Kind: captions Language: en In the 1980s, under Reagan's leadership, the US economy exploded with 12% real GDP growth in just 18 months. And the man behind that boom, today's guest, economist Arthur Laugher, now with America sitting on $ 38 trillion in debt, rising inflation, and growing wealth inequality. Laugher's back. This time advising Donald Trump on how to spark a second economic revolution. [music] In this episode, we go deep into the real mechanics of growth. what worked under [music] Reagan, why Trump's first term fell short of that same boom, and what Laugher says must happen now to avoid collapse. From tax cuts and currency reform to crypto and debt restructuring, if you care about your financial future, the 2026 midterms, or understanding how we fix a broken [music] economy, this is the episode you've been waiting for. I bring you Arthur Lafer. You helped design the policies that fueled Reagan's boom. So why aren't Trump's economic policies creating that same growth? What exactly is missing? >> Well, I think they will. But let me just say that I don't share your pessimism about the world because the systems adapt that well the systems adapt and change. And you know when things get way out of control, there are always response mechanisms that come through the political structure. Reagan was not an accident. John F. Kennedy was not an accident of you know >> so you see them as mechanistic responses to where the economy went and that we will always have said response. >> Yeah. And you have these back and forth and it's only when you get economies that don't have automatic responses like elections and stuff like in those economies you can't adjust and you would be completely correct that we're going straight to hell in a hand basket if the markets weren't able to readjust and offset the damages that you see coming. I agree. >> But how do you how do you reconcile that statement with the fact that every empire ever has always collapsed due to debt and money printing? >> Yeah. Well, well, no, but I'll you're talking a very different time scale on that. You're talking hundreds of years. Uh you're you're not talking hundreds of years, at least I don't think today. I mean, you had the Biden uh uh economy there. You had the response by the Trump economy. Uh what you're seeing with the Trump economy is exactly as what you'd expect. I mean, you know, that the policies change. They don't change all at once. They come flowing in and the economy is responding very favorably right now. And I expect it to continue to respond favorably. In fact, even get more favorable. I mean, with Reagan starting on January 1st, 1983, now that's almost two years into his presidency, uh, real GDP started to rise. The tax cuts took effect. And from January 1st, 83 to June 30th,84, now that's just 18 months, that's just a year and a half, US real GDP grew by 12%. 12%. That's at an 8% peranom compound rate over a year and a half and it just changed the whole face of the earth as we know it. You know, I think you're going to see very major improvements in the economy because of the policies you've seen and when they fully take effect. Wow. I I >> Let's get specific. So, what um take us back to the Reagan conversations. You come into office, he brings you in. Um what are the structural problems that you see? And then why were tax cuts the answer? >> Well, when we came into the office on January 20th, 1981, all right, the prime uh the prime interest rate was 21.5%. Mortgages were doubled to 17 18%. Uh we had huge unemployment. Uh we had a highest marginal income tax rate of 70%. Uh you know, it was collapseville. We just come off the four stooges. Uh I say four stooges, Johnson, Nixon, Ford, and Carter. uh which to me was the largest assemblage of bipartisan ignorance ever put on planet earth. When we took office, we found the US in the doldrums. I mean, it just trashed. Uh we reached into that trash heap. We pulled out this platinum thing. We polished it a little bit. We put it up there. It said USA, Inc. America Enterprise. And we borrowed lots and lots of money. And we did uh because we had very good uses for that money. We dropped the highest marginal income tax rate. Now, just think of this. from 70% which is what it was when we took office down to 28%. Is that a good enough drop for you? [snorts] >> Not spectacular. >> We cut the corporate rate from 46% to 34%. That's not too bad either. Uh we went from 14 tax brackets to two tax brackets. The two tax brackets were were were literally 28 and 15%. That's what we went that was it. Uh we dropped the capital gains tax rate dramatically as well. All of these things happened. We strengthened the dollar. We got Paul Vulker to strengthen the dollar. The US just took off like a rocket ship. And that's where I talked to you about the real growth. Once those policies took effect on January 20th, I mean on January 1st, 1983, we were off to the races. He won the election, the midterm, the uh his second term election, 49 out of 50 states. and I was on the executive committee of the Reagan Bush Finance Committee. And I'll just tell you, in the 84 election, Fritz Manddale was not a bad guy. He was a good guy, solid person. Nothing wrong with him. He just was running against Reagan. And you know, that's a tough one for a guy like that. Reagan about eight weeks out of the election uh uh eight weeks out uh asked us to withdraw our all of our funding, all of the campaign funding from Minnesota. uh so that Montdale could at least win one state. Now that's that's a different world than you see today and the hostility and all that sort of stuff. But that's what it was. And we went from a huge I mean boom to the large share of the world. There was no wars. US the economy was back in full. Stock market took off like mad as you probably know. And it lasted for a long time. It lasted all the way through Bill Clinton. Now, uh, the one thing you mentioned and and I want to address that very formally with you, uh, debt. And let me talk to you about debt a little bit because it's really, really important. And I'm an economist, uh, and I want to go through that debt number. And the way they usually structure the debt conversation is debt is a share of GDP is 130% of GDP. And it's rising like mad. Oh my god. Oh my help me. I'm going to jump off the edge of the cliff. I I can't. My grandchildren are going to be you. You know what the one I'm talking about. >> Of course, >> those numbers are true. And [snorts] that debt as a share of GDP is too high. Okay. But let me put it in perspective. First place, uh you should never look at gross debt of a country or an individual or anything else. You should always look at net debt. there's a lot of debt uh that has been issued by the federal government that is uh that is on the balance sheet of the federal government and different departments and agencies etc. So what you should do is first and foremost uh eliminate all the intragovernmental debt and just look at net debt to the public to the private sector. That's what you should do. And if you did that you would reduce that net debt that debt to GDP number from 130% to about 100%. And that that's a big drop. I mean that's the first thing you do. The second thing you do when you look at debt uh and compare it to GDP it's really an inappropriate comparison when when you look at a company for example you only compare balance sheet items with balance sheet items income statement items with income statement or cash flow items there for those you should never mix stocks with flows or flows with stocks in any of these comparisons. So when you look at debt to GDP, it it's an inappropriate measure. You should look at debt to wealth or you should look at debt service uh to GDP. Both of those are appropriate members. One is a stock to a stock and one is a flow to a flow. If you look at debt to net wealth, it's still too high, but it's about 181 19% of total wealth. That's too high. But it's not jumping out of a window too high. It's just not. If you look at debt service to GDP, uh it's about 4% something like that. Death service to GDP today, it was about 4 and a half, 5% after Reagan, you know, was in that range. It fell as low as 3%. But again, it's too high, but it's not something you get panicked about. So when you look at it, it should be flow to flow or stock. When a bank when you buy a house from a bank and the bank you want a bank loan the two questions they ask you what's the loan the value of the home that's a stock to a stock and can you afford the interest payments that those are the two questions they same thing you should ask about the US and both of those are too high but they're not panic city that's not you know going to hell in a hand basket far from it then the real thing you want to look at on debt if I can is debt is just a tool. A debt is a way of getting money from savers to investors. It's just a loan. That's all it is. And uh it's a very normal way of transferring assets from net savers to net investors. Uh and it's neither