
Bretton Goods
By Pradyumna Shyama Prasad

Ep 34: Long Run Growth with Trevor Chow
Ep 34: Long Run Growth with Trevor Chow
Bretton Goods Apr 17, 2022
00:00
01:09:59

Ep 45: What's going on with nuclear weapons?
Ep 45: What's going on with nuclear weapons?
I spoke to Matt Korda who works at the Federation of American Scientists on nuclear weapon policy. We have an exciting discussion about the role of nuclear weapons, their growth and the dangerous arms races that are starting
Some highlights of the show:
The advent of “exotic” nuclear weapon systems
China’s nuclear strategy has changed dramatically!
Why nuclear experts are most worried about South Asia
The new game theory of a multipolar nuclear world
Nov 20, 202237:21

Ep 44: Trade Policy Tragedy in India
Ep 44: Trade Policy Tragedy in India
I talked to Anupam Manur, a professor of economics about India's trade policy before 1991. We talked about:
The scarcity mindset about foreign exchange reserves
The controversial 1966 devaluation
How did the pre-1991 import licensing system work?
“The financial account was almost non existent”
“Hindustan Motors and Toyota were set up at the same time but in 15 years Toyota sold 280 times the cars”
“Productivity growth was almost absent before 1991”
Jul 31, 202250:31

Ep 43: Funding Science and Innovation in the UK
Ep 43: Funding Science and Innovation in the UK
I spoke to Professor Richard Jones, about how science funding in the UK could improve. Some interesting questions we talked about are
“Penny wise, pound foolish” in science funding
Creating markets for technological advances
How he’d invest a billion £ to accelerate scientific innovation?
Jul 17, 202254:06

Ep 42: Parliamentarism
Ep 42: Parliamentarism
I talked to Tiago Santos, a diplomat, about his book Why Not Parliamentarism. Tiago and I explore some questions here
What makes parliamentary democracies superior to presidential ones?
The creeping presidentialisation of parliamentary democracies
The optimal rate of constitutional amendments
Jul 10, 202250:02

Ep 41: Libertarianism and podcasting with Amit Varma
Ep 41: Libertarianism and podcasting with Amit Varma
I talked to Amit Varma who runs one of my favourite podcasts - The Seen and the Unseen about politics, economics and public policy. We talked about
Libertarianism within the Indian canon
Cultivating your audience
Being a public intellectual
The differences between generations
Jun 27, 202201:13:41

Ep 40: Progress Studies
Ep 40: Progress Studies
I spoke to Jason Crawford of The Roots of Progress about the new movement of Progress Studies. We talked about
Building a culture of economic progress
Why are developed countries more averse to progress?
Is there a tradeoff between economic progress and existential risk?
What is the main constraint for the movement today?
Jun 19, 202248:25

Ep 39: Macro Investing
Ep 39: Macro Investing
I talked with Mayank Seksaria of Liberty Mutual Investments about investing on macroeconomic views. We talked about
Translating macro views into investing allocations
A bottom up view of the macroeconomy
Evaluating macro talent
Why does institutional research cost so much?
Jun 05, 202253:41

Ep 38: The Bond King
Ep 38: The Bond King
I spoke to Mary Childs who is the author of the exceptional book The Bond King. We talked about
How finance became an interesting profession
How do you build institutions that succeed at investing?
Can we automate the Fed?
Financial history being undervalued
May 22, 202242:24

Ep 37: Australia: A Mine with a Parliament?
Ep 37: Australia: A Mine with a Parliament?
I spoke to Steven Hamilton professor of Economics at George Washington University about Australian economic policy, and their upcoming elections. We talk about
Why was Australian COVID policy so strict?
Australia as a nation of prison guards
Economic issues of the Australian election
“Australia is a mine with a parliament”
Dutch disease in Australia
Swimming, intermittent fasting and other personal habits
May 15, 202257:47

