Lex Fridman Podcast - #251 – Ray Dalio: Money, Power, and the Collapse of Empires
Episode Date: December 26, 2021Ray Dalio is an investor, author, and founder of Bridgewater Associates. Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - Athletic Greens: https://athleticgreens.com/lex and use code LEX to... get 1 month of fish oil - GiveWell: https://www.givewell.org/ and use code LEX to get donation matched up to $1k - Magic Spoon: https://magicspoon.com/lex and use code LEX to get $5 off - Blinkist: https://blinkist.com/lex and use code LEX to get 25% off premium - MasterClass: https://masterclass.com/lex to get 15% off EPISODE LINKS: Ray's Twitter: https://twitter.com/RayDalio Ray's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/raydalio Books & resources mentioned: Ray's books: https://amzn.to/3swN5uw Ray's free personality test: https://principlesyou.com/ PODCAST INFO: Podcast website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ YouTube Full Episodes: https://youtube.com/lexfridman YouTube Clips: https://youtube.com/lexclips SUPPORT & CONNECT: - Check out the sponsors above, it's the best way to support this podcast - Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/lexfridman - Twitter: https://twitter.com/lexfridman - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lexfridman - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lexfridman - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lexfridman - Medium: https://medium.com/@lexfridman OUTLINE: Here's the timestamps for the episode. On some podcast players you should be able to click the timestamp to jump to that time. (00:00) - Introduction (08:14) - Money or power (11:50) - Big Cycle (31:43) - Collapse of the American Empire (40:10) - War (43:18) - Xi Jinping (49:21) - Importance of freedoms (55:24) - Democracy's vulnerability (58:49) - Communism's vulnerability (1:05:50) - Vladimir Putin (1:09:55) - Understanding China (1:17:23) - Henry Kissinger (1:27:44) - Elon Musk and Dogecoin (1:29:41) - How to take notes (1:33:24) - Advice for young people (1:37:30) - Hope for humanity
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The following is a conversation with Ray Dalio, his second time on the podcast.
He is a legendary investor, founder of Bridgewater Associates, author of a book I highly recommend
called Principles, and also a new book called Principles for Dealing with a Changing World
Order that looks at the geopolitics of the day, especially US and China, to the lens
of history, providing a fascinating model for the rise
and fall of empires that can be applied to the analysis of our world today.
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If you go to masterclass.com slash Lex that's masterclass.com slash Lex for the amazing holiday deal terms apply. This is the Lex Friedman podcast and here is my conversation with Ray Dahlia. When you look at the history of the world, as you have done in your new book, Principles
of Dealing with the Changing World Order, what is more important, more impactful, money
or power? They go hand in hand. They support
each other and they compete with each other. Those who have money have power, a certain type of power.
That power has to do with all that they can buy, but it also has the ability to influence those with political
power.
And so you see this throughout history, this symbiotic relationship, for example, between
the royal families, the nobility, and the church. So you see that group of people supporting each
other in various ways, and then wrestling around with each other for the money and power
among that group. So the dynamic that's quite classic is you could look at the parties in power back in, you know, the 16, 17 centuries,
you would look at royal families, nobles, and the church, if you're in Europe, and then
you would look at agricultural land, and there was a certain dynamic and that varies over time. It changes.
As those people get thrown out in technology changes so when we evolved, when the society evolved
so that it would produce goods and services and you have something like the industrial revolution,
the first industrial revolution, they have machines and you have the talent the Industrial Revolution, the first Industrial Revolution.
They have machines, and you have the talent of people that are off the farms.
And then you have a struggling for power.
You see that power mix change.
And so we don't see that same power mix anymore, but you still see the same dynamic.
You see those with money, dealing with those who have political power around those assets
that are considered most valuable, particularly the productive assets that produce money.
And political powers usually centered around nation state. So the major
locuses of powers, the nations. Yes. In 1668, after 30 years of war, there was the
development of nation states. Before then, we had, I was really the development of countries as we know it,
that there were borders and that within those borders, those who had control, got to control it,
and there would not to be intrusions in those borders, and that's how we establish the nation state. And then, of course, within each country, there is levels.
There is a central level, and then there is a,
typically a province or state level down below, and then there's a municipal level,
so they each have different levels of power, and it's the coordination of those that determines how the country is run.
You write that the quote archetypal, big cycle, governs the rising and declining empires and influences everything about them, including their currencies and markets. The most important three cycles are the ones
you mentioned in the introduction,
the long-term debt and capital market cycle,
the internal order and disorder cycle,
and the external order and disorder cycle.
Can you describe this big cycle?
There are two orders.
There is an order by a system, order I mean a system, how the system works.
So there's an internal order, that is the internal
governance system and it's usually set out in a
constitution or some agreements.
And then there's the world order, how the world
system. So for example, in 1945, at the end of a war,
which is basically a fight for determining the world order,
the winners of the fight got together and created the world system,
as we now know it.
44, they created the Bretton Woods monetary
system that determined the money pretty much. And because the United States won and had
80% of the world's money, gold was money then, and has 80% of the world's gold, and it
was half the world's economy, and it was the great military power. The water was built around the American world
order so that the United Nations was in New York, the World Bank and the IMF were in Washington,
and they built that new water. So, classically, you have a war to determine whose rules were
following, and then you have the new water being constructed. After that, there is usually period of extended peace and prosperity.
Peace suits prosperity. And the reason you have the peace is because no one wants to fight with the dominant power. You know you're going to lose. You've surrendered.
There's been the surrendering. They carve up the world. They say what it's going to look like.
Who's going to control what? And then you come into that period of peace and then prosperity
where then there's a working together. Usually at that point you've wiped out a lot of the debt, you've wiped out a lot of the issues, the class warfare and so on.
And then there's good working together. So those great periods such as the industrial revolution in the late 1800s,
or what we've experienced in the post-World War II period
are peaceful and prosperous periods
led largely by the dominant world power.
Over a period of time, since really 1500,
and maybe before, but really 1500,
when the Dutch invented capitalism. And what I
mean by that, they invented the first capital markets, the first stocks and
the first stock market, that since then capitalism has been an effective tool
for building wealth because it got resources into the hands of inventive people. That's when we move
from agriculture to the importance of inventiveness of people. They got resources. And then they
built that prosperity. In that process of doing that, they create wealth gaps naturally. Naturally, those who make a lot of money Make a lot more and then those that don't and
It also produces opportunity gaps because
For example those who earn a lot of money have that wealth
they have the power to educate their children in a way that others don't and
the gaps grow.
And also the debts grow at that time.
When they go around the world with their competitiveness,
they earn a lot of money.