good nor bad. It's how the proceeds are used that is important. Now, let me let me give you the example here. I'm going to let you borrow all you want at 1%. and let you invest all you want risk-f free at 12%. How much you're going to borrow from me? >> Uh, it depends on which one of those I get. >> Well, but you get 1% it costs and you can invest it at 12% risk-f free. >> Uh, oh, I see what you're saying. Yeah, then >> infinite. You're going to borrow infinite amount. Reverse those two numbers. I'm going to let you borrow at 12% and invest at 1%. How much you going to do? >> Zero. >> Yeah. So, okay, we're getting into the abstract here because of course in reality, >> no, it's going to be real. >> Yes, it is. Okay, bring it bring it home to reality for me. >> Bring it home. When we came in under Reagan, we found the US have been trashed. The economy was in bad shape. We had to look at Enterprise America and we had an act ability there to borrow at lower rates, what we considered lower rates compared to the investment rates there. And we borrowed lots and lots of money. We use it to cut tax rates. We use it to build up defense spending. We used it to do all the wonderful stuff. And that economy just took off like a jack rabbit. And thank God with, you know, when you get to people like Biden and Obama and W and these people, they borrowed lots and lots of money to pay people not to work. The purposes of the debt were very different. What you want to do here is if you use debt properly on a federal level, uh you can reestablish credul in the debt market within a couple of years. I mean, you really can you can grow your way out of this debt quite easily if you do the right policies. That's all I'm saying. It's not something that's inevitable. It's not something that can't be handled over the next three or four or five years. It can be. It's just it's a it's a problem, but not a crisis problem. We'll get right back to the show, but first here is the hard truth about building a business. 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Um, however, I have what I think is the rebuttal that can't be gotten around and I hope you can because I have no interest in living in the dark and terrifying place that I am currently occupying. Uh so here is what I see. The humans are a certain way. We have a nature. I've heard you talk about this. Given that we have a nature, history is going to um loop. It doesn't exactly repeat. But money money abides by something akin to physics. Humans only have so many reactions to different setups. And you put those two things together and on a roughly 150 to 250 year time horizon, every empire collapses. And they collapse for one very simple reason, debt and money printing. Uh we are debt and money printing not in the way that you just described it. We are debt and money printing for the exact reason you just warned us not to. So we are running deficits precisely so that we can give people money not to work. And the great irony of that when you increase your levels of debt, you radically increase the levels of inequality because a very small number of people let's call it 10% understand assets and therefore 10% of Americans own 93% of the assets and are shielded from the inflation that's caused by debt and money printing to pay people not to work. And the other people, 90% that own 7% of the assets, they just get hammered by inflation and they don't understand that's what's happening. So they have this economic force being applied to them, but all they know is they can't make ends meet. They're they're very anxious about what's happening. They have to transmute that anxiety, which does not feel good, into anger, which does feel good. They need someone to blame. a populist leader will rise up and give them someone to blame. And that's how in this moment, despite the fact that it's basically all the socialist policies in America that have created this, you have a rise in a love for socialism and a decrease in a love for capitalism. And the only thing historically that has pulled us back from that ledge is a an amount of pain that is so extreme that people finally go, "Ah, yeah, I guess we do have to completely restructure the system and effectively start not over, but >> you're hitting me with a lot of topics. So, let me >> The great news is I can run through it piece by piece over and over and over. >> We'll do it piece by piece. Let me do the first one. inflation and the printing too much money and all that. Uh, prior to 1913 in this country, we had a private money system. It was not public. Now, the government did do three things. It defined what a dollar was. It's 12th of an ounce of gold. It's 1 ounce of silver. That's a dollar. Uh, it also did one other thing as well. It did mint coins. If you brought billion in to the federal government, it got it the right purity. It would mint the coins and charge a commission. But so did lots of other private sector mints all around the country did the same thing. So there the real thing they did prior to 1913 was the government audited banks balance sheets. Banks would issue their balance sheets, their income statements and the government would audit them and say they're true and correct etc. At that time banks created money. There were bank notes that were the li liabilities of individual banks. uh they had those they had gold coins circulating, silver coins circulating, money was private. The only thing the government did was define what a dollar was and that was the world back then. Now some some banks notes sold at a slight discount to other bank notes like they did because they were all private liabilities. Uh and that was a system that went from 1776 until 1913 in the US. That's a what is that 137 years there. Now, starting in 1913, we put in the Federal Reserve. The government started to nationalize money. We then had the Roosevelt one, the gold confiscation of 1933, uh, where they confiscated gold at $20.67 an ounce. Then they devalued that. So, they just had this huge wealth tax. We were the only country, I think, ever that has had our citizens prohibited legally, criminally for holy gold. I mean, it was just amazing. And then of course we had the interest equalization tax. We had the uh voluntary foreign credit restraint program. Those were the ones I did my dissertation on at Stanford. We went on up to Smithsonian and I was in the White House in Smithsonian time. I was George Schultz's right-hand person when we went off gold completely and totally. We were a freewheeling paper currency unbacked by anything anywhere at any time. George Schultz's comment was, uh, we've raised the price of gold of the gold from $35 an ounce to $42 an ounce, but we're unwilling to buy it or sell it at that price, which is a joke. And now finally, government had 100% control of money in 1972. They did. Inflation from n [snorts] from 1776 until 1913 was >> zero. >> Yep. >> Zero. Uh there were no major depressions or anything like that. There were some financial panics but they were over in a matter of weeks or months. Uh there was nothing there. Long bonds now these are all from Jeremy Seagull and Jeremy Schwarz who are my colleague at the University of Chicago. Best people in the world on long bond yields in 1776 were in the 5.5% range. By the time you got to 1910 1912 they had gone down to about 4 12%. Just all very stable steady. No blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah none of that stuff. It was a beautiful system. From 1913 to the present, the price level has risen 35fold. You've had interest rates that I'd mention went from 21% down to zero. But ba doo. We had the biggest depression ever. You know, this is a classic example of the federal government nationalizing an industry and screwing it up. We've went from private banking, which worked really well, to public one, which just screwed it all up. And the US, by the way, screwed it up a lot less than other countries did. We are the we are the tallest [ __ ] in the bunch on that. Now, when it gets you to be scared, uh I look at I look at cryptocurrencies at being the private sectors and gold as being the private sector's way of circumventing government monies and creating a money of their own. Especially things like uh um uh uh like uh uh Tether and these other stable coins, they can really stabilize values. And what I'm seeing in this world is the private sector moving back in and replacing the government monies and uh which makes me very optimistic about the long term there. Um so that's the monetary inflation one. Now you have redistribution. You said uh let me go to redistribution with you and this is a really important topic and by the way I've written a lot on the banking system as you know if you did my background stuff that's my bawick and trade. Uh the book I wrote on this one is called taxes have consequences. It's two and a half years old. Uh it is the complete history of the US income tax from 1913 to the present. Uh in this I just want to say we have every single tax return. Uh you know