Jeffrey Sachs' Mocks Donald Trump In A Brutal Rant, Breaks The Internet | US News | World News
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Jeffrey Sachs' Mocks Donald Trump In A Brutal Rant, Breaks The Internet | US News | World News
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Transcript
- 0:00
- uh if you take your credit card and you go shopping and you run up a large
- credit card debt you're running a trade deficit with all those
- shops Now it would be pretty strange if you then blamed all the shop owners for
- having sold you all those things You're ripping me off You're ripping me off You're ripping me off I'm running a
- trade deficit That is the level of understanding of the president of the
- United States The trade deficit does not
- represent at all trade
- policies It represents spending relative to production or
- earnings We call that an identity I teach it in the second day of my course
- in international monetary economics Trump never made it to the second
- 1:03
- day So he says 'You're running a trade deficit Look they're all cheating me.'
- But all that's happening is the United States is outspending its national income And you
- can look at the national income chart You can add up consumption and
- investment and government spending And you can subtract off gross national
- product And lo and behold what will that equal not approximately exactly that
- will equal the current account deficit which is the comprehensive measure of how much you spend on goods and services
- versus how much you uh sell in goods and
- services So the United States runs a current account deficit because it
- spends more than it produces Why does it do that we have a big credit card in the
- 2:05
- United States It's called the national government The US government spends
- about $2 trillion a year more than it takes in in revenues What it's doing is
- making transfers to the American people and to American businesses It doesn't
- tax Americans for those transfers because here's another little fact
- Because the congressmen that vote on the budget got into office by being paid for
- their campaigns by rich people who don't like taxes So the political system says
- 'Spend but don't tax us.' So we run a chronic deficit in the
- United States That spending goes out either as transfer payments or goods and
- 3:02
- services And that's more than our national income which is about $30
- trillion and our spending is about $31 trillion And that's our trade deficit
- And for that Donald Trump blames the world Okay I fail him for this if he
- were my student He's my president It's a little
- weirder because when he did this in two days the world lost $10
- trillion of market capitalization By the way where did it go uh did it get transferred from here
- to here no it got destroyed Why
- destroyed because trade something also the president of the United States doesn't understand is mutually
- beneficial So if you stop trade everybody loses It's not that one side
- 4:05
- wins the other side loses He cannot understand that concept as a guy that
- traded real estate in New York So his idea is somebody had to win
- somebody had to lose But what happened when he made this announcement was $10 trillion was wiped out worldwide It's
- not that the US went up and they went down No everybody went down because the
- whole world system is based on a division of labor and he's breaking that division of
- labor into pieces So then people
- said this doesn't make sense Even the very rich people that gave him the money for him to get
- into office started saying this doesn't make sense The hedge fund managers who were
- 5:00
- his big campaign contributors Elon Musk who paid for his election became prime
- minister Uh he said this doesn't make sense And then the markets said this
- doesn't make sense Not only 10 trillion dollars but as the finance minister said
- interest rates started to rise because people began to dump US Treasury debt
- The safest thing in the world apparently So interesting what
- happened It's not quite true that he reversed things First he left on this
- 10% tariff except for one country for China 145% where he raised
- the tariff rates That's because the United States has a deep neurotic
- attachment to China The US political system hates
- China Why because China's big and successful
- 6:04
- And so that the US hates It's a rival It's a competitor And
- so this is the one thing he left on Now he's going to mess up everything with
- this too Because in a trade war between the US and China China wins China does
- not depend on the US market very much It's about 12% of China's exports China
- will do just fine It's just dumb
- policy That's There's no more Sorry to say it There's just no more explanation
- to this than that It makes no sense Now
- it raises if I could just one last point How can this happen when it makes no
- sense and that people should understand we are in oneperson rule in the United
- 7:03
- States Our political system is in a state of
