Modern Wisdom - #904 - Rory Sutherland - The Secret Weapons Of Marketing Psychology
Episode Date: February 17, 2025Rory Sutherland is one of the world’s leading consumer behaviour experts, the Vice Chairman of Ogilvy Advertising and an author. Every moment of the day, you're being marketed to. From the instant ...you check your phone in the morning to the subtle strategies behind political campaigns. So how can you decode the world around you and master the art of marketing? Expect to learn how effective companies will be at getting their employees back in office, Rory’s thoughts on Jaguars rebrand, what Rory thinks of the current state of British culture at the moment, what causes Overton windows to shift, what the Myth of Collective Wisdom is, the assessment of Trumps successful marketing campaign for president, If people who pay more taxes should get special privileges, how to make a boring product interesting, what makes a brand cool and much more… Sponsors: See discounts for all the products I use and recommend: https://chriswillx.com/deals Get a Free Sample Pack of all LMNT Flavours with your first purchase at https://drinklmnt.com/modernwisdom Get a 20% discount on the best supplements from Momentous at https://livemomentous.com/modernwisdom Get the best bloodwork analysis in America at https://functionhealth.com/modernwisdom Sign up for a one-dollar-per-month trial period from Shopify at https://shopify.com/modernwisdom Extra Stuff: Get my free reading list of 100 books to read before you die: https://chriswillx.com/books Try my productivity energy drink Neutonic: https://neutonic.com/modernwisdom Episodes You Might Enjoy: #577 - David Goggins - This Is How To Master Your Life: https://tinyurl.com/43hv6y59 #712 - Dr Jordan Peterson - How To Destroy Your Negative Beliefs: https://tinyurl.com/2rtz7avf #700 - Dr Andrew Huberman - The Secret Tools To Hack Your Brain: https://tinyurl.com/3ccn5vkp - Get In Touch: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chriswillx Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/chriswillx YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/modernwisdompodcast Email: https://chriswillx.com/contact - Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
So talking about lockdown, how effective do you think companies will be at dragging people back into the office?
It's interesting actually because in the UK, for whatever reason, there are exceptions.
If you go to tech companies, there's tumbleweed, companies which are very strongly kind of tech engineering driven, still seem to be very empty.
What I know best is the ad industry and actually they're generally a fairly
gregarious bunch and I think it's returned to a pretty acceptable kind of equilibrium.
And by the way, I don't, I don't want, well, personally, I don't want to see
people in the office five days a week because everybody who's engaged in some
sort of part of the knowledge economy, 20 to 40% of your working week is going
to be stuff where you just need to truckle down, choose your own environment and get on with it.
And you're much more likely to be more productive if you have some degree of discretion over where
and when you work for those tasks that you perform on your own. But there is this value of what you might call serendipity coaching, for
example, co-creation, collaboration, which I think still requires some
degree of, of, of co-location.
Uh, you know, it helps to have people in the same place at the same
time for all kinds of reasons.
However, what's weird is that the level of absenteeism, if you want, I don't
want to call it that, but you want, I don't want to
call it that, but you know what I mean?
Okay.
Is much, much higher in the U S and Canada than it is in the UK.
Now I don't see.
I, well, some of it's probably geographical in the simple sense that
there are people who've moved.
In other words, it's difficult in the UK to move so far away from the office that
you can't come in for one or two days of the week.
You have to choose an island somewhere, you know, or, or go to Scotland.
Um, in the U S there does seem to have been a sort of widespread dispersion of
people to a distance away from their place of work where it's a flight away,
not a train ride away, but, uh, it's not, it's absolutely not what I would have predicted.
Because if anything, the, um, the U S had a very strong culture of presenteeism of
people effectively getting in early, staying late, uh, being absolutely
desperate to show their face.
And the, uh, the office occupancy rates are much, much lower in the U S and Canada
than they are in Europe or the UK.
One of our mutual friends has a team that works remotely around the world.
So they speak to each other on Slack, but they don't see each other in the office.
And as part of a team building exercise, I think every so often they bring people
together and he thought this would be brilliant.
Everyone's going to get to know each other.
They're going to become friends.
It's going to bond the team together so much.
And he thought this would be brilliant. Everyone's going to get to know each other.
They're going to become friends.
It's going to bond the team together so much.
The week after they had this in-person meetup separately, three people asked for
a pay rise because they all got together and had a beer and were like, so what are
you on?
Hang on a second.
I was told such a, because you don't have that kind of non-critical conversation.
If you're just dealing with people on Slack, right?
First off, there's a digital record of it.
Maybe someone's able to check, I don't know.
Can the admin check Slack?
Maybe they can, I don't know.
And secondly, it's like, we're just here to do the job.
This isn't sort of play around time outside of work.
And do you really text the other marketing guy or whatever after work
about stuff to do with it?
Probably not.
So there is from a totally Machiavellian totalitarian state
organization point of view, there is an argument to be made.
Divide the rule.
Silo off.
Yeah.
Compartmentalize the staff and then they never know if one of them's managed to
negotiate a pay rise and the rest of them haven't.
That reminds me of an agency back in the 1990s who sent their staff on
assertiveness training
and they all came back and half of them resigned.
Oh God.
Be careful the skills, be careful the skills that you give to the staff.
No, no, no, be careful what you wish for.
Yeah.
It is interesting by the way, because one thing that's disappointed me is there seems
to, I expected to see much, much greater levels of investment in really
interesting remote working hardware.
And by which I mean, really, really good tech at home.
There is a project apparently in the works called Google starline, which is a kind of
3d video conferencing, which there's a team at Google probably still working on.
I hope so. Um, but you have, I mean, don't forget, you have a problem now in that
offices have mostly shrunk their footprint.
They still aren't kitted out for the frequency of video calls.
In other words, the number of private pods in an office is too few.
The number of meeting rooms is probably too many.
So there's a whole architectural problem to be addressed in terms of how, because
if I had a day with mostly video calls, I'd want to do it at home because it's easier to do that
than it is to try and find the right conditions in an office.
The other point I make is that
there are a lot of things where
it's very difficult to
sell people on the new behavior, but once they've experienced the new behavior, the
old behavior seems ridiculous.
An example I always gave of that is nobody minded buying CDs when it was the only way
you could listen to music.
You just accept it.
Okay, I don't really want to buy a whole album.
I just want to buy a track
But you know, it's just what you do if you buy music then you had downloads Of course the music industry resisted this furiously the whole idea of downloading
Even even to the point of not making it possible for people to download things legally
Yeah, and the problem there is once you'd experienced downloads, the CD seemed
suddenly ridiculous. And to some extent, we didn't mind commuting in the same way when
we just thought this is just a necessary part of the office.
Work is the place you go to.
It's just work is the place you go to. It's Wednesday, it's Friday. So I go into the office,
that's the deal. The time you spend on the train, the time you spent cleaning your teeth
and getting up early and doing your ablutions didn't feel like a waste of time.
Okay.
Because it was just what you had to do.
The second you've experienced the alternative, which is get out of bed, put a cardigan over
your pajamas and click join meeting.
All of that kind of palaver suddenly seems twice as painful.
And I've got one of those fantastic cooker taps that produces boiling water on
demand and it was difficult to persuade my wife to get one.
Um, but once you have one of those things, waiting for a kettle to
boil feels somehow weirdly Victorian.
Prehistoric.
Yeah.
And so technology often works that way that actually interesting with electric cars, for
example, the latest data seems to suggest that although there's a huge amount of resistance
to electric cars, the people who make the move generally don't go back.
Once you've actually, once you've kind of gone over that first initial hurdle of adoption,
you don't revert.
What does that suggest from a sort of consumer behavior standpoint then that there is a kind of price that needs to be
paid upfront kind of make it kind of makes me think that the
first movers within that industry don't necessarily have
the best advantage because they presumably need to pay the most
money in terms of marketing to break not only somebody into
their brand, but break them into an entire new ecosystem
of tap of vehicles. Quite often, early technology is probably driven by status seeking rather than
utility. So if you think about early adopters of cars, which were unreliable and expensive,
the motivation was either novelty or showing off rather than utility.
Apple vision pro as the 2024 example.
Apple vision pro would be exactly the point. I would argue that, yeah, you want to be the
one person in your street who has that thing. And actually those early adopters do in a
weird way pay a price. But I mean, there's an argument by the way, which is that this also happens
in nature, which is the argument that birds, dinosaurs conceivably evolved
plumage and wings for sexual display purposes, not as a mode of transportation.
So in other words, they did this thing as it was a peacock's tail, but it was
on the sides rather than on the back. Okay. And you could display your feathers as a proof of your health and magnificence.
And then, so this effectively evolved as a status signaling mechanism and then was parlayed
into a mode of transportation because the wings became big enough to enable them to
be used. Oh, it's a mass. It's a massive phallic appendage in one form or another that they can then
fly with.
So you might argue that that's true of thing, you know, I mean, I've always wondered about
technologies like the typewriter, where I can't really see, okay, there's an advantage
in legibility over handwriting.
But for a period of about 40 or 50 years, people would write a note.
This is how it worked in business.
I'm not making this up, okay.
In the 70s in Ogilvy, there was a typing pool, which was a lot of people who you would hand
them a handwritten note and they'd type it up so that you could then send it onto your
client.
And then typically there was always a mistake.
So you then had to send it back and your client. And then typically there was always a mistake, so you then had to
send it back and have it typed. There were no word processors then, so the whole thing had to
start all over again from scratch. And the question you've got to ask there is, was that simply because
you weren't a serious business unless you sent typewritten communication signaling? In other
words, you couldn't as a solicitor's firm or as a, you know, Unilever
or whatever, you couldn't send handwritten notes because it simply looked unprofessional.
So everything had to be typed.
Now, there may have been something to do with carbon paper and copying, which had some particular
role, which made typing desirable, but it's an interesting question because there's not
a, no one could really consider that typing added to productivity quite the opposite.
It meant that every communication producing anything was painful.
The only benefit it may have had is it kept the volume of communication low.
Because it's so effortful.
Well, because it was so effortful.
Whereas email, the cost of actually sending an email to a hundred people is far too
low because then the burden of the burden of both filtering and prioritizing
falls on the recipient, not on the sender.
Yeah.
It's a terror.
I mean, it's very, it does amuse me this, which is there's this hostility
to flexible working, which is partly driven by the suspicion that
people might be enjoying it.
Now, okay.
So it's not really to do with productivity, but there are people, I mean, someone in my
company I won't name was driven practically insane by the fact that the Netflix CEO revealed
that there was a spike in Netflix viewing between 12 and one in many countries.
Lunchtime.
Now, first of all, it's lunchtime.
Okay.
You know, it's accepted that people have a break if they want to chill out by
having a sandwich in front of Netflix rather than wandering around to Pret.
It doesn't bother me personally, but also I would argue that a lot of people would
be much more productive in work if they started work early, took a three hour
break in the middle of the day and then worked later.
Now commuting makes that impossible to do, but I would argue that your energy
levels would be much better managed if you did take a break in the middle of the
day with the additional bonus that you'd actually get a bit of sunlight.
Yeah.
A bit of exposure.
You can maybe pick the kids up at the end of that.
If you're a Scandi, okay, in the winter, you go to work in the dark,
you come home in the dark.
So effectively your exposure to natural light is Saturday and
Sunday for three or four hours.
So that doesn't bother me, the fact that people are actually choosing. If you look at writers,
you know, the people who are professional writers, journalists, novelists,
they're very different, by the way, but all of them have sort of conditions under which they
can and can't write. And they vary. Some people demand complete silence.
Some people go to a cafe because they want some background noise.
But what these people clearly know is that they can optimize their productivity
by controlling the conditions in which they write.
And it strikes me as pretty plausible.
That's true for other forms of knowledge work, where some people can't work
if there's any background noise or chatter, other people can't work in complete silence
because it spooks them out.
I've known writers who, you know, if there's someone operating an electric drill seven
houses down, they're incapable of producing anything.
There are other people who are spectacularly disciplined.
Now it does strike me that you will make people more productive if you allow them some
degree of autonomy to control the environment in which they produce their work.
Now, I'm not suggesting that's five days a week, but I'm suggesting it seems to be implausible
that giving people some degree of autonomy won't have benefits.
But the interesting thing is, if you look at business, we've imposed
loads of things on people, open plan offices, email, okay.
Slack teams, et cetera, without any real investigation of the effect
it has on productivity, but we don't really care because the staff don't
really enjoy that, so we don't have to worry about it.
But the second you have an experiment where the
workforce seemed to welcome it.
Suddenly, everybody has, Oh my God, they've gone to
Sainsbury's on Thursday lunchtime.
Well, they're going to have to go to Sainsbury's at
some time anyway.
Okay.
Yes.
Okay.
They're doing it during daylight when the store's quiet.
Well, if they're working at nine till 10, which they can do
because they don't have to get up at seven o'clock in the morning, who cares? Okay. when the store's quiet, well, if they're working at nine till 10, which they can do because
they don't have to get up at seven o'clock in the morning, who cares?
Okay.
What do you mean when you say that we're too impatient to be intelligent?
Oh, that's simply a question, which is, I think it's a wider question.