So for example, the Dutch, the Dutch Empire,
learned how to build ships,
and that would go around the world. A key ingredient of this
improvement in this cycle is the improvement of education. And by education, I mean the skills
that come from education, but also civility, the ability to deal well together. So the Dutch
invented ships that could go around the world and they had military
power, but they were also very inventive society. 25% of the world's new inventions came
from the Dutch. And so as they went around the world, they also brought their currency,
and they brought their military. They needed the currency, they paid for things and that currency. And then the more that happens, the more that becomes a reserve currency.
And then they have their military, so they need their military strength.
And so you see it evolve in all of those ways.
But over a period of time, as they become more successful and more expensive,
they become more successful and more expensive,
they become more expensive.
And newer countries come along like the UK
than learn to build ships from a lot the Dutch
and could do that less expensively.
And also when they become more expensive, so less competitive.
And also the work ethic begins to change. They believe that since they're richer, they
can enjoy life more. They don't have to work quite as hard. And so you start to see the
tilt. Now you start to see the development of the top. And when you have a world reserve currency,
that allows you to borrow a lot of money.
Because those who want to save,
want to hold your money.
And that means that they'll lend you money.
And so those countries get deeper into debt.
So you see that they gradually lose their competitiveness.
And they get themselves into financial circumstances
which are not good and they have large wealth gaps which set the stage for downturns.
And when they have downturns, the first question is do they have enough money? And traditionally, you know, money is resources.
So you classically see that the coffers are bare, that they're spending more money than they are
earning, and they run out of money in the coffers. And their graineries are empty rather than stocked so that they give them the buffer.
And as that deteriorates, that worsens conditions.
And if they have a rival power that's also challenging them,
they see greater internal conflict over wealth.
And then they have the problems internally and the problems externally, which usually results in an internal war or an external war that leads to the change in the new world order.
And to you, the Dutch Empire is a good example that the British, what are some of the key examples that you think about in the book of this process of the follow the big cycle?
Well, the leading reserve currency empires, but it applies to all the empires.
Were the Dutch, the British, the American and the Chinese.
But you could follow the same pattern.
But you could follow the same pattern. In the book, it was very important for me to not just use words and concepts, because
that's subjective.
It was very important for me to use actual measurements.
So as you see in the book, you can see every level of this.
You can see where is the education level.
What is the military power?
Each one of those, and you can see the back going over the 500 years. And so you can see
the arcs and the composition of those arcs. And what you see is really in most countries
and most dynasties, you can see that. But you also can see through those numbers the health of those countries.
Today, there are statistics that you could, that are in the book, that show what is the
level of education, what is the level of economic output, what is the level of military strength,
what is the level of a number of different measures of strength
so that you can then compare that.
And I think that because they're objective measures of strength
that you could see change,
that shows the picture of where we are today.
And I think one of the most important things about the book
is that it allows people to monitor
how those things are transpiring.
I think for policymakers, you know, are your policymakers doing a good job?
And there's so much subjectivity in that.
But I think it's very simple.
If those lines on the chart are improving, if your health index is improving, then you're
moving toward a better life.
So that's what the book works like.
Also, it was used to create a model for the future.
In other words, there are cause-effect relationships.
Everything that happens has reasons, causes that preceded it that made it happen.
And so by having all those in numbers, one can see the probabilities of certain things happening.
So that's what you see in the book.
It's not just, you know, raise interpretation.
I didn't want to make it raise interpretation because I don't know if I'm right.
Yeah. So one of the fascinating things in the book, so you have lists these 18 measures.
And there's like a little scorecard for the countries of the world today.
So let's say, US, China and Europe.
And what it was 20 years ago and looking at the change from 20 years ago.
And that's another indicator, the change itself to see where things are headed.
Maybe can you comment on from a score perspective, how is US and China doing?
And in the 18 measures, what are some measures that stand out to you?
It was particularly important to think about today for the United States for China.
Well, there are a number financially. What you see in the United States is that we're
borrowing a lot more money, creating a lot of debt, and we're printing a lot of money.
printing a lot of money. And our capacity to do that is very much, is limited, first of all, because when there's
a sale of a bond, when the government borrows more than it borrows money, because it spends
more than it takes in, you have to sell a bond.
And the world right now has a lot of US dollar
Denominated bonds because as the world's reserve currency they sell sold on them and they have very
bad returns
Negative real returns negative real returns significantly and so on so that
Means that more bonds has to be sold then
our So that means that more bonds has to be sold than are bought. And that means that the Federal Reserve has, is faced with the choice of having to raise
the interest rate to curtail borrowing, which slows the economy and hurts the markets, or
by filling that difference and producing money, the
debt monetization, which produces an inflation in goods, services, and financial assets.
So in that regard, that's the United States' position.
In China's case, its balance of payments is a better.
China has displaced the United States as the world's largest trading country.
In other words, more exports to other countries.
And as a result, it's economically competitive,
but it doesn't have the world's reserve currency.
It's a real blessing. So the United States have the world's reserve currency. It's a real blessing. So the United States, it has the world's reserve currency,
but it is risking it because of this imbalance. So if you look at history,
you see that those go slowly, but when they go eventually, they go quickly.
So there's a risk of that financially. Then there's the issue of internal order.
So I'm just giving you the major ones, but I'll get into some of the other ones too. Right
now, there's a lot of internal conflict in the United States, which affects how well it works.
In China, there's less internal conflict
because it's a more autocratic state,
but also they've created this bifurcation
what is political and what is economic
in terms of producing that prosperity.
So if you stay out of the politics pretty much,
and then you're seeing entrepreneurship,
you're seeing the finances of new businesses and so on.
And so that internal working,
that's subject to different people's interpretations,
whether they like it or not,
but the internal conflict
in terms of those kinds of measures is less. Sorry to pause on that for a second. So these measures,
I guess you don't want to sort of romanticize anyone measure or something like that over
interpret anyone measure, but is internal conflict always a bad thing?
Is it a complicated calculation?
Or do you kind of, the way we think about these measures
that you've presented, we should be thinking like
the higher, the better, the lower the worse,
or I mean, of course, depending on the matter.
Well, in many cases, the conflict that produces
the revolution produces revolutionary changes
that lead to resolutions that and lead to new starts.
And so a short-term civil war is a hellacious experience and at the same time it can be the
transition to a new beginning. Also there are different types of conflict,
competition which makes things makes everything better is as a productive conflict, whereas destructive conflicts are not good over the
short time. So, you know, that's how those go. So, within each measure, the story is complicated.
Yeah, but my measures are sort of clear, meaning how much political conflict,
how much social conflict. In other words, you can measure conflict. You can measure
fighting. You can measure crime rates. You can measure lots of different ways of conflict.
So the measures are a composite of different types of internal conflict.
