he referenced is a really good edit. Thanks for that it’s a convenient way for viewers to screen cap it for later look up or pause the video and write down the information. Thanks Lex.

  • @13thloona
    @13thloona Před 4 lety +255

    Krugman said back in the day that the internet wouldn't have a major economical impact... Now Amazon alone is closing down entire malls and businesses all over the world. Maybe we should take his observations on AI and everything technology related with a pinch of salt

    • @michaellupu2080
      @michaellupu2080 Před 4 lety +7

      @@brianhinckley4623 1998

    • @13thloona
      @13thloona Před 4 lety +34

      @@brianhinckley4623 exact quote: "...it will become clear that the Internet's impact on the economy has been no greater than the fax machine's"

    • @gfsrow
      @gfsrow Před 4 lety +14

      I think Krugman's observations tend to be more reflective of, or dependent upon, contemporaneous circumstances rather than prescient projections. He would be quite willing, I think, now, to recognize that the internet has indeed been responsible for shifting patterns in retail behavior and consumer spending, plus he also references the replacement of Longshoremen by large cranes and container ships. But he's still reluctant to posit that society as a whole is moving towards massive automation and significant permanent unemployment. He needs to see it to believe it. Yet he doesn't discount the possibility of eventual UBI (based on middle class income numbers - although he does caution that such a safety net would be pricey).

    • @erikschafer5176
      @erikschafer5176 Před 4 lety +9

      Yes Krugman is a hack but -- he's right that the data doesn't bear out the idea that automation/ai is doing that much. Also his other point is good, that there's no fundamental harm in producing more with less effort, after all that's what the industrial revolution did. There's genuinely no sign that AI is going to be anywhere nearly as impactful as the steam engine.

    • @etunimisukunimi5890
      @etunimisukunimi5890 Před 4 lety +2

      Didn't someone just "hack" his computer to put cp in there? Or so he said. I just don't think this guy's track record is very good with bad predictions and all.

  • @gocatbert
    @gocatbert Před rokem +6

    Have been watching Lex for a long time now and interesting to follow his development as an interviewer. He is now much engaging in his role and feels comfortable in challenging or pressing when appropriate. Seeing this interview from 2+ years ago, it was essentially an hour of Paul Krugman to air his views unchallenged and lacked the texture that Lex's current work contains. Lex, great to see your developing your craft and keep doing these interviews. One of the few content creators whose video's I always watch start to finish.

  • @curiosguy9852
    @curiosguy9852 Před 4 lety +51

    Guest Recommendations: Robert Sapolsky, Eric Lander, Andrew Ng, Fei-Fei Li, Tim Berners-Lee, Tom Leighton

  • @thinkbeyond3457
    @thinkbeyond3457 Před 4 lety +9

    Clear example of why we need younger and more tech savvy voices in our leadership, both in academic thought leadership and in our government.

    • @veugeler72
      @veugeler72 Před rokem

      Or stop doing this thing called government. And put the superstition of authority behind us like all the other old dead superstitions.

  • @JimJamJuicy
    @JimJamJuicy Před rokem +55

    Thank you Lex I really enjoyed listening to Paul, I bought more Bitcoin and Gold as an immune booster immediately afterwards

    • @JimJamJuicy
      @JimJamJuicy Před rokem +2

      @@atg1962 very therapeutic Thankyou

  • @nandesu
    @nandesu Před 4 lety +11

    One of your best introductions to date. If we're going to break down our filter bubbles, we need to be willing to engage in meaningful dialog with those whom we disagree with.

    • @jadedoak6255
      @jadedoak6255 Před 2 lety

      I disagree.
      If the last 20 years have shown us anything, it's that dialog should only be extended to those who have proven to be trustworthy. It's like saying we should inter boxing matches with opponents armed with pistols or swords, because to turn them away would be against the spirit of contest and good sportsmanship.

    • @eminentbishop1325
      @eminentbishop1325 Před rokem

      ​@@jadedoak6255 the words are the weapons here and if you don't use them against folk spreading disinformation then you lost the battle so no you're wrong

    • @jamesclarke2789
      @jamesclarke2789 Před rokem +1

      @@jadedoak6255 And who's to decide who is trustworthy? And how can you determine if the person deciding whether other people are trustworthy is him/herself trustworthy?

  • @joshlewis5253
    @joshlewis5253 Před 4 lety +7

    Thank you for this channel, Lex. I appreciate your work

  • @pretendcampus5410
    @pretendcampus5410 Před 4 lety +24

    I wasn't going to listen to this podcast until I heard the intro. Your approach and attitude is very admirable.

  • @davidsewell4999
    @davidsewell4999 Před 4 lety +143

    Enjoying the podcast so far. What about trying to get someone from a different economic viewpoint now as well? Like Thomas Sowell or someone like that.

    • @lexfridman
      @lexfridman  Před 4 lety +105

      Definitely.

    • @FranksWorldTV
      @FranksWorldTV Před 4 lety +2

      @@lexfridman 💯

    • @t3hm4x
      @t3hm4x Před 4 lety +11

      How about Robert Murphy from the Contra Krugman podcast?

