PBD Podcast - Nouriel Roubini | PBD Podcast | Ep. 319
Episode Date: October 25, 2023Nouriel Roubini is a Turkish-born Iranian-American economic consultant, economist, and writer. He is a Professor Emeritus since 2021 at the Stern School of Business of New York University. Get Nourie...l Roubini's latest book, MegaThreats: https://bit.ly/45KmsBZ Visit Nouriel's website NourielRoubini.com: https://bit.ly/3ScPIhS Follow Nouriel on X: https://bit.ly/3Sj7dx7 Connect With Experts On Minnect: https://bit.ly/48Yu1Yy Visit our website: https://valuetainment.com/ Subscribe to our channel: http://bit.ly/2aPEwD4 Subscribe to: @VALUETAINMENT @vtsoscast @ValuetainmentComedy @bizdocpodcast Want to get clear on your next 5 business moves? https://valuetainment.com/academy/ Join the channel to get exclusive access to perks: https://bit.ly/3Q9rSQL Download the podcasts on all your favorite platforms https://bit.ly/3sFAW4N Text: PODCAST to 310.340.1132 to get the latest updates in real-time! Patrick Bet-David is the founder and CEO of Valuetainment Media. He is the author of the #1 Wall Street Journal Bestseller Your Next Five Moves (Simon & Schuster) and a father of 2 boys and 2 girls. He currently resides in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/pbdpodcast/support
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I know this life meant for me.
Yeah, why would you plan on deliath when we got that day?
That you came in giving values, contagiousness,
world of entrepreneurs, we can't no value that hate is.
I ain't running home, you look what I've become.
I'm the under one.
Okay, so our guest today is a special guest.
I'll read Dr. Nurel Rubini.
Let me properly introduce him.
He is a Turkish-born Iranian-American economist
writer and economic consultant.
He's a professor emeritus at Stern School of Business
of New York University, NYU,
and the founder of Chairman of Rubini Global Economics,
and independent global macroeconomics
and market strategy research firm.
He is best known for predicting the 2007, 2008
subprime mortgage crisis in US,
and subsequent global financial crisis
he's also known for warning about other economic risks,
such as the European debt crisis,
Chinese economics load on the potential for a stagflationary environment. His highly respected
economists and his views are often sought by policymakers and investors around the world.
He's been named one of the top 100 most influential people by time magazine and one of the 50 most
influential global thinkers. By foreign policy, he has written New York, he's a New York
Ambassador and Author, written several books on economics and finance,
including crisis economics, a crash course in the future of finance,
mega threats, and a bunch of other books.
He has highly accomplished economists and his work as significant impact on our
understanding of the global economy.
He has a couple of nicknames. He's, you know, very few people have multiple nicknames.
He's got one that's very known, Dr. Doom of economics. Some people have called him.
This is an interesting one. I got to tell you the more I read about you, the more interesting
you are to me. Rubini was described by a journalist, Halin Olen, as having an accent reminiscent of James Bond
villain.
So I don't know what that accent is going to be like, but the Dr. Doom nickname, have you
always, Mr. Dr. Rubini, have you always been this optimistic and positive about the future?
Well, thanks very much for being on your podcast, first of all.
You know, I'm an economist and as an economist, you have to think about what can go right and
what can go wrong in the world.
You have to do scenario analysis.
The downside risk, there are upside risk.
But in studying the US and the global economy, I've realized that over time some of the
downside risks are becoming more severe than the upside risk.
And the kind of relative economic and financial stability that we had in the 1950s and 60s
has given way to a period of time of much greater economic and financial and monetary volatility
and instability. We have had economic and financial crisis, both in advance economies and emerging
market for the last 20 years. They are becoming more frequent, they are becoming more virulent,
and we have to address them. And also I realized, and that was the subject matter
of my last book, Megatreads, that in addition
to the economic monitoring financial risk
will even award in which there are social risks,
political, geopolitical, environmental,
health, technological, and military.
And that's why my book addresses
both the economic and non-economic
one.
We live in a very dangerous world, so we have to be aware of what's going wrong for every
problem.
There are potential solutions.
They're not easy, they're not cheap, they're not expensive.
So I prefer to be called, I would say, Dr. Riavist rather than Dr. Doom.
But I guess the moniker of Dr. Riavist rather than Dr. Doom.
But I guess the moniker of Dr. Doom is more catchy
and that's why people keep on using it.
I like it though.
I like Dr. Doom to me.
It's more like a movie.
I can see you being an Avengers.
I can see it being, if I was your manager,
I would say let's stick to Dr. Doom.
We can market that more and do bigger things.
But anyways, I appreciate that. Again, I appreciate you for being on. We've been following your work
for a while. And you know, my question I got just to open up with, a lot of times like when you go
to a doctor and a doctor that's seen a thousand patients, two thousand patients, you'll say,
this part of my body hurts, this is what I'm experiencing. And an instantly by three questions,
are you having spasms here?
It could be this.
Let's test this.
Let's do an MRI.
Let's do that.
But for the most part, a doctor who has been around for 30 years
is going to have enough case studies to go to,
to say the trends of what you're talking about,
the symptoms matches this symptom that I've seen
with 78 patients before, right?
And let's kind of get clear on what's going on here
and we get to the bottom of it.
Today, I'm not sure if we have another case study like this,
it would have to be outside of the US
where we printed as much money as we did during COVID,
trillions of dollars, you've seen some numbers
that said we printed 40% of course it's not all paper,
some of it is digital, but still we've seen what the numbers are we've never printed that
kind of money before we've never had interest rates be at zero or one for as
long as it did you know the economic expansion 128 percent I'm not sure it's
good to keep interest rates that low for that long we've never seen people
staying home during COVID the way they did everybody all of a sudden wanted to
work from home.
We've not experienced that simultaneously.
The advancement of AI coming the way it is.
The conflict we're having with Ukraine, Russia, and then Israel, Iran, all hitting at the
same time.
You know, a lot of people right now are not selling their homes.
We have mortgage rates at a 27, not even mortgage rates,
mortgage application at a 27 year low.
Like there is no mortgage applications coming in.
Real estate sales are at a 20 year low.
We're not selling a lot of homes right now
because people don't want to give up that 30% rate.
So while we think the market's gonna crash
and real estate's gonna crash
and property value is gonna come down, it's not.
Gradually we're seeing some stuff that's gone out
with commercial that they're defaulting in,
and some subprime auto payments.
What other case study does somebody like you
who this is your vote?
What do you look at to say no, Patrick?
We've seen this here.
We've seen this aspect here,
and what happened Venezuela.
We've seen this, what happened in Japan.
We've seen this that happen here.
And we feel based on these markers,
this is what's most likely gonna be happening.
So one, the question would be,
what case study do you look at?
And two, based on that case study,
what are some possibilities
of what could happen with today's economy?
You're right in suggesting that the times
might be different today.
As I argue, my mega-thread books,
there's been a regime change in the world economy
and the world at large.
But of course, there are hundreds of episodes
of economic and financial crisis.
The whole economic history of events
have occurred for the last few decades
and there are some similarities
and there are some differences.
But in terms of differences, I would say that,
I grew up between Middle East and Europe.
I was born in 1958 and then for the first 24 years
of my life I was mostly then in Europe and Middle East.
And I came to US for grad school around 1983.
But when I was growing up, there was
to say a nuclear war among great power had gone away,
because in the 70s, you had the taunts
between the Soviet Union and US, then
Nixon went to China.
And therefore, while the were rivals of us,
Soviet Union, China China Communist, there was
no risk of a military war or a nuclear war.
Today, you know, there is already a hot war between Russia and Ukraine.
This hot war could become unconventional, could involve NATO.
We have started to see the beginning of a war between not just Israel and the mass, but
it could extend to Esbalah and
involve Iran that would be a second front. There is a cold war between the US and China
getting colder under some scenario. There is even risk of China invades Taiwan and then
it will respond to your outward US and China. And you have this little dictator in North Korea,
it keeps on sending rockets and it's nuclear bombs
towards the sea of Japan and Korea.
So there are four strategic rival of the US and the West
that are nuclear armed.
One is not yet, but it might become so near-run.
And therefore, today, the risk of war among great powers
or nuclear retaped is higher than ever before.
Another difference, when I was growing up,
in the 60 and 70s, there was barely any mention of global climate change,
you know, temperature, a baby above,
a pre-industrial level.
Today, you already have 1.5 above.
Pre-industrial, we're going to go towards two or more.
It's a disastrous, it's slow motion, train wreck.
You know, when I was growing up,
I never heard about global pandemics.
The last one had been Spanish flu in 1918, 19.
You knew it all in the history books.
This is 1980, we've had HIV, SARS,
MERS, swine flu, birth flu, Zika,
Ebola, COVID-19.