So, I mean, email, which I mentioned earlier, is an interesting case in point in that it
was assumed that there could be no finer form of communication other than immediate and free. And we automatically
assume that faster is better. And one of the questions I raised, which I still think is a
serious question, by the way, is do we need slow AI? Do we need slow Tinder? Do we need slow right move? Let me explain just what
I mean by this, which is that in most processes of search, if you look at consumers, what
they do is they refine their preferences according to what they find out there. So they go into
the property market, the dating market, the holiday market, and they have
a set list of preferences to begin with.
If you talk to any real estate agent, most people who deal with a human real estate agent
end up buying or renting a property which meets remarkably few, if any, of their initial
criteria.
That's probably true of the people people marry as well,
I would guess.
That if you ask someone effectively to write down,
put it very simply, we think we know what we want,
but we don't, is probably the simplest way in which,
and the way we discover what we want
is by a kind of exploratory process of discovery
where we explore the market and what's available and what they cost and what we want is by a kind of exploratory process of discovery where we explore the
market and what's available and what they cost and what we experience when having a
look at a particular house or person then refines up references. And so this, what you
might call the right move approach to decision making, which is define what you like, we
give it to you, you buy one of those.
Okay?
Looks to us as if it's a perfectly sensible and efficient way of choosing a house.
But actually, we don't see what we don't see.
Actually, I was talking to someone this morning, I better not give away who they are, who discovered
that right move, there are areas of London,
which are holes.
In other words, they don't fall into any predefined area
on right move.
And property prices in those areas are disproportionately
low because you can't search for any property
that's in that area.
Now it might be if you're looking for a much bigger area,
but in other words, they're not in Kensington,
they're not in Notting Hill. In other words, they're not in Kensington. They're not in Notting Hill.
In other words, they're these weird little islands of undefined location where you can
actually have disproportionately cheap property because right move is kind of blind to their
existence.
Wow.
You also have the problem, which is you can't sell a property apparently now for 850,000
pounds.
Your estate agent or anybody else will tell you, no, no, you've got to make it say
810 or 990.
Okay.
That's fine.
And the reason is that people search for property, either
900,000 and down or 800,000 and up.
And two things happen.
One, they're less likely to find you at all because you're further away from their searching
point.
Secondly, if they do find you, the people who are searching 900 and down are a bit disquieted
because they think you're too cheap and the people who are searching 800 and up think
you're a bit too expensive.
So the extent to which what seems like a completely rational filtration process in online searching
activity or decision making may be deeply flawed because it doesn't reflect the way in which we
make decisions in the real world, which is we recalibrate what we want according to what we find.
We'll get back to talking to Rory in one minute, but first I need to tell you about Element. For
the last three years I've started every morning with Element. Element is a tasty electrolyte drink mix with everything
that you need and nothing that you don't. Each Grab and Go stick contains a science-backed
electrolyte ratio of sodium, potassium and magnesium with no coloring, no artificial ingredients or any
other junk. Proper hydration isn't just about getting sufficient water in you, it's about having the right number of electrolytes
to use the fluids that are inside of your body. You might not be tired, you
might not need more caffeine, you might just be dehydrated and proper hydration
requires electrolytes. Best of all they have a no questions asked refund policy
with an unlimited duration so you can buy it and try it for as long as you
want and if you do not like it for any reason they'll give you your money back
and you don't even
need to return the box.
That's how confident they are that you love it.
This thing tastes phenomenal.
It's like a sweet salty orangey nectar first thing in the morning and I love it.
And that's why I've used it for probably a thousand days now.
Right now you can get a free sample pack of all eight flavors with your first box by going
to the link in the description below or heading to drink LMNT.com slash modern wisdom that's drink LMNT.com slash modern wisdom.
What was that parable of three men getting onto an airplane?
Oh, the story at the beginning.
No, that's just a story about how undoubtedly in all kinds of areas, driven partly by technology,
what's urgent crowds out what's important.
And it's a joke, it's an old advertising joke told to me by someone who is literally from
the madman era, which is you have a copywriter and art director and an account man, okay,
who are boarding a plane to present work to a client.
And they open the overhead locker and somewhat implausibly a genie gets out and says, I've been
trapped in that overhead locker for years to thank you all for releasing me. I'll give you each a wish
so you can choose anything you want. And they go to the art director who says, I'd like Picasso's
life. You know, I don't mind my life but I want Picasso's life.
The location is the eye, the artistry, you know, probably the women folk, the romantic life.
That's what I really want. And whoosh, the art director disappears.
And then the genie turns to the copyrighter who goes, it's got to be Hemingway.
You know, he enumerates a whole load of reasons why he'd like to be able to write and live like
Hemingway and whoosh disappears.
And then the genie turns to the account man and says, what about your wish?
He says, I want those two guys back.
I've got an important meeting in two and a half hours.
Okay.
And there is that element where, and by the way, we could refer to this in everything
from things like the shareholder value movement to business quarterly reporting, to the extent to which
in advertising too much money is spent on short-term performance advertising and too
little is spent on long-term brand building.
And that's not because it's necessarily more valuable, it's because it delivers measurable
results faster.
So I'll give you a fundamental problem.
The FT wrote a very, very good article specifically about the UK, but I think it applies more
widely which is, how did customer service get so bad?
Now the point is, I felt like writing an article to the FT saying, well, if you occasionally
acknowledged there was something interesting about business other than their quarterly
financial forecasts, maybe the problem wouldn't have happened.
If you actually discussed marketing occasionally or customer experience or
you know the value of repeat business, if you looked at business from the point of
view of what you might call a competition for customers rather than
the competition for operational efficiencies and cost cutting. Maybe we wouldn't have gone into this total shit storm.
Okay.
But parking that rant for a moment.
What seems obvious, okay, if you spend some money on acquiring customers, you can see
whether it's working very quickly.
And you can say very confidently, we spend X and the value of the acquired customers
was Y.
Let's say you want to make a corresponding investment in customer loyalty or customer experience.
In other words, ensuring your existing customers have a great experience and so they come back or dealing with problems very well so that your customers don't leave.
Generally, you could perfectly well prove that that was cost effective.
And indeed, my hunch would be that money spent there would be more cost effective in many
cases than money spent on acquisition.
However, it might take you five years to prove the efficacy of what you do because it's slower.
There are businesses which are fast. There are businesses which are fast, there are
businesses which are slow, there are fast feedback businesses which you learn very
quickly. An example by the way of very fast feedback business is comedy. You
have an instant feedback mechanism from the audience which basically tells you
whether or not a joke is any good and whether you've landed it. And so
apparently if you go to small comedy clubs you'll occasionally be surprised because you're sitting there and there are only sort of 20 tables and
Chris Rock will come in and effectively it's all a bit weird but he's trying
out his new material for the next run. Before you go to bigger theaters
you try your material out on a small scale. And that's a fast feedback
business. Amazon's a a fast feedback business.
Amazon's a pretty fast feedback business, I would argue, because it has a very
high degree of frequency of interaction with customers, something like banking
or insurance is unbelievably slow.
I mean, if you're a bank and you piss off a customer, they don't even leave, by
the way, they just go in there.
Okay.
It's not, it's not like people go, I'm going to close my current account and
I get a walk off, they just open another current account somewhere else, your current account.
They don't buy anything, any other products from you, but it's not the same
as, uh, as something like comedy where you know within seconds, how, whether
you've landed something or not.
And then there are also things which I, which bothered me, which is there are
also things where I was talking to is, there are also things where,
I was talking to the guy who founded AO and they have this lovely little system where
when they deliver a washing machine or a dishwasher or whatever, if there are children in the
house, because they deliver things themselves, they give the children a little branded bear.
Okay?
Now, as he said perfectly right, you know, someone in finance is going to say, okay,
what's the cost benefit analysis?
Okay, on that.
And his point is, it's impossible.
You just have to make a judgment, subjective judgment that the cost of the bear is trivial
and the long term effect is likely to be quite high.
What's that thing about the Bezos has got when anecdotes disagree with data most of
the time? trust the anecdote.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
The interesting thing with Bezos is he's gonna,
I mean, this is true of all those people.
I mean, you know, the sort of,
also very true of Elon Musk.
They have a very unusual, sometimes highly,
seemingly irrational thinking style.
Speaking to someone who is very senior early on at Amazon,
everybody except Bezos hated the idea of Amazon Prime.
They hated the idea of Prime Video.
They didn't like the idea of Amazon Web Services.
Now, Jeff has an interesting notion,
which is what he calls a two-way door.
If you talk to people, by the way, at Amazon,
it's a very, very interesting,
I'm not sure I could cope with it, to be honest,
but it is a very, very interesting culture
in terms of its approach to everything
from meetings to decision-making.
What a two-way door is,
is something where you can walk through the door
and if you don't like what you see, you can walk back.
So a one-way door would be deciding to build
a sort of two million square foot distribution
center north of Memphis.
Once you've built that, it's difficult, not impossible, but it's difficult to reverse
the decision.
There, you actually depend on a large degree of decision making, rigor and rationality,
and you need a really rigorous case.
But in other cases, Jeff would say it's a two way door.
Try it.
If it works, whoop de doo, that's great.
If it doesn't work, we simply stop doing it.
And to be honest, the trial possibly costs less than we would have spent
just arguing about it if we were adopting a kind of purist approach.
And I think it is important because why I think this is becoming vitally important is most
business is probabilistic, but everybody in business wants to prove and pretend that it's
deterministic.
So every spreadsheet is in some ways an act of pretense because it's past information,
which you pretend has wonderful predictive value as if it's kind of Laplace's demon, but it really doesn't.
Okay.
Cause weird shit happens out of nowhere all the time.
And you have this fundamental problem, I think, where I think what distinguishes someone
like Jeff is their probabilistic thinkers.
They just go, well, look, it probably won't work, but if it does, it will be spectacular.
And they are in a position where they can take those decisions.
In their defense, most people, I think, first of all, most people are
promoted within business for their aptitude in solving reductionist
deterministic problems.
How do you optimize this particular-
There's a number in the far right hand column of a spreadsheet somewhere
next to a person's name that says that was green this year.
They made the number go up.
Yeah, absolutely right.
Yeah.
And actually, by the way, they probably, in most cases in business, you capture remarkably few of the gains from a bold decision.
Whereas you capture 100% of the blame if it goes wrong.
Correct.
Yeah.
blame if it goes wrong.
Correct.
Yeah.
So, so certain decisions, decisions, which are what you might call, you know,
low chance of success, huge return.
That's when people leave a business and become an entrepreneur because they realize that there's no point in actually doing those kinds of things within a
business, because if things do well, you get a pat on the back and a, you know,
and a bonus, if things go badly, you lose your job.
Speaking of things going badly, Jaguar's rebrand.
What do you reckon?
I'm in a small minority of people who would argue that before you criticize
what someone does, you've got to understand what they're trying to do.
And they have been completely forthright about the fact they expect to lose all
but 15% of their customers.
All but 15% of their customers.
All but 15% of their customers.
Exactly, of their customers by moving to a much more upmarket expensive car on an electric
platform.
And the argument I might make is that normally what they did is anathema to anybody who loves
what you might call brand maintenance and brand management because, but by the way,
they didn't change their name.
Okay.
They didn't call the car Zog.
They still call it Jaguar.
They still, contrary to rumors, have, in a sense it's, look,
bet the farm here. Okay, either we do this, we either succeed, in which case great, or if we fail,
to be honest, we were heading for disaster anyway, because you've got to be slightly careful. This
is where, you know, okay, when Dylan went electronic, okay, someone shouted Judas,
the crowd in the Manchester free trade hall absolutely hated it.
Jaguar purists are going to hate anything.
By the way, I've had six Jags, by the way, so I'm, you know, I'm a loyal Jag enthusiast.
I love the brand.
And in many ways, I love a lot of the heritage about that
brand. But equally, I love red telephone boxes, but I don't think it should be the BT logo.
Okay, I love, you know, what is it, Giles Gilbert Scott's design for red telephone boxes,
but I'm also cognizant of the fact that I don't make many calls from pay phones anymore.
And I like Burberry Macs, but I'm also cognizant of the fact that because of various things like, you know, central
heating and Uber, not many people wear Macintoshes anymore, you know, apart from
Americans and flashers, in my experience. I was saying this the other day. Now, there
are occasions where you might argue that electrification completely reshapes the competitive landscape for any car brand or any car manufacturer.
And that what you have to do is a fairly dramatic pivot.
I'm going to join you in there.
Get that in you.
Absolutely.
Not enough stimulants in us.
Exactly.
There are cases, Kid A for example, where bands produce an album that kind of
alienates their existing fan base.
Okay.
You might argue that for Jaguar, this was a kind of Sergeant Pepper moment.
Okay.
Where we've got, you know, fundamentally we've got to do, am I right? That there was a sort of pet sound, the Sergeant Pepper interplay going on,
which was who was first.
Were they on some trajectory toward slow motion irrelevance?
Was that why they were going?
The problem with Jaguars, lots of people loved the brand, but the people who loved
the brand didn't necessarily buy Jaguars from new in particular.
Right.
And the new car buyer is a pretty niche audience to begin with.
I thought the ad was deeply weird. It wasn't produced by an ad agency, by the way.
It was, someone said it was less a branding exercise than a de-branding exercise.
You might make the contrary position, which is that it got millions and millions of people
all over the world talking about Jaguar.
Yeah.
I mean, it hadn't happened for years.
Now, you know, I'm not, I'm not one of those people.