    • @lexfridman
      @lexfridman  Před 4 lety +33

      @@t3hm4x I never heard of Contra Krugman or Robert, but just subscribed and will listen. Thank you for pointing it out to me.

    • @michaels8297
      @michaels8297 Před 4 lety +23

      Krugman is a heavily biased economist. I’m glad youre considering bringing on others! You’re an impressive person, lex. My recommendation holds about having on Bill easterly. He has done great work and written great books on the interactions of history, politics, and economics. Daron acemogolu would also be an incredible guest in this regard.

  • @robotron17
    @robotron17 Před 4 lety +24

    Health insurance competition is (intentionally) limited to one or two providers in some states. This is done through regulation (like capital requirements) which effectively makes competition impossible.
    Also, see the "Contra Krugman" podcast, which refutes every Krugman column ever.

    • @batman1776
      @batman1776 Před 4 lety +4

      The goal of Obamacare is to make healthcare so expensive that we switch to single payer system

    • @Jawshuah
      @Jawshuah Před 4 lety

      @@batman1776 It was already ridiculously expensive before

  • @datmesay
    @datmesay Před 4 lety +2

    @Lex congrats for having mister Krugman on your podcast ! Thank you for that 👍🏽

  • @antoniokasljevic
    @antoniokasljevic Před 4 lety +5

    Thank you Lex, impressive line-up lately.

  • @garryyoder4769
    @garryyoder4769 Před 4 lety +6

    Thank you for Mr. Fridman for having Dr. Krugman on your show. His columns in the NYT are worth reading, and although I don't always agree with everything he has to say, he always gives you something to think about.

  • @libelldrian173
    @libelldrian173 Před rokem +11

    I came back to the CZcams version of the podcast with Paul Krugman after listening to it a couple of weeks ago, because I can't remember any of the stuff this dude said.
    It amazes me that you can win a Nobel prize in economics without saying anything while talking.

    • @santzdesign
      @santzdesign Před rokem +3

      Crazy. Everything he says lacks proper reasoning or justification.

  • @PSUProud81
    @PSUProud81 Před 4 lety +32

    I would LOVE to hear a follow-up from him on these topics as they relate to today's new world!

    • @juandavid018
      @juandavid018 Před 3 lety +1

      I agree.

    • @zhouye7647
      @zhouye7647 Před 3 lety +1

      well, you can get a economic degree. Many things he talked aboht is teached in the first year.

  • @jessemair3684
    @jessemair3684 Před 4 lety +5

    The intro was very well said Lex, thank you.

  • @henrikbergman4055
    @henrikbergman4055 Před 4 lety +1

    Thanks for a wonderful intro and an uplifting podcast, as always.

  • @rearview2360
    @rearview2360 Před 4 lety +15

    Lex make them longer!

  • @Dwarfplanet
    @Dwarfplanet Před 4 lety +30

    Thank you for your great introduction and as always quality content!

  • @0x44Monad
    @0x44Monad Před 4 lety

    I’ve shared the first 3 minutes of this video because of how important your messaging is at the beginning. Thank you. It is vital that we approach disagreement as an opportunity to come closer through understanding and an open mind, not withdrawing and drifting farther apart. Thank you.

    • @Michael-vf2mw
      @Michael-vf2mw Před rokem

      It's interesting that Krugman himself in this very podcast flat out contradicts that messaging though around 39:48 in the Divisiveness of Political Discource section

    • @0x44Monad
      @0x44Monad Před rokem

      @@Michael-vf2mw what an opportunity !

    • @Michael-vf2mw
      @Michael-vf2mw Před rokem

      @@0x44Monad what's an opportunity?

  • @neverusingthisagain2
    @neverusingthisagain2 Před 3 lety +7

    I appreciate the intro. But... how can he say that the dmv isn't that bad? Mind blowing.

    • @BlueisNotaWarmColour
      @BlueisNotaWarmColour Před 2 lety +1

      This is a guy that identified the housing bubble and praised its existence. Mind blowing doesn't begin to cover it lol

    • @scarbo2229
      @scarbo2229 Před rokem +2

      He also really likes public schools..cringe

  • @MrKaje72
    @MrKaje72 Před 3 lety +7

    I like that he admits to not knowing what the word “prosaic” means. It takes someone humility on his part. There are ahandful of public figures/speakers that use words or respond to words having no idea what they mean. Good on him A+

    • @jadedoak6255
      @jadedoak6255 Před 2 lety

      That's like praising the men for not walking into the room with a giant ketchup stain on his shirt.
      It's nothing to commend.

    • @Grassisgreenism
      @Grassisgreenism Před rokem

      @@jadedoak6255 Well, against the background that everyone else have ketchup stains on their shirts…

    • @peterkearney31
      @peterkearney31 Před rokem

      Once you get to a point in life when you realise you understand a lot, you begin to understand how little you know. In this context, saying you don't understand or know something is easy.

  • @Stadtpark90
    @Stadtpark90 Před 4 lety +9

    39:50 that comment about Ayn Rand novels - lol
    (also I wonder what else he said there that was cut out / there is a tiny morph / cut in there)

  • @saman10000
    @saman10000 Před 4 lety +4

    Best podcast out there! Thanks LEX!