It's not gonna be the last one.
For the reason we can discuss,
there'll be more virulent ones.
AI, today people worry that AI eventually
is gonna become super intelligent.
It's gonna make human species almost happy and obsolete.
When I was growing up,
we're in the middle of AI winter, right?
There was barely some research about it. Nobody really thought there was not even a personal
computer let alone the internet, but for the idea that machine can threaten our jobs,
our incomes, and our lives, was totally perfetched. We're mostly at that time in stable liberal democracies, at least in the West, and the
kind of radical extremist populism of either extreme right or left that you see all over
the world was not prevalent.
Yes, there were some other foreign countries, Soviet Union, communist China, but they tend
to be the exception rather than rule.
In US, Europe, advanced economy was political stability.
And today instead, we're polarization, partisanship,
and populism that is radical and extreme.
And even economic and financial cycles were much more mild.
We did not have the severe recession,
the severe financial crisis we've seen in the last 30 years.
So it was a very different world.
And today is a world in which the threats are much more severe.
So in some sense, yes, we project from the past and believe that the recent past is going to imply the way the future is going to be.
And with all the ups and downs we have had 75 years of relative peace, progress and prosperity since World War II. And we hope that the future
is going to be like the recent past, but there may be a regime change and the kind of threats
that are emerging are very different than the last 75-year years.
So when you think about that as a consumer, okay, so the feedback I'd want to like give to the consumer and even from you
it would be would it be fair to say don't believe anything any experts or economists are saying right now 100% because everybody could be right and everybody could be wrong right a group could
be right and a group could be could be wrong because it's so hard to predict what's gonna happen.
You know, we're having a conversation yesterday about,
you know, what happened to Venezuela stock market,
how earlier this year was at 10,000,
right now it's at 63,000, 64,000,
and that's a reversal market crash,
where the market crashes up,
and then the rich get richer, the poor get poorer,
where one of my concerns is what
happens if power?
Like, you know how all these knobs we control, you know, when you're on a plane, you're looking
at the pilots, they're controlling all these knobs and you're like, okay, there's probably
five knobs that are the most important knobs to a pilot.
There's probably five knobs that are the most important knobs to a tanker or a driver
or anybody that has a knob.
In America, when it comes on to the economy, there's a handful of knobs.
One of the knobs is the interest rate.
That's a very powerful knob, right?
If you increase it, you decrease it, you're on power, that's a knob.
We have a few other knobs that we can look at.
We feed, you know, whether it's quantitative easing or tightening.
We put money in, we took money out. How bad do you think a
the market would be if in the next six, 12 months, because Powell right now is
trying to raise the rates to bring inflation down to 2%. You're saying it's
mathematically impossible. I read in an article you said it's not going to
happen back to, we have to, it's going to be absolutely impossible to get to
2%, just controlling the not with interest rates. It's not moving it that much. But slightly, how bad would
it be if he brought the rates back down to levels we were at a year and a half ago, say
4%, say even 3%, would the Dow suddenly go to 40, 45,000? Because my biggest concern
is with everything that's going on the economy, some of the behaviors before
that you would see, hey, gold should go to $50,000, $5,000, it's not moving. Bitcoin should
go to $100,000, it hit at $35,000, but the knobs that would typically move certain things are
not doing it right now. So what are some of the knobs you worry about the most that if we screw up can really affect the economy? You made many points interesting and valid. First of all,
the world is uncertain, but I wouldn't go as far as saying we cannot trust anybody. Of
course, even among professional economists and senior ones, there can be a spectrum of
views, but I'd rather to listen to an economist that has views different from me, and I can
have a dialogue with him or her on why they come to certain conclusions rather than other
ones.
But I don't trust those who pretend to be experts who don't know anything, you know.
Unfortunately, today on Twitter, anybody can go and bash me and attack me
Whether you like the note, you know, I've been
Studying due research economics
Pitch yet hardware Yale and when you White House treasury international organization for 50 years
So and then understand certain things. Doesn it mean I'm right all the time?
Of course not.
Does it mean that other people may be right?
Of course, that's why we have an intelligent dialogue
among people who are understanding these issues,
and there are experts.
So I don't believe in the idea that anybody can say anything
just because the experts are all the ones wrong.
At least economists, even when they disagree,
they have a parameter of discussing why they
disagree on what.
And I'll give you a specific example.
But predict the future is hard.
Think about what the Fed is trying to do.
They're trying to achieve inflation back to 2%
without a recession, what they call it soft landing.
So there's one scenario where you have a soft landing. You go back to 2% without a recession, what they call it soft landing. So there's one scenario where you have a soft landing,
you go back to 2% without a recession, Goldilocks,
in Macletes inflation.
There's another scenario, the other extreme,
that as you try to raise rates to fight inflation,
it caused not only an economic crisis recession,
but also financial crisis, because the interest rates
people have to pay under that,
household corporate financial institution, government becomes too high.
So you have an economic and financial crisis called the hard landing.
And then there's a middle scenario of a soft decision landing or a bumpy landing where we go
back to 2%, but we do so only to a short and shallow recession, not a severe one, not a financial crisis
on.
Now, the world could be more than these three scenarios, but let's simplify to these three
scenarios.
Then you can discuss whether the Fed is doing too much or too little.
If they do too much and they really want to fight inflation, they have a risk of killing
the economy because of financial crisis.
If they don't raise interest rates enough
because they care about economic growth
and financial stability, the risk is that there is
at the anchoring of inflation, inflation expectation,
wage price spiral, and went up with high inflation.
So yeah, many objectives.
You want price stability, inflation of 2%,
growth stability, no recession recession because recession leads to unemployment
is painful and you want financial stability that is avoiding financial crisis and banking
stresses. And you have one instrument, in principle, the Fed funds rate. Can you achieve all those
three targets one instrument? Maybe yes, maybe not, it depends on many factors. So my point is
maybe yes, maybe not, it depends on many factors. So my point is you have to be really sophisticated,
that you cannot be just judgmental in generic.
You have to do scenario analysis,
I provide you with three of them,
you have to assign probabilities,
and then those probabilities change as the facts change.
Say a year ago, the hard landing looked like a likely scenario
because where the spiking
all energy, food prices and inflation because in part of the Russian invasion of Ukraine,
six months ago we had banking stresses with few banks going past, so many people thought
we were going to have a real recession.
Then the policy responds, more flexibility in some markets, some adjustment.
I've implied that now it looks like maybe a short and shallow recession.
And the latest number actually suggests that the US economic growth is still about potential
around three rather than two.
And inflation is still falling because some of those negative slideshocks that is as
to ring COVID are being reversed.
And the price wage of parents going downward rather than upward. if the tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax tax and go back to 2% so you have to be, as I say, nuanced.
I like that on what you just said, Rob,
did you get a text by Brandon on a statistic number
that just came back recently?
Maybe I'll show it in a minute here.
It's very interesting.
I really want to get your feedback on this one.
When I get the statistic chart, I'll show it to you.
I think you may have some commentary on it.
By the way, in regards to real estate,
in regards to real estate, very different than 2008.
2008, we're dealing with negam.
People are paying the minimum.
Instead of the interest only, or the 30 or fix, or the 15 year,
you know that whole four pick-up payment mortgage
that we had that turned into a movie big short,
that very well it was a book, Then a movie fantastic movie and a book.
And you look at today's real estate. I obviously a lot of our audience that listens to this.
They're small business owners, some of them want to buy house, some of them want to sell their house.
But a lot of them are also within the real estate market, whether they're loan officers or
they're on the real estate side. So what do you like it? Let's just say I'm your son, okay?
And I'm your family.
I know you don't have any kids,
but let's just say, I'm related to you.
You truly care about me making the right decision.
I come to you and I say, uncle, I got a question for you.
I respect you a lot.
I'm thinking about buying a house right now.
Should I buy right now?
Should I wait right now?
Based on you having been in this industry and you know,
the industry, the economy, you see what's going on with rates,
you know, prices are not lowering, people are not selling.
There's not a lot of inventory out there.
Inventory is super low.
Everyone's waiting.
They're thinking the interest rates are going to come down.
Buyers are thinking sellers are going to lower their prices.
And some pockets, they're lower in prices. What do you think is going to lower their prices and some pockets are lower in prices.
What do you think is going to happen to the real estate market the next six, 12, 18 months?
Well, my answer to that question will be that the situation today for real estate and
I'm talking about residential, of course there is also commercial real estate, I'm talking about a residential. Of course, there is also commercial real estate,
that's a different story, retail and office space and things of that sort. But if you're looking
at residential, I would say the good news might be that things are not going to get bad, as bad as
they did during the subprime, bubble and bust and the global financial crisis. Because in that
episode, what happened was that the bubble in home prices was much worse than today. There might
be some frothiness in home prices today, but say the ratio between average price of a home to the
average household income or the ratio between the price of homes to
RENSA was really
stratosferically out of place
to as price they were going higher
There was a massive increase in the supply
much more many new homes being built and that supply was going into speculative demands
People buying homes just for say condo flipping.