Any publicity is good publicity that emphatically is not true.
Okay.
Um, however, it did signal the fact and by the way, it's not as if Jaguar
hasn't done this before, okay? That
a big change was afoot and that something remarkable was going to emerge. And the new
car, by the way, which we've only just seen this morning, just for people listening.
I haven't seen it. What is it?
It's highly polarizing. It's an extraordinarily bold design. I personally like it. It seems
to come in two colors, Miami pink and London blue.
And the idea of a pink Jaguar is transgressive.
Heretical. Exactly.
Yeah.
Uh, I don't know whether you saw their Twitter was replying to people that
were criticizing the campaign, whoever it is in the marketing department, they're
being very, um, non-apologetic about what they were doing.
We don't care about what it was before.
This is a new era, et cetera, et cetera.
You know, really no as or graces about trying to bring along the heritage or the...
Well, bear in mind, they have got an advantage.
Now, if you look at it from the mindset of a game theorist, okay, if you're a volume
carmaker, electrification is goddamned terrifying. It's Clay Christensen and the
innovators dilemma because you've got this huge sunk cost in both expertise and plant in producing
internal combustion engine cars. You have this incredible engineering heritage which you know
don't get me wrong I love that stuff. I love steam trains. Okay. I love red telephone boxes.
I love driving gloves, E-types, you know, girls from Lucy Clayton being taught how to get in and
out of an E-type without showing your pants. Okay. Which apparently was something that finishing
schools taught in the 1960s. All of that heritage is wonderful. But when technology comes in, I mean,
But when technology comes in, I mean, okay, Blackberry purists, okay, this is, this is, you know, this is a kind of rim moment where electrification fundamentally changes what
it means to be a great car.
Because probably reliability, assuming the software doesn't go wonky, is going to be
pretty damn good.
Okay, now, I recently had a bit of an issue where somebody said electric cars are
expensive and I kind of went, well, kind of depends, doesn't it?
Because an electric Skoda will be more expensive currently than a petrol
Skoda, but in performance and quietness and, you know, and driving dynamics and
efficiency and, you know, the, the electric Skoda is probably more akin to a petrol
Audi than it is to a petrol Skoda.
And the guy I met, who's the kind of electric car guru at wired magazine was
asking this very same question, which is, okay, you've got a bunch of engineers.
You've got a bunch of, you know, if you think about it, the people who hated
Dylan going electronic were folk people. I rather like folk music, but it doesn't really exist anymore,
does it? Okay. I mean, you get the odd little-
So he saw the writing on the wall, but got shouted at for having been ahead of the curve.
Dylan had seen the writing on the wall and decided, okay. And someone shouts Judas at him. I don't believe you play it fucking loud as he replies.
Right now.
Um, you might argue that Jaguar has had a bit of a Dylan moment, which is, look,
the things that made us great at Le Mans or in the age of Mike Hawthorne,
fundamentally what the hell is a car in 2030, 2040, when pretty much any car can deliver
all the performance and indeed the quietness that a normal driver would hope for.
Okay.
And the Wired guy asked the question, is it going to be all about interiors?
Is it going to be all about design?
Is it going to...
Because, okay, a very simple, tough question for Jaguar
Land Rover is we've got Chinese competition.
We're never going to kind of undercut them, given labor
costs, all the other costs that apply.
How on earth do we carve out a niche for
ourselves in this new future?
Now, for a small car manufacturer and a small
volume manufacturer, Jaguar is making about 60,000 a year.
They do have one advantage, which is they can completely pivot and start all over again.
Whereas a large volume car maker has to manage this incredibly painful transition.
Complex supply chain, et cetera, et cetera.
There's a whole German, we're going to, Rittlstadt, you know, which supplies,
you know, fan belts and weird bits, all of that goes. Cause I mean, this is one thing, by the
way, which I think we ought to say about electric cars, which I think is missed by a lot of people,
which is that if you look at a petrol engine, which is, you know, it's a cathedral, it's a magnificent achievement,
a really advanced, you know, petrol engine. All of those things that move and rattle and
bump and filter things and need to be replaced and the gearbox and all that stuff, all of
those things exist for only one reason, which is to rotate a shaft to provide forward movement. Now I'm team Faraday here because the way an electric motor works is you put electricity in,
it rotates. Which explains why with the possible exception of your lawnmower every single rotating
moving thing in your house uses electricity as the motive power not petrol. Okay you
know there is a wonderful advertisement by the way which was done I think for I
think it was either Renault I think it was the Renault the first electric Renault
which is equivalent to the Nissan Leaf where they simply showed someone getting
up in the morning and their elect that what would have been their electric
toothbrush was actually powered by a little gasoline engine. Ah that's very they shaved and there was sort of fumes coming out of their race. Very good
Okay, and it made that very simple point that nearly everything else in your life has gone electric
It was only a matter of time before battery technology driven actually probably by the mobile phone industry
Made this possible for the car. I mean, by the way, Henry Ford and Edison worked together on an electric car
It's interesting the resistance that people have, especially around vehicles, you know,
I guess second to a house, a car is a, it's a type of identifier in a way, it's a status
symbol. It's probably in terms of purchasing, it's going to be second largest in terms of
your capital expenditure.
You know, by the way, when you go back up north, that northerners have nicer cars than southerners
do. Why do you think that is?
Their houses are less expensive.
Right. But the price is the same of a Jaguar in Newcastle as a Jaguar in...
You get this extraordinary phenomenon in London, which really depresses me,
which I've known people like this, who literally have a 1.2 million pound house and
a thousand pound car.
Fiat Cinquecento or something.
It pains the f...
I mean, come on.
I mean, the car is a much greater thing than the houses looked as a piece of technology.
Okay?
You know, you're a car fan or you're one of these weird people who just like young people
Ubers around the place.
So I have single-handedly kept Uber liquid in Austin, Texas. Yeah. But no, I have a, I think I said to you last year,
I was threatening to get a Camaro and sure enough,
I did at the start of this year.
Yeah, the only way that I can non-ironically
buy an American muscle car is when I live in Texas
with an American driving license.
You just need it to fit in.
Correct.
Well, yeah, I mean, it's par for the cost.
You know, if somebody drives, somebody drives
an American pickup truck, a Ford Raptor or whatever the equivalent, a Ranger, I think they call it over here.
If somebody drives that over here, you feel like they're cosplaying.
If somebody drives it in America, you think, Oh, that's, that's cute compared
to the Tundra next to you and the six, the six bed, whatever.
There's a Ford F 350.
I think it might be a 450 isn't there as well.
It goes all the way up, dude.
In Texas, there's ones where, you know, some guy will happily throw his kids in
the back and take them to the park on a Saturday morning or pull what appears to
be an articulated lorry behind him on a Monday morning.
I is very versatile in that way.
One other thing.
You haven't got a big motor home yet.
That would be one of my temptations if I moved to Texas.
An RV would be, would be quite nice.
Um, one of the things that I've been thinking about since I've been staying here, I'm at the Royal Garden Hotel in Kensington.
And on the front door, there's maybe two or three doorman.
And it's not so much of a, at least the places that I tend to stay in America, it doesn't seem to be so much of a trait.
Yet over here, it could be replaced.
I've heard you talk about this before.
It could be replaced with an opening door.
It could be replaced with a series heard you talk about this before. It could be replaced with an opening door.
It could be replaced with a series of sensors and buttons and switches, but
it's not necessarily about that.
It's about the experience of the doorman being outside.
What you're doing there is the old consulting trick of you define the doorman
in terms that make him most amenable to automation.
So you get to go function of do, opening door, replace the doorman with
a, an infrared automatic door mechanism, lay claim to the savings.
Um, but an awful lot of consulting activity, do you know management consulting
firms engaged in this thing, which is called, um, gain sharing.
Now I can't believe that anyone in a company
would sign up to this agreement because it's appalling.
Where they effectively say,
we will effectively define the costs we have saved you
and we want you to pay us a proportion
of the cost savings which we identify.
But as Roger L. Martin says, any idiot can cut costs.
The real skill comes in cutting costs
without actually losing
long term revenue as a consequence.
And so short term cost cutting is dangerously easy.
This is where I come back to that point of we're too impatient to be intelligent, that
intelligence and wisdom is slow, whereas seeming logic is fast.
You can seemingly logically replace the doorman with a automatic door opening device.
What you're failing to notice is the other tacit
and subtle human functions which are doorman,
which might be recognition, hailing, taxis,
also security, okay?
Basically, you don't want drunkards sleeping
in your entrance to your hotel.
And simply maintaining the status of the hotel. That arriving at a hotel, which is notionally a
five-star hotel and kind of, you know, just being met with an automatic door. Even if it's very
fancy automatic door. Americans have come to a London. Americans want a London hotel. Okay.
If you take American or for that matter, Asian tourists, they want London to be a bit Londony with a guy in a top hat. Okay.
A friend of mine booked some friends from Los Angeles in the Hemple hotel, which was, I don't think it exists anymore. It was in Bayswater, but it's kind of like an LA hotel, which is in London W2. And they were gutted, these Los Angeles. I mean, they were very cool people, right?
But they said, if I come to London, I want horse brasses.
I want hunting prints.
Yeah.
Okay.
And so there are all these nuances, which I think are very, very easy to lose
because costs are quantifiable and instantaneous and opportunity costs.
Lost opportunities, lost revenue, that's slow and it's generally hard to actually quantify.
A lovely story about this, which I wrote about actually in the spectator, but people won't
mind hearing it once more, I hope.
I'm driving along this dual carriageway on the Welsh borders and we wanted to buy some
milk and the motorway service station appeared to be closed.
All the lights were off.
The kind of, you know, the petrol fuel logo was off.
The fuel prices were off.
It looked, you know, like, as I said, it's like the Bates motel.
It was completely kind of unlit.
My wife said, oh bugger, it's closed.
We, you know, we needed to buy her lacto free milk because she's convinced
she has lactose intolerance.
But I said, no, hold on a second. I remember going there on Christmas day.
I'm sure that a place that opens on Christmas day wouldn't close at seven o'clock in the evening.
Let's just go in anyway. And sure enough, we find a fully functioning 24 hour store with, I think,
might have been a Starbucks or something as well or a Burger King
and we're the only customers. It's hardly surprising we're the only customers because
everybody else on the road it looks like the place is closed. So I go up to the guy behind the till
I'm a marketing person you're pissing away revenue here this is insane there are you know every
every 10 minutes there are three cars driving past going. Oh shit your clothes
So I go to the guy behind the teller. Yeah
Why are the lights off on the road? Oh, yeah, I think the guy on the last shift forgot to turn them on
There was no urgency now it occurred to me when left and the lights were still off when I left.
If that guy had nicked a lion bar at two o'clock in the morning and been picked up on CCTV, right.
There would have been a kind of inquiry.
You know, he might've lost his job.
There would be extreme disciplinary action.
Cost of the lion bar is about, you know, one pound in lost revenue.
Okay.
The cost of leaving the lights off is probably,
certainly in revenue terms,
a thousand pounds that night, could have been more.
But sins of omission are much less,
dogs that don't bark in the night,
are much, much less easy to identify
than sins of commission.
And we correspondingly get much less upset by them.
And so what you often end up doing is there are a lot
of things like giving a soft toy to someone when you deliver their tumble dryer. It's
I mean, nobody, nobody would, can you imagine a world? I'd love this world, but I can't
really imagine it where someone goes, what you mean you deliver, you deliver things to
people with kids and you don't give them some branded merch. Okay. Are you serious? What
a fucking idiot.
The anchoring and set point that we have behind that.
But no, if for some reason, you know, there was a cost attached to something,
as opposed to opportunity costs, finance people basically pretend opportunities aren't there
because they're too nebulous as far as they're concerned to pay any attention to. But then you
wonder why companies aren't growing. And the reason is because they're fixated on the efficient performance of what
they're already doing and completely uninterested in what they're missing out on.
Trust really is everything when it comes to supplements.
A lot of brands may say they're top quality, but few can actually prove it,
which is why I partnered with Momentus.
They make the highest quality supplements on the planet.
Three of the products that I use to support my brain, body and sleep every day are Omega
3s, creatine and magnesium L3 and 8. Honestly, I try and limit the number of supplements
that I rely on, but when I take these consistently, they have a massive impact on my cognitive
performance, my strength and my sleep. Momentus are literally unparalleled when it comes to
rigorous third party testing. What you read on the label is what's in the product and absolutely nothing else.
Best of all, they have a 30-day money-back guarantee, so you can buy it and try it for 29 days.
And if you do not love it, they will give you your money back.
Plus, they ship internationally.
Right now, you can get 20% off everything site-wide plus that 30-day money-back guarantee
by going to the link in the description below or heading to livemomentous.com slash modern wisdom and using the code modern wisdom at checkouts.
That's L I V E M O M E N T O U S dot com slash modern wisdom and modern wisdom at checkout.
Talk to me about this, the problem with seeking solutions through addition rather than subtraction
thing that you've been on recently? That's an interesting observation, which is that we have an automatic default when we want to solve
a problem that we add things rather than removing them. There is actually a very good point. I think
Nassim made this point when Elon was appointed the director of government efficiency, where he said quite rightly,
you should be the director of government effectiveness, because it's perfectly
impossible to do things very efficiently, which you shouldn't be doing at all. And that's a Peter
Drucker quote, which is, I think nothing is more wasteful or stupid than to see something done
efficiently that shouldn't be done at all. And undoubtedly, I think there are, um, particularly among things which
are ostensibly well-intentioned.
