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Economic Rockstar

Connecting Brilliant Minds in Economics and Finance

059: Shawn Humphrey on La Ceiba Microfinance, Tribal Teaching and Creating a Culture of Commitment in the Classroom

November 19, 2015 by Frank

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059: Shawn Humphrey on La Ceiba Microfinance, Tribal Teaching and Creating a Culture of Commitment in the Classroom

Shawn Humphrey is currently an Associate Professor of Economics at the University of Mary Washington.shawn humphrey

Shawn is the founder of La Ceiba Microfinance,the Two Dollar Challenge, the Month of Microfinance, and the Poverty Action Conference. 

He is also on the Board of Directors of Students Helping Honduras, a former Clinton Global Initiative University mentor, an Opportunity Collaboration alum and a 2014 Feast on Good Speaker.

Shawn is from North Bend, OH, earned his BA in Economics from Earlham College (Richmond, IN), his MA in Economics at Virginia Commonwealth University (Richmond, VA), and after having read Douglass C. North’s Institutions, Institutional Change, and Economic Performance headed to Washington University in St. Louis where he earned his PhD in Economics.

Shawn describes himself as a Tribal Teacher, a Diligent Do-Gooder and a Global Grassroots Mobilizer.

I grew up poor in Ohio. I was bullied from the time I was young, all the way through 8th grade. Both these things are part of my core and they motivate me in everything that I do – Shawn Humphrey

Economics:

In this interview, Shawn mentions: economic development, microfinance, consumption smoothing, poverty and globalisation.

Economists:

In this interview, Shawn mentions: Christine Exley, Helena Nordberg-Hodge, Eugene Power, Robert Solow, Douglass North, Armen Alchian, Harold Demsetz and Gary Miller.

In this episode you will learn:

  • about the social entrepreneurial journey that Shawn found himself pursuing.
  • about Shawn’s Tribal Teaching pedagogy and if this is the future of education.
  • why Shawn wanted to help the poor in Honduras and to encourage people to experience poverty.
  • about Shawn’s family experiencing poverty in the 1970s and how their standing in the community led him to believe that there was a better way to treat and help people out of poverty.
  • about how La Ceiba are helping the poor in Honduras.
  • about the importance of building relationships with individuals that seek assistance from La Ceiba.
  • the problems with microfinance due to group lending and peer-pressure.
  • about the Two Dollar Challenge and you can get involved.
  • why supporting local leaders is the key to ending poverty.
  • about Shawn’s 7 year journey to finding a common ground in humanity.
  • why Shawn’s initial desire to feel significant while helping the poor is now a constant battle.
  • about Tribal Teaching and the pedagogy Shawn has  designed and embraced to make a better learning environment and process.
  • about the culture of commitment that Shawn has introduced into his classroom.

Shawn Humphrey on La Ceiba Microfinance:

“My students and I, we run our own microfinance institution in Honduras called La Ceiba where we take a very distinct approach to microfinance which is different to anything else that is out there.” – Shawn Humphrey

You can make a global impact on not a lot of money if you’re creative enough to embrace your constraints and say ‘hey, let’s find a way around this one!’ and do it creatively. – Shawn Humphrey

“Group lending is simply peer-pressure. It’s a public process by which a small set of individuals can apply pressure to one individual in the group who is unable and/or unwilling at that moment to pay off her loan.”

“90% of our clients did not use their loans for entrepreneurial activities. Most of them use it for consumption smoothing.” – Shawn Humphrey

We get more stories out of coffee and donuts than we do out of group meetings – Shawn Humphrey

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My role is actually on the side-lines as a side-kick, not as a hero in this whole thing – Shawn Humphrey

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I’m fighting an entire culture that has conditioned us to believe in certain things – Shawn Humphrey

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When I started this work, I was flailing human being. I felt hollow inside and for some reason I felt that I could fill that hole by trying to end someone else’s poverty. – Shawn Humphrey

Our hardest work is inside of us – Shawn Humphrey

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Where to Find Shawn Humphrey:

  • shawnhumphrey.com

Organisations founded by Shawn Humphrey:

  • La Ceiba Microfinance
  • Tribal Teaching
  • Month of Microfinance
  • Two Dollar Challenge

Recommended Readings:

  • 5 Species of Students by Shawn Humphrey
  • Life Chart by Shawn Humphrey
  • If You Breathe You Must Battle by Shawn Humphrey
  • To Hell With Good Intentions by Ivan Illich 

Documentaries:

  • Cowspiracy: The Sustainability Secret by Kip Andersen and Keegan Kuhn
  • The Stanford Prison Experiment

Books:

  • The Hero with a Thousand Faces by Joseph Campbell
  • Institutions, Institutional Change, and Economic Performance by Douglass C. North
  • Managerial Dilemma’s by Gary Miller
  • The War of Art by Stephen Pressfield
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012: Yoram Bauman on Cartoons, Being a Stand-Up Economist & His Passion to Save the Environment

December 25, 2014 by Frank

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012: Yoram Bauman on Cartoons, Being a Stand-Up Economist & His Passion to Save the Environment 

Yoram BaumanYoram Bauman is considered the world’s first and only stand-up economist and uses cartoons to explain economic concepts and theories. He has a PhD from the University of Washington and a BA in Mathematics from Reed College. Yoram lectured environmental and health economics at both Whitman College and University of Washington and was a visiting research scholar at the University of International Business and Economics in Beijing. Yoram has swapped the lecture hall for the comedy club and is on a mission to spread joy to the world and to reform economics education. Every year Yoram organizes the Humor Session at the American Economic Association annual meeting.