What is some other interesting measures? Maybe you can also mention that for me in particular,
interest is education and innovation. Yes. The classic cycle, the most important leading indicator,
is the quality of education. Most importantly, broad-based education
drawn from the largest population
because you can never tell who the talent is going to be.
So where are they going to come from?
So for example, if you look at the Chinese dynasties,
the great Chinese dynasties and the Confucian approach.
It was merit to credit of everybody could sit
for exams and so on, broad base of joining
in the populations, and you see that if you go
across societies because that draws on the largest number
of population to get education and it also that creates a reality and a
Perception that the system is fairer equal opportunity not just one of privilege and that helps to create social stability
but education is not just
education in
understanding facts and so when it just education in understanding facts and so on.
It is education and civility of how to behave together.
And so if they're smart, they understand how to be productive
because they work well together and they're productive.
And then that leads to the next stage.
You can see in the lines in the charts,
I plotted these so that you can see in the lines in the charts, I plotted these, so that you
could see in a typical cycle, you could see that education is the long leading indicator, and
then you could see, as you mentioned, that what you see is inventiveness and technology measures,
then follow, and you see then also competitiveness in world markets
follows. For example, in the early stages of a cycle, the industries that they go into
tend to be very basic industry because they have cheap labor, something like textiles
and simple manufactured goods and so on. But as the education rises, then they move up the value chain
to greater technologies and so on, which raises
incomes and raises productivity. So yes, those and,
and as you say, there are 18 different measures like that,
but education and then civility and the inventiveness. So you see it reflected in who's inventing what?
And that corresponds then who's trading with,
who's a big trading country?
And where's the value of economic output
and what a per capita income?
They all follow those arcs.
Yeah, like you said,
the fascinating thing about your book. So there's
philosophy, there's wisdom, but there's plots. Yeah, you can see it. It's not just your opinion.
It's kind of like you can interpret it in any way you like, but you're just giving a lot of
your own insights along with the numbers. If you were to look at the American nation, the American
Empire and the trajectories looking into the future given these measures, what is the trajectory that
leads to the collapse of the American Empire based on these measures? What are the concerning
indicators and if those break down further, what does
that look like?
Well, all of those indicators are concerning.
Maybe except for one, which is technology, the technology niche, although even in that area of the United States is improving at a slower rate
than is China for various advantages that they have there. They put out about eight times as many
computer engineers, they have free data, and so on. But if you look at them, so the financial is a concern, the internal order, disorder is a concern.
Then if you look at education levels, the United States is losing its educational advantage.
If you were to look at, compare it with China, if you take general public education in the United States,
it's deteriorated tremendously even in comparison to developed countries. There are scores,
pieces scores, and so on. And it's something like 38th in the world or something, and that was a
big plunge, average public education. If you look at the best universities in the
world, the United States is unique in having the best universities in the world. So there
are these privileged spots that are, you know, excellent, uniquely excellent. So when you look comparison, education in China is improving rapidly and the quantity is a quantity of educated
people in the areas that they're moving in is greater. And the resources that they're
putting behind it is greater. And so you see the results are greater. But it's sort of a long line that I'm dealing with. If you
would have followed through in terms of actual productions, I think you know, in terms of
technologies, there are some areas that the United States is in a lead at the moment. There
are some areas that China is an elite, but China is gaining
very quickly. When I first went to China in 1984, I would bring $10 calculator,
and I gave them away as gifts to high-ranking people, and they thought they were miracle devices.
Right now, in terms of areas like quantum computing and AI and many areas, you have a race going on.
And so if you take the trajectory of the competitiveness, not just look at the current level, you have a situation where they're improving at a much faster rate.
This is all good for the world if the world can get
along. And the main thing I think is, just in how do you have a healthy world and how do you have
a strong economy and how do you have a strong situation, is be strong. The United States is war is with itself. That's the main war. You know, it's very simple in history.
The financially sound, earn more than you spend, and be strong in these ways, and pretty much everything will take care of itself. But you make it sound simple, of course, because there's a momentum when things degrade,
when the education system degrades, when you start borrowing, when all of these indicators
once they start going down, there's a momentum to it, right? So it's hard to reverse it.
Right, and there are circumstances that you're then in.
For example, indebtedness, it's politically desirable for those to borrow money and spend
because their constituencies only look at what they get. And when they get a lot, they don't pay attention to the balance sheet and how much
debt is on the books. So it's always better to borrow, spend, and then leave the cleanup to
the next guy. And so you inherit a lot. You inherited as a new president enters in or new
legislators. They have a lot of debt. They have a broken-down
infrastructure. They don't have enough money to fix that. And so that's the lay of the
land that the prior generations put you in. And there you are. And so that's right. It's
difficult because when you start to think, okay, what's healthy?
Well, spend, earn more than you spend.
Well, that's not so easy because, you know, what does that mean?
Go earn more.
I mean, okay, that's not so easy.
Spend less.
That isn't going to work.
So now what do you do?
Okay, you have this debt that you then monetize. And that's
why it's classic. So yes, that's why these cycles occur because what has created before,
what happened before created the lay of the land that is then increasingly difficult to deal with.
So what can great leaders do in this moment? I mean, maybe my sense is leadership is crucial here. So for example,
to do very large projects that invest in the education system that sort of try to fix
the fundamentals or maybe invest more and more into the innovation and the development
of new technologies and so on. It feels like that just doesn't happen organically. So you have to have strong leaders that
convince the populists of the importance of these ideas.
Well, I completely agree with your list. What we have is a situation where everybody
has their opinions and they have to sort of get them exactly right and they all fight with each other about whether they're opinions.
So the most important thing is that we are become bipartisan so that we don't and we get over our differences.
I would have a bipartisan cabinet. I would draw upon both members of both parties, the moderates, who
are going to be able to work together. So as then we have one country and then we deal
with those in a means that works for the majority of the people in the middle rather than the polarity. I think our
greatest risk is in not being able to do that. So I would say that's a paramount importance
because we have the resources, you know, wealth, real wealth and science and everything has never
been better than it is. But the notion is that it has to work for the majority of people and we have to keep
it being productive.
So that group has got to calmly and knowledgeably work together so that they increase the size
of the pie and they create broad-based prosperity.
So that is a paramount importance.
Whatever they do, if they do it that way, I can say I'm happy about because that other alternative
is the really scary alternative.
The scary alternative, the different ways it has evolved throughout history, some of
it has led to wars.
What are the future trajectories that lead to a potential war with China?
Cold war or hot war?
Is this something you think about?
Is this something you're worried about?
Yeah, I'd like to talk about both wars.
So the war with China, as I say, there are five kinds of wars.
There's a trade war technology war, geopolitical influence war,
capital war, and military war.