- collapse What President Trump did is an emergency
- decree Everything he does is an emergency decree Literally you can go on
- to whitehouse.gov gov and then type follow the menu to executive decrees and
- there are dozens of them and each one starts the same way with the powers
- invested is in me as president of the United States I hereby declare a
- nonsense b nonsense c nonsense because he's
- king those powers are not invested in the president of the United ates They're
- invested in the Congress You read article 1 section 8 of our constitution
- it says that all duties originate with the Congress and specifically in the
- 8:05
- lower house All legislation has to start in the House of Representatives
- But the US starting in 1945 after World War II
- became a military state to a large extent And so it sprinkled in its
- legislation emergency emergency emergency And Trump doesn't have to
- prove anything's an emergency He just has to says something's an emergency So
- suddenly the trade deficit became an emergency And on that basis he issues a
- oneperson rule Even his aids don't know what he's doing You raise one final
- interesting issue which is that the market recovered about $4 trillion when
- he reversed Anyone who knew that 5 minutes before made
- 9:00
- billions This is not the cleanest government in the world I can tell you I'd be hugely surprised if some people
- didn't know just a bit ahead of time starting with members of the US Congress
- by the way Look we'll get into the more general issues about protectionism and the end
- of globalization question mark in a minute But I think what's happening and the directives coming from the White
- House are such a perfect example of what this panel is about I'd just like to stay on this just for a few more minutes
- Um Minister is protectionism always a shortterm aim and does it always come at
- the expense of the longer term gain donald Trump hasn't said it in public but apparently in private during his
- first term he was asked about the problem of the US national debt And his answer was I don't care because I'll be
- dead by the time it's a problem And apparently that's also his approach to the climate crisis So is this
- protectionism coming from the White House a short-term fix which is going to hurt America in the longer term in terms
- 10:04
- of how it grows it's not a fix It's uh apparently a quick fix but it's
- fundamentally flawed as professor has very clearly stated Look
- protectionism is nothing new If you look at post global financial
- crisis the number of annual trade restrictions have gone up
- dramatically In fact like last year there were over 3,200 trade
- restrictions That is almost 11 times higher than what it was pre- global
- financial crisis So this has been a trend
- But what has you know what we have seen over the past week or two is clearly a
- new level This this goes beyond you know some protectionist measures trade
- 11:07
- restrictions This goes into something an allout trade war So that's really
- worrisome because if you go back again I mean if you go if you look at 20 years
- to global financial crisis global annual trade growth was
- two times world real GDP growth rate So in a
- way trade was the engine of growth Now that
- engine has been slow So if you look at post global financial crisis global trade growth barely kept
- up with kept up with uh real GDP you know global GDP growth So that's no
- longer really one of the kind of like a strong engine But I think the way things
- 12:00
- are now if you know if if current state of affairs is sustained we may end up
- actually protectionism dragging global growth It is not only growth it's really
- there are many you know additional fallouts from these type of policies
- Absolutely Yeah Yeah So the answer to your question this is not a fix
- There's a fundamentally flawed you know uh policy
- perspective Obviously countries have choice you know they they always have a choice but we would rather you know see
- world moving back to rule-based multilateral framework you
- know where everyone benefits I think I agree with professor you know over 1
- billion people since 1990s have been lifted out of poverty
- 13:02
- predominantly in Asia I'm talking about absolute poverty here and that's largely
- thanks to you know trade and and growth associated with
- that trade So it is worrisome that we are now experimenting
- policies that may actually reverse some of these gains which I think were very important
- A billion people out of absolute poverty cannot be underestimated
- It's quite s now admittedly trade do cause geographic
- dislocations but the solution is not protectionism The solution lies more
- internal sound policies you know structural remedies but
- also you can deploy tax policy incentives and other things to address
- you know uh dislocations in regions caused by you know global trade openness
- 14:08
- Uh so it's not a level but protectionism will create more inequalities it will