Okay.
We never asked the question, would we be better off if we just got rid of this entirely?
And so there's a great quote from cybernetics, a guy called Stafford
Beers, where the quote is the purpose of the system is what it does.
Quite a lot of systems, quite a lot of bureaucracy has this ostensible purpose, which is entirely
praiseworthy and worthwhile. And so we actually attach much less scrutiny to that kind of
thing than we do to something that's actually selfish. I mean, you know, one thing about being a commercial company is people go, what's in
it for them?
Okay, what do they get out of this?
I'm suspicious.
This is too good to be true.
I'm not really comfortable with this.
You know, we deploy quite rightly, you know, high degrees of skepticism towards the private
sector because we want to know what they're up to. Now to some extent, if you're working in, for example, something that's altruistic or
charitable, we suspend that level of skepticism. We go, oh, so well-intentioned, isn't it brilliant?
Okay. Okay. Oh, they're working for so-and-so. Isn't that great? Now, it's nonetheless perfectly possible
that the ultimate consequences of that
well-intentioned action, first of all,
it's possible that the motivation isn't nearly
as wholesome as we may like to think.
But secondly, it's also possible that just because
something is well-intentioned doesn't mean
the consequences are necessarily positive or benign.
And so, I mean, there is undoubtedly a really interesting question of what should we stop
doing?
I mean, I'm very interested.
One of the reasons I'm very interested in flexible work is it occurs to me that companies
looked at in one way are actually very inefficient.
I tried to get, I didn't actually get our finance department.
I said, yeah, forget about the usual method of financial reporting.
Okay.
How much does a client have to pay us in fee income in order for my younger colleague,
by the way, the fact that they're younger is relevant because they're not kind
of vested in the property market as someone my age is, in order for my younger colleague
to go out and have a curry.
And what you look at is the client pays us, then there are various overheads and costs
and there's HR and finance and there's office space and there's all that other expense.
Then finally, the money trickles down to the salary
of the person actually doing the work.
Once the kind of landlord has taken their cut
and the shareholders have taken their cut
and everything else trickles down to my colleague.
Then from that incremental amount of money,
40% will probably go in tax.
Then of the remainder, 40%, maybe 50% will go in housing costs and
transportation costs, commuting costs.
So it works out that in order to buy my colleague, you know, you know, a
trip to the Koh-i-Noor, okay.
A client has to give us about 250 quid.
Now, my argument is if you could get rid of all that shit and just do the work on Zoom.
Okay.
In other words, in other words, the people, this seems to be an extraordinary extent to
which, you know, in large organizations, the people who are creating the value, the people
who are doing the real work.
I mean, it's amazing that capitalism functions at all when you look at the extent to which,
you know, money goes in and then incidental costs, particularly property, I'm Georgist,
okay, particularly, you know, property costs, chip away at all of that.
And so the actual incentive for the person to perform valuable work and the reward they
receive for it has mostly disappeared.
You were talking about feedback loops earlier on.
The feedback loop is so slow and it's so molested from what goes in to what actually
comes out the amount of time. You're on 30 days, you're on 60 days, you're on 60 days from the end
of the month. You got it.
It's the big problem on the backend, for instance, with podcasting platforms. So YouTube has gamified
not only for the audience, but also for the creators.
You have this little number that's one of 10.
So it compares where this video is now since published in terms of the
duration of time, 30 minutes, an hour, two hours, however long with other
videos and it tells you where it ranks first of 10.
Wow.
This is better than your last 10 videos at the same amount of time
at the same period after.
Exactly.
Obviously some things are slow burn and some things are fast burn.
Some things pick up afterward, but generally it's a pretty good indication.
So it's pretty good indicator, is it?
Yeah.
You do get the sort of Shawshank redemption phenomenon, don't you?
Where it kicks in, it kicks in toward the end.
But you don't have that, you don't have that on Spotify.
You don't have that on Instagram.
You don't have that on most other platforms because they're not
quite as creator focused.
And yeah, the power of feedback loops is,
is fucking unbelievable.
Speaking of the, you mentioned there, um, some inefficiencies within
the system and some changes to do with Britain, obviously 2 million
people just signed a petition to, we are disgruntled with Mr.
Starmer, Sir Starmer.
Uh, we want to make some changes there.
We've seen a lot of sort of turmoil and stuff across this year, generally 2024 in the UK.
What do you make of the state of sort of British culture,
the milieu that we're in at the moment?
I did make the joke that voting
labor and having a chancellor who's come from the Bank of England is
a bit like going on a club 1830 holiday and taking your parents along,
which it kind of defeats the object of the exercise a bit,
in that one of the things I think we would like to see
as voters, and I'm perfectly happy to give this government,
I think you have to give the people the benefit
of a few years before you get pissy about it.
I mean, that is actually, I'd be interested to know
who's signing that petition. Is it
people on the left who are just disappointed? Is it reform voters? Is it conservatives?
I don't know. Who is it who feels most kind of cheated? I mean, you've got to remember
that there are an awful lot of people who didn't vote for them if you consider the size
of their majority, okay? They've got a massive majority, but the share of the popular vote was fairly good.
I'm not sure if you can be disgruntled with somebody that you didn't vote for.
Well, it's interesting who's demanding a kind of, you know, run again.
Some of the things interest me because we kind of, I think a lot of people know that
there's fundamental inequity, intergenerational inequity, which is because salaries are taxed
very highly and wealth, particularly capital gains from your main property, are barely
taxed at all.
And that leads to, I think, a kind of absurdity, which is that one piece written about this is, it's not actually intergenerational inequality that's the problem. It's going to be intragenerational
inequality when people start inheriting houses or not inheriting houses, because you can literally have the situation where you can work incredibly hard for 30 years and reach a position of
some eminence in a business or in an institution.
And because your parents happen to live in an area of low house prices or didn't own
a house at all, you're still living somewhere crap.
Whereas your underlings, you know, whose parents
lived in Serberton or Kensington or whatever it may be, okay, are basically swanning around in
palaces going on cruises all the time. And that does strike me as a fundamental flaw that we've
created this system where unearned income, which is not really particularly meritocratic
or inherited income, is treated incredibly generously.
Whereas earned income, I think the top, if I'm right, is it the top 5% of taxpayers pay
50% or 60% of all income class?
So in America, it may be the same here too.
Probably the same here.
I mean, that's by the way, it's a kind of statistical artifact.
You generally, you usually find those power law effects.
So it's not quite as weird as it sounds, but nonetheless, that is quite
weird when you think about it.
Now, one thing I thought was extraordinarily interesting as an idea is, you know,
that chap who, who was it, who wrote the trading game, Gary Stevenson,
he makes a very valid point, whatever else you think, which is that nearly all economic
models use single representative agents to populate the models, which is they assume
that the person whom they're trying to optimize for is an average of everybody.
And as a consequence, inequality doesn't feature in those models because you're simply dealing
with an average.
And so if Bill Gates walks into a football stadium, everybody in the football stadium
is actually a millionaire suddenly on average.
It's simply not a reliable thing to do.
And one of the things that strikes me as genuinely horrific is the extent to which I think the tax
system is kind of garontophilic in that there are huge, huge concessions in terms of pensions
that are given out, huge concessions in terms of inherited property, huge concessions in terms of
capital gains and existing property. You also get this utter absurdity which fascinates
me which is that there are five-bedroom, four-bedroom houses which have one or two pensioners knocking
around in them. Nothing wrong with that, you might argue, except those pensioners are often skint.
Okay, now it's a weird kind of way of being a millionaire that you live in a massive
house that you don't entirely need.
Now, if you simply saved a hell of a lot of money and you just like living in a
big fuck off house, well, you can argue that's kind of, you know, you're entitled
to that, but you literally get people living in these extraordinary houses who
are, you know, going to Lidl and worried about the price of lemons.
Yeah.
Okay.
Pretty weird. If someone told you and your kid, you're going to beidl and worried about the price of lemons. Yeah. Okay. Pretty weird.
If someone told you and your kid, you're going to be a millionaire one day, but
you're going to be really worried about where you buy lemons.
You'd think this is a pretty weird one.
Well, what's that?
Does it?
I mean, one, one great idea, Roger L.
Martin's idea is that you should, at the moment you get your first 10,000 or
whatever it is of your annual salary is tax free every year.
Roger L.
Martin, a Canadian, proposed that that
should be a lifetime tax allowance. So the first 250,000 Canadian dollars you earn in your life
is tax free, after which the tax system kicks in. Now that would be extraordinarily beneficial to
younger people who need the money more and who could build up some... Actually, you don't need that much in the way
of savings. I mean, one of the interesting things about the benefits to wealth is that there are
inflection points. You know, the first house deposit. Well, actually having 5,000 pounds you
can call on in a crisis is a really, really, you know, is a really, really big difference.
It fundamentally changes what people can do.
I mean, very interesting thing.
When I first went to America, I was, I think I was 29, roughly.
And I remember thinking, I'm glad I never came here when I was skinned.
Okay.
It's a bad, it's a bad country to be pouring.
It's a terrible country in which not to have $10,000.
Correct.
You know, one bad thing goes wrong and suddenly you're in Leavenworth doing a nine stretch.
And so, you know, so there are these inflection points where you can take people, you know,
one of them I always think is that when you start earning a bit above median income, you notice that actually it's quite nice because things are
priced for people who are a bit poorer than you, you know, televisions, for example, flat
screen TVs.
It'd be almost okay.
Let's imagine that flat screen TVs cost five grand.
Okay, we both would have bought one by now, but we don't have to pay five grand because they're priced for sale to people who earn a lot less than we do.
And so, you know, there are, I think there are these interesting inflection points in
earnings. Now, what's really interesting, by the way, and this fascinates me, is the Pre 2020, the only real point of negotiation with your employer was how much they paid
you because it was assumed that you worked a five day week.
It was assumed that you came into an office or some other place of work for five days
and that you had hours and you had a place.
Those were non-variables and the only variable was your salary.
Now, to what extent will people start to practice lifestyle arbitrage, which is to
say, well, I could work for Goldman Sachs in London for 200 and something, whatever,
but actually 120,000 in Lisbon, okay.
And a pretty good broadband connection.
Earning in pounds and spending in pesos.
The number of people who might simply, I mean, by the way, that applies within the UK.
You know, there are a lot of people who live in Newcastle and get 10 times the house for
the same money.
You know the sad thing actually, my daughter went to Newcastle University, adores the city
quite rightly.
I've been up there.
It's fantastic.
You know that, Bill, I do.
Okay.
It's a glorious place,
which gets the balance. I think it gets a lot of things absolutely right in terms of the kind of
yin and yang of a city. You know, it's manageable in size, but it's not boring, remotely boring.
It has beautiful architecture, but it also has utility and it's got a coast. Okay. My daughter,
she said, she said, the tragedy is in a way way I didn't really want to move to London, which is bloody expensive. If I could have persuaded six of my university
friends to stay in Newcastle, we all would have said tragedy of the commons. You haven't
got the tragedy of the commons, which is that you're forced to go along with this kind of
majority consensus. You also can be on the winner takes all effect. You can be on the
receiving end of that too, though you can benefit from that, which I have been in Austin.
Why does any scene appear anywhere?
Any scene appears anywhere because people go, no one's really too sure why.
And because people go, more people go.
And then before you know it, you've got the hottest new place.
I suppose it was Rogan in Austin.
Was it-
He made one of the big ones, but before him was Lex Friedman.
I think before Lex was Michael Malice.
Before him was Aubrey Marcus.
You know, you've got, you track it back to wherever you want.
And now everybody has a fucking second holiday home from Jason Calacanis coming over from,
you know, Investor Bay, West Coast bullshit world to come and now live on a ranch, wear
a cowboy hat.
So yeah, it's a
Is it, you know, can I be really mischievous here?
Okay.
And I always thought this is why Brits like living in LA, which is that secretly
everybody over the age of 35 wants to live in the suburbia.
Okay.
But in London, it's just not cool.
Okay.
I mean, if I took my younger colleagues, I couldn't get them to move to Bromley.
If I put a gun to their head secretly, I suspect they want a little bit of, you
know, a bit of lawn and a bit of a place to park a car.
Yes. Oh, so you've got it. You've got a blend of the two.
But LA, it's totally cool to live in a suburban house, isn't it? That's where everybody lives.
Same in Austin. Honestly, the suburbs, the olden style suburbs, so what's up north, which
is the domain, is kind of a soulless hellscape that was created for people that work at tech
companies to not have to go far to go to the office.
Uh, but when you're-
Few things.
It was also built after the invention of the car.
Yeah.
So the distance from the center matters a lot less.
Um, by the way, it should have, um, I'm, I'm, I'm, I don't normally
criticize the U S um, but you could, you should create high speed rail to
someone like San Antonio.
Shouldn't you, you could link a couple of places.
I think that the, the, the rumor is that Austin in San Antonio growing at such a
clip that they're going to merge into one huge mega city eventually, you know, it's
only without traffic, I think it's only 50 minutes ish from sort of the edge of one
to the edge of another.
And when you think about we've got this land, we might as well expand it.
Um,
Oh, you've got another advantage, we might as well expand it. Um,
Oh, you've got another advantage in Austin, which is interesting.