the last two months of 1913 we had an income tax and all the way here we know the last guy in the top 1%. We know the first guy in the bottom 99%. We we don't have his name but we have his tax return. All right. We have this we see how the first year 13 14 and 15 uh the number of people required to file was about 358,000 out of 62 million adults. Just teeny tiny little group and the tax rates went from 0% to 7%. That was it. Little bitty little bitty. And then of course by 1951 1617 it had gone up to 77% was the highest marginal income tax rate. It went up to 6.4 million people. That was World War I. That was the pandemic then. And then Wilson dropped it to 73% in 19 191819. Boom on down went down as low as 25% under Harding and Coolage. We have had huge amounts of variation in the tax rates on the rich. We we have we've had enormous amounts. And we don't just guess what happens when you raise tax rates on the rich. Uh we know we have every single example and let me just summarize if I can on SIZ [ __ ] and all these other guys you know Zupman and Savva and all the redistric Bernie Sanders AOC. I can easily imagine raising tax rates in the rich and collecting more money and helping the poor. I can also easily manage raising tax rates in the rich. They hire more lawyers and accountants deferred income specialists. they have bad economic activity happen to them and you actually collect less money from the rich. Either one of those is very possible because these guys are rich and they can hire lawyers, accountants, deferred income specialists, whatever. So, we have to look at the facts rather than feelings. Every single time we've raised the highest tax rate on the top 1% of income earners every single time, three things have occurred. The economy has underperformed. Tax revenues from the rich have gone down. not up and the poor have been hammered. Every single time we've cut the highest tax rate on the top 1% of income earners, every single time the economy has outperformed, tax revenues from the rich have gone up and the poor have had opportunities that have exceeded other time periods by a long shot. So that's where we are in this. So, as you can probably guess, I'm far less afraid of mom Donny's uh Elizabeth Warren. And yeah, they screw up. They dumb. They don't understand economics. They don't know straight up from scum. But, you know, frankly, they sooner or later are going to be squashed and they're going to be replaced by a low rate flat tax. In 1944, the highest marginal income tax rate in America was 94%. Every dollar you earned, you were allowed to keep 6 cents. God bless you, son, for working hard. Today, the highest marginal income tax rate is 37%. We've made enormous project progress over the years. If you look at states, in 1976, there was one state in the United States that did not have a state death tax, and that was Nevada. All right? Every other state did. All right? Today, 38 states have eliminated the death tax. Uh, all of them eliminated the inventory tax. You know, when you look at the progress we've made, we've got now allowed people to do discount sales. We've gotten negotiated rates in the stock market. In 1973, every stock traded by law had to pay 34 cents as a commission. Today, it's zero. Trucks were deontrolled, airlines decontrolled, all of this stuff. you know, we are making enormous progress coming along here and you know, I I do see the problems you're saying and I do think they're correct and a lot of the response is anger, but you know, we had a lot of anger after Nixon. I don't know if you were aware of that. You're way too young to understand that world, but I was the chief economist in the White House then. I was George Schultz's right-hand person. If you think it's hostile and political today, you have no idea how bad it was under Nixon and Ford and Jimmy Carter and all. Oh my god, it was awful. So, this stuff is repeating, but every time it's repeating. I I'm telling you, it's getting better and better and better. Yeah, we [clears throat] make five steps forward, then we're pushed back three steps, and it's all true, but we're making progress all over the place on inflation, private money, tax rates, all of this stuff. We are we are really making a big difference in the world in the right direction. We're creating a lot of new problems too but they are soluble in the US the way our structure is is that we allow those s solutions to come back into the system where other countries really don't. You can't get a vote in Russia for example and you have a hard time even in Britain. You don't vote for the prime minister. You vote for a party that then is 100% in control. That's not the way we do it. We do checks and balances. Britain does not. So, >> okay, hold on really fast before let me say back to you what I just heard. >> That's why we're doing this. >> Yeah. So, I here's what I heard. Um, hey Tom, listen. Uh, when you put this into historical context, yes, we make these really bad decisions, but that causes humans to react. And so, we come back down and then that causes people to react and we go back up. You know, we sort of rock back and forth. Okay. So you have a base assumption that that will protect us. Um unfortunately history is on my side that what is actually happening is that you're getting these back and forths but they are on a trajectory of debt just going up up up up. So there's no denying that you have this tack up and down for sure. Um, but when you just look at the M2 money supply, the amount of debt that we're taking on in terms of just the sheer magnitude of it is so much bigger than what we were doing in the '7s, 80s, 90s. It's like once you get the breaking point of the 2001 dot crash, all hell breaks loose in terms of how we treat printing money to solve our problems. You then compound that in the 2008 uh financial bubble or bursting of the housing bubble then obviously co and so you look at this and we are in a moment now >> gotcha >> where we're roughly 122% debt to GDP you've already told me you don't think that's the right way to look at it and I've heard you however I will say this when you say don't look at that I hear the same thing I hear when people are like oh we don't like the CPI results so we're going to change the CPI at some point you just need to have a metric and so either But but help me. >> Bear with me. Bear with me. Bear with me. >> I just made up that new rate. This has been done in accounting for a thousand years. But the way I describe >> changing the metric by which we judge. >> No, I'm not changing. You're using a bad metric. And you've always been using a bad metric. And the proper accounting going all the way back in time is the way I described it to you. It's the way every company does its balance sheets and its income statements and its cash flows. That's the way you do it. Banks do it that way. Always have. >> Okay. >> You're using a bad metric. Now you say I'm changing it to but I'm changing it to a good merit metric. It is a problem. I'm not denying that but it's nothing like the problem you're describing. >> Okay. A bad metric. >> You've that point is very clear. And so now well I I haven't said that I concede. I just said you've been very clear. >> Concede. I'm just the guy who knows those metrics. >> Sure. But the any philosophy that somebody uses must describe the world that I see. The world that you are failing to describe so far is that every counting >> bear with me >> numbers ev every empire Arthur has failed for debt and money printing. >> You know I read Rogoff too. >> We're we're just talking about what's actually happened. So if if you're going to give me a metric that shows this is actually what they did wrong so that I can look at the American empire through that lens, fair enough. But until I have a metric where I can go, oh, this is why all of these empires before us failed so that I can look at are we making the same mistakes or not. >> I got you. No, I got you. It's a great great question. And let me just answer a little bit if if I can. I tried to give you an answer on on that. Our system is much more flexible than most systems have been historically. They have not been free market democratic economic capitalist system. And maybe ours will fail on that grounds as well. And I'm not sure it won't. But when I look at the systems today, first place the metrics I use are just accounting textbook me metrics. It's not like I have edited it to rebut you. I didn't. Uh it's been around there. It just is useful in rebutting your 122% number. That's all I'm you know you are right about debt being too large. And you're right. But the problem is is government spending. And you know when I look at this system today uh I don't see the end of the earth coming. I see this system adjusting right now. And I was trying to describe >> but so you've been very clear on all that. So I want to make sure that we differentiate between when I'm confused and when I disagree. I am not confused about what you say because I agree with all of it. What