So once it burst and the speculative demand disappeared, the excess supply of housing
implied that the price collapsed. 20-30 percent, many people were essentially having no equity in
their homes. They could not essentially pay their mortgages, they walked
away from their homes, and once we had the recession, we were severe people didn't have the income
to pay also for their homes. So we had a real severe recession, bust of housing. Today instead,
first of all, those that measure of the bubble in the housing market are showing frothiness, but not a massive bubble like
6.08
to
The economy is still growing
So the household might have a balance sheet problem the interest is are starting to play on the mortgage as a higher
But if you have a job and income you can still afford it
is higher, but if you have a job and income, you can still afford it. Three, when interest rates were very low, you know, as of two years ago, you could get,
as a prime borrower, say, you could get a 10-year mortgage for 20, half to 3%, today is
7-8.
Many people locked in mortgages along maturity, 10, 20, 30 years, and interest rates are much lower.
So the average person is nothing, 7, 8%.
The average is paying something like between three and four.
Some people less, some people more.
And people have jobs.
So are we going to have a downturn in real estate?
Yes.
Is it going to be more severe in commercial, meaning offices and stores and so on?
Yes.
Could there be a risk also for housing?
Yes.
But if we avoid a real recession, people have jobs and income and they have now locked
in interest rates are lower.
As some of those mortgages refinanced, then people are going to find much more expensive
to pay their mortgages refinanced, then people are going to find much more expensive to pay their mortgages.
And today, I would say, given their ratio
between prices and rents, it's much more,
how to say, much more difficult,
for any individual to rent rather than buy.
You want to wait to buy only when mortgages are lower
or prices have fallen 10-15%.
So if I had to give an advice to anybody, I would say rent today, wait until mortgage rates are
lower and all prices of all my lower is not a good time to buy.
And I don't know if you saw the numbers. It said what, 52% cheaper right now to rent to buy.
Yeah, that's correct. And there's other stats that support what you're saying.
Right now, in America, 61% of the total mortgages in America
are held at under 4%.
What percentage?
61% are held under 4%.
And 81% are under 5%.
And if you look at it as a band,
about a quarter of them or
3% to 2.5% 38% of them are 3 to 4 and 20% or 4 to 5. So to your points or you
know people that go say from migration north to south you could air B&B which
is another phrase for just rent your old home. And, you know, if you're a retired person, rent something in any of the
southern sunbelt where you go for your winters when you, um, not for, uh, you
know, extravagance, just as you go down for the, for the winter, the way the, um,
the retired folks go.
The other side of it is there's a little bit of a tick up in foreclosures
for subprime, but I read this morning that even if that peaks out, it probably only adds 50%
to the current inventory, which would still keep it like only 40% of the historical average.
So in other words, if the subprime inventory comes out through foreclosures, the inventory
for sale right now is still so low, it's just going to bring it up a little bit.
And it's going to be more...
It's not going to be dramatic where it's going to be felt.
Spot market.
Well, the other thing I read that was very interesting is who owns the houses that are being
fore...
that are...
that are being discounted?
The homeowner discounts the rates much slower and it was the foreclosure
glut and the banks that dumped the assets they were holding. Because you and I have a bank
all of a sudden we have four houses and no mortgage behind them. We're like, holy crap, we sell
them. And we dropped the price. So the banks were the ones that started the snowball of
the price dropping because Pat and Tom's bank
were not making interest on that.
We got property talks, we got insurance.
Get this thing off my balance.
Yeah.
And we, and we tossed it out.
I wanna show this, I wanna show this, Dr. Noreal.
If you can, if you can pull this up, Rob,
I know I'm not gonna be able to see it.
As long as he sees it, that's what I care about.
I saw this the other day and for me, I'm always wondering, you know, who not going to be able to see it as long as he sees it. That's what I care about. I saw this the other day. And for me, I'm always wondering, you know,
who is going to predict the recession more accurately?
Do they know something the rest of us don't know?
As long as you see it, I'm good.
Whenever you see it, if you can just tell me you see it,
it should say, what's next for the US economy?
2024 projections. Are you able to see it?
Not yet.
Okay, Rob, let me know when you have it so he can see it.
On this chart, before he brings it up, I'll just read it to you.
It shows seven different brackets.
And these brackets are shown, what is the percentage?
Who thinks a recession is coming?
Okay.
FET staff, 0%, they don't think recession is coming.
This is people that work for the Fed,
they don't think a recession is gonna be coming.
Yield curve, 61%, economist, economists think 48% chance,
a recession is coming.
Consumers, 69% chance, they think a recession is coming.
Goldman Sachs is only at 15%.
Bank of America is at 35% to 40%.
However, CEOs of larger companies, they're at 84%.
Seals of larger companies are at 84%.
So why would CEOs of larger companies be at 84%?
What did they do that the rest of us don't know?
Now if you of course, of course, study this,
a lot of these companies when money was so cheap,
everybody was saying, guys, let's go get some money.
Let's go get some money.
Let's go get some money.
Let's go get some money.
Money is so cheap.
Some of them put it to work.
Some of them put it in a treasury and they made interest on it.
But for the most part, some of these guys are paying interest rates that they're
worried if the, if it gets called a year from now, six months from now,
their interest on the loan that they took, some numbers have shown it's going to
go from 530 billion this year to 780 billion next year.
Then it's going to crack a trillion one, then a trillion three in the next three
years. And these are interest payments that they have to be paying.
That's a lot of money.
Why do you think CEOs who are in the business think a recession is more likely than the rest
of the other seven communities?
Yes, I mean, first of all, that chart shows that there is a whole distribution of views
among different
groups, even among economists, summer optimistic, summer pessimistic.
And sure, that's the case also among a variety of CEOs.
So the honest answer is, as I said, when it comes to predicting the future, you can only
do a bunch of scenarios and try to assess probability. Six months ago, the stuff of the Fed had a recession.
Short and Charlotte's being their baseline.
Today instead, they say their baseline is no recession.
So that probably has gone for them not to zero,
but their baseline is a soft landing rather than a short
and shallow recession.
Additional point, when people say there'll be a recession,
there's gonna be a short and shallow,
there's gonna be more severe associated
with a banking financial crisis or not.
And these are a recession next 12 months,
as opposed to after the presidential elections,
if a recession were to occur before the next presidential
election, it's gonna have impact on whether there's gonna be Trump or Biden winning, even a short and shallow recession.
It occurs in 2025, the implications are going to be different.
So even the question has to be more specific.
I think that the CEOs, in my view, are concerned about several things. First of all, while during the global financial crisis,
the problem was too much debt of households,
mortgages and lending by the banks.
In the last 10, 15 years,
there has been a massive buildup of corporate debt.
Corporation are borrowed like crazy.
And they've been financed less by banks
and more by what people call shadow banks,
non-bank financial institutions, a variety of capital markets, hedge funds, private equity firms,
and you name it. There is already a lot of data that is what's called junk bonds below investment
rate, or people that have so much data that is risky, and the spreads that you have to pay on it is much higher than investment grade.
There is a trillion dollar of what people call fallen angels, that and firms that were investment grade and now they've been done graded to junk level.
There is another trillion dollar of corporate data that is barely investment-grade, one step from being done-graded.
And in the private markets, there has been a massive build-up of private debt, not financed by banks or capital markets,
and things like what people exalt the instrument like leverage loans, C.L.O. private debt, a lot of it has been done in very
risky ways without safe covenants.
And some of this debt by the corporate sector like the household during the COVID crisis
was refinanced and lower interest rates and longer maturity, but several trillion dollars of this corporate
debt is coming now to maturity in the next one, two, three years and so on. And if interest
rates remain high, those firms that were borrowing at low rates, like households, will have
to reference themselves at much higher rates. Now, like for the household sector, today,
there is a balance sheet problem.
You have a lot of debt and the interest rate on that debt is rising.
But you don't have yet a P&L problem, meaning an income side,
because the economy is still growing.
Profits are still positive.
Remings are growing.
So, yes, corporates like household are trained on the balance sheet high debt and
Gradual interest rates going higher, but as long as houses have jobs and incomes rather being unemployed as long as firms have revenue growth and profits
They can still manage the interest payments on those liabilities if instead there is a recession
You get a double, a shock to your
balance sheet, high debt and rising interest payments on the debt, and then a
hit to your income statement, your revenue, your income, your profit, your
employment, and then you get into a severe financial distress. So the bad news
that ratios are high and that service increase are rising. The good news is that income revenues,
profits are still rising and therefore for now even the corporate sector can afford it. But
COS are becoming nervous that eventually this large stock of debt and higher interest rates
is going to become unsustainable. They also look at global risk of various sorts. And of course, the geopolitical
risk are a threat. If energy prices were to rise even more so, because there is a regional
war between Israel, U.S., and Iran, not just against Hamas, that shock to all prices is
going to lead to inflation, recession, stagnation, like the 1970s. This is some of the things that might be
on the mind of the corporate leaders.