As far as military war goes, I only think it's only a Taiwan issue, but that's a big issue.
And we could talk about that for a minute.
But those others, there'll be rough competitions, and we'll have that type of evolution over
a period of time.
That's what that war looks like. Taiwan has been for a long time a sovereignty issue to China.
And it has its roots in what's called the Hundred Years of Humiliation. From the 1840s to 1949,
foreign powers came in, took advantage of China. They had the opium wars
in such times. And that represented the hundred years of humiliation. And Taiwan represents
is their sovereignty and their important thing. And 50 years ago, starting 50 years ago, there was
an agreement that there is one China and Taiwan is part of China and that there would be peaceful
reunification. The peaceful reunification hasn't happened. And in their view, that's a very big issue.
And so it's a big contentious issue.
And that could produce a military war,
could produce a military accident, could produce a very tense situation.
And if we had a military war, God help us because of the capacity in all different new ways to inflict harm on each other.
But anyway, that's that.
If you don't have that military war, you'll have the competition between those other kinds
of wars and whoever is strongest in those areas will win.
Where do you put cyber war within the five?
Well cyber war is a military war.
I'm assuming the type of cyber war that you're referring to is that which it's used to inflict
pain on the other party through cyber.
So cyber wars, you'll see cyber war, you could see space war, you can see drone warfare, you, um, new
types of warfare, not just, um, the traditional and, and nuclear type of warfare, but you could
see any of the above.
What are the defining characteristics?
What are the interesting things about, uh, Xi Jinping, the president of China, as a leader on the
world stage?
His father was a early leader.
He was himself in the culture revolution in times treated brutally and during that period of time it was very very difficult and he came up
you know through the ranks and is a very intelligent man when he first came to power they as you know
they have two five-year terms and we're now coming to the end of the they have two five-year terms. And we're now coming to the end of the
second of those five-year terms. When he first came to power, he felt that there should be
a lot of reform and reform meant moving to much more of a market and open economy.
When that happened in him coming in, I had some contact with economic policy makers,
but in the circumstances then, where that five major banks lent to state-owned enterprises
and local governments with implied government guarantees. And so there was not control of that.
And the movement to a more of a market economy and
the development of markets was a primary.
And also the dealing with the corruption issue.
There was a lot of corruption prior to that and that was viewed as an existential threat
to the system.
So that became the primary objective. And then as time progressed over those 10 years,
there was a lot of changing in their financial circumstances,
opening many, many other markets.
They're particularly getting money to small and medium-sized enterprises
and developing a lending system and then establishing
controls on it. So right now there's a vibrant capital markets. You can raise capital, you can
be an entrepreneur, you can become a billionaire in the capital markets, and they developed the markets to be
the second largest capital markets.
At the same time, they had to deal with their rising debt issue, which they began to deal
with really about four years ago when the second term began and then Luha became the vice premier responsible for that and
to deal with those issues.
So you see right now that what's happening is the dealing with the real estate bubble. There was a development
in real estate a bubble which produced a lot of unproductive lending. And Shishi Ping
said, you know, houses are meant to live in, not to speculate on. And so that was wasteful.
So they established what they call three red lines, which are financial ratios,
that the property developers had to live within.
And that is then causing the adjustments
that are going on now,
which in my view are very healthy
because whenever there's bankruptcy
and so on the most in the public thing,
okay, that's a problem. It's in many
cases really a cleaning up of bad debts and bad practices and so that's what's going on.
So that's let's say economically. At the same time there is the changing relationships,
the changing world order, the changing relationships with the United States and other countries,
which is becoming much less cooperative and much more warlike, much more confrontational.
Those two things, the domestic debt problem and the domestic has led to what's called core, what they call core leadership, which means a leadership more around
him that is less challenging, because they believe in history that during very difficult
times a more centrally controlled decision-making process lends itself better than to a more fragmented political contentious project.
And that's basically what's going on now.
You said it very eloquently, but you mean the leadership is surrounded by yes men, and there's a lot of centralized control.
That characterization is much more black and white than it really is.
But it leans towards that direction. Like for example, of the standing members of the
Polo Bureau, four are more alleged, allied to three are less so. You have to understand that it's
kind of a collective leadership at the top. And then
of course, there's just jockeying for power in a highly political sense at the top. But no one
leader can be successful against all those powers at the top. So it's very politically negotiating.
all those powers at the top. So it's very politically negotiating. It's very much more like if you put
in the United States, the Democrats and the Republicans, and they had to be in the same government and they work it out. It's kind of something like that, and so that's that struggle, but it's an
internal struggle. Where do you put the importance of some of these ideas that the founding of the United
States, now we're talking about that at the context of China, the freedom of speech,
freedoms?
What China is doing with the central management of a lot of things, it's enabling a lot of
growth, but it's also limiting people on the very basic level in terms of freedom, the kind of
freedom that I think can lead to entrepreneurship to starting new businesses, to having big
dreams and chasing those dreams, and then creating totally new things in whatever the space
may be in technology, in business, and whatever.
How important is that as a metric for society?
Well, they have a view in which is the idea of a dialectic which means that two things
are at obvious, that everything comes with pros and cons, and two opposites exist. And
you want the benefits of those two opposites, and how do you deal with the benefits of those two opposites?
So let's say you want the capital markets because it gets money into the hands of the entrepreneurs
who are motivated, they build fortunes, and that drives an economy to do very well.
And at the same time, it produces the other problems, the wealth gaps, the other problems
in the debt cycle that we're talking about and so on.
And Deng Xiaoping, how do you reconcile communism and the market economy and the capital markets?
And he famously said, and it doesn't matter if it's a white cat or a black cat just
along the catch is mice.
In other words, if it works and make in the country richer, then that becomes the objective
and then they move that along.
So there are these conflicts.
And one of the leaders described it to me as follows because it's confusion and it goes back over a period of time.
There's a hierarchy and it's an extension of the family. He described it and
he said the United States is a country of
individuals and individualism and
That is its vibrancy that
we see. The individual rights to speak up, the individual
protection of the individual, individual property rights and all of those things as of paramount importance. And we build our organization. That's why democracy is from the bottom up or even a company.
We'll get together and we'll be partners to prosper together.
That is the American approach.
He was describing that in China, it's an extension of the Confucian family,
essentially. And so it's almost like,
you know, there's a hierarchy. And so what they think about is the common good,
not the individualism.
So for example, if they want a high speed rail
to go from one place to another,
and that's best in the common good,
then the individual protections that would stand
in the way of doing that would be of secondary concern.
So that notion of controlling.
So it, for example, what they're doing with video games, they control what type of video
games and how many hours a day kids can be on video games operating in that way because
they believe that that's good for the society and that's very controlling. In the
United States, I think probably most parents would say leave it to me and it's a
matter between me and my kids. The same thing has to do with data. In other words,
in the United States, who controls the data?