I'm saying is that >> the where we disagree is that I have a way of explaining this that describes the collapse of the previous empires. So far you probably understand it far better than I, but so far you've not articulated what it is that caused those empires to fall. Let me tell you your cause. Let me let me support your argument here. Uh in 2007, I think the the balance sheet of the Fed was about $850 billion, something like that. Uh it went up as high as $9.4 trillion. Uh in the next bunch of years, which you're talking about M2, you were talking about the money system in that terms. I use the balance sheet of the Fed. You're totally correct. You can see that 22% inflation from Biden really clearly in those numbers. It's just obvious. Duh. I mean, they're those numbers have changed dramatically and they not only have changed on the balance sheet. Not enough to make it great, believe me. But they've also changed on the responses of the market to the bad money that's been created by the Fed and by the US government and the nationalization. All of these cryptocurrencies are rushing to our defense and to our savior. Look at Tether. I mean, Tether's hitting marketplaces all over the world and it's do it's doing in Turkey and central Africa with the Masai and all these where you can hold dollars on your phone and you can transact. The transactions costs have been dropped enormously and they're growing by leaps and bounds. What was I think it was 2014 Bitcoin sold for 250 bucks. It's a couple dollars higher than that now. I mean all of these things I view that as the private sector trying to come in and solve your problem correctly. Those >> agree. So what you're saying is this empire won't collapse because that's democratically possible for us to replace the money. >> Yes. Exactly. That's exactly correct. And I think those other countries that you've always tal mentioned there and that's all they're all true. Your data are correct. I I you know I know Rogue off and those numbers are correct. The collapse is all there. I just think that just saying the same thing always happens to every country is not correct. It happens for a reason. And I think the reasons it happened in those other examples are not applicable today in full. They may become applicable very soon. And thank God I'm 85 because I won't have to live to see a collapse in the US. But but but the truth of the matter is I don't think we're doing the same problems that they did. I don't think our debt is anywhere near the same level those other countries you talked about and and I think the private market is coming in and replacing it which really excites me. This is Jude Winsky's book the way the world works which is a really a classic in this area and it's just wonderful and and I just don't see the inevitability of the collapse just because we're 250 years old next year. >> Totally agree that it has nothing to do with the timeline. Um, I think the timeline is simply tied to the >> duration it takes the society to discover how much they can profit off of debt. And once they realize, oh, wait a second, I don't uh, as a politician, my only job, no matter what anybody tells you, is to gain and retain power. So, I know I have to gain and retain power. And what they begin to realize is uh, I gain and retain power by promising free things. And I can pay for those free things by generating as much debt as I want and printing money to cover it, which is an invisible tax. And so it just oh, it takes roughly 150 to 250 years for that cycle to get so far out of control. Uh because you need these random events, not random, but you need these problem events to occur and to begin to stack up. And so you get I mean I've heard you say that no no no if you really want to understand about America's financial problems you need to go back to the Great Depression. You're one of the only people I hear talk about that I I'll ask you to go all the way back to 1913. For me that's where the problem really starts because that's where >> that's why I did the that's why I did the money up to 1913 because you had the Fed and the initiation of the income tax. 1913 is a critical year where government came in and started screwing everything up really badly and 1930 was proof of the pudding. >> Okay. So, I think just so everybody understands why you and I can agree on so much and still uh walk away being you not worried and me like terminally worried. >> Don't get me wrong, I just not like you were worried. I don't think it's inevitable. I think we through the political process can solve it and have done so so far. >> Okay. So, really fast because I want you to walk us through what Trump is going to do at a policy level to back all of this out because I certainly from where I'm sitting, it seems like Trump uh listens to you. He certainly hears you out. Whether he takes your advice or not, we'll see over time. Uh but that is extremely useful as we're talking to somebody that's inside the White House that uh understands how this works. Okay. I like your I like where you're coming from. And just for the record, I'm an economist. Trump has to look at all sorts of stuff. When I'm with him, and I do see him frequently, uh I try to give him information to allow him to make better decisions. I ask him explicitly not to tell me what his thoughts are cuz I don't want to be burdened with that type of knowledge. He has a lot of other things to consider that I never consider. Uh, and so all I do is view myself as someone who tries to facilitate him making great decisions. I think he is a great decision maker. He's a COO. He's not the most popular guy anywhere, but he doesn't know how to make a decision. And he bases it, I think, really on good stuff. Many times using my inputs, but coming to a different conclusion. >> And sometimes his conclusions were a hell of a lot better than mine were. And I look back on it and I, oh my god, how could I misled him so badly? Scammers know the holidays are busy for everyone, which can make us all targets for scams. 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Banking services provided by Cash App's bank partners. Prepaid debit cards issued by Sutton Bank member FDIC. See terms and conditions at cash.app/legal/ app/legal/ USen-us uscard-aggreement promotions provided by cashapp brand. Visit cash.app/legal/mpodcast for full disclosures. The base assumptions that I think cause us to um share so much in common but still draw a different conclusion are you believe that democracy allows for a release valve where people it has a corrective mechanism and that the private market has come in with will round it to cryptocurrency in order to create a new financial system where people can escape the abuses of a governmentcontrolled financial system. >> Yes, they can. And and also on the tax system too, just for that, I mean, I mentioned that the tax system has gone from 94% in 1944 to 37 today. That's that is that is an rectification. Our capital gains tax, I mean, we effectively have no capital gains tax on owner occupied homes anymore. $500,000 for every couple and a step up basis at death. And I could go on. That's half the capital stock of America. So, we've made huge progress at the state level and at the federal level on tax rates, which to me are much more important than tax revenues, as you know. That's I just did my curve quickly and slid it by you, didn't I? I got it slipped through. >> I I know your curve very well. And it >> you lower the rate, you collect more money. So, >> yeah. And look, we we will almost certainly get to the point where we really push into that because it's very very important for people to understand that. something that I have a hard time getting people to embrace. But um first I want to lay out what my base assumptions are. So and we don't have to debate them. I think there's probably more interesting things for us to move on to. But for the audience who's trying to build their own worldview, I want them to understand. So >> uh for me, the thing that I see is voters vote emotionally. And so democracy can be the biggest problem as much as it can be a salvation. So it comes down to how voters feel not what's actually happening. and wealth inequality for better or worse is the thing that drives how people feel. So you've got a system right now as of today because of inflation uh money printing that wealth inequality is just going absolute haywire which is making people feel bad and that feeling is going to continue to create an impulse for politicians to give things away for free and run an unbalanced budget. Okay. So >> but let's do wealth inequality just the facts during the great depression money wealth was much more evenly dist distributed than uh it was in the 20s or than it is now. Uh during World War II wealth was much more evenly distributed than it was now. In other words, the only way you can get equality of wealth or income is at zero. Do do you know the transfer? Can I do a transfer theorem with you? Because I I think you'll love it. >> Sure. if