- create bigger problems Uh already you've got significant headwinds for global growth
- aging population high global indebtness climate impending climate
- crisis So protectionism is going to be yet another big blow to long-term growth
- outlook And that's why growth is barely you know at you know sustained at
- at 3% I think the risk is that we will move to a new era where per capita GDP
- growth will almost disappear if we continue down this path
- Really interesting what you say about protectionism having fallout in other sectors and we will get on to that about
- 15:02
- how it might affect cooperation on the climate crisis global health etc etc But
- let's use one country as a particular example about how a nation can react to protectionism So we have the US tariffs
- which in 90 days will come into effect beyond the 10% that Donald Trump has placed Let's take two rich countries UK
- and Singapore will stay at 10% Bangladesh and Botswana will both go up to
- 37% Laos will be 48% Syria will be 41%
- Lisu in Southern Africa will be 50% In 2023 the US exported to Lutu $7.33
- million worth of goods Loto in that same year exported to the United States $228
- million The US GDP per capita in 2023 was
- $82.8,000 per person In Loto it was $916 Gentlemen how does a country like
- 16:01
- Nutu deal with the protectionism coming from the US minister
- Well uh look protectionism is an external shock
- meaning it's not a decision by you know the counterparty It's it's essentially
- So how do you deal with it i guess uh you focus on regional integration I mean
- as a an antidote of protectionism So regional connectivity regional
- integration would be one way forward So you know instead of globalization on a
- big scale you focus on how you can deepen and broaden your ties with your
- immediate neighborhood or countries that are still willing to entertain
- rule-based trade So I think that's the only way Um
- 17:00
- uh again this is a major shock for many countries I think global supply chains
- are going to suffer Uh this will lead to I mean already I think the risk is that
- capital will be misallocated Take us I mean take Turkey for example Uh we have we are the world
- second largest of white goods exporter We need chips basic ones nothing
- sophisticated We're not talking about four nanometers We're talking about you know 30 40 70
- nanometers If we're worried that countries are not going to supply that
- uh even though it may not be the most efficient way we may have to go into a
- very large capex to see if we could produce them We are good at something Other countries
- are better at something So we would rather trade And this is a very simple
- you know uh economics you know theory everybody
- 18:02
- benefits So I don't think you know X country or Y country they there's not
- much they can do except to look at you know ways in which uh they could uh
- mitigate the fallout from not being able to sell goods to United States But
- professor that takes a long time to arrange because of course the shock is immediate You can't make deals that
- quickly can you i think uh the particular tariff rates
- that Trump announced last week that led to that financial blood bath are not going to come back So I don't think
- we're going to hear again about those numbers after 90 days 90 days in US time
- now is infinity It's eternity Uh we'll never hear those numbers again Where did
- those numbers come from something again so stupid you can't believe that that
- 19:03
- any uh country any country would would do this But the idea is the
- following As I said if you want to know what your trade balance is you earn some
- income So you sell some services to somebody and you buy things And if you
- sp if you spend what you earn you're in trade balance Technically you're in
- current account balance Now most of us I work for one employer
- uh my university So I run a a big trade surplus with my university And then I
- run a pretty big uh trade deficit with uh the grocery store that I we buy our
- groceries from and if I have to buy shoes I run a trade deficit with the shoe store and so forth Trump's
- idea just to add to the craziness of it is that you should run a trade balance
- 20:03
- with everybody Not an overall trade balance but a trade balance with everybody So you should sell a little
- bit you should work a little bit for your shoe store you should work a little bit for your grocery store you should uh
- you should go around anytime you want to shop you trade something I'll you know I'll write you an essay if you'll sell
- me shoes and you make your living uh somehow trying to balance your trade
- with all of your counterparts Well this is insane This is why we have a market economy You don't have to have balance
- with every transaction that you do with somebody And but what Trump said was 'Oh
- lutu they sell us more than uh we buy from them so they're cheating us
- That's literally what he said Literally what he
- said Okay Is it completely delusional or
- 21:00
- rhetoric it's delusional Okay Just so you know Uh it's weird But anyway now