Yoram is an advocate for carbon pricing and other economic approaches to protecting the environment. Yoram has written extensively on these issues but has also published numerous micro and macro books with comedy and entertainment as its central theme. They include The Cartoon Introduction to Economics, The Cartoon Introduction to Climate Change and Stand-Up Economics: The Micro Textbook. Some of these books have been translated into over 10 languages.

Economic Themes:

In this interview, Yoram mentions and discusses: adverse selection, portfolio selection theory, the invisible hand, environmental economics, environmental taxes, market power, monopoly, corruption, opportunity cost, free market, revenue-neutral carbon taxes, consumption tax, tragedy of the commons, externalities, correlation, hyperinflation, population growth, economic growth, monetary base and rational expectations.

Economists and Economic Schools:

In this interview, Yoram mentions: George Akerlof, James Tobin, Adam Smith, Gregory Mankiw and Paul Krugman.

Yoram’s AH-HA HA HA HA Moment:

“I went to graduate school to work on environmental taxes and to make them a reality, so being an academic was one path to doing that. When I was in graduate school I wrote a parody of an economics textbook by Greg Mankiw just to blow off steam. It ended up getting published in a science humor journal called The Annals of Improbable Research and they run a humor session each year at the AAAS meeting. They invited me to come and I had so much fun that I got into stand-up comedy as a hobby.”

“My academic career wasn’t going as well as I hoped.”

Yoram’s Affirmations/Mantra:

  • “When I had choices in front of me, in terms of life choices, I was going to choose the path of adventure. That’s turned out to work really well for me. There’s this constant pressure in life that you’re not good enough. Maybe you have a PhD in economics but you’re not a Professor at Harvard. I’m in a position where I can take chances and I don’t have to pursue the resume builder and I don’t have to take the conventional path.”
  • “I think if a lot of people stop and look in the mirror, especially college-educated folks, I think that they are already winners. And when you’re already a winner then you can afford to take some risks and take some chances.”
When you’re already a winner you can afford to take some risks and take some chances – Yoram

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Personal Habits:

  • Yoram’s 4 month old baby Zadie wakes up at 4am for a bottle feed. He feeds her, puts her back to sleep and stays up, spending 2 to 3 hours working when it’s quite.
I work pretty hard and set deadlines for myself and make them happen – Yoram Bauman

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  • Yoram spends some of his time at Lighthouse Coffee in Seattle, where his child likes to nap with the comforting noise that’s there, and gets to work on his emails while off-line (there’s no wi-fi at Lighthouse Coffee). It’s a great way to clear out your inbox without fighting off all the traffic

Influencers:

  • Yoram’s father, his grandmother, Helen Winter, his godmother Betty Tansey, his professors, the Overeducated Cartoonist, Larry Gonick, Jon Stewart and John Oliver.

The longer we live, the more there is to learn and the more exciting it is to dig out the answers – Helen Winter.

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In this episode, you will learn:

  • about revenue-neutral carbon taxing.
  • if we should keep economics serious or is there room for comedy?
  • why it’s important to motivate people to open a textbook and how humor and comedy can  do this.
  • how cartoons and humor can bring so much detail and understanding to economic concepts.
  • where it all began for Yoram when writing a cartoon economics textbook.
  • about the cartoon books written by Yoram that document the annals of economic theory.
  • how Yoram humorously depicts why some economists have won the Nobel Prize in Economics in a simplified and memorable manner.
  • how Adam Smith calls the winners of the Nobel Prize in Economics to interview them. Spooked? Find out how.
  • how Yoram found his true calling while reading Mankiw’s economics textbook.
  • how Yoram uses cartoons and comedy to teach us economics and to inform us of the need for environmental taxes, something he is passionate about.
  • how Yoram can use his knowledge on monopoly to maintain a lucrative career in comedy.
  • if Yoram ‘fears market failure’ (he is a monopolist after all!).
  • how the comedy club and the lecture hall are quite similar.
  • about Yoram’s passion for environmental tax reform.
  • how we can reduce the carbon impact on our environment with tax reform.
  • about the meaning of The Tragedy of the Commons.
  • about the secret to being a comedian.
  • why I think Yoram reminds me of Walter White from Breaking Bad.
  • about the connection Yoram has with Steve Jobs.
  • about the influence that the strong women in Yoram’s life had on his outlook and philosophy.
  • how having a new born baby has created a new habit for Yoram to help him get things done.
  • about Joss Paper or spirit money and how you can make your dead ancestors wealthy in the afterworld.