you let me do it and and [clears throat] let me just a transfer is when you take from one person and give to another person what you're saying the governments give away money to buy off votes and stuff like that you know that's a transfer we usually think of a transfer system being from those who have a little bit more to those who have a little bit less that's the way we usually think of it although there is one from young to old social security which I love by the way from tall to short I love that one skinny to fat I like that one too But let me do it here. The transfer theorem with from those who have a little bit more to those who have a little bit less. Whenever you take from those who have a little bit more, you reduce their incentives to produce and they will produce a little bit less. Period. Whenever you give to those who have a little bit less, you provide them with an alternative source of income other than working and they too will produce a little bit less. This is just the slutskkey equation in macroeconomics. That's all it is. Common sense. So the theorem here is whenever you redistribute income, you always reduce total income. Period. That's math. It's not whether you're tall or short, Harvard or MTSU, it doesn't matter. It's just plain math. That's the theorem. Now, the lema from this theorem is sort of cool, and I think it's fairly intuitive. The more you redistribute, the greater will be the decline in total production income. But now the one that's delicious that I think you will love is the limit function of this theorem. If you were able to redistribute income so that everyone comes out exactly equal, there will be no income whatsoever. And God, I hope Bernie Sanders listens to this show. I hope he does. Let me do this. >> Avid subscriber. Yeah, good. Well, let me if I can't do the math for you on this one. In order to get everyone to come out exactly the same. So, you have complete income equality. So, you have a complete What you'd have to do is you'd have to tax everyone who earns above the average income 100% of the excess and you'd have to subsidize everyone below the average income up to the average income. Only in that way can you make sure that everyone comes out exactly the same. Now, if you actually did that, if you actually taxed everyone above the average income, 100% of the excess, and if you actually subsidize everyone below the average income up to the average income, I'll stipulate today, counselor, we'll all be equal at zero income in the system. That is the theorem that drives the equality of income. Equality of income is the stupidest concept I've ever ever heard in my life. It's dumb. It's awful. It's nasty. It's brutish. It's vile. Because the dream should be to make the poor richer, not to make the rich poorer. The dream is to help those who are in need, not to hurt those who have succeeded. That's the dream in this world. And so when I see people willing to sacrifice all the poor and disenfranchised people in this earth just to make sure they get even with that rich guy, I find myself disgusted. That's the Larry Summers model of economics, and he's been my arch nemesis for 40 years now. And he [snorts] I win, he loses. >> You follow my >> Well, he's he's he's pulling himself off the chessboard for you, so I don't think you have to. >> And I Let me just say a little fun [snorts] fun one for you. This is fun, but I I'm not a mean person. I really not I don't want anyone. >> Don't strike me as one. >> Well, I I don't want anyone to suffer. I don't uh in even no matter if they're vile or terrible, I just don't want them to have pain either. But if but if pain has to be come down and there has to be here. I know the guy I want to be the one who gets it. Larry Sage has just done such a beautiful job and taking it for me. He's lived on privilege all of his life. His uncle is Paul Samus and his other uncle and his mom's side is Kenneth. Both Nobel laureates, famous mathematical economists. He's parlayed that privilege all the way up being sec president of Harvard, secretary of the treasury, head of the NEC, and now he's always been a bad economist. He's always been that, but now you find he's a bad person as well. >> Yeah. Yeah. Well, to to uh you reap what you sow, I guess. All right. So, really fast, all of that makes sense to me. Uh this is another case of everything you say I agree with wholeheartedly. Um the very clever guy from what I've heard you are >> well that is exceedingly generous very nice things about you that's why I'm on the show it's a and you're living up to your expectations I think your questions and comments are really really insightful and correct they're the right questions and I hope I'm >> I get emotional and answering them but I hope you don't mind that but >> I don't mind at all this is joy for me >> you you and me both okay so the there's one thing in all of this that I still worry about which is um whatever the government makes mandatory is the only thing the average person is going to um use. So if the government is making the hyper it's not technically hyperinflated but the very inflated currency the mandatory one to pay your taxes and all that that's the one people are going to understand. I don't think the vast majority of people understand crypto nor will they embrace it unless they're forced to. They need to because otherwise they're getting hammered by inflation and so going but they understand that. >> Yep. >> Go ahead. Sorry. >> Here's the thing. They don't understand inflation. That that is a hill I will die on. But I to your point intuitively they know something is going wrong. Okay. So that's one. The wealth inequality even though that's the right thing to point at in terms of what drives people crazy from a there's just a algorithm embedded in us from evolution that makes us hate inequality. per perfect. Uh, however, you can distract people from that by giving them relative growth. So, if they believe that, oh, I'm making more money today than I was yesterday, and buying that car, that house, that whatever is a little bit easier today than it was yesterday, and I'm going to be able to amass some amount of wealth that I'll be able to pass on to my kids so that I have reason to believe that their life is going to be better than mine, and therefore all of my sacrifices are worth it. >> Yeah. The second you break that, you are in a real problem. And we have broken that. >> And right now, things are getting harder and harder for people to afford. And so that makes them go, "Wait a second. That guy's making a whole lot more than me, >> which they never would have worried about or thought about if things that they wanted were getting effectively cheaper for them." >> You're right. So the question becomes, since we agree on that and we know we're moving in the wrong direction, what precisely is Trump going to do from a policy perspective or more importantly, what are you advising him to do uh to get it moving in the other direction so that real wages are going up, not the nominal where it's like, yes, I'm making more dollars. >> Gotcha. Gotcha. >> That one obviously I'm not saying for you, I'm saying for the audience. Okay. But so that the the dollars I'm making sure are more, but in terms of what they buy, it is less. So real wages is where it's like, hey, the actual difference between how much I'm making and how much something costs has changed and I'm in a more powerful position. Okay, how do we get there? >> Yeah. Well, you know, I break it into five kingdoms of macroeconomics. If you look at a big macroeconomics textbook, you've got five sections in there, at least if you're talking about the US and developed countries. First section is taxation. Second section is government spending. Third section is monetary policy, inflation, all that stuff. Fourth section is regulations. And fifth section is international trade. And I sometimes add one piece through strength which is defense security. Sometimes when I look at those five grand kingdoms, I look at let's say Joe Biden. He's a loser in every single one of them. just just across the board. Trump in his first term uh cut personal income taxes, cut corporate taxes, 100% expensing, cut the death tax dramatically in the tax cuts and jobs act. He did a great job on taxation on government spending and that he did the defense stuff that was pretty good. He reduced the rate of increase of spending there until it came to CO and then he blew it on the CO. But uh even when he blew it on the co he did get the uh the vaccine in operation warp speed by within 10 months which is pretty impressive by the way. They were expecting eight or nine years there. If you look at his monetary policy he was 1 and a half% inflation during that period there. It that was what he had there. Uh if you look at uh regulations he deontrolled energy. He deontrolled healthc care uh price transparency. I could go right to try. He did all of that stuff which is pretty cool on regulation and on trade. Uh I I'd love to talk to you about