- then he calculated a formula Okay Lutu we have to tax them by the amount to
- reduce the imports from them so that we have balance with lutu And then they made some absolutely
- stupid formula that you would not accept in a firstear third week class It came
- out of the US trade representatives office They probably were told do it overnight The boss wants it And then
- they came up with a list of tariffs country by country based on the bilateral trade balance You cannot make
- this stuff up This is not a It used to be not a Mickey Mouse country my
- country But this is Mickey Mouse This is not And I'm sorry I apologize to Mickey
- Mouse He would not do this Mickey Mouse is smarter than this So we are in a crazy land actually
- 22:08
- with this Now it stopped for a moment We'll never hear those numbers again I
- don't know what we'll hear in 3 months God help us really because it probably
- won't have to do with trade It'll have to do with something else But we can't normalize this as what's
- the rationale how to negotiate what to do Of course 60 countries immediately
- said 'We'll rebalance with you.' And the president of the United States literally
- used the language I'm about to use I'm quoting him because otherwise I would never say this He said '60 countries are
- coming to kiss my ass.' He said that in a public speech the president of the United
- States So this is I'm sorry I apologize but it's presidential language Yeah Okay
- 23:05
- I'm only speaking at high political terms
- So we cannot normalize this We have to say no We didn't
- spend a hundred years on 200 years
- 27 years since David Ricardo put forward the idea of comparative advantage Okay
- And we have been building the trade system since the ruins of World War II
- for 80 years And we have been building the World Trade Organization which the US
- led the creation of I think it's fair to say for 31
- years This should not be normalized to try to figure out what is the theory of
- this And it's a more fundamental point ladies and gentlemen The United States
- 24:04
- is a rogue nation right now on many things not just on trade but on making
- Gaza into the US Riviera uh on whatever it wants to say It's a
- little bit of a rogue nation for the world to hold together The rest of the
- world has to say 'We're not going down crazy lane We're going to be responsible
- We're going to go to the UN We're going to go to the World Trade Organization
- We're not going to get into this downward spiral because if we normalize
- craziness there is no way out.' Uh you mentioned Mickey Mouse but
- there's a kind of a theme here from Bloomberg the news agency These are its headlines in the morning and the
- afternoon of Tuesday Wednesday and Thursday Tuesday morning this is madness
- 25:03
- In the afternoon a clown show On Wednesday stocks keep falling In the
- afternoon could have been worse Thursday morning assessing the damage Thursday afternoon Trump blinks
- And and by the way if I may cuz it's interesting because I'm living in this crazy world the Secretary of Treasury
- then with with all deference to a person who has a very hard job he says this was
- planned all along when Trump dropped this Can you imagine he couldn't say
- anything else though Well yeah I know But to hear this from your Treasury Secretary is not also reassuring because
- all you hear is a crazy land rather than what we need to hear which is
- rationality Okay So let's make it more general for the moment And by the way ladies and gentlemen in the audience
- I'll give you a few minutes at the end if you want to ask our two panelists a question We'll try to get a few questions in from the audience So to
- 26:04
- broaden it out Minister as the professor says and pretty much everybody agrees protectionism doesn't make economic
- sense because in the longer term it's going to cost everybody So what's driving increasing protectionism not
- just in the United States but in other nations as well because if it doesn't make economic sense does it mean it then
- becomes a political statement from the person uh imposing that protectionism uh
- to almost appear as like a nationalist moment to bring people towards that
- decision maker politically rather than economically
- well it's easy to explain I think what is driving the
- current you know uh what seems like a fundamentally
- flawed policies is first of all let's set the scene I
- mean there's a geostrategic competition between China and United States we know
- 27:05
- that um China has what it takes to become a
- superpower because it has human capital it as state-of-the-art infrastructure
- and now it's catching up in technology United States consider itself
- as the hedge among power So we know from history there's
- always been tensions between existing superpowers and emerging ones
- uh it doesn't have to end this way meaning in a trade war or any other
- force but it does in the past I mean history tells us that is you know we