Yeah, that's on the mind of the CEO.
I have a question for you,
and that's what's on your mind.
A year ago, you, like many others,
and I was kind of in this camp,
you saw all the things you articulated,
and you thought that this year
could be a pretty hard landing recession.
Now it appears that it extended.
The stimulus took consumer credit card debt
all the way down to 300,000,000, 400,000 billion,
but now the consumer has spent that all the way up
to 1 trillion, really driving what appears to be third quarter.
And then you've got the things that you just talked about
that so the consumer may have a little bit more runway
because they've got a PNL and the interest rates on their debt is rising
Gradually, so this consumers probably got some time
But it doesn't sound like you think corporates got a lot of time
What do you think is coming for next year? You think it's gonna be a soft landing
But I'm hearing between the lines. I think you've got some thoughts in there that may be more severe for the corporate sector. Did I hear that?
thoughts in there that may be more severe for the corporate sector. Did I hear that?
Yes, I would say if we go back to the three scenarios I described before, a real hard
landing, a short and shallow recession called it soft beach or bumpy landing, and real soft landing,
I would say that the good news compared to a year ago when we had spiking, inflation,
and rising commodity prices, or six months ago when we were worried that the banking problem
would lead to a credit crunch and a crash of the economy, is that the tail risk of a real
hard landing today looks much lower than it was, and the stimulus, the fiscal might be
part of the story. So then the question is, say, think about the next year or so
through the end of 24.
Do we get really a soft landing or a short and shallow recession?
I would say the consensus is moved toward the soft landing,
but there are scenarios under which you could see
got a short and shallow recession.
You get a short and shallow recession. You get a short and shallow recession
for the following reason.
You could be in a situation in which
both the discomfort in the Middle East gets worse.
And all prices have already risen by 10%
compared to the pre-barbaric attack of Israel by Hamas.
Suppose that they go up by 20% or more.
Then you have two shocks.
One, inflation is rising.
Two, those who are users of energy, households and those firms that are energy users in the US,
have a shock to their income as well, because it's more expensive to buy energy.
So you have a stack of inflation-shop that reduces income and increases inflation
cost of production. Then the Fed has a dilemma. You want to fight inflation left to raise rates
more, but already I. And that creates distress. And if you don't raise them because you're worried
about growth, then you can have a Dehanko Reveh inflation expectation and a wage price pile.
So the trade-off becomes more difficult for the Fed. The economy is already going to slow down in the fourth quarter because of a bunch
of headwinds, not just energy prices, most likely, what the government shutdown, the GOP
doesn't even have a speaker, even if they have one, there will be a collision course with
the Democrats. So we get a government shutdown,
get energy prices rising,
we have labor strikes in a number of sectors.
Student loan repayment have to start,
that's a drag of 50 billion on the economy.
And rising interest rates are becoming a burden
both for households and for corporates will have to start
cutting back on consumption, cutting back on capital spending,
cutting back on hiring.
So you get a slow down of the economy, slowly, slowly.
And then there are all these new uncertainties coming from
the Middle East to require in uncertain people who like to wait.
Is the option of evaluating them they might do less capex,
less production, less employment, less consumption,
they may save work, and then it becomes a sinful feeling.
So I would say for now, the economy's
been growing up up potential.
Q3 actually could be very strong.
Q4 is going to be probably weak.
And then depending what happens to the Middle East,
what happens to inflation, whether the Fed can still
hold from here as opposed to I can ignore,
you may end up in a soft landing,
or you may end up into a short and shallow recession.
And those are the factors they have to keep in mind,
as you're asking yourself, whether it's one or the other.
What do you think the highest probability? I mean, that's a wide analysis. What do you think
the highest probability for the US? I mean, no economist can say anything with certainty, of course.
But what do you think the highest probability? Soft landing and then
corporate banking and corporations have a tough time adjusting because they're carrying
some of them $1 trillion of, you know, barely above junk.
Um, I would say right now, the situation in my view is,
uh, the probability of a soft landing, I would give it an
excellent more than a short and shallow recession, say 55,
45, few months ago, I would have said the opposite, but the
economic data of surprise on the
upside, there's also a lot of fiscal stimulus in the pipeline between the CHIPS Act, the
infrastructure act, and the IRA, and the IRA is going to cost us not $360 billion, but
there's such a generous system of tax credit for investing into energy that probably the
final cost is going to be over a
trillion over a decade. And then you have the new investments in AI that many firms are doing
that are also a positive and so on. So I would say a soft landing as of now looks more likely
and the Fed may be close to being done with raising rates as long as there is no spike in inflation, rather
than even a short and shallow recession. But I would say if energy prices go higher by
another 10 to 20 percent compared to current level, then probably we get into a short and
shallow recession. Because then inflation is higher, the Fed cannot just ignore it. They have to hike once or twice more.
And the rising energy prices as a stronger impact on the users of energy, they will have to spend less than on the producers of energy.
They will have a windfall of profit and revenues. So the net effect on the economy is weakening the economy while raising inflation.
So I think that what's happening in the Middle East at this point is very critical.
The banking problems, we worried about them, but they're under control right now.
A few original banks went bust, the other ones were backstopped, the credit crunch has
not been so severe, the big banks are still plenty of cash, plenty of capital, so we're not going
to have a banking problem as of now. But if the Fed were to raise interest rates, two or
three or four times more, because inflation goes higher, because energy prices go higher
than I think we end up into a recession.
Do you have for someone that Turkish know Turkish born Iranian American I read somewhere
I think you were also you also lived in Tehran for a year if I'm not mistaken. Yeah, from Istanbul
to Tehran to Tel Aviv and then Milano and after college I came to US for grad school. So got it.
Quite an interesting one. Yeah. So you've been in that region. I lived in Iran for 10 years myself, born 78, three months later,
Homeni obviously comes in and the rest is history.
And then we go to Germany to live in a refugee camp.
What are your thoughts about what's going on right now with Israel,
Palestine, and then you're someone that's gone to Harvard
and you're not just anybody that went to Harvard.
Professor there, respectable.
You went to school there yourself.
But you're seeing the criticism that's happening
within schools, universities, kids taking different sides.
Many billionaires are now saying,
I'm not gonna be funding schools, whether it's Wharton,
whether it's Harvard, whether it's Yale,
it's not like it's just one school. It's a lot of that taking place. How are you processing the current
conflict taking place in Israel and Palestine and Hamas?
First of all, as an economist, I have to ask myself, what are going to be the economic
and financial implications of this conflict, regardless of personal views.
You know, I'm Jewish, my parents, my sister, 20 persons living in Israel.
You know, I support strong Israel, I think that this attack by Amaz against Israel was totally
barbaric, torture rape, abuse, something disgusting, barbaric. but I also believe that eventually there has to be a
political solution to the Palestinian problem with a two-slide solution, and maybe we need a
war to go to peace. That's what happened in 73. Egypt attacked Israel, restored their honor,
and then Sadat went and made peace with Baggan. So maybe we'll need a warrant and then we can read over a mass and we can have more stable
Palestinian, authority in Gaza and resume the normalization between Israel, Saudi, US
and the rest and then we can restore the peace process.
That's my hope.
As an economist I have to think about scenarios.
I would say, principally, you have to think about two scenarios.
Scenario number one is one in which this conflict remains limited to Gaza.
Israel boz into Gaza, try to dislodge as much as it can of a mass, try to eradicate it.
A mass has been actually more of a curse to the Palestinian in Gaza than
to the Israelis.
It has made the life miserable.
And it will be painful, hopefully, can avoid and minimize the loss of civilian life and
all the rest.
But as long as remains contain just to Israel, a mass in Gaza, the macroeconomic implication globally remained modest.
Market seems to be pricing this scenario.
Say, oil prices, energy prices have gone up by only 10% compared to before the attack
by Amaz.
It's significant, but it's the fear premium.
There is not yet a shock to the production or supply or
exports of oil and energy and gas from the Gulf. It's more the fear premium that is
fighting 10% energy prices. And the movements in bond yields in stock markets and gold has
been minimal. When there was a panic, gold and higher, bond yields went lower, equity corrected the little bit. But now,
good economic use on US showed that bond yields are going higher
again, equity are stronger, and gold is moving, a sort of
sideways. So the market seem to be believing that the
probability of a conflict contained to essentially Gaza is
a 80% probability, even more, the probability of a regional conflict
with a global 10%, 20% maximum. That's what the markets, bond markets, equity markets,
all markets, and gold markets are telling us. Now, market can be wrong. So that's a, how
to say, less dystopian scenarios, still ugly, painful, but manageable, both geopolitically,
economic and financially.