  • @nonchalantd
    @nonchalantd Před 4 lety +59

    Has Andrew Yang been on the podcast?

    • @amiracleone2803
      @amiracleone2803 Před 4 lety +1

      @@ACogloc he was not a politician until now. This guy did not have an open mind at all.

    • @greatsea
      @greatsea Před 4 lety

      @@ACogloc yeah but Krugman is way more of a partisan schmuck than Yang.

  • @theword7268
    @theword7268 Před 4 lety +21

    I think Krugman is underestimating the breadth and depth mass automation will have. Predicting the future based on the past doesn't apply when you have something unprecedented. A few isolated sectors aren't going to be impacted, entire industries will be. There is no historical precedent for the potential ramifications of #AI and #Automation replacing human labor in multiple industries all within the same basic time frame. He is correct that in the past, new jobs have been created but he refuses to acknowledge that the issue with automation, robots and ai is that the new jobs will be automated too.

    • @maciejsloniewski3313
      @maciejsloniewski3313 Před 3 lety +1

      I thought exactly the same. I think the pace of this change is not as fast as the other ongoing changes and it mostly takes place in China or other Asian countries, which makes it obscured to westerners. Will this change take us to a universal basic income, this is yet to be determined.

    • @theword7268
      @theword7268 Před 3 lety +1

      @@maciejsloniewski3313 UBI only gets you so far. PEople act as if UBI is the answer when it is more like a bandaid on a gaping wound. It helps but it doesnt address the underlying issue. That issue is that the entire economic system society is based on has become obsolete. Friend of mine has an ebook that addresses this here: cutt.ly/YrTPv8K

    • @gentlemantramp7528
      @gentlemantramp7528 Před 3 lety +2

      Not to mention the extent to which the last industrial revolution, the shift from farm to factory, urbanization, rapid transit, economic depression, and mechanized world war (WWI) left people feeling as if life as they knew it had been turned upside down and inside out, and thereby open to the utopian promises of political extremism that led to the rise of Hitler & Stalin.

    • @theword7268
      @theword7268 Před 3 lety +1

      @@gentlemantramp7528 True, the rise of extremism is evident already throughout the world and one of my fears is that rather than our best and brightest moving us forward, we are taken backwards into some sort of dark age where rational discourse is conquered by irrational violence.

    • @gentlemantramp7528
      @gentlemantramp7528 Před 3 lety +2

      @@theword7268 Exactly. It's the 1930's trying to happen all over again, and for many of the same reasons-though finding different outlets this time around (internet as opposed to radio & newsreel, etc).
      But where would the US have been in the 1930's & '40's without FDR's New Deal?
      And where, in light of society transforming info tech, tf is our New Deal?
      IMO, Bernie lost because he let them paint him as Castro instead of FDR, but he is very much a creature of the 20th Century (e.g., what happens to labor bargaining power when workers are no longer exploited but simply replaced?). Whereas Andrew Yang was the only candidate in the race with the vision to propose a New Deal for the 21st Century.
      "Unhappy the land that is in need of heroes." ~Bertolt Brecht

  • @jessicaadami3499
    @jessicaadami3499 Před rokem +2

    I absolutely adore Paul Krugman ( and of course Lex).
    His Economies of scale theory of international trade is a small part of my economics module this semester
    I mostly agree with what he's said in this podcast but from a South African's (not rich like the situations he has been describing) point of view, basic education seems to be the last thing any citizen would want to receive from the government if you can afford otherwise. Profit incentives definitley cultivate a more efficient learning environment (of course with diminishing returns at the higher price range) I say this as a 20 year old who has a basic education built up of half gov and half private
    regardless though, the education system as we know it is far from optimal and is in dire need of rapid reform
    (maybe brought about by the 4th industrial revolution and ever growing globilization? )
    I feel hopeful at the thought of a more widely accessible, customisable and encouraging education process that can aid in giving all South Africans the dignity that comes with literacy in particular and a confident mind in general
    but first our society would need to step away from this culture of oppression that has so deeply rooted itself within our trans-generational mindset.
    the well-informed citizen seems to be a world away and with it lies the respect that my fellow human beings deserve
    That's why its essential for me to take full advantage of the privilage I hold so that I might help pull a few people up with me

  • @thepinkfloydsound5353
    @thepinkfloydsound5353 Před 4 lety +21

    I'm really impressed with the guests lately! Two Nobel prize winners in a row! Really enjoying these conversations.

  • @johangodfroid4978
    @johangodfroid4978 Před 4 lety +2

    I have simply loved the podcast of melanie mitchell and Jeff hawkins.
    I had the same ideas before to see them because I have spend a lot of time writing a text for fun in AI
    but their point of view was slightly different and I have found them very interesting , if you knwo other people having the same way to see the world
    I would love to see them as guest.

  • @huydo8605
    @huydo8605 Před 4 lety +4

    Thanks Lex, You are one of the men who inspire me so much, and of course many others, back to science and learn from abc..., not only the curious for myself but the most important is my realization, I know nothing about this and that which i seemed to already got them in past (my ignorance, sorry).
    By the way, keep moving...
    Happy new lunar year to you and all of your guests Lex.
    Learn from you so much.