- more frequently see tensions rather than cooperation so what lies behind this
- very simple go back to 20 years ago roughly speaking China accounts for about 8% of
- 28:04
- global manufacturing Today China accounts for more than 30%
- of global manufacturing Who lost ground united
- States European Union and Japan United
- States clearly also sees this Again go back to 20 years ago and just visualize
- a world map Um which country
- commands as the main trading partner of the rest of the world maps are all over
- the place Clearly it was United States 20 years ago Today it's China
- Now normally uh what you would the way you would
- respond the way I would respond is that look we need sound policies structure
- 29:01
- reforms to regain ground Instead it looks like this rivalry
- combined with lack of obviously clear understanding is that it leads to to go
- after quick fixes Mhm And quick fixes which is also to do with populism
- nationalism is to blame others and is to present it in a simple
- fashion The reality is you have to be more competitive You know you have to invest
- in upskilling reskilling your population you have to invest in your
- infrastructure and you have to you know there's a lot of I mean there's a long
- list of homework but those are politically difficult to deliver they take time and they're difficult so
- structural policy has been lacking in most countries and when you can't deliver
- 30:02
- structural transformation then you go either you rely on monetary policy to fix
- things you know monetary policy in many parts of the developed world have been
- doing the heavy lifting over the last couple of decades in the face of
- difficulties So my point here is that I think we know what drives it is
- losing ground But how do you regain ground again the sophisticated way would be to
- do the right thing and deliver on reforms The easy way would be to blame
- everyone else and come up with high tariffs as a
- fix Uh let's see Um okay so
- protectionism is also not helping your friends to concentrate more on yourself
- 31:01
- rather than the outside world We know that the dramatic drastic cuts to USID
- the Agency for International Development has already or is going to cost lives
- Myanmar's recent earthquake the Americans have been for
- decades maybe the most important first responder sending hundreds of rescue
- workers They sent three administrators They didn't send a single rescue worker
- They laid off recently some people working for the federal government on uh
- the US nuclear program They realized very quickly within a couple of days that it was actually a national security
- issue So they were told to come back to their office The office said sorry they've been uh excluded from their
- federal email so we can't get in touch with them So they couldn't remploy them Professor Saxs when you were president
- of the Earth Institute at Columbia University it focuses I've got to read this from the notes It focuses on
- 32:02
- sustainable development this institute at Colombia including research in climate change geology global health
- economics management agriculture ecosystems urbanization energy water
- everything that we need to live So how does protectionism affect these
- kinds of relationships between one country and another country
- yeah I I want to answer that by uh continuing on with the brilliant
- explanation that that the minister just gave about the hard stuff and the and
- the easy stuff Yeah So uh just to say in American politics the swing states in the
- presidential elections in the last uh three elections in particular have been
- the Midwestern states Uh so those are states like Michigan Indiana Illinois
- Ohio Pennsylvania Wisconsin Minnesota These are states that can go either way
- 33:05
- And those states did suffer a decline of employment in
- manufacturing not only or even mainly because of trade but also heavily
- because of automation over the last 40 years I come from Detroit which is uh
- Motor City used to be Uh and uh I used to go uh when young on school field
- trips to see the assembly lines and there were actually workers on the assembly line But now if you go to an
- automotive plant it's all robots Very very few people inside That's not
- because the jobs went overseas in that case That's because uh the assembly line
- itself became an automated phenomenon So Trump is
- giving an answer to those swing states It's China's fault It's Mexico's fault
- 34:06
- It's Lutu's fault What the minister said is really
- important that when he said that trade benefits the economy but it could hurt
- some sectors And what you do is not stop the trade but you make sure that you pull
- everyone along Maybe in a regional policy or maybe uh in job reskilling or
- maybe in some other kind of public investment or education policy
- Here's where the US really failed over the last 40 years We let the
- inequalities widen and widen partly because of automation partly because
- jobs did go overseas but for the right reason They had comparative advantage in
