4.8 • 2.3K Ratings
🗓️ 22 November 2021
⏱️ 63 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
In this week’s TGS, my old friend Larry Kotlikoff, an economist at Boston University, is back to talk about some of our most pressing economic concerns. Chief among them is the inflation rate, which has hit a 30-year high. By some accounts, inflation is now threatening to do major, possibly longterm damage to the US economy. But are things as bad as they seem? Larry will take us through his analysis and talk about some other looming economic troubles. If you want to understand how these things work, Larry is your guy.
We begin by discussing just why high inflation poses such a dire threat to the economy. Obviously it’s something to be concerned about, but will it get bad enough to send us the way of Weimar Germany? This leads us to discuss Biden’s recent policy decisions, including the $1.2 trillion infrastructure bill. Larry argues that it’s not as costly as it sounds when you consider that it’s parceled out over the course of a decade. Larry is much more concerned about the fiscal gap, which is enormous and, according to Larry, could eventually lead the US into insolvency. Larry sees this as a problem that can only be solved by responsible political leadership, but we have trouble naming any current politicians with the influence to get it done.
It’s always great to have Larry on the show (even if he has a tendency to make some pretty frightening predictions about the future). As always, I’m interested to know what you think!
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0:00 Why high inflation is a potentially dire problem
9:00 Are we headed the way of Weimar Germany and Argentina?
20:37 How short-term government spending can function as a longterm investment
30:02 The looming threat of the fiscal gap
37:08 Why is the US’s fiscal gap so large compared to that of other countries?
41:30 Larry: We’re on the path to becoming a second-rate country
46:37 Why Larry thinks we should index taxes to inflation
53:36 Can we pay for what we’re spending without printing money?
Links and Readings
Steven Rattner’s NYT guest essay, “I Warned the Democrats about Inflation”
Larry Summers’s WaPo op-ed, “On inflation, it’s past time for team transitory to stand down”
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
0:00.0 | We are on the way here at the Glenn show. I'm Glenn Lowry. I |
0:03.7 | Teach a Brown University professor of economics there. I'm host of the Glenn show |
0:07.9 | Which can be found that Glenn Lowry that's substack calm and that YouTube folks last see folks last |
0:15.3 | Lynn Lowry show |
0:17.3 | I'm with Lawrence Kotlakov Larry is professor of economics at Boston University an old old friend of mine |
0:24.2 | Dear good friend of mine outstanding economist and frequent guest here at the Glenn show where we talked about |
0:31.2 | Economic policy issues amongst other things. So look back Larry. I was your best man and |
0:38.2 | I was your boss for a while. I hired you to be you. You stated to be here for a bit with us |
0:44.0 | Professors don't have bosses Larry |
0:46.9 | Ten boss. Nobody was going to be trolled Glenn Lowry does what he Larry is an old dear friend |
0:52.8 | We've been friends for a long time. I joined the BU faculty in |
0:56.4 | 1991 that's going to be exactly 30 years ago |
0:59.9 | As a professor Larry helped to recruit me with John Silber's support the late John Silber former president of Boston University |
1:07.6 | Away from Harvard where I was in scouts as a tenured professor at the Kennedy School, but they |
1:13.5 | They persuaded me to walk across the river. I have no regrets none whatsoever had 14 good years in the economics department at Boston |
1:22.7 | University and yes, Larry presided very effectively as best man at my recent waiting for years ago |
1:29.2 | To the lovely Lohan Lowry my wife and wife partner. She's not here to show herself. She sometimes makes cameo |
1:37.0 | Okay, tell her to come in. Give you some |
1:40.7 | I don't think I'm going to do that. She's often another part of this house doing something |
1:44.5 | Okay, but yeah Larry and I we're fellow economists and |
1:48.7 | Both of us are public intellectuals after a fashion Larry has columns and Forbes and other places where economic policy issues are being debated |
1:57.9 | He has written popular books about everything from social security to the future of banking in this country |
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