  • @conversatio-luisdiaz
    @conversatio-luisdiaz Před 2 lety +6

    I'm here after listening to Saifedean Ammous

    • @drewsimon9652
      @drewsimon9652 Před 2 lety +2

      Haha, same! Just reading comments- might come back later to actually listen to it all.

  • @sergiosjd
    @sergiosjd Před rokem +1

    Dude, just your intro is worth the video. Kudos.

  • @rahulrathnakumar785
    @rahulrathnakumar785 Před 4 lety +8

    That introduction to the podcast. It was a much needed message. You're doing a service to humanity Lex. Thanks!

    • @hollishedrich9126
      @hollishedrich9126 Před 2 lety +1

      Except that if you're anybody who knows anything about how things actually work, listening to Krugman for an hour is about as much fun as having bamboo shoots stuck under your fingernails.

    • @ZelenaZmija
      @ZelenaZmija Před rokem +2

      @@hollishedrich9126 Given your comment it seems like Lex's introduction was directed towards you.

    • @hollishedrich9126
      @hollishedrich9126 Před rokem

      @@ZelenaZmija Paul Krugman is an idiot and the only reason hes where he is at is because he is a propagandest for the establishment.

    • @davidrojas4687
      @davidrojas4687 Před rokem

      It was ruthless

  • @gercontreras
    @gercontreras Před 3 lety +3

    Krugman should talk about what "competition" (subsidized by governments) does on poor countries that cannot compete, how some countries get ruined by others that make them dependent on their markets, how the production of useless products ruins the environment, how cyclic crisis characteristic of capitalism, ruin families, produce stress and affects the health of people.

    • @brennangum6236
      @brennangum6236 Před 2 lety +1

      describe useless? Like useless to you? How about me? Maybe I have a use for it. If something has demand it has "usefulness" at the very least to those who are demanding it

    • @SpartakMs83
      @SpartakMs83 Před rokem

      @@brennangum6236 "If something has demand it has "usefulness" In a market economy yes, in a mixed economy less so, in a command economy not at all. We have a mixed economy, and many useless products and wasted resources because of it.

  • @samk6170
    @samk6170 Před 4 lety +34

    Not a fan of Krugman, but good to see him here. Lex is doing a great job in building bridges. I would love to see more outliers within the spectrum of discourse as well.

    • @MJ-cc4uf
      @MJ-cc4uf Před 4 lety +1

      @@TheReferrer72 - You mean besides the fact that he suffers from OMB and TDS? And does calling someone a Nobel prize winner mean much after they gave one to The Great O?

    • @erikschafer5176
      @erikschafer5176 Před 4 lety +5

      @@TheReferrer72 I mean a really easy bone to pick with him in this interview is how, in the segment about civil discourse, he endorses the idea that viewpoints he doesn't agree with amount to saying 'the earth is flat'. He generally dismisses challenging viewpoints and doesn't do much intellectual work in trying to understand them. He's also often very very wrong, and spends a lot of time trying to avoid admitting to it He's basically a political pundit that was once an economist.

    • @erikschafer5176
      @erikschafer5176 Před 4 lety +1

      @@TheReferrer72 But if you read him and listen to him, it's clear he doesn't put any effort in to understand, think about, or internalize other viewpoints. In other words, I think it's clear he *doesn't* listen to other viewpoints and just dismisses them offhand because he's become a tribal pundit. The position he's in almost totally insulates him from needing to address criticism or disagreement and so, well, here we are.

    • @Laurence2000
      @Laurence2000 Před 4 lety +1

      M J Ah - mentioning “TDS” as if it’s an actual affliction, not a concoction purely of one side of the political aisle. And literally discounting the prestige of the Nobel Prize because one of the prizes in an entirely different category was given to a politician you didn’t like eleven years ago.
      When Lex was suggesting that certain closed-minded, hyperpartisan listeners unsubscribe, you probably should have taken the hint.

    • @Laurence2000
      @Laurence2000 Před 4 lety +1

      Erik Schafer I got to the portion of the interview you mentioned where you say Paul chalks up differing viewpoints to people claiming that the Earth is flat.
      It’s at 37:45, and he doesn’t actually say that. He was referencing a hyperbolic line he wrote during the 2000 election season criticizing the news media’s tendency to report on every dispute as if both sides had equal standing, to the point that an assertion that the Earth was flat would get the same treatment.

  • @vinster9165
    @vinster9165 Před 4 lety +4

    Loved your closing monologue

  • @DaveKesler
    @DaveKesler Před 2 lety +1

    I love you brutha- you are working so hard to find meaning. I’m an architect philosopher professor at CCSF SAN Fran. Peace out

  • @NicoleHuskaConsulting
    @NicoleHuskaConsulting Před 4 lety +64

    best intro ever!

    • @Jon-br8co
      @Jon-br8co Před 4 lety

      A safe intro... but I respect it.

    • @Stadtpark90
      @Stadtpark90 Před 4 lety +1

      1:34 That’s the positive part. The negative part beforehand is even more impressive^^

    • @jfritz6233
      @jfritz6233 Před 4 lety

      Best intro ever??? The reason for all of the dislikes is the arrogance of the intro. Well that and the twitter controversy of the guest.

