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Economic Rockstar

Connecting Brilliant Minds in Economics and Finance

076: Greg Ip on Foolproofing the Economy and Why Stability is Destabilizing

March 10, 2016 by Frank

http://traffic.libsyn.com/economicrockstar/076_Greg_Ip.mp3
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076: Greg Ip on Foolproofing the Economy and Why Stability is Destabilizing

Greg Ip is one of the best-known economics journalists in the US.Greg Ip Economic Rockstar

He is currently chief economics commentator of The Wall Street Journal and writes about U.S. and global economic developments and policy each week in the Capital Account column and on Real Time Economics, the Wall Street Journal’s economics blog.

From 2008 to January 2015, he was U.S. Economics Editor of The Economist magazine. Greg is the author of Foolproof: Why Safety Can Be Dangerous and How Danger Makes Us Safe as well as author of The Little Book of Economics: How the Economy Works in the Real World.

“Stability is Destabilising”- Hyman Minsky

Economics:

In this episode, Greg mentions and discusses: junk bonds, capitalism, investment, growth, financial crisis, bank deposits, loans, currency, gold, exchange rates, money market funds, bank run, exchange traded funds, recessions, unintended consequences and the Paradox of Thrift.

Economists:

In this episode, Greg mentions and discusses: Paul Volcker, Hyman Minsky, Gary Gorton, Joseph Schumpeter and John Maynard Keynes.

 

In this episode you will learn:

  • about the theme behind Greg Ip’s latest book Foolproof.

  • when the pursuit of safety lead us into danger?

  • what forest fires have to do with Wall Street.

  • about the relationship between the financial market (and its potential for a crisis) and ecological systems.
  • the way we publicly and privately try to cope with risk and danger and how those choices can create unintended consequences.

  • about the Fallacy of Composition: Things you do that are safe actually end up making other people less safe.
  • what American Football can teach us about the Fallacy of Composition.
  • how making American Football safe with the introduction of helmets has created increased risk taking and more injuries.
  • what past economic and financial crises have in common.
  • how the financial system succeeded too well in making people feel their money was safe.
  • how banking regulations and capital controls introduced after the financial crisis will create risks in other parts of the economy and financial markets.
  • if savings is actually bad for the economy.

  • about Keynes’ Paradox of Thrift and how savings forces others to borrow.

  • whether exchange traded funds (ETFs) will be the next financial catastrophe.
  • about the Peltzman Effect on anti-lock brakes.
  • how Paul Volcker‘s regulation of capital flows caused the growth of shadow banking.

  • how The Great Moderation changed attitudes about debt and how relaxed laws allowed high-risk households to borrow for mortgages.

  • about Gary Gorton of Yale and his explanation for a financial crisis.
  • how being present in danger can remind ourselves of the things that aren’t always safe.
  • whether the finance industry could take the lessons learned about safety and regulation in the airline industry.
  • why the Lehman Brothers collapse surprised many due to the US government indicating to the market that banks and mortgage companies would be bailed out.
  • how German savers were much to blame for the euro crisis than their European counterparts that borrowed.
  • why we continue to build cities near water which can cause devastation in the form of floods and tidal waves.
  • why The Netherlands, with their ‘Room For The River’ programme, is destroying dykes and allowing their lands to flood.
  • why Greg Ip is worried about the situation in China and how the stability that the government is trying to maintain will eventually lead to instability.

“If banks are limited from lending then lending activity will migrate elsewhere. We see this happening at exchange traded funds and other shadowy parts of the financial system. And you worry that risks are starting to grow there.” – Greg IP

“One way to protect ourselves against disaster is to make use of the presence of danger to remind ourselves that things aren’t always safe and to take steps that keep us safe”.  – Greg IP

“What I worry about more is that the pendulum has swung too far against risk taking. And the risks that are been taken are being channeled too far in the direction of financial risk and not real economy risk – people starting new businesses or buying new homes.” – Greg Ip

“What I worry about China is that they have leadership that is worried about political and economic stability.”

Where to Find Greg Ip:

  • The Wall Street Journal 
  • www.gregip.com

Books:

  • Foolproof: Why Safety Can Be Dangerous and How Danger Makes Us Safe by Greg Ip
  • The Little Book of Economics: How the Economy Works in the Real World by Greg Ip

Other Interesting Links:

  • Deregulation: The Expected and The Unexpected by Sam Peltzman
  • Do we really need more regulation of financial derivatives? by Merton H. Miller
  • Financial Innovation: The Last Twenty Years and the Next by Merton H. Miller
  • Peltzman, S. (1975). The Effects of Automobile Safety Regulation, Journal of Political Economy: 677 – 726.
  • National Center for Catastrophic Sport Injury Research 
  • Probability of a Hazardous Material Truck Accident in New Jersey by Damodaran, M., Daniel, J. and Luke, A. C. (2002)
http://traffic.libsyn.com/economicrockstar/076_Greg_Ip.mp3

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060: Manu Saadia on Trekonomics – The Economics of Star Trek: Scarcity, Productivity and Public Goods

November 26, 2015 by Frank

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060: Manu Saadia on Trekonomics – The Economics of Star Trek: Scarcity, Productivity and Public Goods

Manu Saadia fell into science fiction and Star Trek fandom at the age of eight, back in Paris, France, where he was born and raised.Manu Saadia

Manu  studied history of science and economic history in Paris and Chicago. After many happy years in the Ivory Tower, he yielded to his childhood passion for the future.