Ep 36: Labour Economics Versus the World
Ep 36: Labour Economics Versus the World
What is the labour market like? What are the largest barriers in the labour market? Nathan Young and I spoke to economist Bryan Caplan about his new book Labor Econ Versus The World. We also talk about
Censorship and dictatorships
Bets he is willing to take
Malengo and international migration
DALLE-2 and writing graphic novels
The literature on education
Why he is not an experimental economist
The effect of AI on jobs
Bets Bryan is willing to take
No important disruption to the politics of countries where Ukrainian refugees immigrate
Poland will gain over 3x of the GDP Ukraine loses with regards to immigration
Less than 20% chance of humanity ending by 2100
Less than 60% chance that he will consider misaligned AI to be a problem in 20 years
If >5% of people immigrate to a developed nation there will be no civil wars
Upper bounds on religious fundamentalism in the EU
What are the odds that mainstream psychiatry accepts his view of mental illness?
Papers referenced in the podcast
Mankiw, Romer and Weil
Where has all the Education gone?
Eric Hanusheck on test scores and GDP
May 08, 202201:13:59

Working on Existential Risks with David Manheim
Working on Existential Risks with David Manheim
I spoke to David Manehim who works on reducing existential threats to humanity at the Technion. We talked about
The biggest threats to humanity
Preventing all future pandemics
Is working on X-risk even tractable?
How you can work on reducing existential risk
Very fun on an underrated topic!
May 02, 202239:36

Ep 34: Long Run Growth with Trevor Chow
Ep 34: Long Run Growth with Trevor Chow
I spoke to the very very talented Trevor Chow about the history of long run growth. Topics include
Wishlist of economic history topics
Getting over vetocracy
Qualities of the best economic blogs
Why more economics graduates should join a VC firm!
Meme theory of money
Highly highly recommended
Apr 17, 202201:09:59

Ep 33: Jumping Through Financial History with Jamie Catherwood
Ep 33: Jumping Through Financial History with Jamie Catherwood
I spoke with Jamie Catherwood who writes and teaches financial history at Investor Amnesia. We had a lot of fun talking about
The relevance of financial history
Formation of bubbles
Investing during a war
Surprising stories behind the 1907 financial panic
The influence of Twitter
Mar 06, 202245:09

The Indian Economy
The Indian Economy
I talked to Puja Mehra, a journalist and author of the book The Lost Decade about India's economic history of the years 2008-2018. We talked about
The reasons for India's jobs crisis
Should the Finance Ministry be split into two?
The farming crisis
Has India's Big Government really receded?
Feb 20, 202246:34

Chinese Tech Antitrust
Chinese Tech Antitrust
I spoke to Michael Norris, a commentator on Chinese technology industries and research manager at AgencyChina. We talked about
Understanding the motivations of Chinese antitrust enforcement
The 'low hanging fruit' of antitrust
The false dilemma of hard tech and software
Chinese tech companies he is bullish on
English language news sources for China tech
Feb 20, 202259:27

Ep 30: Finance and scams with Jamie Powell
Ep 30: Finance and scams with Jamie Powell
I talked to Jamie Powell who is a financial journalist at the Financial Times. We had lots of fun talking about:
The economics of short selling
Can bubbles be good for the economy?
Issues with Web3
The story around tesla
Highly recommended!
Feb 06, 202250:16

Ep 29: Financing Science and Innovation
Ep 29: Financing Science and Innovation
I talked to Ben Reinhardt about new models for funding science and innovation. Ben's pieces on DARPA and his proposal for a private DARPA-like research funding organization are foundational pieces in the field and should be read by anyone who wants to understand them. We talked about:
The Big Man Theory of History
What makes good DARPA program managers?
Why you need to be less responsible to innovate
Does science have an introspection problem?
Will the US maintain its leading position in science
Highly recommended!
Jan 30, 202201:31:46

Ep 28: Finding and Funding Entrepreneurs with Matt Clifford
Ep 28: Finding and Funding Entrepreneurs with Matt Clifford
I spoke with Matt Clifford, the co-founder and CEO of Entrepreneur First a pre-idea investing firm. We talked about some very exciting topics! They are:
Personality types of successful founders
Founders with high agency
The race between politics and technology
The most underrated impactful historical event
Jan 23, 202250:45