- in those jobs Skilled people got better and better salaries Lower skilled people
- 35:03
- had their living standards fall the gap widened By the way not just the income
- gap the life expectancy became 10 years or more So many of our
- epidemics so many of our social problems relate to this widening inequality The
- United States political system didn't address it at all for 40 years And that
- comes to what I mentioned the corruption of the political system When part candidates of both political parties are
- paid by rich donors for their reelection campaigns and both parties then become
- the agents of tax cuts and uh and and
- no really addressing the social conditions You end up with a Donald
- Trump coming in and selling a pseudo explanation It's all China and
- 36:02
- selling a pseudo remedy a trade war What the auto workers are going to learn
- right now is they're they're going to lose jobs by even the tariffs that have
- been put in place because we need the intermediate parts brought in from elsewhere Now they face higher costs And
- the United States can't compete at all with Chinese electric vehicles China The
- United States has basically handed China the electric vehicle market for the next 20 years So did Europe by the way Europe
- delayed the transformation to electric vehicles said we produce great internal
- combustion engines We're going to continue to do that The world actually needs electric vehicles because of the
- climate crisis So all of this is to say the real hard work is to think ahead Mhm
- The country by the way in my experience of working all over the world in the
- 37:02
- last 40 years that thinks the head that thinks ahead the most is China China's
- success is not random China's success actually is a lot of
- forwardlooking planning In 2014 China issued a document called made
- in China 2025 And it wasn't a protectionist policy It
- was we need to invest in the technology so we can be at the forefront I think in
- eight of the 10 sectors that were identified there China succeeded in reaching the forefront In 2017 China
- made a plan for artificial intelligence This is already eight years ago Deep
- Seek didn't just come out of nowhere It came out of a long-term strategy So this
- is hard work that actually pays off This is what every government should do This
- 38:00
- is what every country should do is look ahead Now you mentioned very interesting
- idea We we got a president who doesn't understand
- and maybe doesn't care about the future in the same way But just to say the
- biggest issue on the planet should be the climate crisis not all the things
- we're endlessly talking about And every part of the world is going to suffer
- terribly by what has been built in in terrible very dangerous climate change
- It's it's out of the headlines But you know I had a
- very difficult job I was the director of an institute
- with 300 climate scientists for 14 years Some of the world's leading climate
- scientists The reason it was a hard job is that every week they came up and told
- 39:02
- me it's worse than we thought They would give me
- endlessly grim news And the lead climate
- scientist at Columbia University is a man named James Hansen who I regard as
- the world's leading climate scientist And he produced a study in
- January that said 'It's much worse than we have thought The world's temperature
- has gone up by.3° C in 3 years We have had 21 months
- of the last 22 above 1.5° That's the new baseline by the way
- That's not because of an El Nino effect That's the new baseline We already blew
- the limit that we set 10 years ago in Paris that we said we would not exceed
- We're already above it and what Hansen says is we're rising at an accelerating
- 40:06
- rate Now it's the average rate is probably between.3 and point4 degrees
- Celsius per decade now on average So we'll be at 2°
- excess What all of this means is profound danger 20 years from now 25 30
- But we're already seeing terrible danger today It's I don't want to minimize what's already happening Los Angeles
- burned down Massive forest fires in Korea last week It's everywhere I'm My
- wife and I are non-stop traveling Every single place we go is some kind of
- climate crisis Literally in some it's a drought it's floods it's heat waves it's pest
- infestations it's forest fires And the sea level is going to rise by many
- meters which is not great for a stumble by the way and not great for coastal
- 41:06
- areas It's very dangerous what is built into the system Now what is Trump's
- answer for this yesterday King Donald issued an
- executive decree to bring back coal
- It's willful destruction of well-being
- Willful And that is again he pulled out of the Paris agreement What I'm hoping
- ladies and gentlemen is the other 192
- members of the UN have to say 'No we're
- not entering a crazy land We're going to take care of our future
- right now I live in a crazy land but the rest of the world has to avoid the crazy
- 42:01