Cause you saw in the property crash of 2008, you saw very dramatic property
crashes in Vegas, Phoenix, Austin.
And the reason is, uh, they're unusual in that they're not on a lake and
they're not on a coast.
And so they can expand in four directions,
which I know that San Francisco can't. Okay. If you're on a kind of peninsula. How does that impact the price? Because simply there's four times as much land,
actually more than that, because area expands at the square of distance.
Yes. So you've only got to go a mile from the, a mile further out and you get, you know,
what is it? The square of the distance increase.
A fuckton more land.
Okay, so there isn't really much scarcity.
Combine that with the fact that they were designed for the car.
So you, I mean, I love Phoenix, it's fantastic
because they actually synchronize all the,
they probably do this in Austin,
they synchronize the traffic lights.
So when you drive in at night, you can ride the green wave.
Have you done this?
Well, I certainly know the way that traffic flows work.
If you hit a red light, you're more likely to hit subsequent red lights.
That's it.
Right.
Okay.
I thought that was something called riding the green wave,
where there's, if you obey the speed limit, you can basically keep going.
That's only if you hit the first green though.
If you hit the first red, you think I'm fucked here for everyone that I'm going to hit.
Well, you and your massive muscle car won't be able to.
I can try and go as quickly as possible.
This episode is brought to you by Function.
Staying on top of your health requires more than just an annual physical,
which is why I partnered with Function.
They run lab tests twice a year that track over a hundred biomarkers
and monitor for early signs of thousands of diseases.
They even screen for 50 types of cancer at stage one,
which is five times
more data than you get from an annual physical. You receive insights from expert physicians who
provide a detailed written clinician summary of their observations and phone consultations for any
critical findings. Plus, Dr. Andrew Huberman is their scientific advisor and Dr. Mark Hyman is
their chief medical officer, so you can trust that the data and insights you receive are as
scientifically sound as they are actionable. Getting these lab tests done
would usually cost thousands but with Function it is only $500. They've got a
300,000 person wait list but every Monday they open a few spots for Modern
Wisdom listeners. Right now you can discover where your health stands by
going to the link in the description below or heading to functionhealth.com
slash modern wisdom. That's functionhealth.com slash modern wisdom.
Just going back to the UK for a second, let's say that Starmer brought you in or
whoever it is that does tourism brought you in to improve UK culture, sort of
tourist destination type thing.
Have you got any sort of branding or psychological interventions, which would
maybe be low cost that could make the UK more attractive across the board. For tourists.
Yeah, for tourists or for people to stay. We've got the second in the world, the UK second in the
world for millionaire exits in 2024. China, fucking literal communist dictatorship authoritarian
hellscape was first with about-
You've got to watch the super rich because the super rich don't give a shit about democracy,
okay, because they can capture power using money rather than using rights. And the super rich, I mean, if you look at Dubai,
which has done a fantastic job of effectively saying, we're just going to make this place
unbelievably attractive for wealthy people to live here in terms of low taxes, okay, very low crime rate, okay.
You have cheap labor, which rich people really love.
Most of us are, you know, in other words, you get lots of people doing stuff for you.
So the service industries are fantastic.
And to be honest, very rich people aren't that bothered about being able to vote because
they only get one vote, which is the same as the, you know, the teacher down the street.
Why would I want something I can't have more of than somebody else? So it doesn't surprise me, by the way, that actually very rich people are often quite drawn to authoritarian spaces, because they don't suffer the downside.
Okay, but they gain, you know, in some respects they can profit from the upside.
China lost about 13 to 15,000 this year.
The UK lost 10,000 ish millionaires leaving, but we have 3% of the population of China.
We have about 5% of the population of India and more millionaires left the UK.
Second in the world in millionaire exits, we have the same number of universities
in the top 10 as America do, but only 20% of
the number of startup founders and entrepreneurs.
So why, what is it that's going on?
One thing you could do, and the Portuguese are playing this game.
I mean, a lot of people have, I mean, I had an interesting conversation, okay, which is
that the, where people spend wealth is increasingly, I think slightly undesirably, okay,
being detached from where people earn it.
Now, I grew up in the Welsh valleys.
My Scottish ancestors moved down to South Wales
because it was the Dubai of the late 19th century,
you know, coal money.
It was actually, you know, it was actually booming.
I mean, my great grandfather, I think,
moved down to Edinburgh, intending to join from a croft,
intending to join the police force, and was told, don't bother here, South Wales is where
you need to go to make money.
But the people, including the coal owners, lived somewhere within it.
They didn't live next to the mine, but they lived somewhere within the proximity of that
thing. I remember my grandmother, who's not remotely left-wing, to the mine, but they lived somewhere within the proximity of that thing.
I remember my grandmother, who's not remotely left-wing, quite the opposite, standing on
Cardiff station looking around, and by the way, Cardiff was a lot grimmer back then,
this was in the 70s, than it is now.
It's rather nice now, lovely.
And saying, just think of the money that's been made here and spent in more exotic places.
I always remember that.
It was a strangely kind of socialistic
sentiment from a pretty right-wing grandmother.
And what you see, and I remember having this conversation with people who
are responsible for investing Kent.
And I said, to be honest, it doesn't really matter whether you attract
businesses to Kent, if you can get people who earn money in London to come and
live in Kent and their families all spend their money here, that's good enough.
When you have this detachment of where people make money and where people spend it, one
thing the Portuguese are doing, they're proposing lower tax rates for people under 30.
They're proposing these Nomad visas.
Lisbon, very cool, very attractive city. Likewise, Porto, you know, attracts
people who like kite surfing and other excitement.
Italy's got this new flat tax, you pay a hundred grand and that's all the tax that you pay
for the entire year. That's a new one from them.
So I mean, we don't seem to know the other thing you can do is just make the place one
hell of an entertaining place. Now I've always argued, I can't get anybody to disagree with this.
I don't think pubs, cafes and restaurants should be, should pay rates or taxes
because they're actually a social space.
When you spend money, this, this is interesting, which is that economics holds
it as kind of, this is, this is my Gary Steve's, which is as well as these kind
of single representative agent models, which don yeah, yeah. Which is as well as these kind of single representative agent models,
which don't understand inequality.
And you know, by the way, really bad inequality is bad for everybody.
It's bad for the very rich.
Okay.
You want people, the ideal place in which you live is one in which you're surrounded
by a few people who are richer than you and quite a few people who are a bit
poorer than you, but not so much that they cause a ton of havoc.
Well, it's not just a havoc.
You want actually social spaces to be roughly commensurate with where you were.
Cohesive.
And if you live in a place where you have 10 rich people, okay, and everybody else is
massively poor, the 10 rich people got nowhere to go to eat.
There's a fascinating study that came out of Australia.
Candice Blake did this.
They correlated wealth inequality with self objectification as measured by sexy
selfies online and wealth inequality is positively correlated.
The level of inequality within a local ecology is positively correlated
with sexy selfies.
By men or women or both?
Just women.
Just women.
Yeah.
So self objectification, self beautification, sexy selfies online is
positively correlated with inequality.
What's their explanation for that?
Proposed mechanism is that in a high wealth inequality environment, women
can see not only how high they can climb, but how low they could fall
with a potential partner.
So the effort you have to make in terms of Botox and all the rest of it.
There's a very interesting theory about that, which is why Neiman Marcus, there's an academic
paper, why Neiman Marcus started in Texas, not in Boston. And there are two explanations,
where you get more males than females, the luxury goods thing is important, but also where you get a high degree of anonymity.
So in other words, you had a lot of people moving in who can, who can
effectively reinvent themselves as high status individuals.
Okay.
Now, just to give an example, luxury goods only work really when you have an audience of strangers.
Okay.
So how about, okay, how had I gone into the pub in
Monmouth where I grew up, which is a market town, with sunglasses with machine written
across them, okay, on inch high letters, I would have been the subject of complete ridicule.
Everybody knew where I lived, what I did, what my parents did, what I earned, etc. And
this would have been regarded as an utterly ridiculous thing to do.
But the signal can be stress tested.
But if I go to Miami, I don't know, that probably, I didn't, you know.
So, so you're undoubtedly right in that, in that a lot of these kind of display
and signaling behaviors are contextually determined by the setting.
There's another one that I'll give you.
It's called the environmental security hypothesis.
So this is human behavioral ecology, which is kind of
twinned with evolutionary psychology.
Got it.
It's a little bit more concerned with how we react to the local
environment around us, how we sort of interact and so on.
Um, there is some pretty good evidence to suggest that men prefer
bigger women when the economy is bad.
So men under, uh, resource stress seem to prefer bigger women,
and this can be tracked in a bunch of different ways.
There's a strange hemline index as well, isn't there, which is that in the 20s, you had very
thin androgynous women with short skirts. And then when you have a depression, the whole thing
slightly changes. Yeah. Well, it's the, again, the proposed mechanism is that in a time of resource scarcity, ancestrally,
you would have wanted a woman that looks like she could survive a couple of months.
A bad winter.
Yeah, exactly.
A couple of months without a good harvest.
Uh, and that seems to have carried over now.
So two, two really interesting ones, kind of, as you've said that as the economy wavers
up and down, it seems to be that the preferred body size, uh size overall, the sort of ideal body that women have also fluctuates. But they did a really great study
on university students in the canteen hall and before and after they ate, they showed them different
women's body shapes. And prior to eating, they preferred bigger women and after eating, they
preferred thinner women. That there is something about even the sort of ambient hunger resource scarcity which
impacts this, the environmental security hypothesis as it's known.
This is fascinating because undoubtedly, I mean, by the way, I think, by the way, I'm
a huge enthusiast for evolutionary psychology, but sometimes I think it jumps the shark a little
bit in terms of, I think these things are contributory, but I don't think what sometimes
happens in evolutionary psychology is that this is believed to be the only game in town. So for
example, that data on women having affairs with one of your earlier guests, which seemed to validate one hypothesis rather than another.
And there is indeed a valid evolutionary explanation for what they claim that the
data shows. But I would argue there were also five other possible explanations for that phenomenon.
Not least more attractive men are likely to be out there playing the field more,
simply because their opportunities are greater. And therefore the fact that women tended to have affairs with people more attractive,
but not necessarily richer than the people with whom they're in a long-term relationship
with could be explained by multiple.
I knew that you'd come and do a quiz at the end.
Talk to me about your assessment of Trump's marketing campaign.
Trump's marketing campaign?
Um, I didn't think you need to do that because actually what he did was, um,
fairly consistent, uh, with what he'd done before. He had probably, Elon was a little bit of a, um, uh, clever signal boost.
Say signal boost.
I think what you really have to analyze is the Democrats as a marketing entity and how
spectacularly bad they are in that you end up the problem with living in a very tight
urban bubble.
I didn't talk with Rick Rubin for the Christmas edition of The Spectator.
He's great.
Absolutely glorious man.
And he made the interesting point that he had a kind of interestingly bipolar childhood and that he spent weeks on Long Island, which was effectively a blue
collar existence.
And then he spent his weekends in Manhattan with an aunt who was a kind of creative
services director for Estee Lauder, was taken to concerts, you know, the usual
cultural events, books,
poetry, etc. And the interesting observation he said is there was a downside to that, which
is that the cultural life in New York was entirely driven and hence constrained by
what other people thought of your tastes. Whereas people on Long Island, the blue-collar
culture, basically you like things because you like things. It's similar to Rob's point that middle-class food, posh people food,
looks better than it tastes and working-class food tastes better than it looks.
And the constraints on you, on your opinions, on your tastes, on what you could enjoy, because
you had to defer, your primary concern was what does this say about me to other people
within my group.
Now, in a blue collar environment, you can like what you like.
There are certain musical forms which tend to be gospel, I was mentioning this, country,
where nobody really cares. There's
no particular kudos to be gained from liking country or liking gospel. And therefore you're
free basically to exercise honest subjective taste without having to pretend to like things
that you don't in order to fit into a particular milieu. And there is a problem when
the Democrats become... I've got a skin in this. I've got a dog in this fight because actually,
Woodrow Wilson was like my third cousin, twice removed, weirdly. Everybody's got a racist in
the family. My misfortune is that my racist was the President of the United States. But
is that my racist was the President of the United States. But his mum was born in England to Scottish parents. But the Democrats fundamentally, I think, are in this bizarre hall of mirrors,
where effectively their own opinions and thoughts have now become subordinated to a kind of
artificial worldview where you have to buy the entire album, as it were. There's a Times
journalist who talks about this, which is sort of album politics. In other words, it's
not just that you have left-wing opinions, you have to buy into every single opinion
that is believed to be from the left, and you have to buy the whole package deal.
And consequently, you end up with this very, very strange group of people
thinking their norm. And it's very similar to the phenomenon that Jillian Tett spotted.
I don't know if you've read the silo effect. Have you had Jillian on the show?
No.
Very, very interesting because she's an FT journalist, but principally her training was
as an anthropologist and ending up as a business journalist. She brought her anthropological
skillset and eye to what was going on in business. And by happy coincidence, well, in a sense, she ended up looking at
what was effectively the securitization of mortgages, that whole business before the
events of the Big Short, before the crash. And she immediately spotted that you had this
group of people in a particular habitus or mindset who are incapable of understanding the world outside their own
particular reference points.