  • @dogsdomain8458
    @dogsdomain8458 Před 3 lety +2

    Krugman is correct on automation. It has actually been declining overal. And productivity growth has slowed significantly

  • @weaviesbaby
    @weaviesbaby Před 2 lety +21

    Tom Woods does a wonderful job giving a counter opinion on his podcast “Contra Krugman”.
    Whether you agree or disagree with Krugman, it’s always good to hear descent, understand, and strengthen your position!

    • @ericd9827
      @ericd9827 Před 2 lety +6

      Yeah, listen to Woods the historian to learn why the Nobel Prize winning economist doesn’t understand economics. Brilliant plan. What could go wrong?
      Can’t wait for Krugman’s podcast on history!

    • @ericd9827
      @ericd9827 Před 2 lety +1

      @@googs6274 Swing and a miss!

    • @hoku9965
      @hoku9965 Před 2 lety +2

      I looked at Tom Woods background then realized he’s not an Economist. I was laughing hysterically

  • @marsrocks247
    @marsrocks247 Před 3 lety

    Stay positive Lex. You're a hero.

  • @Captain1nsaneo
    @Captain1nsaneo Před 4 lety +10

    Thanks for doing this interview, helped me get a better picture of who Krugman is beyond his name used as a rubber stamp.
    If you're looking for more guests, Russ Roberts of EconTalk and Peter Robinson of Uncommon Knowledge would be good sources if not interviews in and of themselves.
    Personally, as someone with economics training, I've noticed that a lot of models assume a peaceful world filled with rational actors. As I've gotten older I've had more problems with this; rational self-interest is individually defined and the world has historically been the opposite of peaceful. The most profesitorial of my professors said that macro economics hadn't really progressed in understanding since the classics and I'm still inclined to believe him.

    • @amiracleone2803
      @amiracleone2803 Před 4 lety

      please vote Andrew Yang in the Democratic Primary. The Freedom Dividend of $1000 a month is the first step in a long journey towards peace and prosperity for all the people everywhere in the world. Andrew Yang2020

    • @Captain1nsaneo
      @Captain1nsaneo Před 4 lety +2

      @@amiracleone2803 Wooden shoes going up, silken slippers going down.
      In short; No.

    • @shawnradke
      @shawnradke Před rokem

      @@amiracleone2803 lol everyone getting $1000 would mean everything goes up to match that influx of cash lol
      how dumb can you be?

  • @jayburd9572
    @jayburd9572 Před 4 lety +31

    damn Lex went in on this intro

    • @mandolorian9893
      @mandolorian9893 Před 4 lety +2

      I know right? As soon as he said that I went and liked.

  • @basembarakat
    @basembarakat Před rokem

    I loved this interview and I love to hear Dr. Krugman views on the current inflation issue we're facing.

  • @workingtheories
    @workingtheories Před rokem +1

    Every few minutes Krugman almost starts talking like Jiminy Glick.

  • @squishler
    @squishler Před 4 lety +30

    Do Greg Manikew next!!

    • @squishler
      @squishler Před 4 lety

      Erika Johnson Because Mr. Krugman is (and remains) a biased economic theorist. His predictions serve his perspective and ease the tensions of the wealthy and political elite he is beholden to for his platform. Or he was honestly just wrong and continues to be. Take your pick I guess. We need a UBI or we're in serious trouble. The riots are today may well pale in comparison to whats coming. 🙁

  • @Krypto_Knite
    @Krypto_Knite Před 4 lety +8

    Good on You for making a stand Lex

  • @fabioq6916
    @fabioq6916 Před rokem

    Great intro from Lex. His standing has risen in my mind.

  • @christopher_thereal1
    @christopher_thereal1 Před rokem +1

    Fantastic monologue. Perhaps your best.

  • @ashersilbermann5552
    @ashersilbermann5552 Před 3 lety +1

    While I still disagree with a lot of his policies, I really appreciate you talking to great minds from all parts of the spectrum. If you disagree with someone, the most important thing you can do is hear them out. Maybe you are wrong and they can change your mind. Or maybe hearing them out will give you a “steel man” to argue against as opposed to a straw man.

  • @WS-gs6sf
    @WS-gs6sf Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you Paul for pointing out that economics is a science without experimentation at around 43 minutes.

    • @craigbowers4016
      @craigbowers4016 Před 3 lety +1

      @Erika Johnson Because he's terrible at economics. Check out his debate with Richard Wolff.

    • @tw_lb
      @tw_lb Před 2 lety

      But there are plenty of natural experiments that can inform and test theory.

  • @MrStosh12345
    @MrStosh12345 Před 4 lety +2

    Thank you Lex!

  • @ivansandoval946
    @ivansandoval946 Před 4 lety +14

    Speaking of safety nets, some of them such as the Argentinian' one is carelessly and extremely located at the other side. Here we got some of the highest taxes and the widest variaty of them. Moreover bolivian people or every foreigner can get hospitalized for free in our hospitals. Nevertheless, nothing is for free, we should pay less taxes, improve our system, and add fees for foreigners... Another case of stupid extremes

  • @AntonShmerkin
    @AntonShmerkin Před 4 lety +6

    Could we get someone from 'alternative' economics, please? Michael Hudson? Richard Wolfe? Yanis Varoufakis?