Does the company control the data? Do you individually control the data?
And so the inclination would be to figure that out, but nobody would say that the government is going to control the data
because of our inclination of really anti-government control. In China, it would be that the government will
control the data because that's going to be best for the society, and it depends who you trust,
but that's so that difference in philosophy is very much at the heart of that. As far as
your question in terms of effectiveness, it really is, in China's case,
it's how you balance the things, right? So what they're attempting to do is to create
a lot of freedom and creativity in areas that are not political, let's say. And so you
see a lot of entrepreneurship, you see a lot of product development, you
see a lot of creativity happening in that way. So the stereotype that you don't see creativity
happening is an old stereotype, but where's a lot of creativity certainly happening. And
the system can work well if they can achieve that kind of balance.
It's proven to have worked well. Since I started going there in 1984, per capital income,
real per capital income is increased by 26 times. The longevity rate is increased by 10 years.
The poverty rate has fallen from 88% to less than 1% in terms of basics like
starvation and things.
And if you read history, Plato's Republic, he talks about the cycles, democracy, and
autocratic, and the benevolent despot and all of that, each has their own vulnerability.
The vulnerability of democracy, which has been a remarkable, remarkable system, and I don't
have to extoll the benefits of it.
But the vulnerability of it has always been the internal conflict that produces itself as anarchy.
In World War II, four democracies chose to be auto-crisis
because there was internal disorder
and the belief will somebody bring about order
and get control of the situation.
That was in Germany, Italy, Japan, and Spain.
They were parliamentary systems that turned themselves over to that.
So both systems have vulnerabilities.
I think the main thing that we need to think about is those vulnerabilities.
Democracy is an amazing system because it adheres to the rules and the system.
And the checks and balances is quite amazing.
And it gives it a flexibility to change without civil wars.
But there has to be the respect of the rules. And
when you see something like they will not accept elections, or they will not accept rules,
history is shown, when the causes that people are behind are more important to them than
the system. The system is in jeopardy.
So we have a situation that's very much like that.
In terms of, let's say the 2024 elections,
I believe that there's a very high chance
that neither side will accept losing, for example.
And so we have that kind of a situation. So one
would hope that one could rise above the disagreements and rely on the system
for resolving disagreements, because if that doesn't happen, then we have our
own chaos. So the kind of the trend that started in 2020,
or I mean, I suppose it's been there, it's been growing. One representation of this internal
disorder has been the growing trend of being skeptical about the results of the election.
results of the election. Well, it started before that.
There was the emergence of population before President Trump was elected.
He was basically elected as a populist because there was a large percentage of the population
that felt that the system didn't work for them.
And he tapped into that.
And he was largely elected as a populist leader,
first populist leader in a developed country.
And so populism began that then.
And that was a battle of one group against the other group.
And so since then, it's been like that
and it continued to grow.
You've mentioned the vulnerability of democracy, the internal disorder, the vulnerability of democracy.
What's the vulnerability of a system like China?
Maybe one way to say it's put China aside and look at history,
look at Soby Union, what's the vulnerability of a communist type system?
Well, I'll call it both communist and autocratic,
depending on how much autocracy is that it lacks flexibility. It lacks the ability. So, but I should deal with
them differently. In other words, there's the economic system. The economic system threatens
motivation and productivity. So, communism or socialism has to be done in a way where you can threaten productivity.
Capitalism has, and when I mean by that, I mean free markets and capital markets.
I've been in an effective way of allocating resources and also creating the incentives and the resources, providing the resources for the inventiveness
of new ideas.
And so if I compare that, what the Chinese have done through a large extent is to recognize
that and have made a move, that's why the seeming dialectic or the conflict between those two
things exists.
But anyway, that's it as far as an autocratic system.
Rather than one man, one vote from the population up,
the risks of the autocratic system is that there's enough discontent
that arises.
That the system doesn't have the flexibility
and that rather than bending, it breaks.
That's the big risk.
The notion of trying to control a population,
if there's that rather than giving it the flexibility.
So that would be the big risk
of the water crytic system.
What's the human?
Because you mentioned like the top gets bigger
with the empires.
You start to get these granted.
Is some of this is just human nature.
So the concern with China, with the autocratic nations,
the concern with with China with autocratic nations the concern with the
the third Reich
the Soviet Union
was that
Fundamentally at the individual level the humans involved at the top
They start becoming they're starting to lose touch with the reality in a way that no longer makes them.
I guess that's the representation, the flexibility that you're referring to.
Well, I mean, in a democracy, you could change.
You can go as far left or as far right.
You can change the leaders easily.
And so the people don't become, you know, they pretty much only have themselves to blame. Yeah. You know, and one of the problems of that is they may not choose the best leaders, but they
have that flexibility.
So vote and you get what you wanted.
In the case of the autocratic, let's say leaders, and then the movement from democracies
to autocracies.
What you see normally that movement is that one of the systems is not working.
Let's say the democracy is not effectively.
Everybody's arguing with each other and nobody's getting anything done.
You know, like Mussolini, the trains are not running on time.
And that would be the example.
Jesus, this is places
got in chaotic. Well, somebody get them to control. And then they, then you get the
autocratic. And then he's autocratic enough to boss people around. And, and then you follow
those kinds of orders. And it's like a, maybe a CEO in a powerful company, going around, and that could work
well or it could work badly.
Most companies are run as like autocracies in a sense.
There's the hierarchy and the command economy and that kind of thing.
That can work well or not, but then quite often when you get the populist autocratic,
their personality is something that they want to fight. And they become more nationalistic.
And they tend to become more militaristic. And human nature at that stage
more militaristic and human nature at that stage lends itself to fighting. There's an arc here that when we think of a country and we say we and we think of a country, it's
not true, it's not like that. There are individuals who change. One generation dies and another generation comes along. And one of those arcs is that
the ones who have been through war don't want to go to war and are more happily, you know,
willing to abide by whatever the rules are. As you get farther along into that cycle and you get a new generation and they forget about wars and the horrors of wars,
then they want to fight.
And so you're seeing right now,
the emergent of fight for right.
And what that means is you see it internally,
fight where are you in fight for that thing? And they mean fight. And then externally, fight.
Are you going to be the strong one who will fight and win? And that develops on both sides,
this fight and win. And they side is cheering each other on into a war. But that comes by those who really have not experienced war because it comes in their part of their lifetime.
Humans are fascinating.
Humans are fascinating. And by the way, human nature has not changed over the thousands of years.