- land Has to avoid normalizing this I don't know if any of you saw it
- during the height of the coronavirus pandemic an Australian artist uh cartoonist drew a cartoon which had the
- first tidal wave kind of a tsunami of um economic recession there was a bigger
- tidal wave tsunami behind it which was COVID 19 and then a huge one over both
- of them which was the climate crisis So get ready I'll give you a chance to ask a few questions but I just wanted to
- address one final issue to the minister And I was getting a bit depressed professor when you were talking about
- that I tell my kids since they were born they're now 21 and 19 live anywhere you want in the world but don't live near
- the coast or near a river Um the professor is saying that the climate crisis is going to be one of probably
- I'm kind of you know putting words into your mouth professor that del globalization if it becomes more and
- more of a popular sentiment and policy the climate crisis will uh be affected
- 43:01
- because of a lack of cooperation through del globalization Minister what other big dangers do you see if the trend of
- delobalization gathers pace well as I mentioned
- earlier in addition to the impending climate crisis which could have a
- devastating impact on the future of humanity you know I think we are faced
- with significant headwinds uh that already exist uh but some of
- them could become more complicated One of them
- is high global indebtness Mhm If protectionism you know uh
- clearly goes the way it is today meaning if we really go into these trade wars
- and if this leads to higher inflation even for a couple of years if
- 44:02
- that's the case then that means long-term interest rates are likely to
- rise And if that is so then many countries
- are already struggling to manage the debt service You know global indebtness if
- you look at it overall indebtness was 328% last year 328% of GDP Yeah this is
- huge When interest rates are very low but when rates go up
- clearly that's a big issue I mean look at you know look at the Turkish
- scene Um yes we've had a you know domestic
- uh you know I mean domestic issue that led to some market
- turbulence But what happened post April 2 CDS have gone through the roof CDS are
- 45:03
- country risk premium you know our external bond deals 10 year five year
- they all gone up significantly on the back of these tariffs
- I think there are already many countries according to UN that pay more
- in on interest on debt than what they you know are able to earmark for
- education and health care combined So I think you know we already have
- issues such as indebtness that could that the current you know trend could
- exacerbate I mean aging population already is could create huge constraints
- on public finances going forward Um so those are some of the
- additional headwinds that exist that could actually serve as speed limit or a
- 46:00
- drag on growth So I think you know the world and I
- agree with professor that um the world has to you know rather than going you
- know down this path we need to cooperate more We need to work more closely on
- climate change on how to address other problems because protectionism will also
- lead to probably global inequalities You know if you don't allow AI
- chips to be freely available to everyone clearly that's a big issue
- because then many countries will be left behind in terms of tapping this you know
- AI that has immense potential to boost productivity You know protectionism is
- not limited to trade of goods and service it's now associated with financial
- 47:01
- flaws you know with diffusion of technologies through
- FDI So clearly um I think we'll be worse off unless we
- cooperate unless we return to multilateralism Uh but sadly right now
- it's all about shift to miniaturalism You know a few countries
- getting together but that's not enough I think um issues are too big for few
- countries to address I think you know the rest of the world should come
- together So yes there are significant challenges Uh when you mentioned aging population I have a good example from
- Europe that only two countries on the entire continent are having enough babies to sustain their population level
- That's Ireland and Portugal So you imagine the pressure on the taxation system and the spending on those other
- countries that are not sustaining their population levels and are just getting older and older and older Okay let me
- 48:01
- look at the back as well if anybody has any questions We've got about 7 minutes left and please make it a question not a
- lecture because if it's a lecture I'll have to stop you Gentleman over there and gentleman over here Okay please
- introduce Oh there's a microphone Thank Thank you very much
- Doesn't work Yeah does work Okay thank you very much
- Uh I have a question for Mr Jeffrey Saxs Uh my name is Sarcer and I'm from Haraj
- News Um so you mentioned that we shouldn't look for a rationale behind
- the actions of Donald Trump But just just to be a devil's advocate I just