Ep 27: A Tour through British Economic History
Ep 27: A Tour through British Economic History
I talked to Duncan Weldon a former Britain economics correspondent for The Economist and the writer of the substack Value Added. We talked about his book Two Hundred Years of Muddling Through. Topics include
How did the road to riches change through centuries?
Why does Britain have no tech giants?
How did Britain survive with high levels of debt in the past?
Why did the Industrial Revolution begin in Britain and not elsewhere?
Jan 16, 202253:09

Ep 26: Housing policy with Sam Bowman
Ep 26: Housing policy with Sam Bowman
I talked to Sam Bowman, the Director of competition policy at the Law and Econ Center. He was previously Executive Director of the Adam Smith Institute and has been a constant advocate for saner housing policy. I talked to him about housing policy and adjacent topics:
How housing affects everything!
How do we incentivize NIMBYs into allowing more building?
The most underrated economist
Lessons from writing Works in Progress
Dec 26, 202156:49

Ep 25: Market Mechanics with Mike Green
Ep 25: Market Mechanics with Mike Green
I talked to Michael Green who is Chief Strategist and Portfolio Manager at Simplify ETFs. He previously was Chief Strategist and Portfolio Manager at Logica and even before that he was portfolio manager at Thiel Capital. Mike is extremely smart and very fun to talk to. We had an interesting conversation about
How do passive flows change the stock market?
How can you trade these with options?
Explaining the Gamestop rally in Jan 2021
How do you price crypto?
Why is his twitter handle profplum99?
Why ambitious people should not enter finance
Dec 19, 202154:18

Ep 24: COVID and the FDA with Alex Tabarrok
Ep 24: COVID and the FDA with Alex Tabarrok
I talked to Alex Tabarrok, Professor of Economics at George Mason University about the FDA's response on COVID along with a variety of other topics. We talked about
What happens if the public wants an inefficient COVID response?
What mistakes did zero-COVID countries make?
What are bottlenecks to Indian growth?
Why he thinks investing in life extension research gives a very high return?
Who is the most underrated economist of the 20th century?
Dec 12, 202159:43

Ep 23: Monetary policy with Joey Politano
Ep 23: Monetary policy with Joey Politano
I spoke to Joey Politano, who writes the popular newsletter Apricitas . We did a deep dive into monetary policy where Joey talked about Quantitative Easing, Yield Curve Control and stablecoins. Other topics include
Measuring the stance of monetary policy
Which country would benefit from using dogecoin as currency?
What can economists learn from political science
Dec 05, 202154:28

Ep 22: Tom Spencer on the housing crisis, the monarchy, and Brexit
Ep 22: Tom Spencer on the housing crisis, the monarchy, and Brexit
I talked to Tom Spencer a law student at City Law School and Chief Organizer of London New Liberals. Tom's interests lie on the edge of law and economics where he does work on housing policy and anti trust. We had a lively conversation on
Solving the UK's housing crisis
What lawyers and economists can learn from each other
Brexit and its consequences
The unwritten British constitution
Abolishing the monarchy
Nov 29, 202153:44

Ep 21: Michael Bishop on replication markets
Ep 21: Michael Bishop on replication markets
I talked to Michael Bishop, who worked at DARPA's Replication Markets project. We talked about
Why was there a replication crisis in science?
How do you design a market for predicting replication attempts?
Is there alpha in replication market trading?
Nov 22, 202146:58

Ep 20: Kevin Erdmann on the myths about the Great Recession
Ep 20: Kevin Erdmann on the myths about the Great Recession
I talked to Kevin Erdmann, a visiting fellow at the Mercatus Center about his upcoming book Building From the Ground Up which is about myths surrounding the housing bubble and the Great Recession. We talked about
The myth of a 'housing bubble'
How American policymakers self induced a recession
His research process
Preorder Keivn's new book here!
Nov 14, 202144:56

Ep 19: Matt Darling on behavioural science
Ep 19: Matt Darling on behavioural science
I talked to Matt Darling, an Employment Policy Fellow at the Niskanen Institute
We talked about
Cognitive tax of poverty
Behavioural economics and the replication crisis
What question does he wish people asked him?
Nov 02, 202144:19