The second scenario is one in which Iran decides that the cannot let Israel completely eradicate
a mass as they've been supporting it for decades, and the way to try to make it hard for Israel to beat Hamas is to unleash
Esbala in Lebanon, because then Israel has to fight on two fronts, south against Hamas,
north against the Esbala, and Esbala is something like 100,000 of it, not 10,000 or so. So they
are much more powerful. That could be even a third front in the West Bank as well.
Now, if Iran decides that they have to essentially support
the proxy of mass at any cost and they unleash a ballad,
not only US and an Israel attack as ballad,
but then Israel and US have to attack Iran.
Why?
Two reasons.
Most likely Iran was already behind
a mass attack against Israel and certainly would be again behind the attack of a Hezbollah against
Israel. So a decision of his baili in the full world with Israel is cannot be taken without Iran
agreeing on it. And two, Iran at that point has to accelerate his own nuclear chlorification program
because they know they have to try to get the bomb before Israel attacks them. And, in
my way, in the deal that the US did with Iran on releasing the six hostages in exchange
of, or a few hostages, in exchange of six billion. Iran also committed to stop enrichment
of uranium to 60%, not going to 90% weapon grade. Not that the US has pulled out of this
deal, say, no more six billion, Iran is a can retaliate only by enriching uranium.
So your two reasons why Israel and US have to strike Iran, Iran and Israel as well
up, and it's trying to fight Israel on three fronts.
And Iran is going to go and build a bomb.
Then if Israel and U.S. attack Iran, then the production and exports of oil from the
Gulf, the state of war was blocked for a few weeks, if not a few months, depending on
how severe this conflict becomes.
Becomes like 1973.
A young people people were or 1979
Are in revolution where you had a doubling or tripling in all prices and if that happens then
It's a regional conflict all doubles in price inflation goes to the roof
You have a U.S. recession. You have a global recession and we have a
Stackflation like heading the 70ss, stackflation means inflation and recession.
And then it becomes really ugly,
it comes in economic and financial crisis globally.
So the other side is,
which one of these two scenarios more likely?
The other side is that nobody knows.
And you can try to assign probabilities.
The marketer is saying the negative scenario,
which everything goes wrong, is only 10 to 20%
probability.
80% probability that the conflicts is contained to Gaza.
Other people, geopolitical experts think that the second scenario is more than likely.
Does anybody know?
Not clearly.
But it's a very, very different outlook for the U.S. and the global economy.
In one, the impact is really minimal on the economy, on the markets.
In the other one, it's a total disaster.
Yeah, it's not a pretty face.
I mean, when you're looking at it right now, it's not looking good at all.
And a lot of people are concerned, but again, if you're saying 10 to 20% the way the markets
react and saying they're going to figure out a way to have a peace treaty or, you know,
kind of finish this on and move on. It doesn't look like Israel wants to do that. It almost
seems like Israel wants to impose because they're not happy about what Hamas did and they want
to defend their position. But again, we're gonna see what's gonna happen with them.
No, Israel is gonna go after Hamas.
They're left to invade Gaza.
They're left to try to limit, and they will try.
Civilian deaths because Israel doesn't want to kill civilians.
And unfortunately, Hamas uses them as human shields.
But let's say the conflict in Gaza could become painful
and ugly and whatever, but eventually
there will be a ceasefire.
Eventually, hopefully, most of Gaza is eradicated.
Maybe you get Saoudi's Egyptians and moderate Palestinians from West Bank controlling and
providing security to Gaza after Israel has done the cleanup. And then you have a path either for at least a ceasefire
and or then resuming a pre-sposses. But the economic implication however ugly things become
for Israel and for dozens are contained. So I'm not saying it's a nice scenario, but it's
contained. It doesn't have global consequence. The other scenario, you have the global speculation, global recession and I inflation. It's a real disaster for the world.
You know, when I was talking to Ray Dalio, one of the things he was talking about is how close
to he also watches the political side of how it affects the economy, right? I mean, you have to
almost pay attention to see what's going on with politics in this region and China and this and that Middle East. How does this impact 2024, we're 12 months away, right? Give or take 12 months
in a week, 12 months, yeah, exactly 12 months, 53, 54 weeks away from election. How does this
impact elections negatively, positively, no impact? What do you think the impact that this is on the election?
You know, it's complicated. I would say that assuming that Democrats nominate Biden and Republican nominate Trump,
that's a baseline for now, the key things probably that determine the results of the election are,
first of all, the economy.
Secondly, of course, the
campaign and the debates are going to be mattering as well, which one of the two
candidates look stronger in debates or in the campaign, but I think that's going to be a bit of a wash.
The economy is a first-order magnitude, and then foreign policy issues also can matter as well, directly and directly. Now, I would say the economy for now is doing okay.
It's not great, but growth is about potential and employment rate is low, job creation is
still solid, which growth is fine now and so on.
So the economy is doing reasonably well.
So that should be favoring Biden.
What could the real economy, I would say,
is not the Fed directly, is more the Middle East.
As I said, if oil goes up by another 20%,
then inflation is rising, the economy is weakening,
and the Fed, if you do them, if you don't, if you raise rates,
there are such accounts more severe.
If you don't raise rates, then inflation goes higher.
And that's also painful.
So the Middle East, first of all,
can derail the economy.
And that's one direct effect.
Two, of course, the Middle East matters
because then you have a foreign policy kind of crisis
where the Russian invasion of Ukraine brutal now you have
another conflict. I would say that the reaction of the president so far has been quite strong
even Republicans believe that you know strong support of Israel has been the right thing
to do. But you know the same way the Ukraine thing became partisan unfortunately because
we should be supporting Ukraine. Even the Middle
East could become partisan. I'm sure Trump is going to say it's your fault by trying to
have a dialogue with Iran. We look like we were appeasing Iran and then they have mass
attacks. The thing is, I'm very criticism. I think that Trump getting out of the joint
comprehensive plan of action was actually a big mistake,
but that's a personal view because then Iran became even more radicalized.
But foreign policy, if there is a total disaster in the Middle East, they could blame it on the President,
but so far it is in the President's taken, an approach that is the right one and supported by most Americans and so on.
So the key thing I think is really the economy and whether they live a recession,
and that depends in part on what's going to happen in the Middle East.
So the results of the election depend on the economy,
and the biggest threat to the economy right now is probably a conflict in the Middle East
that spikes all prices, a leads to inflation and recession.
Then, you know, Carter lost his election in the second term
when he ran a game because not only did he have the hostage crisis,
but more importantly, there ain't a revolution that led to a shock
to the production of oil, doubling of all prices, inflation and recession.
That was the trigger for Carter losing to Ronald Reagan.
And a carton beat Ford because we had the first old shock of 1973 as well.
And that's why he was only blamed on the sitting president, General Ford.
So the Middle East can really affect the results
of the US election when Carter beat Ford and when Reagan beat Carter. It could happen
again next year. Meaning it could happen where Trump beats Biden again next year. Kind
of like, oh, you're saying Carter beating Ford is what you're saying. So some would say,
I mean, if you look at the Washington Post,
just came out saying Biden's economy is great everywhere,
except in the polls.
And I think this is a couple days ago.
That's the U.S. economy continues to improve.
President Joe Biden continues to not get credit for it,
only 35% of voters in seven swing states
trust Biden on the economy.
According to a Bloomberg morning consult, Paul, with 51% saying it was better under Trump that 16% difference and it's a
it's a WAPO talking about this and Bloomberg talking about this so why do you
think the American voter doesn't trust Biden on the economy?
You know, polls, you know, first of all, can change over time. I think that the economy did well under Trump, but of course, then you had the COVID crisis,
an external shock, led to a recession.
Since then, we've had the recovery from the COVID crisis.
Growth has been robust.
An employment is low. job creation good. Of course, inflation
for a while led to a reduction in real wages and people felt the pain of inflation.
Now luckily inflation is falling, it's still above a target, but core is getting close
to three. So I think some of the malaise is a malaise that comes from the recent increasing
inflation and the erosion of real wages.
In the US, we also have a large amount of income and wealth inequality.
That's not because of Biden or Trump. It's more structural.
But I think that even if you have jobs that is a feeling that the middle class or the working class
are sort of left behind, that neither party cares about them.
I would say Biden is policies, you know, Trump run as a populist and then he governs
a plutocrat, giving tax cuts mostly for corporation.
Biden has to his own industrial policy, try to rebuild the industrial base of the country
and new factors, he manufacturing jobs are being created.