So it's so interesting because like in doing this study and it comes across in the study
It's like watching the same movie over and over again
You you know you see the arc and you see it happen over and over again
The only things that seem to change are the clothes people wear and the technology
Yeah, and then some of you probably would disagree with you about the clothes. Maybe there's also cycles within fashion
Maybe we're not even creative there
What do you
Make of Russia and Vladimir Putin? What do you think about Putin as a leader as a human being on this world stage within the context of
the cycles on the empires that you think about.
Well, Putin came to power at the failure of Russia's last order.
So there was the end of communism, and there was the development of the market economy,
the collapse of the Soviet Union. And at that time, he was appointed by Yeltsin, who was an alcoholic and had problems managing,
and was put into power.
And the conditions in the Russian were, there was anarchy.
There was no money.
It was, it had the classic end of cycle ingredients.
It was broke, it was people fighting with each other, it was anarchy, and that's when
he came to power. And there were not institutions, the whole thing had collapsed, and there was
not effective ministry of education, ministry of anything.
And so the idea was that they needed 25 years of stability and they needed a democracy
and they needed the improvement of capital markets. So he's been in that position as a, I guess I would call him a semi-autocratic leader
in that, from all indications, he would respect the democracy and he's very popular.
He's one democratic elections because he's been a strong leader and he's brought
peace and stability to the Soviet to Russia after the breakup of the Soviet Union. And the country's interests in a way where Russia is not a significant economic power, but it is a
significant military power. So the issues, and then there's a strong alliance between Russia and China now.
So that's kind of the lay of the land. And then there are sensitivities. The Ukraine issue
is a sensitivity because there are a lot of Russians who live in the Ukraine. And there's also the issue of NATO on their border. So there are those kinds of things.
And he has military power. And he has a strong alliance with China. And I guess that's my best
summary of what his position is. Strong leader, popular. These are not subjective interpretations. These are objective interpretations.
Yeah, it's interesting just in this conversation, you're not sort of doing the usual criticism
of a Vainewon particular system. You're looking at these systems from the perspective of history.
You're just describing how they work.
It's often times when you talk about what Russia is today or what Soviet Union was or what
China is today is you start to criticize, well, they do this kind of censorship, what they
do this kind of, they limit freedoms in this kind of way.
But you're just kind of describing this as a nation with ideas, what they think is right. This is how they hope to get it to work.
This is why it's working.
This is what's not working.
Here's metrics that show that it's not working.
I think that's a refreshing way to think about it.
It's easy though.
I mean, you got some criticism saying that I think China's
a strict parent.
Some people criticize these countries for
doing so for violating human rights. I suppose there are some people that criticize
the United States for violating human rights. But what are your thoughts on the world
stage today about some of the behaviors of this government in terms of respecting the
rights, the basic rights of human beings.
You described accurately how I just tried to look at things in a non.
I don't want to impute my values on anybody.
I mean, there are intolerable things. So I'm not saying there aren't
ill intolerable things. But one of the great things of being an American here is that I grew
up with all different nationalities having all different points of view and all different
religions and all different ways of operating. And I've come to treasure the fact that that is,
you know, what's their business is their business.
And then the question is, where do you cross the line
under what circumstances that others have got to do
it my way.
And then when you do it internationally,
the issue of what is a sovereign state,
you know, which, as I say, in the piece of West
failure, and you have borders, and then when do you cross the line that my way of doing
things has got to be their way of doing things or what are the various rights.
And so that's a very delicate question or a very difficult question.
And we all have responsibilities to different parties
and we all have different levels of knowledge
about those particular things.
So, for example, as an international investor,
I have a responsibility to my investors.
Those who run companies have a responsibility
to theirs of how did they run that?
So if you're taking Nike or stinkers and so on, and Americans can decide whether they
want to buy a Chinese products or not by Chinese products, we are all faced with those types
of choices.
So you have what do you want to do in your constituency and you have your choices. And then beyond that, in many cases, the issues are quite complex, like there
are geopolitical questions that enter into it. So, and then I believe that if you disconnect
it, if all those if entities like myself, the businesses doing business with China,
disconnected, I think that that would be disastrous, economically disastrous, and it would also
be reduce the understanding that comes from working together that helps to reduce wars. And so these are all complicated.
So what we do is, and who makes it my opinion matters the most.
Why should it be my opinion that matters the most
in making that decision?
So I largely look at the government guidance
that I get not only from my own government,
but from the other governments.
And I follow the rules.
I'm in 40, we invest
in 40 countries. And we want to do that in the best way to provide the diversified portfolio.
And we sort of need that up. Every one of those countries has similar complexities. There
are always one issue or another. And there's only so much that we really understand about
all of those issues.
So we rely largely on the guidance that we get.
Yeah, you have to empathize and show respect to the culture of the place, the way things
are done.
You don't necessarily...
The way you heal relationships between nations, like you said, you work together. And that requires kind of
to listen maybe more than you talk. And I think people in the public sphere
talk a lot about China without really listening, without understanding much about China, without one of the things that makes me really sad because I know how to speak Russian
and I can I know how much is lost in translation. It makes me sad that I'll never really get
to know the Chinese culture because like I'll never really get to know the language, the
literature, the just talk to regular people. It's not just the government or officials or
scientists, just regular folks and get the culture. I think if you don't understand the culture, just the basics of the human nature of what
people love about their country, about their family, what the kind of hopes they have,
what kind of values they have.
Without that, you're not going to be able to fully connect with them. You have to do that first. Do you have a chance of building
a good world? I couldn't agree with you more. I was very lucky because, as I say, since
1984, so for more than half of my life, I've been going there and the common people and
all sorts of people, and I've got to meet
them.
I don't speak the language, but a combination of through translators or them speaking English
and being in situations I had my son go to school, a local school, and we develop those
kinds of understandings. I think that, but the not wanting to know the other perspective is the thing that's
most scary.
Yeah.
Like, I'm right now in the middle and all I want to try to do is to help mutual understanding.
You're right.
If there were questions probing me,
asking me, what is it?
I'm not on one side or another.
I don't wanna be on one side or another.
I believe that each has their right
within there to approach their different culture
in their own way.
So many ways you gave an example.
It, if they're not doing harm to others, I mean, so, but that issue of trying
to understand is so much better, that doesn't mean agree with. If you are wanting to out
clever and out compete somebody, it still pays to understand what they're thinking.
So to achieve understanding of what they're thinking, even if you want to go to war with
them, that understanding is the best thing to have.
What we have now is a situation in which there's an enemy mentality. And that means that anything that serves the
seems to be like understanding or conveying understanding seems to mistakenly create the notion
of, I'm on their side in a war. And that's kind of a dangerous thing because there's a momentum
here to fight. Henry Kissinger praises you new book and you thank
him in it in the dedication. What's your relationship like with him? What makes him interesting? Maybe
what makes him controversial? What makes him such a central figure in history?