Ep 18: Rohit Krishnan on ambition, optionality and venture capital
Ep 18: Rohit Krishnan on ambition, optionality and venture capital
I talked to Rohit Krishnan, a venture capitalist and writer of the newsletter Strange Loop Canon. In my view he is among the most underrated writers in the public sphere today. I talked to him about a variety of topics. They are:
The real meaning of ambition
Why people misunderstand optionality
Rohit’s favourite Indian cuisine
Why you can’t replicate college with internet subcultures
“VC’s biggest competition is hedge funds”.
Biggest career mistakes people make
Do consultants make good VCs?
What is VC's biggest competition
I'm sure you'll love this!
Sep 27, 202101:21:50

Ep 17: Maia on populism and Argentina
Ep 17: Maia on populism and Argentina
I talked to the very popular @EGirlMonetarism about the political economy of Argentinian populism. It was a very informative conversation. We talked about:
The political economy of Latin American populism
The most underrated economic concept
How to fix the Argentine economy
Sep 26, 202147:16

Samuel Hammond on passing policies and nonprofits
Samuel Hammond on passing policies and nonprofits
Samuel Hammond is the Director of Poverty and Welfare Policy at the Niskanen Center. We had an excellent conversation on
How policies actually get passed
“libertarian think tanks exist for rich people to feel like they're smart and smart people to feel like they’re rich”
Nonprofits and the lack of market incentives
His most controversial opinion on economics
Sep 25, 202148:13

Ep 15: Joshua Miller on Market Monetarism, NGDP Targeting and Milton Friedman
Ep 15: Joshua Miller on Market Monetarism, NGDP Targeting and Milton Friedman
I talk to Joshua Miller, an extremely smart 16 year old on
Nominal GDP Targeting
What he disagrees with Milton Friedman the most on
The theory behind market monetarism
Sep 21, 202158:09

Ep 14: Noah Smith on American growth, partisanship and veganism
Ep 14: Noah Smith on American growth, partisanship and veganism
I talked to the very popular Noah Smith on a variety of topics. We talked about
Is America too insular?
Indian cultural exports to the US
Is economic growth zero-sum at the country level?
Where does he disagree with @jdcmedlock the most?
What are the deep causes of partisanship in America?
The moral coordination problem of going vegan
The political economy of solving NIMBYism
“America's national pastime is avoiding other Americans”
Do give a listen to this!
Sep 14, 202155:08

Ep 13: Michael Fritzell on investing in Asia
Ep 13: Michael Fritzell on investing in Asia
I spoke to Michael Fritzell who writes the substack Asian Century Stocks about high-quality stock ideas around Asia. Michael is a CFA charterholder and has worked as an equity analyst in Asia for over a decade.
We talk about
Common characteristics of successful CEOs
Why Chinese real estate prices are due for a fall
How do you read an annual report in Asia?
Sep 06, 202151:17

Ep 12: Pranay Kothasthane on Indian foreign policy and growth
Ep 12: Pranay Kothasthane on Indian foreign policy and growth
I spoke to Pranay Kothasthane who is the Deputy Director of Takshashila Institution, a think tank based in Bengaluru.
We talk about
India’s vaccine diplomacy
Why Pranay’s an optimist on Indian growth
What he learnt running a Hindi podcast
Aug 29, 202152:15

Ep 11: Mark Lutter on Charter Cities
Ep 11: Mark Lutter on Charter Cities
Mark Lutter is the Founder and Executive Director of the Charter Cities Institute. CCI's aim is to build an ecosystem for charter cities
We talk about
- The basic concepts of charter cities
- What is the biggest misconception about charter cities?
- What personality type does it take to run a non profit?
Aug 23, 202145:17

Ep 10: Shruti Rajagopalan on Indian economic reforms
Ep 10: Shruti Rajagopalan on Indian economic reforms
For this Indian Independence day I talked to Shruti Rajagopalan about the Indian economic reforms.
How was Nehruvian socialism different from socialism under Indira Gandhi?
Why didn't land reform work in India?
Does Shruti believe in the Great Man theory of history?
Aug 15, 202149:43