But the average American is still quite cranky because he's worried about still inflation
being too high, he's worried about all these economic and political and geopolitical uncertainties.
There is now a meaningful amount of income and wealth inequality and there is a resentment
against it.
And usually people tend to overall blame whoever is in power because the buck stops there
as well.
So I would say, you know, there is also a represents electron that depends, of course,
on five to seven swing states, which direction they're going to go is not clear.
Economic issues may matter, and those polls are just that what the calm is doing well,
only part of Americans are supporting by in those swing states.
But then many people believe that in those swing states soccer moms, independent voters, and others,
find that the brand of populism of Trump is also
quite toxic, is a divider, and many of them were put off
by him in 2020, were put off by him in 2022.
And then my vote for Biden in 2024.
So I would say the results of the 24 election
are totally open
where there's going to be Biden on Trump.
It's all to be seen, right?
I agree.
I do think it's going to be totally open.
By the way, have you seen studying the economy
last 50 years us having this many strikes in a year,
UAW, writers, actors, FedEx, you know, UPS?
Who else is the reason when Kaiser Permanente,
75,000 of them?
I mean, left and right, there's so many strikes
that are taking place.
Have you ever seen a time
what we've had this many strikes at the same time?
Well, you know, in the 70s,
there was a lot of labor strikes,
but I think the reason why we're seeing this type
of labor strike, and not just US, but also in Europe,
is that, you know, for the last few decades there has been a massive increase
in income and wealthy inequality.
Real wages have not grown very much.
Regalitzo was in power.
Profits has grown a lot.
The share of labor income, as a share of overall income has gone down.
The share of wages have gone down,
the share of profit and capital has gone up.
And there is more inequality.
And I think that that's something that leads
to political resentment against it,
not only among Democrats, one of the reasons why,
the GOP used to be the party of Wall Street
and big business and small business.
And now it's become the party instead of economic populism, right?
Of the left behind the blue collars and my collars saying we want policies in our favor,
bashing big business against free trade, against migration, against things that usually the GOP standard for why those were suffering are not just
White colors and blue colors that are socially more
progressive and both Democrats
But also many people are socially conservative
Feel that they're left behind and they want economic populism and the economic policy of this territory of Trump was
Economic populism and nationalism and protection is a new name it
So, you know the economic policies of a Bernie Sanders are not very different from those of Donald Trump at least those
They do proteins to have and by them as taken some of the same
Economic populism and by theomics in parties, I care about you,
about working class.
I want to create jobs, manufacturing.
I want to reshore it.
I want to invest in our infrastructure.
I want to produce a lot more chips, more energy,
more alternative, and so on and so on.
So economic populism and industrial policy
is something that's both Republican and
Democrat sort of a grion.
Let's say fair, free capitalism is out of the wind, not only among Democrats, but even
among Republicans.
Yeah, it's funny you say that.
When you say, you know, GOP was about Wall Street, it was this, it was that.
I mean, I would even add GOP, maybe some would say,
censorship and for war.
And it's almost like flip.
Today, it's more Democrats that are for war,
for censorship, for Wall Street, they're controlled by them.
And it's very confusing for the voter on what's going on.
But Tom, you have a question about, go ahead.
You're gonna say something.
But yeah, so Tom, you had a question about immigration
on, you know, how, you had a question about immigration on,
you know, how, you know, the amount of people
that are coming across and then, you know,
Dr. Rene talked about how immigration is a good thing.
We're getting a lot of workers.
What question did you have?
Well, the question I had, most recently you talked
about immigration.
Immigration also is not the number one topic for an election.
Correctly, you know, Bill Clinton was right.
It's the economy's stupid.
But right behind it, you've got immigration.
Because on one side, people see excess immigration on here,
maybe taking basic low paying jobs and taking jobs away
from the people that are already here
who desperately want to find those jobs.
On the other hand, you pointed out that it actually
helps innovation.
When actually information I've seen
is that the H1B program,
and I don't know how you got to Harvard,
how you came to the United States,
but you look at a lot of these leaders and innovators
in Silicon Valley, they came across
from H1Bs from India and places like this,
where they had strong undergraduate degrees
and were coming for graduate degrees and MBAs here.
Right now when you look at immigration, you were saying it's good for the economy, but
it doesn't create an immediate deficit burden because when they arrive here, they're not
ready to be workers and it's not a handful of innovators, entrepreneurs coming to start
companies.
That's a mass of humanity that's basically refugee status.
So most recently you talked to that on CNBC,
can you unpack that a little bit? Because it seemed like you were talking on both sides.
Yeah, first of all, I would say that migration has to be regulated. Nobody says, let's have
open board than anybody can get in. And we have to have a more rational migration policy.
And I would say both parties have positions that
are too radical, essentially.
Republican blaming every problem on migrants
and Democrats not being willing to maybe having
more constraints on how we manage legal migration,
as opposed to a more open border. But even Democrats
are going to realize that you have to address this problem in a more consistent way. And even
Biden, I'll say, I want funding for the wall and for a more rational immigration policy.
So hopefully, if you don't make it a political issue, both sides can reach an agreement on
having good quality workers coming to US
and legal migration rather than illegal one.
You know, US is a country has always been built
on people coming from abroad, migrants.
Everybody in the US came from somewhere else
apart from the Native American ones.
And the strength of the US has been getting people
from all over the world.
And it's not just that people say,
do people who come here like me go to go and get a PhD
and being high-coded, if the workers as opposed to those who are
people with less skills.
But think of it this way, even among those that are maybe lower skill,
suppose that you are a poor farmer in Mexico,
or Central America, and you're deciding to leave your village,
risk your life, because you could be dead
across the border to come to America.
Even among those farmers, you are the one
that is slightly more entrepreneurial, slightly more restaking, slightly more hard working, and you're willing to risk your life to have a better life in US.
When you come to US, you're not going to get a welfare check. You're going to work your ass off in the fields, in the factories, delivery of food, whatever not.
I mean, we see it.
You see all these Latinos that provide us service every day.
I see it in New York in tons of them.
And I'm sure whether it's tax or California,
these are really hardworking people.
But actually, the work hard, they pay taxes,
because they have to pay tax.
Some of them even pay social security taxes
because they hope that one day they become legal
and they have social security benefits.
And therefore, why there's a PhD like me,
high productivity, or somebody's gonna create a Silicon Valley
firm and a good third of them are created by foreigners,
or even a small campizino that is working as a soft
to have a better life and so on.
The kind of people that the US attracts
are those are more ambitious, more entrepreneurial,
more staking, more hardworking, more willing to have a better life at any level of education,
at any level of skills.
Are there some people that are coming here maybe because eventually they think they're
going to get welfare or something?
Yes, are the majority I don't think so.
The majority want to come here to work and have a better life.
Now you cannot have it unregulated.
You cannot have millions of people illegally.
They put some pressure on local public services, whether it's housing, healthcare, education
and other ones.
And therefore, we have to have a managed process.
So we have to go beyond the extremes.
We have to be rational about it, sensible, do immigration
reform, I sent you and allow those who are still here and work hard to be legalized, and
then have a system that allows people to come in, in US legally, maybe you do like Canada
where you give points for skills of some sort, you know, we don't need just PhD, we need
people who can be electrician or planners or working in the farms and so on. So skills are is
different at different level of the distribution of the job matching as well.
So we have to have a little bit less rhetoric, less partisanship and you know,
I'm a migrant, you're a migrant, many others are at some point everybody
came from somewhere else to America and that's what made America great but we have to have
a rational approach to it. We cannot just call them all rapists and murderers and bad homers
like Trump did that was sick, that's totally false and wrong, but we cannot just have borders that are open without any legal migration either.
So we have to tone down the rhetoric,
and we have to, and by the way, there's a massive lack
of supply of labor, you know, in New York,
where I live, many restaurants, you know,
don't have enough workers and skilled workers.
So you have all these people coming from Venezuela,
by the way, many of them are skilled
that escaping Maduro and economic disaster and they want to work and until recently it couldn't work because if you come in US and you're not yet officially
Refugee you cannot have a work permit luckily
I think rightly so the Biden administration decided that they can have a work permit because these people are actually highly employable
administration decided that they can have a work for me because these people are actually highly employable. Many of them are highly employable. They want to work once they are here.
So if you let them in, we should let them work and legalize their ability to work so that
they're not the strain on our social welfare system.
That's right.
I just want to here restate what I think you said. So you're for legal immigration. You're
not for leaving the border open and letting everybody
in. That's what you're saying.
You're not for illegal immigration.
OK.
So that's very important to say.
For legal immigration, and also for a system, maybe,
of points that gives up, we need different people
of different skills.
And different skills means that not everybody
is entrepreneurically.
We need more farm worker.
We need more climber. We need more climber.
We need more education.
We need people who are doing
blue collar work in manufacturing.