trade that take a longer but he all the deals he did in his first term were lowering tariff barriers, lowering uh quotas, lowering restrictions on trade, not increasing them. The Japan deal, the US MCA, the South Korea, the Brazil and the Colombia ones were all freer trade, not less. This term he got the tax cuts and jobs act permanent. He got u no tax on overtime. So all those guys, all those firefighters in California and all the people in Palestine, Ohio who spend 80 hours a week at at 911, you know, do all the work and take all the risk. He doesn't. You don't tax the living crap out of them anymore. You're not going to tax them for putting in 90 hours a week at the highest rates. Interest on loans should be taxdeductible. As long as interest income is taxable, interest loans should be tips. Why in the hell should you spend a billion dollars trying to collect a million dollars from tips? You know, there just some things that are just not worth it. He did [clears throat] that as well. What he did, he put in workfare in there. He put in the U medical price transparency in the big beautiful bill. He put in a bunch of other things there that I won't go through the details on, but are all pretty damn good. Uh what I see him doing on trade is trying to negotiate to get better free trade deals. That's my belief. He's a free trader all the way. He just loves to negotiate them to reduce their tariffs. We have much lower tariffs than any of the other major countries and he wants them to bring theirs down and that's exactly and the deregulation. I mean, he's doing that really well. So, I think in the five grand kingdoms, Trump is an outlier doing really well on taxes, government spending. I think he's doing well on monetary policy on regulatory policy and on trade policy. And I think his use of trade to negotiate peace like in Ukraine, uh like in China, with Taiwan, like in the four countries in Africa that he's done it with Pakistan and Afghanistan, what he did in Gaza, you know, he really knows how to leverage those types of tools to bring the peace down. He is very Reagan-esque in every respect except his personal demeanor. He is a CEO. Reagan was softspoken, was lovely high. Reagan was as radical a revolutionary as Trump is. I mean, my godfather was Justin Dart, who was head of Reagan's kitchen cabinet. Believe me, he was Donald Trump. He was a CEO. Donald Trump is doing all the right things there are to be done. And uh I couldn't be more happy than I am about how he's doing it. So that's my story. I'm sticking to it. Um, let me give you an example where I I I was wrong in some of my advice to him. I He scared the hell out of me on trade. He scared me to death. And you know, I've just seen >> because of the tariffs. >> Yeah. And to other, you know, this whenever I see a president getting involved in that stuff, I'm here's the depression. You know, 1929 when they passed the Smood Holly tariff in the fourth quarter, the stock market fell by 35% when it was signed into law by Hoover. On June 30th, 19 June uh June 30th, 19 uh 30, uh the market fell to 8 13% of its previous high unemployment rate. It's really bad. I was there in the White House when Nixon put in wage and price controls, when he did the 10% import sir charge, when he excluded foreign made capital with a job development credit. I was there. I watched the country go to hell in a hazse president guys don't know straight up from sick and they're really bad and you know there ain't no lesson to be learned from the second kick of a mule and so when I hear a president talking about using trade I'm scared he called me now this is true story he called me I think in 2019 at home uh it was in the evening early had not had my first bourbon yet but I was preparing at makaker mark a little bit I love it And he said, "Arthur, I want to talk to you about trade. I'd love to, sir." He said, "You know, I'm a free trader. You know, basically, I've known him for a long time. Not well. I've known [snorts] him, but not well. I'd never sat down, chat with him, let alone. And I, you know, he ran an international company, and I believed him always to be a free trader. I don't know of any CEO of a big company that's not a free trader. Fred Smith, all the rest of them are all free traders." And I then said in addition, anyone who imports two foreign wives has to be a free trader. He didn't giggle by the way there. And what he said to me was the following. He said, you know, if you look at the major countries in the world, the US is the freest trade big country. Now maybe you get the aisle of man. You maybe get Jersey, Gernie, and Sarkc or Monaco or maybe Hong Kong is freer trade than we are, but we are a really free trade. It all came about from World War II. At the end of World War II, we granted all of these combatants, both hostiles and and friendlies, uh the right to use protectionist trade legislation to develop their indust in infant industries. We allowed them to do that, but they never gave it back. And as they grew and finally became big, they have all these tariffs against America. We have very little against them. That's that's what's called reciprocity. He said there's also another thing that is there too as well which is called uh uh which is uh uh called uh uh leverage. When you look at uh these countries um these countries uh big countries with large markets have a lot of leverage over little ones cuz they don't bear the gains. They don't bear the loss of the gains from trade nearly as much as the other. The the point here is that everyone's hurt in a trade war. Everyone is no one wins in the trade war but they don't all lose equal amounts and little countries especially little relative to the US lose more than we do. So it gives us a leverage factor on them. The the last thing is today it's flexible. You know back in the days of the smooth holly tariff you had to pass legislation. It took you two three years to get the coalition finally passed it there. It takes equally as long to undo it. It's just a very cumbersome inflexible thing. today with executive orders. He can to raise a tariff on you today, cut a tariff on me tomorrow. He can get a tantrum and put a tariff on Ford in Canada, that guy who runs Ontario, and then drop it the next week cuz he gets cool. You know, it's flexible. So, reciprocity, leverage, and flexibility are new features of the trade system. What he tried to describe to me was these three features gives him the ability to negotiate other countries to lower their tariff barriers here. He said, "I'm going to scare the bevers out of these people, get them to come to the table to negotiate freer trade deals with them." That's what he said to me literally. I'm a free trader and I've watched what he's done and what I've seen what he's done. He has done exactly that. He uses international trade as a as a negotiating tool to achieve all sorts of global good objectives in the system. So that's that's where I am on Trump on trade. Uh I could >> really fast on on that. What's the metric that you look at to decide whether it's net effective or net problematic? >> What the final results I expect to be >> as of when like how long are you going to give this? Yeah, but there is no moment, you know, with with Trump. It's like a a Kalistoga or Kanosogga wagon coming down a mountain with rocks that sort of with no driver, you know, it's going to be bumpy bump. If you think the harmony is going to be achieved next week, think again. It's just going to be a new issue, a new bang thing. He keeps disrupting. He negotiates. He is a change agent all the time. And you don't need a change agent forever. But when this dust settles and the smoke clears, I think we're going to have a much freer trade world, a much more peaceful world. I think he's going to solve the Ukraine Russian situation. I think he's going to solve the China Taiwan situation. I think he's gone long distance on solving the Gaza Israel type of situation, Hamas. I think he's going to do all these other ones. Uh, and I'm watching what he's doing and how he's doing it. And every day in every way I'm getting a little bit more optimistic on how he uses these tools. He is a CEO. He is not a [snorts] pollster in charge. He's not a other thing. He takes these tools and negotiates and brings them to achieve really good results is where I come out on trade with Trump. That's now I think in three five years and I'm sorry I'm 85 years old because you're probably 27 or something like that. I don't know how old >> 26. But yeah. >> Okay. 26. All right. You're going to live a long time and you can flip me off [snorts] 10 years from now and I may not be around, but I'm going to be around. But I mean, the dream is that we're honing in on the horizon effect, which is a freer trade, more peaceful world. The way Reagan left us after NAFTA, I think Trump is going to leave us with much lower tax rates. He's going to get that tax rate below 28%. He's going to get the corporate rate, I would guess, 1515 on all these. He's just pumping all the