And just an amusing detail about that, which I thought was just, hold on a second, I remember
thinking.
Okay.
So there was a Trump event at that huge New York hall, what the hell is it called?
Madison Square Gardens.
Okay.
Where there was a comedian,
I think he's a Texan comedian if I'm right.
Tony Hinchcliffe.
And he told a little joke about Puerto Rico, okay?
Which is, we won't repeat it here.
And the immediate assumption,
because in their worldview,
all Latinos identify as Latinx
and have a massive sense of solidarity
towards all other Latinos, okay,
because that's their peculiar worldview, was that by countenancing this joke, Trump had
lost the entire Latino vote.
I was sort of like going, okay, that's a bit like saying that if the guy had told an anti-French
joke, he would have lost the European vote. The idea that Latinos are so
kind of homogeneous as an ethnic group that they identify, you know, they'll band together with
the Puerto Ricans. I mean, Cubans thought that joke was hysterically funny. I would imagine that
the other Latinos found that funnier, given that it's jibbing someone that's close enough to them.
I mean, you watch Narcos, right? I mean, you know, the Colombian-Mexican tension is enormous.
I mean, yes, there are points of shared commonality, but you also have this thing between, actually,
precisely because the countries are quite similar, you get this kind of narcissism of
small differences. And I always remember, I remember looking at that and they're going, he's lost the
entire Latino vote.
Now it's going, you clearly have a view of a community, which is one which is based on,
you know, probably, you know, some Marxist ideology about race, which is in complete
denial about nationality or nationhood. And it just struck me as really
interesting that you could misread that so badly. Fundamentally, the way they go about appointing
people, the way the whole thing appears to be kind of a coronation, it's very sad because this could be a really wonderful, there are lots of aspects.
By European standards, I'd lean politically right.
I'll be honest about that.
By Euro standards.
But there are aspects to the US which strike me as ridiculously right-wing.
Not least the appalling vacation allowance.
Yes.
Okay.
Yeah.
Which is that's a humanitarian crisis.
I don't know.
I don't know.
Two weeks paid vacation, but also it's
weirder than that because unless you're
getting married and going on honeymoon,
taking a whole week at a time is looked
at as pretty dubious.
Now, I don't know about you, it's not a
holiday if you know which day of the week
it is in my definition. Okay. If don't know about you, it's not a holiday if you know which day of the week it is, in my definition. Okay? If you're conscious of the day of the week,
you're not properly on holiday.
Well, look at maternity leave as well in America.
That strikes me again as absolutely extraordinary.
It's fucking barbaric.
And yet, it's a wonderful case of status quo bias, by the way, because if you think I have
never, you know, I've popped
a spectator parties and I haven't drink with Nigel Farage once or twice.
Okay.
I've never met anybody in the UK.
So right wing that they believe that, um, uh, the, uh, that we'd be better
off with fewer days of a rollback.
Let's roll back this for another 2% of leave. Because we could get another 2% of GDP
if we just roll back vacation time.
Genuinely, I've never come with anybody.
That's a really great point.
If there's anybody sufficiently right-wing
that thinks that the UK is too open and free with the way
that we give away.
The other weird American instance I had
was that I met somebody who said they would happily pay $60,000 to a
tax attorney or tax advisor to avoid paying $40,000 in tax.
They said this to me in absolute seriousness.
Now, okay.
That is literally you resent your tax dollars to such an extent that you would actually
happily pay $60,000.
I think that at least from a business perspective, because you can, people will have heard, I
got my tax down to zero as an American thing, which is basically that you can drive profit
down to the level where the whatever it is, 32%, 37%, depending on where
you live, and that the government would have taken, there is none for them to take because
you've spent it all. So you basically get a one-third discount on anything that you want to buy.
But what that, it sounds sexy. It's like, oh my God, he didn't pay any tax. It's like, yeah,
but he did pay 60% of everything that was taxable that he had to drive down.
It's not like he got it for free.
He just got quite a big discount on whatever it is that he's talking about.
But yeah, there is a, such an aversion to giving money to the government, to the
stage where people will happily do this sort of seppuku, like Harry carry thing.
Uh, of actually almost harming themselves in order simply to spite.
Absolutely.
Yes. The hand will get chopped off to, simply to spite. Absolutely. Yes.
The hand will get chopped off to the finger.
Yeah, exactly.
The IRS on the end of your middle finger.
We'll get back to talking to Rory in one minute, but first I need to tell you about Shopify.
Shopify powers 10% of all e-commerce in the United States.
They're the driving force behind Gymshark, Skims, Allo and Newtonic, which is why I've
partnered with them because
when it comes to converting browsers into buyers, they are best in class. Their checkout is 36%
better on average compared to other leading commerce platforms and with ShopPay can boost
conversions up to 50%. Best of all, they've got award-winning support, which is there to help you
every step of the way. Look, you're not going into business to learn how to code or build a website
or do backend inventory management. Shopify takes all of that off your hands and allows you
to focus on the job you came here to do, which is designing and selling an awesome product.
Upgrade your business and get the same checkout that we use at Nutonic with Shopify. Right now,
you can sign up for a $1 per month trial period by going to the link in the description below or heading to Shopify.com slash modern wisdom or lowercase that Shopify.com slash modern
wisdom to upgrade just selling today.
But you had this thing about people that pay lots of taxes needing additional privilege
or maybe an idea to offer them extra privileges.
Okay.
I'm loving this.
I'm a big fan.
Slowly accumulating more flavors.
This is great.
It's funny. It's a thought experiment, which we're, one of the things I think we're lacking in
is that I would argue, yes, that my joke suggestion was that people who pay higher rate tax should be
allowed to drive in the bus lanes. Okay. Now, just to be clear about this, I didn't mean that
entirely seriously. I didn't mean that it should be enacted. It was purely a thought
experiment based on the observation that rich people are pretty happy paying for
things if a small amount. So when you are poor, a large part of your
disposable income is spent on what you might reasonably call utility. As you get
richer, both attractively and
unattractively, as I said, um, what you
might call relative status.
In other words, the relative quality of
something matters more than its absolute value.
And so if you look at car manufacturers,
the top of the range X probably costs 25%
more to manufacture than the bottom of the range X, but the sticker
price might be doubled.
And that's simply because the people buying from the top of the range are more interested
in status and more interested in, you know, leather seats and heads up display and, you
know, adaptive cruise control.
They're more interested in what you might call things you can show off about or things
which are just novel.
Whereas the poorer person is buying the car as a mode of transportation.
Utility.
Okay, it's closer to the economic idea of utility.
And consequently, it struck me that government should play the same trick that car manufacturers
do, which is to say, yes, you pay a lot more tax, but in return, you get
certain privileges.
You get certain advantages.
Now by the way, the evidence that something of the kind, which is that if it was simply
reframed with a thank you.
So there's an experiment from Singapore, which I think was adopted in the UK by a housing
association which had trouble getting people to pay their rent on time.
And one of the most, they tried a variety of behavioral and economic interventions,
but one of the most successful was simply every time you paid your rent on time, you've
got a tech saying thank you.
And that massively reduced the incidence of late payment subsequently.
It's one of those weird things.
That's a total, just, it's a tiny little reframing, which is you did a good thing.
We're grateful to you.
We noticed.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, I don't feel when I, when I pay whatever vast amount I pay to the
checker, if they just said, kind of, we noticed, thank you for doing the right
thing, by the way, just to be clear on this, I do do the right thing because my
wife does my finances. She's a vicar in the Church of England, which is like having the
shittest accountant in the world in terms of tax. She'll say, Rory, when you attended
that conference, they gave you a free pen. I really think you ought to declare this.
I actually declared all the capital gains on my bloody Bitcoin.
Oh, wow.
Oh my God.
That would bankrupt most people, especially if you've got to pay it in fear.
No, what kind of pissed me off about that is had it been a house, of course, I
wouldn't have had to pay a bloody thing.
No capital gains.
But, but the interesting thing, the interesting thing there is that, I mean, there was a guy who's the expert on
this guy at Berkeley called George Aikoff, who was a left-wing guy who pointed out that
the right, to some extent, enjoyed some unfair advantages simply because of linguistics.
So the phrase tax relief, for example, suggests that tax is a burden from which you have to be relieved.
It's not paying your civic duties towards the maintenance of collective goods.
And as a Brit, as I said, a right of centre Brit, I can't help noticing when I go to
LA.
To be absolutely honest, I'm not sure I wouldn't rather have a slightly worse car and better
roads. Okay, because you know,
there is a correct ratio of expenditure
of money which is spent at the individual level
and money that's spent at the collective level.
And by the way, one of the reasons I half jokingly suggest
that pubs, cafes and restaurants
should be given a big tax break,
I genuinely mean that
is because I think they're a social good.
If you go to the pub, okay, you are maintaining a pub that I can go to the
following day and it actually benefits the whole community.
And you might argue that the rich people who go to the pub and buy the fancy
spirits or the high margin drinks are actually subsidizing the lower margin
drinks for people with less money.
So in other words, there is an ecosystem within that kind of thing,
which is mutually beneficial.
There's such distaste though, from anybody to the people that have got
wealth, especially from the media in very much sort of demonized at the moment.
It's very uncool and goof to talk about the level of wealth that you have,
especially when we've got inequality, cost of living, crisis, inflation, housing problems,
et cetera.
So it doesn't surprise me that it's hard to get people to be on board with doing
something you already have enough benefits as it is look at the wealth that
you have, look at the, I had this idea with Scott Galloway where I suggested
that presuming that some rich people are at least somewhat smart, given that they've managed
to get themselves to the stage of being rich.
They're lucky too.
Yes, of course.
I mean, there's a million.
He would acknowledge that.
He's very honest about that.
There's a million, a million other reasons why.
But that some people in there will not be total idiots.
Perhaps some of the people that are real power users when it comes to tax.
I think Elon did this, made a statement the other day that he's paid more money in tax than any human in history. He recently paid 10 billion to
the IRS. Probably Romans who'd take him up on that. Yeah, nations. When you're competing with
empires, perhaps that might be something different. My idea to Scott was why don't people who pay
some Uber amount in tax, the top 0.001%,
why don't they get to have some sort of consultant at the IRS or the Inland Revenue?
And they can maybe talk about discriminating where their tax dollars are spent.
You can say, I really like education.
Well, the military, for example, or whatever.
Yeah, anything, but it treats your taxes, first off,
it makes your tax money more accountable
because I think people that have earned a lot of money
understand efficiency, at least in one form or another,
in that they've managed to accumulate the money,
and they look at government and think,
I'm gonna give you these tax dollars,
and I think that you're just gonna piss it up.
How many times has the Pentagon failed
its fucking budget report here?
So by- You had something a little bit similar in New Mexico.
There was a guy called Gary Johnson.
I think I'm right.
Aren't they saying who's the governor of New Mexico who was kind of libertarian.
And it was kind of Ron Swanson.
I don't know if you know Parks and Recreation, but you had a
libertarian doing a government job.
And he believed, quite
interestingly, he said, basically, I dislike all forms of government expenditure, except
roads and education. He believed those things genuinely had to be collectively spent. They
were collective goods. And that I think his phrase is, if you want economic growth, you
need a four-lane highway. And so he was almost a case in point where, in other words,
he very, very narrowly decided what the focus of government within New Mexico should, and was by
all accounts actually a very, he was a presidential candidate for the libertarian party about 12
years ago or something. But he was a pretty good governor. Have you been to New Mexico?
It's near neighboring states. No, I haven't.
It's glorious.
Go there.
It's utterly fantastic.
Um, the, um, Santa Fe opera, give that a go.
I, by the way, I'm trying to start a little tradition that the guests on podcasts
get to advertise something as well.
Whatever you would like.
It always strikes me as very unfair.
The Santa Fe opera.
The Santa Fe opera is my.
A mid-roll podcast.
I was on Jamie Lang's podcast and started, I think I was plugging a Italian
Jamaican cafe in West Room, probably giving it a greater level of indiscriminate fame.
I wonder how many people have bought air fryers and Mustang Mackeys off the back of you.
I do think down the street.
I know, I know.
It's had a market impact on the Mustang Mackey. Oh, I've got a new one for you. I do think down the street it's had a market impact on the Mustang Mach-E.
Oh, I've got a new one for you. Only relevant for Brits really, although also possibly relevant
for ex-pat Indians in the United States. The Frozen Paratha.
I saw you tweet about this the other day.
I bought this from a cardo. I thought, why the hell has this Frozen Paratha got 170 votes
and is like a five star, literally five stars on a
cardo. What's a cardo? Oh my goodness you don't know. You see there are lots of
things in the UK, so it's grocery delivery, home grocery delivery, very
innovative bunch of people who started you know effectively robotic picking. So
they have it's very very high high tech mode of grocery delivery.
They used to have a partnership with Waitrose.
They've now got a partnership with Marks and Spencer.
Okay.
It's actually probably better than anything
you've got in the US actually.
By the way, in Britain, we never really celebrate.
So I would include Octopus Energy and Ocado
as you know, and perhaps a, um, wise, okay.
We occasionally do these things incredibly well.
And in the United States, you'd be fated for doing this.
Whereas in Britain, you're just treated with kind of mild suspicion.
Okay.
Um, and there is, there is, I think there is that British problem, which is there is an acceptable social ceiling to the amount of wealth you have.
Yes.