- want to understand their point of view which they mention yes trade deficit and the national debt of the United States
- but also they mention the hard industries that left United States back in the day So uh what I'm trying to
- understand is uh if United States gets into a confrontation with global powers
- 49:02
- such as China or Russia or any other state maybe even Europe one day uh is it wrong for them to want their hard
- industries back and this is their rationale to put these tariffs on because Donald Trump mentioned that uh
- we are buying cars from Canada that we could have been producing uh before So
- uh is there a rationale behind at least on the hard industry part okay thank you
- Yeah you know in in trade theory or trade concept there is the national
- security rationale Uh so you may want to procure domestically to have a an
- armament industry That's quite different from imposing tariffs on 150 countries in a
- completely arbitrary way In fact the right policy might be local procurement
- from domestic industry that has nothing to do with trade policy at all
- 50:02
- So that is not an argument for what he's
- doing But I would add one more point We don't need an arms race and we
- don't need a war Actually diplomacy is really cheap
- compared to war That's why we're at the Antalya diplomacy forum not the Antalya
- military forum Uh so if Trump really wanted to save some money we
- have almost 800 overseas military
- bases in 80 countries This is crazy
- So if you wanted to save money and be close the budget deficit I would close
- hundreds and hundreds of military bases and leave all these countries at peace because
- 51:06
- wherever there is an American military base there's a big headache Believe me
- sir Okay Is your question to the finance minister is your question to the finance minister
- or to the professor because I want to even things up I would come back to you if it was for the professor but if you
- Okay let's address it to the finance
- minister 1212 Uh my name is Real Miller Uh formerly of the OECD formerly of
- UNESCO and formerly an adviser to finance ministers So I can address my question to a finance minister One of
- the things that's tremendously tempting and it was really in part part of what the last question was about was the hard industries right so now let's go back to
- being an extractive economy coal mining you know uh be in Canada I'm Canadian
- originally beaver skins right that we sent over so resources right now we have seen in the past historically when there
- 52:06
- was a move from natural resources to manufacturing it was quite difficult for the society and the politics to change
- because the oligarchs of resources were not the oligarchs of manufacturing So I have a question which relates to the
- historical context we're in What if we're moving to intangible economies what if we're moving away from tangibles
- in general and those robots are going to take care of producing intangibles how do we talk to people who are nervous and
- worried because they're accustomed i go to Germany and I say 'Can Germany be rich without producing cars?' And they
- go 'Never.' I said 'Could could the could Britain be rich without producing coal never.' And so we have this
- historical difficulty of making the transition And I wonder what you can say in a country like Turkey where you are
- making the transition through industry and China through catchup and convergence But can we begin to talk
- 53:00
- about going beyond the tangible economy of course we can imagine because
- if you look at last couple of hundred years there has been significant you
- know trends I mean if I'm not mistaken if you go back to 200 years ago 90% of
- employment was in agriculture Today in developed west it's about 1% 2% Uh but
- but we are much better off So I think we can uh
- extrapolate it's true that uh you know we may achieve artificial general
- intelligence soon meaning within a year or two and according to exports maybe
- artificial super intelligence within 5 years and assuming that also gets
- converted in robotics and advanced manufacturing chances are the
- 54:01
- traditional employment will no longer be there So we have to come up with obvious
- So that's why I think you know it seems like today's debate considering what is
- ahead of us a bit outdated So I I I I hear what you're
- asking and it's really complicated We all have to think I remember attending a
- global economic symposium in KE uh back in 2007 and one of the session because I
- was finance minister and you well treasury they put me in that session in that panel and the question was
- uh when do we start taxing robots so look uh yes I I do see that
- happening I don't have the answer but certainly we have to think about it It'll be interesting to know if a robot
- will need a work permit as well right okay that that's it The time is up
- ladies and gentlemen It was always going to be too brief with these two particular gentlemen
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