time, moving us in that direction. Bing bang on the rocks and everything in that wagon. But I am really excited. But it's the horizon effect I look at. And the same one I did with Reagan. Remember, we didn't get the 28% tax rate until 1986. I mean, he had been in office five plus years before we got that. Now, we passed that bill 97 to3, which is amazing. We got every lib Democrat to vote for our bill to cut the rate down to 28% to raise the lowest rate to 15. I mean, how did Reagan do that? He [clears throat] did it by just working his tush off all the Hi there. Hello. Hello. But >> did he though or was it that he actually was able to deliver uh tangible prosperity? Because my concern with Trump is that what we're seeing is somebody who talks a Reagan game but really is erratic. And that sort of it's I'm all over the map. I'm using this as a weapon and I buy into the way that you describe it, but in terms of how it's playing out in reality, it the tariffs have turned into an incredible cudgel. They've generated billions of dollars, maybe even hundreds of billions of dollars so far. >> Well, you'll enjoy a piece I'm writing in the Wall Street Journal this week that'll come out this week. You'll enjoy it because it's what you do with that money. And >> yeah, so I'll be very eager to hear if you've got anything you want to tease us with now, but >> I'll tease you with it right now. >> Right. Hey, which would you rather do? Give money to people who don't work or cut tax rates on people who do work? >> Uh, I would rather cut tax rates on people who do work. >> That is not true. There's no way you believe that, Arthur. You know better than that. There are people that are angry right now. There is a cross a cross world study. Hold on. You've got to hear this. >> I'm not going to do a poll, but you go poll number. That's if th this you know enough people >> when you say Arthur Malleo always yells at me when I talk to me professor professor I said look at remember I'm on your side I'm I'm just pushing you a little bit but I'm not >> same here but >> I know I've got I want to get [laughter] >> if if you map socialists as people that want to help the poor you will be eternally confused. If you map them as people that want to hurt the rich they will suddenly make all the sense in the world. >> They do. Exactly. You're right. So, but that means they don't want to vote for things that are going to help the wealthy. They don't want to vote for tax uh cuts for people that are making money. They want to get more money so that they can give it to the people something. When you started, you said politicians all they care about is maintaining power. >> Mhm. >> Now, let's take a look at what happened when Reagan cut tax rates. He didn't give it out in handouts. Reagan didn't do that. He cut tax rates. He cut the highest rate from 70% to 28%. That's not chop liver guy. He cut the corporate from 46 to 34. He got rid of I mean the capital gains tax was way. >> Didn't you say it was 12% GDP growth? >> Yeah, it's at 12% in 18 months. We grew. >> Trump is not giving us that. >> No, but he is it's just starting. Reagan was able to do that because it caused a recession depression in the first two years and almost all of that was just bounce back in first part of 83. Trump did not make the mistake of phasing in tax cuts. He didn't make that mistake. So therefore, you're not going to get the huge bounce. But those growth rates right now are 3 plus% 4% and I'm telling you, they're going to come in four or five%. You're going to get real serious growth. And when that stuff starts hitting, then you're going to start seeing people woo dancing in the streets, you know, tussles and tousels all over Baton Rouge and all this stuff. It's going to be all it's going to be a party time in the US for a while. It'll be the 20s. I'm guaranteed. >> So, you really think that we're we're going to see that kind of tangible growth for the average? >> Not not not 12% in in 18 months. You're not clear. Four, five, five, six% big. The bounceback's not going to occur. But the rest of the Reagan period was huge, too. We won the election in ' 84 with 49 states. I told you how I was on the executive committee of the Reagan Bush Finance Committee, which is fairly cool. I was the only poor person on it. Uh, all of us were billionaires and and and let and I worked with Reagan really closely. I knew Reagan very well. He'd come over to the house for dinner. I I I've known him forever and ever. My godfather was his best friend. I've always gotten my positions in life through privilege, not through earning them. And I love it for getting privileges much more for fun than than actually having to do the work. And you look at what happened with Reagan and you saw what Reagan could have won president of the world. Montdale was a great guy, but don't run against God. You're gonna get hammered. We even were able to get that silly guy, George Herbert Walker Bush, elected in 88 because of the Reagan coattails. What a loser he was. I mean, Trump is right on that trail there. Not as dramatic, but the down wasn't nearly as dramatic either. When he came in, it wasn't at 12% unemployment rate. Uh Reagan had to go up to well over 10%, I think. So I am very much in the camp that when these or the smoke clears and the dust settles there, you're going to see a very bullish economy. You're going to see a stable currency. And it may not be the dollar as we know it. It may be some tether dollar or something like that. He's going to do the inflation. The people he's going to appoint to the Fed are going to be really good good price rule people like Paul Vulker. I mean, you know, all these things are coming together in a very cool way. And and you know, I'm amazed at the guy given what he's gone through, but you know, he he doesn't ask his staff, "What should I do?" He tells his staff what he's going to do and what they have to do because they keep their jobs. And that's the way he should be. He's not a pollster in general. He's just not. He doesn't look at those polls, you know, if he did scare the hell out of himself, but he doesn't. And he's just doing the right thing. >> Talk to me about the Fed. I want to know what's the right thing there. The right thing you do is use a price fruit which I went back and what we did prior to 1913 we defined a dollar and what you had is the supply of money adjusted to the price level. You know that's what you did back before that and it did perfectly. What you need is a price rule. The way Vulkar did it was he looked at spot commodity prices and if they were rising too rapidly, he would sell bonds in the open market, take money out of the system, reduce the Fed's balance sheet, and then if it was going down too fast, he would do just the opposite and expand the Fed's balance sheet, and sooner or later, if you stabilize spot commodity prices, the price level stabilizes right along the way. Exactly what we did from 1776 to 1913 was a price rule. it happened to be gold and silver from 1776 to 1913 which worked really well. Uh this time you can just use the CPI or something else. That's where just what Vulkar did. And you know when Vulkar did it the inflation rates I mean I told you it was 21 and a half% prime double digit mortgages were 15%. He brought it down to way down. I [snorts] mean, if you just look at it, the inflation just collapsed. And that's what I think the Fed people are being looked at in terms of doing that and structurally reforming the entire Federal Reserve system. There's no need to have 400 PhDs of Larry Summers at the Fed being employed there. We don't need 400 PhD economists at the Fed. Believe me when I tell you that these people should try to get there's been huge uh uh uh uh creep in the uh in the functions of the Fed and it's been ruining the system. We need to really structurally change it and I think that's what he's going to do >> given that we are excited by it. You you should be very excited by this. You're >> that's what they're going to do. >> I think they're going to do that. Yes. I mean I'm look I'm great at forecasting the past. I'm a lot less good at forecasting the future, but I have no choice here. I have to. And I think that's what's going to happen. The next Fed chairman is going to really rock and roll and shake the foundations of the Fed. >> And that's very happy. >> That is the way that you describe it in terms of effectively um steering by price is interesting. Uh, I'm going to set that aside for now because I don't my intuition is that's not where we end up. So, when I look at the we have fiscal dominance, so the government spending and debt obligation is so massive, we can't raise rates. Um, and we are going to have to print [clears throat] money because we don't have Trump is not interested in balancing the budget. So, you've got we know we're going to be running hot right now. We're two trillion roughly a year. Uh so that's going to have to be printed to make up for that. And given that and he's screaming for Jerome Powell to