First, most importantly, he's unique about seeing things through all the others' eyes.
So if you were, it's like there's a chess game.
I mean, I think geopolitics is like a chess game, but with multiple chess players playing
the same game. So imagine there are six people around playing the chess game.
six people around laying the chess game and he could sit in each seat and he could know how they see it. Okay and see it in a calm way of how they see it. He's
unique in that way. He's 98 years old and he's equally able to do that and he
has a background that in which he's a historian. So he really understands history super terrifically.
He doesn't understand economic history as much. So that's why to some extent we enjoy
having a conversation because he's interested in the economic in the economic piece. He doesn't know
and I'm so interested in the geopolitical piece
that I don't know as well.
But anyway, he's able to do that,
but not only a historian, but a practitioner.
So when you go from an academic to a practitioner
who has that talent to see things through others eyes
in an objective way and to be strategic
rather than just tactical, that's a very special person.
That's why Henry is, to me, a very special person.
Yeah, he's lived a fascinating life.
Just all of the world events he's been involved in is fascinating.
Like you said, that's such an interesting skill to have, to consider what are the concerns,
the hope, the dreams, the fears of all the people at the table.
What are they thinking?
I find that people don't, once again, don't do that enough when it's the obvious thing
you should be doing, whether it's business deals or political negotiation or geopolitical negotiation, I'm often surprised
again, sorry to go to the Russian thing because I hear Putin talk in Russian and you start
doing first certain intentions, not the trivial stuff, the human being.
What is that human being hoping for himself, for his country, for his
close in a circle, for the bigger, like, and I just see that that's often just loss in translation.
I just see like American leaders talking to Putin and it's just not, it's, there's not a connection.
Absolutely. I know exactly what you're talking about. It has never failed that in my
listening to a conversation or even reading a speech and you see then it reported the inevitably,
the reporter picks some headline characterization that has very little to do with what was really happening,
but might be a headline grabber that's at some kind of distortion, and there's a lack of
understanding of really what's going on.
If it's okay, let me ask you a couple questions about cryptocurrency.
You've had a few opinions about Bitcoin over the years.
What are your thoughts
about Bitcoin today? It's role in the global financial system and just in human society in
general. Well, the evolution of Bitcoin over the years is one of the things that has influenced influence changes in my view. It has proven itself something like 10, 11 years ago. Imagine
the programming of this and here's you throw it out and that's the idea. It has not been hacked.
It has operated, it has built, it has come an amazing way over that 11 years to be maybe probably the most
excited topic among a lot of people and has been used and is now has obtained the status
of having imputed value.
At the same time, it is one of those assets
that is an alternative money.
I think we're entering an era
where there's going to be a competition of monies
because of the printing of fiat money
and the depreciated value.
There will be a competition of monies. And Bitcoin
is part of that competition, but there'll be many monies, not just crypto monies, but
there'll be central bank crypto monies, but there'll be different kinds of monies. And even monies are things that you buy and sell, NFTs can become a
money, a type of money. You own it and it's an investment and you could say I'd rather own
it than own Bitcoin. Has a red all your body in NFTs? Not yet. Okay. But only just because like, I definitely wanna buy NFTs to just experience them.
Like I think I should produce one.
And I should-
I should have asked that.
Have you minted an after you probably should
just to know what it's like.
Yeah, that's right.
This stuff is happening.
This stuff is real, okay?
And how it operates.
But like all new, real things,
some are going to go and some are going to, you know,
it's like in the internet in the year 2000,
you know, pets.com could have been a great,
but babypets.com doesn't make it and who knows?
That's the beauty of the competitive system
that it'll evolve and some things will be treasured and some things will be trashed
so
But when I look at it, I think we are in an environment of you know, what is an alternate money?
A money has two purposes a medium of exchange and a storehold of wealth and
We are looking for and it's portable and you can and it's best if it's recognized
in other countries. So gold is one of those. So I look at it as an alternative gold, but
I look at a number of things as an alternative gold. And I think that, and I think, and goal is still my favorite
because of certain qualities.
For example, you can't trace it.
In Bitcoin, you can trace who owns it,
where it's going, and so on.
Governments can have that ability to trace it,
and so on.
A goal piece of coin, it's not connected.
I think not connected has benefits, particularly in a world
where maybe connections can be more risky. And then also gold has been for many thousands of years,
universally recognized as a source of money. And central banks, it's the third largest
and central banks, it's the third largest source of money in central bank reserves. And I don't think Bitcoin is going to serve those types of purposes and so on.
So for various reasons, I prefer gold to the other, but it's a little bit part of my
mix.
But then you look at it, I think 69,000 this year is the high Bitcoin hit.
Do you think it's possible? You mentioned
gold. Do you think it's possible to reach as very high numbers, like 1 million, some people
talk about? I don't, I don't think that's possible because the way I look at it is there's There's a certain amount of
Certain amount of it and there's a certain amount of gold. I'll use gold as a benchmark
The amount of it is worth about five about one trillion dollars
Total crypto is about 2.2 trillion, but let's say Bitcoin
It's one trillion dollars if you take the amount of money that is in
gold that is not used for jewelry purposes and not used by central banks and I assume Bitcoin won't be used for jewelry purposes or central bank purposes, that amount in gold is about $5 trillion.
So right now, if you were to have a portfolio that has gold and crypto, gold and Bitcoin,
it's worth about 20% of the value of gold.
Do I think it's going to be worth more than gold?
In terms of that mix, I don't think it'll be worth more than gold. In terms of that mix, I don't think it'll be worth
more than gold. But let's say it became worth as much as gold. I don't believe it will be. I think
that 20% sounds kind of about right. I really don't know what the right answer is.
And then there's the question of what is all of that pool of money that let's say gold and gold equivalents relative to everything else does it go from, you know, let's call it
678 trillion to 16 trillion maybe it could double it depends what it is in the world environment, but basically if you use gold as a measure, there's no, it just makes no
sense that it's going to be used that much more. Am I sure about that? I'm not sure about
anything, but logically it seems to me that there's a limitation on its price in relationship
to other things that are like it. Let me ask for your deep financial analysis and a very important issue.
I just talked a couple days ago of Elon Musk.
He wants to put a literal dogecoin on the moon.
What are your thoughts about dogecoin?
And do you think it'll be the official currency?
Maybe reserve currency on the moon and on Mars.
My reaction is that's cute.
I remember Elon when he first got his money from PayPal.
I think he said to me, it was,
he got $180 million, $90 million, he decided to say,
why aren't we going to outer space?