Ep 9:Karol Karpinski on bureaucracy, payments and shock therapy
Ep 9:Karol Karpinski on bureaucracy, payments and shock therapy
Karol is a financial sector specialist at the World Bank. I speak to him about
Why doesn't America have 24/7 payment systems?
Was shock therapy in Poland a mistake?
Bangladesh’s growth miracle
What do the World Bank’s critics get wrong?
A highly enjoyable episode!
Aug 09, 202145:57

Ep 8: Srivatsan Prakash on podcasting, investments and stimulus
Ep 8: Srivatsan Prakash on podcasting, investments and stimulus
I talk to Srivatsan Prakash - the host of the Market Champions podcast - about his experience podcasting, investing and some thoughts about the stimulus
We talk about
- The most surprising thing about being on a podcast
- Is there a wrong way to invest
- Why ‘Austrian investing’ is the wrong way to invest
- The Biden stimulus isn’t going to lead to inflation
Aug 01, 202146:44

Ep 7: Alfonso Peccatiello on Italy, trading and career advice
Ep 7: Alfonso Peccatiello on Italy, trading and career advice
Alfonso Peccatiello is the Head of Fixed Income Portfolio Management at ING Deutschland. I talked to him about
Why is Italy in trouble economically?
How should you size positions while trading?
Why do so many European institutions buy negative yielding bonds?
Alfonso gives some very good career advice at the end of the interview!
Jul 26, 202145:30

Ep 6: Hemanth Bharatha Chakravarty on India’s political economy, debating and RCTs
Ep 6: Hemanth Bharatha Chakravarty on India’s political economy, debating and RCTs
Hemantha is a student at Harvard, who is currently working at the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. He has worked with the India CEA and the RBI. We talk about
What makes certain government schemes successful?
Does being a debater make you more adversarial?
How would he change RCTs?
Jul 17, 202101:05:24

Ep 5: Mike Bird on journalism, property prices and central banking
Ep 5: Mike Bird on journalism, property prices and central banking
Mike is starting at The Economist as Asia business and finance editor. We talk about
- What is the biggest flaw of journalists?
- How Hong Kong's land policy hurts its tech companies
- Why asset price "inflation" is nonsense
- Why Mike's not an MMTer but would like to see it tried anyways
BONUS: Mike reveals who he thinks will win the Euros!
Jul 10, 202150:41

Ep 4: Eli Dourado on think tanks, the Great Stagnation and regulation
Ep 4: Eli Dourado on think tanks, the Great Stagnation and regulation
We talk about
- Do think tanks actually have an impact?
- Should we loosen accredited investor regulations?
- Should more companies invest in public policy roles?
- What would he do if he could remake American federal regulation?
You can read Eli's writing at https://elidourado.com/
You can read my writing at http://brettongoods.substack.com/
Jul 05, 202153:29

Ep 3: Byrne Hobart on Socratic dialogue, pseudonyms and institutions
Ep 3: Byrne Hobart on Socratic dialogue, pseudonyms and institutions
We talk about
- How to become a good generalist
- Why did America do so much better than Europe on vaccines?
- What happened to the media industry?
- His writing process
- Picking a media diet
- Why nobody writes in Socratic dialogue?
- The pseudonymous economy
- Where should ambitious people go?
Jun 28, 202155:49

Ep 2: Jeff Snider on the Monetary System
Ep 2: Jeff Snider on the Monetary System
I talked to Jeff Snider on why he thinks QE doesn't matter, the usage of repo in financial markets and the global dollar shortage.
It was an entertaining conversation, and Jeff is very knowledgeable on these matters.
Subscribe to my podcast here: https://open.spotify.com/show/5a29fQG0xEbPEdqSxQjMcQ
Read Jeff's writing here: https://alhambrapartners.com/author/jsnider/
Jun 22, 202153:27

Ep 1: Garett Jones on Democracy, The Senate and the Idea Pipeline
Ep 1: Garett Jones on Democracy, The Senate and the Idea Pipeline
In this episode I interview Garett Jones on his book 10% Less Democracy. We talked about term limits, lobbying, the workings of the Senate and how do policies go from ideas to implementation.
Buy his book here: https://www.amazon.com/10-Less-Democracy-Should-Elites/dp/1503603571
Subscribe to my newsletter here: http://brettongoods.substack.com/
Jun 02, 202155:00