The Americans have observed even in what you would think of as pretty cutthroat businesses
like investment banking, that once they've got a flat in London, a former rectory in
the Cotswolds, a wife called Polly, a Labrador, two children at private school arranged over
in an Arga, basically that's it.
You've hit your ceiling and anything more would be slightly
dubious. You know, there is that kind of weird kind of class based ceiling to, you know,
it's quite difficult to create a Dyson in the UK. Okay. But what's interesting in a
card is the frozen Paratha is, it was invented in what I call Cinnamon Valley, which is this
area around Wembley in London, which is where an enormous amount of innovation in Indian
food preparation goes on, which is one of the great, I think one of the great reasons
I still live in the UK is the quality of Indian food surpasses that.
Very difficult to find in America.
I imagine Austin, you must have a large enough expat community that it's starting to raise. I'm yet to find a good Indian meal in Austin Texas much to
my dismay. Okay we'll go looking. I'll crowdsource it maybe someone can comment below.
But the frozen paratha is a remarkable thing it just sits in the freezer
you can have an onion one you can have aloo paratha there's a garlic one but
basically you take it out of the freezer where it's basically completely long life
bang it in a pan with a little bit of oil, about one and a half minutes either
side, turn it over.
You've had the kind of paratha which is literally, you know, if you went to a three-star Michelin
Indian restaurant, you would not be disappointed by the paratha.
It's the great, I mean, what the hell is sourd, what's this sourdough thing?
It's fine, right?
Sourdough has a place in my bread repertoire, but the extent to which it's
come to dominate artisan bread, rather like IPA dominated artisan.
Salted caramel in the dessert world.
Yeah, you got it exactly.
Yeah.
These things, these kind of, these winner take all effects in a globalized
economy are actually problematic because they're like the gray squirrel, you know, they're, they eliminate the indigenous
alternative.
Myopia in the bread world.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It is, it is a problem, you know, I mean, um, and likewise, you know, the
discussion of AI relative to discussion of the importance of zoom and remote
working strikes me as off whack, but actually over a longer time horizon, um, the importance
of being able to have a conversation with anybody instantaneously on any continent in
a group or individually strikes me as, you know, it's not far from teleportation.
And yet nobody's really talking about it.
Nobody's developing hardware for it. Uh. That strikes me as something slightly weird.
I've been thinking a lot about, um, we built a new Tonic brand and we're building another
one at the moment with a guy called Mike Isretel.
And, um, I, a lot of the time what we're talking about is sort of coolness and credibility,
two things that we're trying to aim for now Now with a millennial, Gen Z degenerate, influencer driven, online TikTok,
Instagram brand, perhaps that's easy.
Are companies in markets that aren't necessarily so customer facing that don't
need to have an Instagram account, do you think companies get too concerned
with trying to be cool, with trying to create sort of a...
No, I think that the focus on the consumer is... There's a great passage, it's only a small passage
in John Kay's book, The Corporation in the 21st Century, which is his attack largely,
the whole book is an attack on the idea of the shareholder value movement. That the fundamental
point is that the point of a corporation is not solely to generate shareholder value movement. That the fundamental point is that the point of a corporation is not solely to generate
shareholder value, but also the fact that the pursuit of a single metric is much less
creative and much more likely to lead to value destruction, including for the shareholders,
than the pursuit of multiple objectives, the triangulation of multiple objectives, which
is looking after your employees, looking after your shareholders, looking after your
customers and looking after the wider society.
Okay.
So, so a multi-dimensional objective from a company will probably lead to a
greater variety of behaviors and a greater level of creativity than a single minded
kind of reductionist objective like
short term shareholder value maximization.
And one of Kay's points which he makes is that if you look at the companies that have
been kicking around in the Fortune 500 or the FTSE or whatever for a long, long time,
it's Nestle, it's Unilever, it's Procter & Gamble, it's Wreck-It, okay.
It's companies which have a large marketing function which keeps them rooted in the real
but changing world of what customers really want, okay, and keeps them alert to effectively
exploring new forms of value exchange which are ever-changing with technology, taste, fashion, etc.
And those companies, interestingly, seem to have a much greater level of survival than
companies that effectively develop some proxy measure of success other than the marketplace
and seek to pursue that.
Now pursuing success in the marketplace is more difficult, it's more painful, it involves
you to deal in things that are highly probabilistic rather than deterministic. It's messy, but
ultimately in terms of resilience, it seems to keep companies on their game in a way that
businesses that are basically focused on what you might call internal benchmarking metrics
can find themselves actually massively detached.
Could you give an example?
Well, okay, if you pursue, yeah, I mean, if you pursue efficiency at the delivery of something, okay,
you can end up very efficiently making something that
people no longer want or where you're completely depositioned because effectively what you're
making.
So, in some cases, for example, the rules of the game change.
Okay, so there will be a period where, for example, well, I'll give you a perfect example of this,
okay?
Which is an example I love to give, which is when I was a kid, okay, there were a few
rich kids at school who'd been to Schiphol Airport and they'd come back and go, it's
incredible, there's shops and everything you can buy.
I bought a Walkman for like so many gilders before the Euro.
Okay.
I was amazing.
And we went there and we did this.
And then, then you got, then it was Changi airport in Singapore.
Oh, it's amazing.
I bought this.
They've got this.
They've got a fountain.
They've got them the other, you see.
And then you, then you, then eventually it moved to Dubai.
The crown moved to Dubai of kind of blinged up airports.
And that all goes on.
And then one day people come back and they go to London city airport.
It's brilliant.
There are hardly any shops.
You get on the plane in about five minutes and you suddenly realize that
everybody has been optimizing for turning an airport into a bloody shopping center.
And then London city airport comes along completely the opposite.
Okay.
And just changes the rules of the game.
So, I mean, the hotel industry is interesting. I mean,
okay, I think I'm allowed a plug for this. I'm a weird fan. Have you stayed in a Moxie hotel?
Yeah, yeah, yeah. A few times. What's your take? Because I think it's quite clear. I think it's
kind of mental hack, which is actually quite smart, which is everything is really basic. It's good.
Good TV, good Wi Fi, comfortable room, but not very big. No room service, no laundry, as far as I can remember.
Okay.
You wouldn't want to stay there for two weeks, but two things, pretty good location.
Um, and secondly, the ground floor is basically a bit like a wee work in that
you can just hang out there, meet people.
There's actually a meeting room.
Even after you've checked out, you can spend three hours doing your email at the Moxie without feeling like a weirdo.
I think.
Whereas if you do that at a conventional hotel, once you've
checked out, you feel they want you to piss off.
Yes, because it's just a smaller reception area.
Exactly.
It's a cracking reception area where you'd look like a weirdo.
Yeah.
I, uh, I've spent a lot of time on the road over the last couple of years.
I've come to believe that the biggest determining factor about your enjoyment
of a hotel is the quality of the pillows and it's not the bed, of years, I've come to believe that the biggest determining factor about your enjoyment of a hotel is the quality of the pillows. And it's not the bed, bad bed,
good pillows, totally fine night's sleep, good bed, bad pillows, fucked. So I, every time that I-
You need a pillow sommelier, don't you?
Well, look, so I'm trying to work on this at the moment. I'm trying to find a, uh, Amazon Prime pillow, which I can get in most
territories that I go to, so most like US, UK, maybe a Dubai or whatever,
that I can get next day delivery to any hotel that if I get there and on the
first day when I check in and I go, Oh, fuck, they know they've got one of
the, they've got one of those ones that makes that sound when you lie in it and like quickly get onto Amazon, order it and have it arrive.
Uber sleeps to go alongside Uber eats.
Very good.
Yeah.
Very good.
So basically it will deliver.
I, that's the, that's the worst, the worst part.
But I mean, yeah, interesting pivot at the moment.
It's an interesting idea because you would also have a market.
If you had Uber sleeps, you can have a service, which if you, if you basically
missed the last train and ended up crashing at a hotel, it would deliver sort of, you know, a shirt
in your size for the following day and toothpaste and a toothbrush and all the things you didn't
think to pack because you weren't aware you were going to be staying at a hotel. Yeah, that's
brilliant. There's a move at the moment in airports towards like health, wellness and stuff.
There's meditation areas, there's gyms, there's napping, rent by the hour napping rooms, which
I imagine are used for all manner of-
Fundamentally, by the way, I mean, the built environment in every respect has not caught
up with technology.
And it's actually, I think it's a total failure.
It's largely probably because you can't measure.
But I always think, okay,
there's nowhere at a station in a concourse.
They've got all these walls around the edges
which are underused.
Now just put a shelf there for people to put a laptop on.
There are trains with no tables,
which drives me practically insane because apparently it's worth spending $120 billion to reduce
the time spent on a train between London and Manchester, but actually putting a table on
a train so the person can work for an hour rather than basically sitting there like a
Tyrannosaurus Rex trying to type on their knees. That's considered apparently an unworthy
expense compared to time-saving on the actual journey itself. And we will need, offices will
need to actually fundamentally adapt to the fact that patterns of work are different and that you
probably need fewer meeting rooms and you need more pods, but also the open plan office was insufficiently variegated.
So if you take people who are non-neurotypical, for example, you know,
I mean, my argument is that to some extent, the perfect office
is not an open plan space.
It's 50% library, 50% pub.
In other words, half of it should be hyper social and a bit noisy for people.
And I actually like working in cafes.
I like background noise, even if I don't know anybody present.
Equally, I'm conscious of the fact that there are people who can't work unless they have complete silence.
You also don't want to be in that all the time, necessarily.
It is a barbell. You're right.
If you have the final proofread of this particular piece of copy that absolutely needs to be right,
if you're writing a best man's speech,
yes, probably best to be in somewhere that's a little bit more chill.
It's your final run through.
You're trying to remember a presentation,
you're trying to do whatever.
Do you really want to be in the cafe?
But yeah, I mean, you'll have seen this as well.
To introverts in open plan office is probably very tiring.
Well, I mean, I think on average,
it seems like open plan offices really,
really damaged down productivity.
The difference even between noise canceling headphones
and complete silence is marked, a mutual friend of ours
worked at a place, a social media management agency
years ago and they had this huge Harry Potter fan page thing.
And as a part of that, they were doing a time-lapse
of them building the world's biggest
Harry Potter jigsaw puzzle.
So they were going upstairs, they had an entire room, you know, it's one of
these many, many, many stories.
And there was open plan office and fucking astro turf on the walls and
every, you know, ping pong Wednesdays or whatever.
And, uh, he just, he couldn't work.
He couldn't think, he couldn't focus.
So he had found that they'd kind of given up on this huge Harry Potter thing.
Then maybe got stuck at some stage of the jigsaw.
that they'd kind of given up on this huge Harry Potter thing. They maybe got stuck at some stage of the jigsaw.
So there was a point where every morning
for a couple of weeks, he went up and sat
in amongst disused Harry Potter jigsaw puzzle pieces
on the floor because it was the only place
he could get any fucking piece.
Yes, yeah.
Yeah, I mean, you know, we have some weird
sort of mysterious lavatories
on the ground floor, which I notice the occupancy rate is surprisingly high
given that they're not signposted.
Yes.
And I strongly suspect people are using them as a kind of escape pod.
Need a little bit of chill time.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I, um, you know, I, I, the other thing I think is interesting is if you
really want to bond people,
one interesting thing is to reduce the amount of money you spend on rent,
but I think you have to correspondingly ring-fence a bit of that saving
and spend it on what you might call staff jollies.
I don't mean total self-indulgence, but I mean, you know, away days
where maybe we should take some office space by the sea,
somewhere like Margate, Folkestone, Brighton.
Okay.
Just because actually if you want to bond people, I don't think an office
is a particularly good place for bonding.
I think if you take people on a trip together, you find people bond very, very tightly.
I mean, famously, you'll love this story from advertising, the Coke Hilltop ad
I'd like to teach the world to sing, it was conceived at, I think, Dublin airport because there
was a massive flight delay.
And effectively, there's a quote from Bob Dylan in Brownsville Girl where he said, isn't
it funny how people who've suffered together have more in common than those who are most
content. And these people, these people had basically all been together, you know, and they were stuck at
Dublin airport like overnight. Okay. And he noticed that effectively people were all going
to the Coke machine. And because of the shared adversity, they were all bonding in ways that
they never would have done had the flight been on time. It's one of the reasons that throughout
history, armies have been encouraged to get drunk together
a few nights before the first battle. Not because, sure, the bonding thing, the fact that it's more
difficult to lie, the fact that you're a better liar detector when you're drunk than when you're sober.
Do you remember that Carlsberg campaign, you know who your mates are?
No.
It only lasted, I think it was, it, it interested me from an anthropological perspective, because
there's a theory that the reason young men get drunk and do stupid things is to find
out who your mates are.
In other words, the person who at the first sign of a police siren hoofs it around the
corner is not your mate.
And so it's a kind of loyalty testing thing, just as to some extent, you know, rude banter is a kind of proof of stress testing.
It's a stress test of a friendship.
If, if we weren't really good friends, I couldn't say this to you.
Therefore the fact that I'm saying this to you is proof of our
signal of friendship.
Uh, I wanted to show you this Europeans, according to a study by simple
analytics, Europeans spend approximately 575 million
hours per year clicking through cookie banners, the prompts which appear on websites asking
unions to accept cookies.