    • @craigbowers4016
      @craigbowers4016 Před 3 lety +1

      I believe I've heard Richard Wolff, a major advocate for workplace democracy and worker co-ops, speak about how this will be necessary due in large part to AI. #DemocracyAtWork

    • @williamerdman4888
      @williamerdman4888 Před rokem

      Richard Wolfe - really?.... NO

  • @asafzilberberg6648
    @asafzilberberg6648 Před rokem

    Interesting conversation and wonderful pre-conversation monologue

  • @danellwein8679
    @danellwein8679 Před 4 lety

    thanks for this ... good one Lex ...

  • @lordtyrus1
    @lordtyrus1 Před rokem +11

    Ah to be an economist. The only job where you can be consistently wrong for your entire career and still get a Nobel prize.

  • @josephchagan9015
    @josephchagan9015 Před 4 lety +22

    not sure i can deal with paul for an hour but im going to try because you do good work lex. hopefully you push back where appropriate. lets see how it goes...

    • @lexfridman
      @lexfridman  Před 4 lety +30

      In this conversation on topics of highest disagreement (i.e., effect of automation or role safety nets & UBI), I let the opinion stand, because it IS an opinion and I will talk with many others who have a different opinion. In the future, I will make sure to explore deeper on these topics. I'm sorry if I don't do a good enough job of that here. I'm working hard to improve. I want to balance my natural inclination to be respectful of other people and my role as someone who has to facilitate exploration of difficult ideas.

    • @josephchagan9015
      @josephchagan9015 Před 4 lety +3

      ​@@lexfridman Certainly understandable. I think AI isn't usually an adversarial topic (even though opinions on some parts of it vary wildly) so I don't necessarily expect you to rake a guest over the coals.
      I mainly feel as though paul has ducked answering for some of his claims (being invited to debate Andrew Yang specifically) so I was hopeful for a chance to see him pressed on it.
      It can be difficult to facilitate a robust discussion without seeming confrontational.

    • @betauser6233
      @betauser6233 Před 4 lety +1

      Lex Fridman your doing great lex! would like to see you press a little harder or reword the question when they trail off without a direct answer to your question

    • @mikeg9b
      @mikeg9b Před 4 lety

      @@lexfridman I think you did a fine job of striking an appropriate balance.

  • @angrd020
    @angrd020 Před 4 lety +2

    It really behooves people to be open minded, attentive and engaged. There are so many things to be learned from your fellow humans and the world around us at large. Thanks for this insightful video Lex!🎥👍📽️

  • @moribundmurdoch
    @moribundmurdoch Před 2 lety +3

    Are you also going to get the ContraKrugman guys on the show? Maybe have them debate?

    • @hollishedrich9126
      @hollishedrich9126 Před 2 lety +2

      Krugman is not going to debate with anybody of substance because he knows he'll get his clock cleaned.

  • @Yamsonnl
    @Yamsonnl Před 22 dny

    🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation:
    00:00 *- Nobel Prize Economist*
    00:25 *- Political Discourse Challenges*
    02:31 *- Cash App Sponsorship*
    03:52 *- Imaginary Sweden Utopia*
    05:02 *- Competition's Value*
    06:11 *- Healthcare Competition Failures*
    08:17 *- Justice Views Disagreement*
    10:56 *- Income Inequality Measures*
    13:16 *- US Safety Net Gaps*
    14:47 *- Social Justice Economic Health*
    16:21 *- Invisible Hand Limits*
    18:23 *- Market Magic*
    20:16 *- Government Health Insurance*
    21:51 *- Tech Regulation Need*
    23:14 *- Automation Job Impact Skeptic*
    25:55 *- Productivity Measurement Explained*
    27:17 *- Productivity Growth Slowdown*
    27:30 *- Blaming Automation Misconception*
    28:22 *- Visibility Bias Impact*
    28:50 *- Economic Misunderstandings*
    29:31 *- Political Influence Misery*
    30:44 *- Economy Politics Interaction*
    31:11 *- Political Choices Differ*
    32:06 *- Welfare State Explained*
    33:49 *- Universal Basic Income Analysis*
    36:40 *- Robots Job Takeover Skepticism*
    37:08 *- Public Discourse Fragmentation*
    39:25 *- Ideological Respect Challenge*
    41:26 *- Radical Idea Evaluation*
    42:49 *- Zombie Ideas Persistence*
    43:15 *- Economics Testability Limitation*
    44:51 *- Economic Theories Disagreements*
    46:08 *- Minimum Wage Impact Debate*
    47:03 *- Technological Innovation Importance*
    48:37 *- Infrastructure Investment Necessity*
    49:05 *- Prosaic Innovation Value*
    50:31 *- Infrastructure Political Challenges*
    52:29 *- Future Mars Society Speculation*
    55:27 *- International Trade Complexity*
    56:06 *- International Trade Complexity*
    56:57 *- Global Production Chain*
    57:23 *- Trade Conflict Impact*
    58:40 *- Trade Downsides Addressed*
    59:36 *- Facing Public Fear*
    01:00:15 *- Handling Hate Mail*
    01:00:55 *- Intellectual Journey Advice*
    01:01:33 *- Writing Without Intimidation*
    Made with HARPA AI

  • @glenhillier5826
    @glenhillier5826 Před 4 lety

    Good interview!