And he wanted to take a spaceship that would be modified
using Russian technology to put a plant and a watering
can on the moon, or on Mars, I think it was, and he said, first life on Mars or first life
on that, as an inspiring notion.
And so then there's always what's behind it.
I have a lot of respect for Elon's ability to do other things behind it. And so I would take that as symbolic,
and I'd be asking him what's behind it, what's next. And I'm also just on the topic of
Jewish going and meme going, and there's some aspect of humor and like hardiness that's really
interesting about the way we communicate what ideas become viral, how to
captivate people with ideas.
There's something about taking things too serious to get somehow slows it all down.
It's interesting.
You're right.
That's part of human nature somehow.
Like humor is part of this whole thing.
You've talked about the importance of writing ideas down.
And you have principles in particular.
Principles.
And you have this really nice thing in your book where you actually, I think there's such
a brilliant way.
Sorry.
You have such a brilliant way of highlighting which parts are extra important and you make
them bold. That as a brilliant idea. Let me just ask the high level question of what's a good system for
Taking notes
Well, I find that almost everything happens over and over again
And we're in the blizzard of these things happening And what I found is that if I'm making a decision
that after I make the decision usually,
or right at the time, if I pause and reflect,
and I write my principle down,
in other words, principle is sort of a recipe.
What would I use to, how would I make that decision?
And what are the criteria around it?
I find that I make it much more clear, it becomes clear,
and it applies to the next thing that comes along,
it'll be that way, because everything happens over and over and over again.
And I think people make the mistake of looking at just the one, like it's the first one,
they have, I don't know, they have the first problem of this sort of the first child or whatever it is.
And this has been happening plenty of time.
And so if you have the principles, I found that that helped me think more clearly about it.
And it helped me communicate better like why. And so
over the years, over the last 30 years or so, that's what I've done. I did it originally to communicate
very well with people I work with. I set up my company and it was very important to have good
communication. And then we could debate the principles. And so that's the process. I urge
people to do that. There are many excellent decision makers. And I just wish that they wrote down
their principles when this set. So for example, we talk about Henry Kissinger and his new book is going to come out with a book on leadership.
And don't just describe the leaders, describe then what about them were the essential elements
to make a good leader under what circumstances.
And so if we think about that, then also then you begin to think in a principled way.
And then when you start to think in a principled way, life becomes, it's so much easier to make
decisions and it's so much less confusing because it's like coming up on a species and you
say, okay, well, what species is it?
Not just another, it's a thing.
Now what species is it?
And how do I deal with that species effectively?
And so that's what that is.
And so I encourage people to write it down.
I wish anybody who's successful
wrote down their principles or their recipes
for making those types of decisions.
So the events of interest here happens over and over
and over in similar ways as you're looking
for the patterns and you're defining the process that's right to respond to those patterns
and you call that the principles and that allows you to deal with the future effectively.
So like that codifies the lessons from the past to be able to deal with the future. What advice do you have for young folks today?
In high school, in college, thinking about how to live,
have a career that can be proud of, or maybe have a life that can be proud of?
Know yourself, follow your passion,
make your work and passion the same thing
while considering the money part, because
money will get you freedom and choice and be able to beg that. But if you know yourself,
feel the pull and pursue that passion. And along those lines, by the way, I found that using personality profile tests
has been very helpful. I've used those for about 25 years for people to help to understand
themselves and understand each other. So I created a free one that is called Principles principles you, it's online, it's had remarkable loving people who've taken it, learn about
themselves, but also you can put in somebody else and it'll tell you about your relationship
with them. That's like 30 minutes is a quick discovery, but the main thing is to understand on your journey, your hero's journey, when you're that you will have mistakes
and you will have weaknesses, and to
understand those, not fight those,
because by understanding mistakes, you will learn not to make mistakes again.
I have a principle which is pain plus reflection equals progress. And so that reflection is important to
know yourself, know your pulls, know your weaknesses. And when you also know your
weaknesses and the strengths of other people, there are people who have
strengths where you're weak and you have strengths where
they're weak and to be able to work well together is the most effective way of achieving success.
So yeah, it's that journey and there's a life arc and there's a journey and you want
to make it the best that you can make it. And it has, it's like a video game.
You know, it has the challenges and the obstacles
and the learning experiences and the temptations
and all of that.
And the maximizing learning to go where you want to go
to achieve the life you want is the most important.
That's kind of maybe a long-winded way of seeing it,
but to learn, I think I'll try to say it simply.
There's a five-step process.
Step one is know your goals, know what you're going after.
You could have almost anything you want,
but you can't have everything you want.
And so you have to prioritize and you move in that direction
On the way to your goals you're going to encounter your problems and your obstacles
So identifying step two is understanding your problems and your obstacles identify them
Step three is to diagnose them to get at the root cause of the problem.
And that could be many root causes, but it could also be your weaknesses or weaknesses of
others, but you have to be objective about them.
Once you diagnose them, then you go to step four, which is to design a way to get around
them.
And then, after you have that design, you implement that design, so you
have to follow through and do it. And you do that, and that will then produce its new results,
which should be better results. I have, I call this kind of a looping process. It's the
evolutionary looping process. And you do, you just keep doing that,
and you learn over a period of time,
and you move in the direction that you want.
Last question, and you only have one minute to answer.
You dedicate the book, quote,
to my grandchildren and those of their generation
who will be participants in the continuation of the story. May the force of evolution be with you.
So let me ask, where is this force of evolution taking human civilization?
And what in this story that evolution is writing gives you hope?
Evolution is a direction toward improvement. And the greatest force is man's capacity to adapt and invent.
And so you see in the charts in the book, you see that this upward movement, life expect
and see health, all the things that we think are better. You see, there's a chart and it
shows that over a period of time and you barely see the downturns from depressions and wars
in that. That is the greatest power. Man's ability to event and adapt is evolution and that's the greatest power and that is what
gives me justifiable hope. And a continuation of that, like we mentioned with Elon, maybe we'll
become a multi-planetary species. So not only will we keep creating amazing things here on Earth,
we'll keep expanding out into the cosmos. My time horizon isn't, person have me analyzing that yet, but I hope so when I agree that
that would be in the next.
So I'm not going to ask you for the best financial system on Mars.
I think we'll focus on earth now.
Thank you so much for your brilliance, for the books you've written, for the works you've
done, for the inspiration of millions.
So, and thank you for spending your valuable time here with me today.
Thank you.
Thanks for listening to this conversation with Ray Dalio.
To support this podcast, please check out our sponsors in the description.
And now, let me leave you with some words from Ray Dalio himself.
Every time you confront something painful, you are at a potentially important juncture
in your life.
You have the opportunity to choose healthy and painful truth, or unhealthy but comfortable
delusion.
Thank you for listening, and hope to see you next time. you