On Being a Monopolist:

“I’m the world’s first and only, so I have market power. Fortunately, I know a thing or two about monopoly pricing.” – Yoram Bauman

‘I’m the world’s first and only, so I have market power’ – Yoram Bauman

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Yoram has over 1.7 million YouTube views – ‘That’s a lot for economics jokes’ – Yoram Bauman

On Failure:

“I’m not afraid of failure because I’m an economist. Economists are experts on failure.” – Yoram Bauman

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“I’ve done my fair share of ‘bombing’. Hopefully you learn from it, you grow from it and you also realise that it’s not the end of the world and that you wake up the next morning and the sun still rises and you try again.”– Yoram Bauman

On Cartooning and The Similarities Between Teaching and Stand-Up Comedy:

  • “Anytime you can try to reach out to people and humanise the subject and humanise yourself as an instructor I think that’s helpful. Humor has a way of motivating people. Especially at college level, teachers forget how important motivation is. Try and give people an incentive to crack open a textbook other than the fact their grades depend upon it.”

‘Cartooning is an under-appreciated method of education’ – Yoram Bauman

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  • “What I learned from comedy is that it’s a two-way street. You have to pay attention to where the audience is and you have to figure out ways to get feedback from them. In the comedy world that’s quite easy – people are either laughing or they’re not laughing. You get feedback pretty easily. But in the teaching world it’s a lot harder to get feedback. You have get yourself in that mindset of thinking about how is the audience viewing this and how can I figure out where they are and how can I connect with them.”

Gigging in Beijing in The Bookworm

  • There’s no censorship at The Bookworm. There’s actually quite a bit of free speech in China if you’re a Westerner speaking English.
  • They had a book on Tiananmen Square in The Bookworm.
  • There’s a lot of China that’s very laissez-faire. You think about it as a Communist state, and you think this must mean it’s like a police state like North Korea. But it’s actually a lot like the Wild West in the United States in many places.
  • If you look at the day-to-day lives of many people, it’s become more like the Wild West than the totalitarian North Korea style regime.

Environmental Tax Reform

  • If we had higher taxes on bad things like pollution, we can afford to have lower taxes on good things. That idea struck me as being intellectually beautiful and it also struck me as something that was politically a good idea that could get some bi-partisan support.
  • I decided to devote a considerable portion of my life-energy to make pollution tax a reality.
  • Economic theory and almost all economists think that revenue-neutral carbon tax is a good idea but if you look at the political system, it’s been very difficult to get environmental taxes to work in the political arena.

British Columbia Case Study on Carbon Taxing

  • British Columbia is considered to have the best climate policy in the world with its revenue-neutral carbon tax and it’s performing terrifically. But it’s one of the relatively few examples of a textbook case of environmental economics in action in terms of pollution taxes.
  • The revenue from the carbon tax in British Columbia reduces investment and corporate tax, so the overall impact on the province is its fiscal status is basically zero.
  • I’m working with a group called Carbon Washington and we’re going to reduce sales tax in the state. Households will pay a few hundred dollars more a year for fossil fuels but they’ll pay a few hundred dollars less a year for something else.

China’s Role in Environmental Reform

  • The Chinese make noise about pricing carbon. There’s a big agreement their president made with President Obama. Maybe they’re exploring the idea but I have a hard time believing that they’re fully committed to it because they don’t yet seem to be fully committed to reducing local air pollution.

Tragedy of the Commons (21:23)

The Secret To Being a Comedian

  • “Let yourself be free to explore unusual areas and hobbies. You have to give yourself permission to follow your passions to pursue something. I gave myself permission to try it (comedy) and I gave myself permission to fail, and I think with a lot of creative endeavours it’s what you  need to do.”

The Difference Between Macro Economists and Micro Economists:

“The level of vitriol in macro economics makes it especially appealing as a target. Micro economists disagree about little things, but on the big things they are all pretty much on the same page. But macro economists are really all over the map and so that opens up some opportunities for  comedy.”

Recommended Books:

  • The Cartoon Introduction to Economics: Volume One: Microeconomics by Yoram Bauman and Grady Klein
  • The Cartoon Introduction to Economics: Volume Two: Macroeconomics by Yoram Bauman and Grady Klein
  • The Cartoon Introduction to Climate Change by Yoram Bauman and Grady KleinAudible
  • Economics of the Environment: Selected Readings by Robert Stavins
  • Becoming Richard Pryor by Scott Saul
  • Andy Kaufman: The Truth, Finally by Bob Zmuda
  • Books by comedian Lenny Bruce
  • A bunch of baby books.

Favorite Internet Resources:

  • Greg Mankiw’s Blog
  • Paul Krugman’s Blog
  • Real Climate
  • Climate Progress
  • Climate Etc by Judith Curry

Where To Find Yoram Bauman:

  • Yoram’s website: www.standupeconomist.com
  • Carbon Washington: www.carbonwa.org
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Frank Conway

Frank Conway is founder of Economic Rockstar and lecturer of economics, finance and statistics. Read More…

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