  • @johnbertram1537
    @johnbertram1537 Před 2 lety +1

    You are very gracious in your introduction, and I agree we have to remain open to all ideas. I came here to steel man the status quo economic thought and Keynesiansim. However I am still left feeling a strong vein of partisanism runs though all of Krugman's ideas and in that there is a good deal of projection going on with regards to his identified political opposition. He also makes mention of consensus and evidence most often without producing any which is right out of the establishment playbook.

  • @rishubhchakraborty4963

    Beautifully executed - I work for a publisher and I wish they could take interviews and opinions like this. Absolutely love Paul Krugman's view on utopia and competition.

  • @Frank22164
    @Frank22164 Před 3 lety +5

    Lex, your approach is excellent in that you let the interviewee express themself without any undue pressure and you ask probing questions. Krugman I feel doesn't do enough rigorous analysis on some of his assertions, such as those on wealth inequality and safety nets.
    The common notion of wealth inequality is that it is detrimental to a healthy economy especially if the imbalances are large. This perspective as applied to a largely free economy.
    Where I find Krugman falling short is his one-sided characterization of immense wealth as a negative. Amazon is a perfect example. The company and it's founder are extremely wealthy because they returned a value measurable in dollars that far exceeds the companies profits or wealth of Jeff Bezos. The same applies to Walmart. To wit. The Walmart family is worth somewhere around a hundred billion dollars. The savings they pass on to consumers? Trillions. Yet that calculation is never made, the focus is mostly on the "negatives". Amazon not only saves consumers money but also vast amounts of time and their incredibly innovative delivery system puts every other company to shame, the USPS, UPS and Fedex to mention a few.
    One negative ascribed to Amazon, the pace of work at the warehouses, and the salaries of those who work in them. Not mentioned, many of these workers have very limited skills, addiction issues and are often irregular in their work habits. Naturally, they are the most prone to complain about their own lack of success as being the fault of some "other". Yet countless people with little education do very well if they stay positive, focus on improvements and defer gratification. How many high school students who goofed around in school suddenly grew up in their mid-twenties to early thirties, got a college education, and elevated themselves? Happens all the time, from earning $12 an hour to $50-$250 an hour.

    • @santzdesign
      @santzdesign Před rokem +1

      I was scrolling through the comments to see if there was anyone commenting something about the interview's content, finally found your comment. And I have to agree. I think this interview lacks depth. 1 hour for such controversial topics? Some of Krugman's justifications are either left unjustified or pitched as a truth, yet I think most of his assertions are very debatable or quite false (like the fact the 2008 crisis and the Government's intervention didn't bring inflation... or that safety net programs for health and/or education are better than the market taking care of those). I dunno. I try not to be biased, but I always find it so hard to agree with these sort of people. I think they usually end up defending the interests of politicians...

  • @raymondoftoulouse3355
    @raymondoftoulouse3355 Před 4 lety +3

    Feel like shit, just want 90s Krugman back

  • @dimomarkov8937
    @dimomarkov8937 Před 4 lety +4

    Great intro

  • @testusernameyoutube1
    @testusernameyoutube1 Před 4 lety +6

    Is Lex an assistant professor at MIT ?

  • @gabrielgripp516
    @gabrielgripp516 Před 4 lety +1

    Great podcast

  • @NReidy182
    @NReidy182 Před 4 lety +1

    Hey Lex, great interview (as usual)! Thoughts on trying to get Mark Cuban on? He always has some interesting things to say about the intersection of business and AI. He also personally reads all of his emails and his email is public knowledge

  • @mastrake
    @mastrake Před 4 lety +2

    That was a great conversation. Thank you!

  • @kannanv9304
    @kannanv9304 Před 4 lety +1

    Lex.....Intro was sensational.....Those were no numb words.......Were sharp and penetrative, right through every thing into the cerebral cortex.......I watch your podcasts more for absorption into the stacks of my sub-conscious mind, when I watch first time......Always choose to come back for a recap later........

  • @jbsweeney1077
    @jbsweeney1077 Před 3 lety +3

    No one who disagrees with Krugman accepts his definition of “justice”

    • @hollishedrich9126
      @hollishedrich9126 Před 2 lety +1

      His definition of Justice is complete bullshit.

    • @hollishedrich9126
      @hollishedrich9126 Před 2 lety +1

      As is pretty much everything that comes out of his mouth.

    • @hollishedrich9126
      @hollishedrich9126 Před 2 lety +2

      Except for the one about an alien invasion being good for the economy. He could beyond something there...

  • @JoshuaAGomes
    @JoshuaAGomes Před 2 lety +2

    I would particularly love to see you discuss automation Daron Acemoglu.

  • @calvinxu3464
    @calvinxu3464 Před 2 lety +3

    As an economist myself, I am really impressed with your line of questioning, Lex! Was it a turnoff for you that Krugman thinks your friend Musk’s idea of colonizing the Mars is an unrealistic one?