Yes, and by the way, one of the Brexit dividends should have been that we got rid of that because
it was an absolutely stupid piece of legislation which adds...
And by the way, it's also counterproductive because every now and
then I go onto my Google Chrome and I get rid of effectively all the cookies.
Right.
So you've had to restart it.
For the next two weeks, it's even worse than usual in that every Goddam page I go
to, I have to effectively give permission or deny it to see whatever this thing was.
That was a classic case of what I think is sometimes called, you know, the, um,
what was the famous thing in the, in British India where they, they created a
bounty on cobras, cobras snakes.
Yeah.
And people started farming them to claim the bounty.
There was something to do with, uh, um, trying to reduce the number of cars on
the road.
to do with trying to reduce the number of cars on the road. So they did, they logged the registration plates in one form or another, and all of the rich people just bought second
cars. So they doubled the number of cars that were on the roads.
That was Athens. Yeah. I think you could come into Athens with an odd numbered number plate
or an even numbered number plate to reduce traffic.
And so everybody lined up at the Greek equivalent of the DMV and that when they were handing
out car license plates and basically they said, Oh, I really need an even number because
my other car is not.
And so they'd all shuffle into order.
I'll swap you.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
In the queue.
And no, I mean, I mean, if you think about it, there were extraordinarily
intelligent, if you'd given the job to some nudge theorists rather than to
lawyers, you could have come up with a very simple solution, which I would've
thought would be fairly amicable to everybody, which is you can set your
browser to delete cookies more than X weeks old.
Okay.
And that would be, you know, you, you might mandate that that's an automatic option that's made available to you.
But you know, the problem I have is that I, you know, I like to
purge all these things, you know, I never quite know what clearing your cash
actually means, but I like to do it regularly because it feels, you know,
cathartic, okay, but, um, but, but, you know,
I like to clear cookies every now and then because it occurs to me there's probably an
unwholesome buildup of the things. But then every time I purge the damn things, um, it
makes my browsing experience painfully bad. We could have, we could have got rid of that
within weeks of 2060 if we wish to. I have no idea why nobody's done it.
Meanwhile, we're still struggling with all of the problems everybody wanted to get rid of,
and we've accumulated new ones, and some of them have got worse. And now Keir Starmer's done a
massive U-turn on immigration. That was surprising. If we acknowledge the fact that the bad thing
about government isn't really that money spent through the government is necessarily bad,
because there are things that probably are better paid for collectively rather than
individually. Defense being an obvious example. I don't think it makes sense for everybody to
employ a private army. It's pretty logical that we should actually pool our resources in the
provision of defense. By the way, I would also argue that the ratio of those things probably changes.
You know, there are periods where technologically we'd be better off spending money on
collective goods, and there are periods where we're better off spending more money on
individual goods. And you know, there's a ratio of the two. But you made the point that, first of
all, if you allowed very high taxpayers some degree
of control over where their tax was spent, that's the first thing.
Interestingly, good luck with that because it's called hypothecation.
Dan Ariely is a friend of mine, a behavioral scientist, believes that you could get people
paying tax much more happily if it were hypothecated. But the treasury absolutely hate the idea
because it removes from them the finance person's privilege of shoveling money around at their
whim. So they absolutely hate hypothecations.
It also creates a level of accountability.
I'll tell you a clever case of hypothecation by the way was John Maynard Keynes. I think he had, it might have
been a million pounds to spend. He was the bursar of King's College, Cambridge. And he
had two things that were caused on his finances. There was the Arts Theatre in Cambridge, which
was run and still is and owned, I think, by King's College, Cambridge, for whatever historical
reason, and King's College Chapel, which is a famous, I think, by King's College Cambridge for whatever historical reason,
and King's College Chapel, which is a famous, you know, glorious medieval building.
And Keynes immediately gave a million pounds to the Arts Theatre and nothing to the chapels.
And his argument was very simple. He said, raising money for the chapel is a piece of piss, okay?
I can get Americans to give money for this world-famous chapel,
whereas raising money for the Arts theatre is gonna be damn near impossible
So with the money I've got at my disposal
I'll give it to the things that what can't raise money at the expense of things that can
Treasury absolutely hate her publication. I also think that for example
Fundamentally, I mean I've got an interesting idea which I'll share with you, which I think
is actually a usable idea, which is what I call charitable yield management.
Okay, let me explain.
There are lots of things where you want to allocate resources according to willingness
to pay.
So, I'll give you an example.
I'm at Athens Airport.
There's a massive queue for passport control.
There are people in front of me in the queue. I'm paranoid. I turn up at airports like three
hours early. I'm totally paranoid like that. These people had left it a bit late. Their flight was
leaving in 40 minutes. The queue was about 20 minutes long. I was pretty sympathetic.
Now, what you could do is you could simply have, in the end, someone spotted them and let them through.
It was quite intelligent.
But you could have a system where you pay 20 quid, you jump the queue.
Most people find that repugnant, but also they see that as the airport effectively profiting
from their own incompetence.
Okay, which is you're probably deliberately creating a long queue so you can maximize
revenue from queue jumping.
If you had certain things where you paid, but the money went to charity.
That is an interesting thing because it still identifies willingness to pay.
In other words, you're clearly desperate to catch your flight.
Removes the incentive for fuckery.
And also the resentment of the people doing it because yeah, they may be richer than you, but at least they're doing a good thing. So that could apply to parking.
In every car park, there should be five station car parks.
There should be five spaces where it's 25 quid to Oxfam on top of the parking charge
to park there.
The reason being that someone who is absolutely desperate to park will always be able to find
a space.
Whereas someone who's got 40 minutes to spare can drive off somewhere else.
You've got maximizing area under the curve.
You're maximizing exactly that, the area under the curve, without creating resentment.
You can apply that to street parking.
One parking space in 10, and it's easy to do with Ringo or pay by phone.
What do you use in Austin?
What's the parking app in Austin?
I had no idea.
It's just tap your card on that.
Oh, you tap it.
You've got that.
So with those apps, it's really, really easy.
If you're in one of those charity spaces, you have a different code and you just put
in a different number and 20 quid goes to Oxfam on top of your cost of parking, which
means that the parking spaces go to the people who most desperately need them without anybody feeling rooked and charities make a lot of money.
Now that strikes me as quite an interesting, you could apply that to road pricing as well,
by the way, interestingly. How so?
Well, if people felt that a component of, let's say you had a high speed lane, if there's a traffic jam on the M25,
you can pay 20 quid to use the,
it's equivalent to the multi,
what is it, the multi-occupancy lane you get in the US.
Okay, there's a premium lane
which lets you jump the queue a bit.
Okay, now I would use that if I were going to Heathrow,
probably, okay, if I've got a plane to catch,
if I haven't got a plane to catch, I went,
now the great thing is, what would create a lot of resentment is if people just got a plane to catch, if I haven't got a plane to catch, I went, no,
the great thing is what would create a lot of resentment is if people just saw a load
of Bentley's and you know, flash cars jumping the queue, it creates fundamental resentment.
But actually if you made the thing charitable, it would be less repugnant.
And you would still be allocating the road to the people who were most in need of the
road.
Well, we have like fast lanes or whatever they're called, preferential lanes all across
America and that's basically the same.
It's like the T, if you've got the text tag or whatever, then you can go through this
one and by paying that it's $1.86 or whatever in order to go through this particular lane.
But that lane's got far fewer people on it and you can, everybody kind of.
I mean, it's interesting.
Road pricing is going to be very interesting from a psychological perspective, because
one of the things they did with Ulez, which is in London, which is that if you had an
older diesel, diesel vehicle, you had to pay, was it 20 pounds to come into the Ulez zone,
which was pretty extensive.
It went right to, it wasn't like the congestion zone zone which is just the middle of London it was pretty much
right to the edges of London there were Eulers cameras everywhere and what was
unfair about that was not only that we can debate the whole legitimacy of the
charge but let's say I had an older diesel vehicle I live in Sevenoaks which
is just outside the Eulz zone. To be honest,
I drive into the Ulez zone six times a year, maybe eight. I could just about swallow the current
charge. If you travel in every day, so a hundred people paying the Ulez charge once don't really
care, whereas one person paying it a hundred times, it's practically bankrupting them.
And the fact that there was no recognition of that.
So if you were a nurse who lived outside London or in indeed inside London, and
because of shift work needed to drive to work and because you hadn't got much
money, you had an older diesel car.
That was the fact that there was no equivalent of Amazon Prime, which is, okay, pay once,
pay for a year, was fundamentally unfair.
That again is down to Gary Stevenson's observation actually, that if you optimize for the average,
you don't distinguish between one person paying something 100 times and 100 people paying
something once.
I always noticed when you drive down the French motorway, which is called the Autoroute des
Anglais from Calais down towards, I think this one is towards A10
or something it's called can't remember the exact number and he always noticed
that for the first sort of 50 miles basically all the cars are English this
bloody road he's been on don't the local French want to use their Autoroute and
then he realized of course if you're English you drive to France once a year
you pay the French motorway tolls.
If you drive a long way down to the south of France, it's going to come to a few hundred
euros.
Okay.
But that's a lot less than you pay for a hire car if you flew.
And it's just something you just, you suck it up if you want to drive down to the south
of France.
If you're French, okay, and you've got to stretch a motorway of 20 miles and it costs
you five euros a goddamned day.
Okay.
That's a thousand euros a year.
It's a completely different, completely different equation.
And so one of the things we need to understand much better is to economists, price is a number,
but to consumers, price is a feeling.
And fundamentally, economists have this weird idea of money that it kind of, I mean, one
of the most important topics, I think, in economics is how to spend it.
I mean, Scott Galloway did quite an interesting piece on this just a few days ago, which is,
in other words, it's not just about investment, it's not just about wealth optimization, the level of skill with which you translate available money into meaningful
experiences in some happiness, well-being, flourishing, whatever you want to call it.
I mean, that's a skill in itself. And there are undoubtedly people who do it very, very badly.
By the way, not only people who are extravagant, but actually people who are too stingy.
So there's a wonderful piece of research by George Loewenstein, which looks at the fact
that we all acknowledge in economics that there are people who spend too much.
In other words, they get into debt, they're extravagant, they live for the moment, they're probably, you know, they kind of have short time horizons
and optimize for the moment to a point where they neglect their long-term wealth. But George
Lowenstein also made the point that correspondingly, you would expect there to be people who are not
spendthrifts, he called them skin flints, who actually find the act of spending money so painful.
Just the act of parting with money is something, you know, the very transaction itself is so painful.
They spend far too little.
And I think he did a kind of survey on this and roughly speaking, about 40 to 50%
of the population get it roughly right.
And then you have a chunk of people at one end actually skin flints
out number spendthrifts.
Wow.
If I remember his data.
Wow.
So there is, I mean, one of his points is that he, you know, he's a very big
believer in buying experiences rather than stuff.
Um, that, um, and that's one of the reasons I think Americans, by the way,
should have more vacation time because Americans have quite a large non-working
population, but it's all people at the beginning of life and at the end of
life.
And the Americans massively over-index in terms of leisure or lack of economic participation
in terms of students and in terms of retirees.
But they're massively too busy in the middle of life.
And one of the things I would argue is that if Americans spent more money on experiences, leisure, travel, et cetera, which tend to be quite labor intensive,
rather than say buying more goods, which is what you do when you have very little
spare time, would they actually, would the actual American economy benefit?
Because you can't.
Because you got, in other words, it's better off having people working in a
New Orleans cafe than it is importing a Chinese device that, you know, I don't
know, robotically cleans your cappuccino machine or something, whatever it is
that people are buying and that's, now's, that's now having said that you've got to be very careful about
dividing what is a good and what is an experience, because if you buy a guitar
and then spend a lot of time playing the guitar, it's both.
It's both.
Yeah.
So it's very dangerous to say, Oh no, no, it's just, it's just goods are solid
things, experiences are intangible because there's a combination of both.
Rory Sutherland, ladies and gentlemen, Rory, let's bring this one home.
I appreciate you.
Eighth time, ninth time on the show.
I love it every time you come on.
Thank you.
It's a pleasure. It's a delight.
Yeah. I just feel, to be honest,
I just feel I'm a crap version of Eric Weinstein.
I don't know. Don't invite.
Eric, every time I watch him,
I feel inadequate.
I just feel like this rubbish,
rubbish version of Eric.
If Eric's made it to the end of this episode,
I forgot to text you and ask what brand of shirt you wear.
Where's these incredibly plutocratic white shirts?
I'm just intrigued to know where he likes them from.
I will remember and if not,
I've just put it out on YouTube channel.
By the way, his theory, which is ingenious,
that Jeffrey Epstein was basically an intelligence ploy
that couldn't survive into the internet
age.
That was one of those eye-opening moments where you go, surely not act.
Because if you think about it, okay, for a government, for a state actor, operating a
billionaire looks expensive, right?
But compared to an aircraft carrier, it's a rounding out.
Jeffrey Epstein was the deal of the century. Rory Sutherland said it here. Rory, I appreciate
you. Until next time, mate.
Thank you very much indeed.
If you are looking for new reading suggestions, look no further than the Modern Wisdom reading
list. It is 100 books that you should read before you die, the most interesting, life-changing
and impactful books I've ever read with descriptions about why I like them and
links to go and buy them and you can get it right now for free by going to
chriswillx.com slash books that's chriswillx.com slash books