So the skills are skills at every spectrum.
So it's not easy.
You just give a premium to people who have college degree.
We need skill workers even though we're blue collar.
I love that.
And I agree because we do need that.
There's certain work that not everybody's gonna do.
We need people across the board.
But to specify that you're for legal immigration,
and what's interesting is what I love is going on is,
at first, you know, a lot of Democrats,
and you know, Republicans criticize Democrats
for other things, and Democrats criticize Republicans
for other things.
I love to see how initially so many Democrats
were against the wall, and I'm so impressed with Biden that he sets aside his ego and
the embarrassment for the Democratic Party, and he's agreeing to continue building the
wall because he's realizing how catastrophic it is at the border, and maybe the verbiage,
because I'm a 1978 kid, so, myrial bolt lift when it happened in Miami, Jimmy Carter is the reason why I'm in America.
You're probably in America for different reasons.
I'm here because of Jimmy Carter.
Jimmy Carter's entire campaign was around human rights.
And at that time, it was like, no, hey, Reza Shah Palavi, you're an evil man, you're an evil
leader, you have to let go to 3000 political prisoners.
Well, you know, a lot of those people they let go eventually 9-11 happened.
And many of those leaders were from the political prisoners that he had held
hostage in Iran.
And then the same thing happened with Cuba when it was kind of like, Hey, you know,
it's not fair what you're doing to all your political prisoners.
And then came one of the greatest movies of all time called Scarface.
And he came up and he says,
I'm a political refugee.
And guess who Castro sent to Miami?
He sent the people out of prison, 125,000 people,
out of his jail said, you go to Miami
and Miami is unemployment rate hit nearly 50%.
I don't know if you, I'm sure you've studied
what happened to Miami when he sent it.
So a part of what Trump was saying,
he was saying they're sending,
not their best is what they're sending.
And he's talking about how Mexico needs to do better job,
creating a better economy.
So people don't want to leave your country
and come to America.
And then, I was so enamored by a book I read about
how Indians raised their kids to become leaders.
I spoke in Mumbai with Arundati Baccharya,
who was the former chairwoman
of State Bank of India, 240,000 employees. And I spoke with Divyank Turaqi and a couple
billionaires from there. We were at IIT. I'm sure you're familiar with IIT Institute, which
is like RMIT, but they crush RMIT many times when they're doing different kind of testing.
And you know, when you say immigrants, when it comes on to Fortune 500
immigrants, a lot of the CEOs are either Indian,
they're either Asian, it's different kind of,
or they're from Venezuela, or they're from,
so it's folks that came here legally
that couldn't stand their country,
that eventually worked their way up to doing what they're doing.
Which is great, we wanna see that.
And a lot of times, you know,
especially with what's going on right now,
I think they found, what did they find at the border, dear?
The four Iranian extremists or terrorists
that are coming through the border
and the Fed just recently gave us an update two days ago,
talking about that there's a high likelihood
that Hezbollah, Hamas, folks are coming through
the southern border and we have
to be careful about it.
So, I think that is becoming a very big concern for family saying, look, you know, tragedy,
you know, for example, sometimes revenge is done by people that are patient, the weight
five years, ten years, fifteen years, and in all of a sudden, when you least expect it,
nine, eleven happens, when you least expect it, 9-11 happens.
When you least expect it, an event in Israel happens.
When you least expect it.
So it's, but the best part, you know what I'm saying
all these things about you, about Biden.
What I love about what I'm seeing with Biden,
as Biden has shown, he has no ego, giving credit,
and obviously he's not giving credit,
but following Trump's policies that worked,
and he's following with the weather
is to semi-conductor chip policies that he had,
you know, whether it's different kind of things
that he was doing there.
It's great to see.
The other side about immigration
that I want to kind of ask the question to you,
and maybe this is just my lack of expertise in this area.
I want to see what you'll say about it.
You know how on one end you'll say,
we need more immigrants.
We need to have more immigrants
coming here. I agree. I think we need to have more kids. I don't think we're having enough kids.
I think we need to have more babies. I think one the biggest problems we have in America is Americans
are not having enough kids. We're having too few kids. We need to be having more kids. And that's
a problem. That can be that math can be shown in many different ways. But if we're saying we need more
immigrants to come here and these are your words if we're saying we need more immigrants to come here,
and these are your words where you're saying
we need more immigrants to come here, that's fine, I agree.
But then on the other end, you also think
that AI is gonna destroy a lot of jobs,
where they're gonna rely on, you know,
what's the thing that Andrew Yang was talking about?
We had them on the podcast, the thousand dollars a month,
he called it something, there was a-
Or maybe you're a universal basic income. So isn't that kind of contradictory to think on the podcast, the thousand dollars a month, he called it something, there was a... Or maybe I, you know, you're a university
in universal basic income.
So isn't that kind of contradictory to think on one end
and maybe that's normal, it's okay to entertain
both thoughts, to say we need more immigrants,
yes, because they're willing to do some works.
And then on the other end, we're like,
yeah, but AI is gonna replace a lot of jobs.
That's a very valid and important point.
I think the answer of it, it's over which time arise on your worried about which problem.
I would say that today, the job disruption caused by AI are extremely limited and if anything,
the fact that there are going to be hundreds or thousands of new AI firms created, living
like the internet startups and so on, may actually create many more jobs because there
will be lots of new firms trying to do AI and they require workers of different skills.
So in the short run, actually, there will be a booming capital investment by the US corporate sector, because every firm is going to have to say, I want to invest into AI, not to fall
behind.
And they're going to meet people that actually know about AI and get implemented as a
first stage.
And the unemployment rate in the US is very low low, really 3.7% by any historical standard.
It's been a strong job creation, both in manufacturing and services.
The cheap acts, the infrastructure act, the IRA is going to create many more jobs, whether
in manufacturing, whether in fossil fuel and renewable energy, whether construction
work for infrastructures,
and you name it.
So right now we have actually tight labor markets,
and there has been a fall in labor force participation
rate aging of population.
And we also need more workers because our social security
system and Medicare is pays you go.
And the payroll taxes of the young pay for the benefits of
the elderly and now we have less young people, more old people and the sources here at RAS
Fund is going to run out of money in a decade and the only way to avoid it is either you
have more babies but people cannot force them to have more children, I agree with you.
So that more children but for a whole bunch of reasons people don't. The other option is immigration.
Immigration has helped us with this implicit debt
or unfunded liability coming from pay
to go out and social security system.
Over the next 10 years, I think that there'll be really
a demand for jobs.
And there's going to be a scarcity of job, giving aging,
giving the greater resignation and so on.
So immigration has got gonna be necessary.
In the next 10 years or so, as there'll be more AI,
there'll be disruptions, there'll be job loss,
manufacturing, job loss, services,
even cognitive, not creative jobs.
And eventually, probably, if you're looking at the next 10 years,
but 20 years, you could
have a significant amount of permanent technological unemployment.
That's the bad news.
The good news is that the AI is going to increase productivity growth.
It's going to increase potential growth that today is only 2%.
Potential growth will become 4, 5, 6, 7.
And therefore, eventually, you can tax the winners and then redistribute
money to those who are left behind, not because they're lazy or whatever, but because they're
unlucky and they are in firms and jobs that are made obsolete by AI. So that's exactly what
universal basic income is going to be. It tax the winners, it tax the robots,
it tax those who will gain from AI,
and you're distributed to those that need to be
reskilled or need to be supported
with a broader social safety net.
But I would say in the next decade,
we're going to need more jobs, more people,
we have aging, we have unfunded liabilities,
we have bottlenecks on the labor market
on terms of
supply being low and the man being high, so we need migrants. If and when
productivity growth from AI is going to cause massive job disruption, massive
technology and employment, we don't need all those foreign workers, then we can
reduce the amount of people we let in from abroad, maybe significantly
over time.
We might need to fill skill workers, right?
To do AI, to do the jobs of the future, to do data science in the...
Let me push workers.
Let me push workers.
China is a...
I want to hear 1.3 million people graduating in computer science and engineering and multiple
of what we do in the US.
So we might still need lots of engineers from India
to help us to build the AI.
So let me push back on that on a couple different fronts.
On one, and I want you to, if I push back,
and you're like, you have no idea what you're talking about,
push back as much as you can,
I want to find leaks in my argument.
So you're saying we still need immigrants, okay,
fine, we need immigrants, but at the same time,
the rich people we're gonna have to overtax them
to pay the others because they got unlucky,
but we need people because in other countries,
they're getting degrees and areas that is high-paying jobs.
So why are we entertaining the idea
of allowing everybody
and anybody to come here?
America back in the days was about,
what do you bring to our country?
What do you offer to our country?
We recruited and allowed the best to come here,
like the best of the best, the best minds,
the best educated people.