Manu embarked on his continuing mission to explore strange new worlds by boldly going where many have gone before: Los Angeles, CA, where he advise and (occasionally) builds tech companies.

Manu received the 2005 Wayne C. Booth Graduate Student Prize for Excellence in Teaching at the University of Chicago.

His book, Trekonomics, is currently available for pre-order at www.inkshares.com and will be released in 2016.

Star Trek offers much more detail about its own world and the way its economics actually works – like the plumbing so to speak. So that’s what I wanted to do. Go into the plumbing of Star Trek. – Manu Saadia

Economics:

In this interview, Manu mentions:  trekonomics, crowd funding, labor, economic history, trade, robots, capitalism, comparative advantage, currency, money, Gold-Pressed Latinum, public goods, conspicuous consumption, scarcity, peak oil, productivity and opportunity costs.

Economists:

In this interview, Manu mentions: Brad DeLong, Felix Salmon, Adam Smith, Thomas Malthus, Hubbert, Paul Ehrlich, Julian Simon, Romer, Larry Summers, John Maynard Keynes and Angus Deaton,

In this episode you will learn:

  • why Manu Saadia wrote Trekonomics.
  • about the Star Trek Economics panel at Comic Con.
  • why economists love Star Trek.
  • about inkshares and how it can help authors publish their book.
  • how traditional media rather than social media boosted pre-order sales of Trekonomics – an ironic outcome.
  • when Manu’s interested in economics and Star Trek collided.
  • about the work of Isaac Asimov and how his stories are a discourse on economics.
  • how the stories of robots and the future by Asimov influenced and shaped the storyline in Star Trek.
  • about the replicators in Star Trek and how they solve the problem of economic scarcity.
  • about the Ferengi’s and how they represent capitalism and trade.
  • why The Federation or the humans in Star Trek do not use money but have a foreign account to trade with the Ferengi’s.
  • about the Ferengi’s currency, Gold-Pressed Latinum, which cannot be replicable.
  • why owning a replicator is a ‘pain in the ass’.
  • how things that cannot be replicated has value but those that can be replicated has no value.
  • if Keynes’ The Economic Possibilities of Our Grand Children is a rebuttal of the writings of H. G. Wells.
  • about GPS being a public good and the benefits it has brought to the public.
  • why making GPS a public good in 1983 was one of the best decisions Ronald Reagan made as US President.
  • Manu’s favourite Star Trek episode is Lower Decks (The Next Generation).

Quotes by Manu Saadia in Episode 60 of the Economic Rockstar Podcast:

Trekonomics got a lot of support and very nice feedback from a lot of economists – Manu Saadia

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“It always baffles me when you have these very famous and serious economic thinkers were in fact  total Star Trek nerds. I was on a panel at New York Comic Con with Brad DeLong, Paul Krugman and Annalen Newitz from i09. There was Chris Black as well and Felix Salmon.” – Manu Saadia

Brad DeLong came to the panel with a Star Trek hoodie. – Manu Saadia

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On Isaac Asimov: “All of his work is a long meditation on economics, either foundation where there is this science called psychohistory which is in fact a fictional mathematical modelling of human behaviours on the scale of societies on a galactic scale.” – Manu Saadia

“One of the reasons why I wanted to study economics was that I was fascinated by and really wanted to understand the transformation of humanity’s relation to its own labor. This is one of the great questions of political economy because it determines a lot of things when it comes to the shape society and the role of the state and how behaviors are determined and constructed over time. But it’s also the key to understanding where we’re going”. – Manu Saadia

“I would say the replicators are more of a metaphor. If you look at their status in the series, they do not help move the narratives forward. They’re just there to signify that there’s no need to work. They’re a little bit like robots in Asimov. They have the same narrative function, which is to show and demonstrate that post-scarcity does exist and is based on automation and artificial intelligence.” – Manu Saadia

The Ferengi’s are the capitalist, merchant traders of the galaxy – Manu Saadia

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Most of the stuff in Star Trek is basically a public good – Manu Saadia

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I think Star Trek is very much what Keynes described in The Economic Possibilities of Our Grand Children – Manu Saadia

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Books:

  • Scatter, Adapt, and Remember by Annalen Newitz 
  • Isaac Asimov
  • Frankenstein by Mary Shelly
  • The Economic Possibilities of Our Grand Children by John Maynard Keynes

Papers:

  • Romer (1990) Productivity Gains

Links:

  • What I Learned Crowdfunding Trekonomics  by Manu Saadia
  • Trekonomics The economics of Star Trek: how does it work, and how do we get there?  by Manu Saadia
  • View the transcript to The Amazing Economics of Star Trek at New York Comic Con
  • www.i09.com 
  • www.inkshares.com
  • What the economics of Star Trek can teach us about the real world by Brian Fung, Andrea Peterson and Hayley Tsukayama Washington Post 
  • The Live Long and Prosper Edition Slate Money 
  • Club of Rome 

Manu’s Favorite Star Trek Epsiodes:

  • City on the Edge of Forever
  • Arena

Where to Find Manu:

  • inkshares.com
  • fusion.net

Music:

  • Star Trek Episode Amok Time
http://traffic.libsyn.com/economicrockstar/Manu_Saadia_Final.mp3

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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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