  • @BVLAXER27
    @BVLAXER27 Před 2 lety +4

    Watching Lex interview someone that I detest affirms my conclusion that he is spectacular at his job. Amazing questioning.

  • @Val-sl6ng
    @Val-sl6ng Před 4 lety

    Just wanted to say how lucky we, as the community, are that Lex Fridman is doing his podcast. I couldn't be more thankful for the ability to listen to the most advanced people alive, explaining their world-view and speculating on different topics. And all this is for 1min of listening to some ads at the beginning. Lex, you are doing such a great job! - incredible guests, thoughtful questions - thank you.

  • @th3b0yg
    @th3b0yg Před 3 lety +2

    I had a negative impression of Paul Krugman. I'm now re-thinking that. I found his comments in this discussion to be reasonable and learned. I would like to hear more from him.

    • @Guizambaldi
      @Guizambaldi Před 3 lety

      Krugman has one of the most amazing academic career in economics. He has at least 4 hugely influential papers that either founded an area or delved deeper into one.
      He is on the same league of Milton Friedman as an economist, just with different morals.

    • @handyman1016
      @handyman1016 Před 2 lety

      @@Guizambaldi different? No. He has immoral means to get what he deems a good outcome.

    • @Guizambaldi
      @Guizambaldi Před 2 lety

      @@handyman1016 You should notice that not everyone is a libertarian or conservative fanatic like you. Some people are more well read.

    • @handyman1016
      @handyman1016 Před 2 lety

      @@Guizambaldi Well Read = Coming up with word salad to justify immoral deeds.

    • @berntengdahl1519
      @berntengdahl1519 Před 2 lety

      @@handyman1016 What you meant to say is that he has what YOU consider to be immoral means to get what he deems a good outcome.

  • @michaelhenault1444
    @michaelhenault1444 Před rokem

    Bravo, nice job Lex

  • @paulodetarsoarrudacorreia6138

    Congrats, very good.

  • @shashanksharma9917
    @shashanksharma9917 Před 4 lety

    You are my hero!

  • @TheToltec
    @TheToltec Před rokem

    Great interview

  • @5pp000
    @5pp000 Před 11 měsíci

    Re: 52:26, the question about starting a political and economic system from scratch -- I'll offer my two desiderata: approval voting, and the land value tax.

  • @KristoferPettersson
    @KristoferPettersson Před 4 lety +2

    I agree that it's obvious that robots aren't replacing us yet, but the interesting question here has always been: Why? The sole purpose of IT in general is to get companies to invest in your product or service but a company has a limit to its budget so it has to decide on whether to hire a new human or buy your product. If buying the product is good enough to compensate for not hiring people, then why are we still working so much? Or are we? I'm certainly more comfortable today than my grand father was. Some people earn money just by owning stuff. One could claim they're not working at all even. :) Questions. Where do I find the answers?

    • @agingchill9012
      @agingchill9012 Před 4 lety

      Celebs and Experts Supporting UBI (short videos): czcams.com/channels/8f0bqKU2-SyNSnA0EiVGfg.htmlvideos
      All Affirming Yang's UBI/AUTOMATION Policies: Barack Obama, Martin Luther King Jr, Elon Musk, Mark Cuban, Mark Zuckerberg, Marianne Williamson, Tulsi Gabbard, Pete Buttigieg, Joe Biden, Bernie Sanders (13+m video): czcams.com/video/0eWF7uHfki4/video.html

  • @rasmusnordstrom9947
    @rasmusnordstrom9947 Před 4 lety +5

    Please get Austrian economist Bob Murphy next!

  • @daveBit15
    @daveBit15 Před rokem

    There are definitively CLEAR ANSWERS for most of the important questions around economics. Unfortunately, it's a discipline plagued by obfuscation.

  • @joaodecarvalho7012
    @joaodecarvalho7012 Před 4 lety

    Can I copy the 1:30 minutes of warning and paste it on Facebook?

  • @syourke3
    @syourke3 Před rokem

    I’d love to see a debate between Krugman and Steve Keene.

  • @xqt39a
    @xqt39a Před 4 lety +2

    Interesting idea that seemingly small things could have major impact. I read an economic article where the writer asserted that a failed Dollar Tree could bring down the US economy.. some truth?

  • @robotron17
    @robotron17 Před 4 lety +6

    Krugman said the markets would crash and never recover when Trump was elected. "If the question is when markets will recover, a first-pass answer is never". We are now at record highs - up a staggering 70% in less than one term.

    • @notgetting1486
      @notgetting1486 Před 4 lety

      god, i wish you knew half as much about economics as you pretend to. that's not how fast it moves.

    • @robotron17
      @robotron17 Před 4 lety +1

      ​@@notgetting1486 Hmmm... well I trade stocks for a living. And my claim is SUPER easy to verify. Krugman made his claim near the bottom of the dip on election night, right around 17,300 in the DJIA. Multiply that by 1.7 (the formula for calculating a 70% gain) and we get .... 29,410. DJIA hit an all time high a few days ago at 29,414. Okay, moron?

    • @berntengdahl1519
      @berntengdahl1519 Před 2 lety

      @@robotron17 Perhaps Krugman was not refering to the DJIA?