Nowadays, we're getting people that are coming to our schools,
learning our stuff,
then they're going back to their countries.
They used to stay here.
Now they're like, nah, I don't know if I want to stay here, I'm going to go back to my country.
And then the other thing about social security and what are we going to do within the next 10
years, I have a thought, why don't we, when we came out with social security retirement age was 65,
whatever it was, and people life expectancy was 62, the benefit was barely being paid for a few
hundred, if not a few thousand people,
now we're paying a ton of different people.
How about the idea of doing the following?
Is raising retirement age to 72.
Social security doesn't start till 72.
However, there's a big however,
and I want to see what you're,
how you would break down this argument
and say, no, I don't think it's going to work.
What if we raise so a retirement age
where social security benefits start at 72?
However, from 65 years old, on, every year you make money,
up to $200,000 salary, you pay no taxes.
What does that mean?
So I'm sitting there with my wife, I'm 65 years old,
I'm about to take social security.
I say, babe, we can't afford this.
Guess what?
What?
I'll work for another year, but this year, if I work,
I won't pay federal income taxes.
And I'll work one more year, and I'll work one more year,
and I'll work one more year, and I'll work one more year.
Every year, you're delaying the benefits of Social Security,
which is a good thing.
And as long as you choose to do that, great.
But Social Security doesn't start till 72.
This may cause some young people,
I know people right now that are 80 years old,
that are very young, they look like they're 60 years old,
it's a very different climate today.
But I think there's some contradictions in that argument
of we need immigrants, but we need more educated,
but if we don't, then we have to pay the unlucky ones
and get the people that are creating the jobs
to tax them even higher, that doesn't really excite people to, you know,
pursue incentives knowing the ones that are going to work above and beyond
and find solutions are going to get destroyed by the government taxes long term.
Don't you think?
You make many valid arguments, and I think that, as we often agree,
is never black and white, is a matter of trade-offs.
So it's not no immigration or a totally open border.
It's not like AI's going to destroy jobs tomorrow,
as opposed to eventually destroy jobs.
And there are many ways in which you can resolve
the problem of as you go social security and healthcare systems.
One is, as you suggest, increasing retardment age,
and other ones to give incentive, including tax ones,
like you suggested, to work longer.
You could gradually raise the payroll tax.
You could gradually reduce even the benefits,
not of the currently old, or they want to soon
to be retired by the benefits of younger people.
So, there's a combination of things that you can do to resolve this problem and we'll need
to make them.
Unfortunately, neither party wants to make entitlement reform is the third rail of US politics.
You know,
Democrats say let's not touch social security, but Trump knows that it's toxic to talk about
social security and he doesn't want to talk about it.
He says the other Republican candidates who want to reform social security are stupid. So
both parties are in denial and unfortunately it's going to take eventually a crisis,
getting closer to running out of the trust fund and we're going to need the bipartisan
commission like we did in the 80s, the Greenspan, running it to try to reform sources of security.
But until we get to the problem, we're running out of money,
nothing's gonna be done because both sides are gonna be pretending that
there is not a problem. So entitlement is a big issue and
the kind of things you suggest definitely go in the right
of what we need to do. But I'm not gonna do anything for the next 10 years.
And meanwhile, having skilled workers who come, generate income, pay payroll taxes, and
then they make this problem less severe, is one of the solution.
If we don't have more babies, more migrants as a result, there's unfundial liability all
over the world.
But don't you think, Terry?
Terry, you know, on migration, we agree.
It's not black and white.
We don't want to shut down the border. we don't want to leave it open to everybody.
We need skill workers and for the next decade I would say the demand for workers is going
to outstrip the supply and the bottom next is going to be we don't have enough worker
qualified for the jobs that we need.
And unless we have more skill worker in the US, unless we have more babies, we don't
take 20 years anyhow for these babies to become adults, we need more skill worker in the US, unless we have more babies, you're gonna take 20 years anyhow for these babies
to become adults, we need more workers for our broad.
I would do it a form of our migration policy,
that first is legal migration,
that you get points for different types of skills,
and we need both manual workers,
blue collar workers, white collar workers,
entrepenerials, so the kind of points you get
to depend on what are our bottlenecks in which sectors.
And we're gonna have more of them.
And those want to come to the US.
As I said, usually are those who are more
interpenorial, more ambitious, more restaking,
more willing to live, family, society,
tribe, village, and start their life from scratch.
Like you did like I did, right?
And those who are actually staying back home
and are those who are maybe less interpenorial, like you did like I did, right? And those were actually staying back home, and those were maybe less than pepinarium,
less ambitious, less restaking, less hard working, right?
So actually, you get the best of all
when they get the migrants overall.
With few bad apples, when the bad apples
tend to be the exception, and the good apples tend to be,
and the good ones, that's what made America great again.
And like, even when AI is to really destroy lots of jobs,
then we'll have to figure out face out migration.
And regardless of migration, eventually,
AI is going to destroy so many jobs
that there is no other solution but taxing the winners
and redistributing to those who lost jobs
because they were unlucky.
So eventually, we're going to have UBI, and eventually, we'll have some universal,
basic provision of public services, if not UBI, because there is no other way.
Otherwise, in a college, we'll go to the roof, and you'll have massive social slides.
So in a democracy, eventually, if there is permanent technological employment,
that is not your own fault, but because of technology, we have to tax the winners and redistribute what we do in any progressive social welfare system like in the West, not just in the West, but also in the West.
We already would now have to do it in a more systematic way. There is no other alternative otherwise you have a revolution. Well, I think what you're saying is very interesting.
10 years is not along horizon.
I mean, think about it.
10 years ago, Obama was in his second term.
We think of him as maybe just the president the other day.
But 10 years ago, he was in his second term.
He had a chef.
And we've got now what you seem to be describing
as a labor bubble that's going to happen over the next 10 years.
I like what you're saying about a point system for skills
to moderate immigration to those people.
You know, give us your tire, your poor,
your huddle masses, your earning debris free,
and bringing those over.
You seem to be describing that is that
there would be a labor bubble that's going to lead
to acceleration of socialist policies.
Is that kind of the crystal ball you're seeing?
Well, what they see is a situation
which income and wealth inequality is reason.
Real wages are like behind.
Workers have done less than people
who are entrepreneur, owner or capital
or very high skill worker.
And of course, the right solution is not taxing the rich and redistributing,
but giving economic opportunity.
So rescaling education, investing into reshoring
of manufacturing, infrastructure, AI, you name it,
policies that lead to more jobs and more good jobs.
And again, not to be partisan doesn't matter
whether a Trump is gonna do it or a Biden is gonna do it.
We need sound, the industrial policy that rebuild
the job and industrial bizar concrete.
I think whoever's gonna be power left
to go in that direction, we have to make sure
we are not excessive protectionist,
excessively against migration, because migration
is going to help us deal with all of those challenges. We need rational and economic policies,
and we can go in the right direction. And if eventually AI is going to destroy many jobs,
the economic price is going to be so big that we can redistribute to those who are left behind
or risk kill them. So if to manage all these transitions, with a rational migration policy,
with rational reform of entitlements, social security, and with a rational industrial policy,
as well. Dr. Rubini, this has been fantastic. I really enjoy talking to you.
This has been fantastic. Really enjoy talking to you.
Wrap, if we can make sure we put mega threats link below
with all the links to social before we wrap up,
30 seconds, Dr. Rubini, I know you talked about it briefly
earlier.
What will the readers get from the book?
If you don't mind taking 30 seconds and sharing with us,
what's in the book?
Well, the book speaks not only about the economic, monetary, financial threats, but as I said, the political inequality and backlash against liberal democracy, geopolitical, the risk of
war between great nation, the technological one, how much AI is going to produce more
as opposed to disrupt jobs.
There is coming from climate change and we have to address them to save a planet, how to
address global pandemics are becoming more severe, the backlash against globalization.
So what are the policies we can have to avoid the dystopian future where these economic
and non-economic threats feed on each other and went up in a dystopian future.
I think we can do it, but we have to start waking up,
stop living like zombies, stop kicking the can down the road,
and all the solution to this problem exists,
but they require sacrifices individually, socially,
collectively in the short run,
for the common good, and globally over time.
So we have to be less divided, less partisan,
most of America and actually I think at mainstream,
the radicals on the right on the left are the minority,
we have to be together,
because the problems we're addressing are serious,
nationally and globally together, we can resolve them.
We swim and survive together, or we sing together.
We're all in the same boat.
So we have to address them individually and collectively and stop partisanship, polarization
and division.
That's what we can America.
America is strong, economically, technologically, even militarily.
What can actually destroy America is internal division, hard-dissensual polarization.
Thank you so much, sir.
Again, gang, the links are going to be below to order the book.
Appreciate you.
Take everybody.
Bye-bye.
you