lower rates, which is from where I'm sitting absolute insanity, that is going to uh flood the market with even cheaper money. You're going to get bubbles. I think we're already in a massive AI bubble. Uh and I think that that's only going to get worse >> if we lower rates. Um, so that given that that's what Trump is signaling, what is it that makes you think instead of doing that, we're going to get a Vulkar style. >> Now, now I'm going to use inside information with you, if you'll forgive me. I've known Trump for a long time >> and uh I, you know, he's been very successful in many, many ways. comes uh there not to that you've got to take Trump seriously but not literally and I think you're taking him literally when you sit there and say you know what Trump does is he he's on all sorts of sides of all issues it's but he uses the chaos and the mayhem to be able to get things through and to get them done. When I look at what Trump's plan, when I look at what he's going to do is he wants lower inflation, he wants inflation to be effectively zero. Does he want the real return on capital to be zero? No. I mean, when you look at, let's say, the end of Clinton when the 10-year was yielding 4 plus% and it's yielding 4 plus% right now. All right. The composition of our four plus% right now is probably 2.5% inflation. And then the real yield, the tips yield is probably one and a half, something like that. When you had to Clinton, it was just the reverse. What you want to do is you want to have a very high real return on capital, which is the tip shield, and want you to have a very lower expected rate of inflation. Those two rates always move in the opposite direction. And I [clears throat] think what we need to have is a Fed that stabilizes the value of the dollar so that a price level now a dollar bill is worth today, what it will be worth next year, 5 years from now, 100 years from now. We need a monetary system like the gold standard was in from 1776 to 1913. That's what we need and I think that's the direction we're going to go. When I look at the lessons of >> how are they going to do that though? Are they going to rep to gold? >> Well, no. I think they're going to use a spot commodity price index or or they may use some of the some of the cryptos. I mean, they're talking about all sorts of things. Now, just conversations. I'm not saying is a Trump or not. I don't know. Uh but there all sorts of things of a crypto dollar where you have a tether for a dollar where where you know you you guarantee it's stable. You know, a stable coin. You can design a currency today with crypto to guarantee it's stable in value. You can do it and you can do it with complete confidence of its of its secrecy because if you read Singh's book on codes, you can make codes that cannot be broken and the and the blockchain is a way of guaranteeing that you don't have the the double payment problem. I mean all of these things are there and available now that have never been around before. I mean, the dollar bill was an amazing creation back in in 19 what 134, whatever it was. And and we're now at one of those right away. And I just see market forces bringing that in. And any government that doesn't take advantage of that, stupid. And if this government doesn't do it, which I think it will do it, you've got places like Boules uh uh uh El Salvador, you've got places like Malays Argentina, you've got all these other places in the world that are all doing it. And you know, we can't fight this this thing of change of getting a stable currency. You just can't. And it's like the dollarization of the world. Back in the day when the dollar meant something, we had dollarization, but we don't now. Now, they can cure the dollar. They can or they can allow uh alternatives to come in and provide an alternative currency that's stable in value. I love that these cryptos are coming in and challenging the dollar. I just love it. >> And when you say take advantage, are you talking about building a Bitcoin reserve? >> Well, I don't even think you need a reserve. No, I just think Bitcoin can do it itself. Now, Bitcoin does not Bitcoin is a fixed quantity or at least supposedly a fixed quantity of something. When you have a fixed quantity, the prices vary. So, Bitcoin serves beautifully as a store of value. That's true. But when you see something like Tether and some of these other ones, they have a fixed value and the quantities vary. You have a price primal and a quantity duel. With Bitcoin, you you have the the quantity is fixed and the prices move. With a stable coin, you have the quantities move and the price is fixed. And what we need is a stable coin for transactions purposes. And in that regard, we don't need to have reserves. You we don't need to do that. Bank of England ran the gold standard for two centuries without having a effectively any reserves except for a transactions volume of that. It just you don't need it. You just let the quantity of the of the entity vary. And we can do that really well uh by making sure it's stable in terms of goods and services. The way you do that is you can take it like tether in terms of dollars and then it have it pay interest on that or allow the currency to appreciate by the amount of inflation. And it it ain't rocket surgery. It can really be done quite simply. You and I could sit here uh I'll do the programming, you do the computer stuff. We can make that program and just guarantee that we have a currency that is stable in terms of goods and services in prices forever and ever. Amen. Why not now? I mean, and they're doing it. It's not back 15 years ago, there was none of this. Now it's all over the place. There are 55 stable coins being and you want to have the competition amongst these alternative cryptos. I mean, you really do because it's great. one does some things and another one and they compete and get the the consumer gains all the gains from competing crypto stable coins and crypto value coins. So, you see where I'm coming from >> and you understand what I'm talking about. >> I do >> and I read all the math on this stuff. I mean, >> you can make it completely secure and you can make it take care of the double payment problem. Bingo. Blockchain is incredible. I mean, and they can do now blockchain trades 43,000 a second and they're going up to 200,000 a second. Boom. I mean, it's a you remember when you have to go to the store and put your card in that machine and you wait, don't pull it out yet. Beep. Okay, you pull it out. That's just clearing it to make sure you take care of the double payment. You write a check. Your bank doesn't let you use it until they clear that check with the other guy's account. That take five days. All of that's gone. All of those transactions are gone. This is a period of incredible efficiency gains in the marketplace in transactions. And I watch this happening before my very eyes and I'm just blown away. I'm 85, but I can't believe that. I mean, the world is really I'm just ecstatic by what the world is creating. Oh, well. >> Okay. >> I know I'm going against your pessimism, but I do like your logic. Your logic is much better than your feelings, by the way. Your logic is super high. You you just want to be pessimistic. Did you beat your little sister or something when you were a kid? Or I'm just joking with you. >> The the funny thing is uh I am a extremely optimistic person by nature. But I have to ground I don't trust my emotions. So I always ground it in logic. And the problem is that when I think up from first principles, um, I take the exact opposite of you, which is that the math does not justify your optimism. I've tried to anchor us in terms of what the difference is in the base assumption. So you think everybody will just migrate to crypto. I do not. Um, because they didn't migrate to assets. Crypto right now is best understood as an asset. Now, the reason that I say that, >> no, that's that's only because >> I know you're going to bear with me. The reason that I say that is because the their life is not set up to make that an obvious thing that they understand from the time that they're born. And so now they have to learn about it and they have to migrate themselves over to that system. And I'm saying that they're busy trying to make ends meet, trying to fall in love, uh you know, trying to keep their head above water. And the reality is that they >> that's not that's not a first principles. That is a second principles. You believe that people are emotionally incapable of doing the right thing. >> That literally is first principles. The human mind works in a certain way. >> I think that's >> you're you're falling prey to man as economic animal. And we are not. >> I'm the Darwin. I'm the Darwin of economics. I believe >> perfect. Then then you will agree wholeheartedly that humans are an emotional creature first and foremost. We do not think through things logically. We are emotionbased. So listen the the there has been a study jump >> off cliffs >> you well first of all yes we do when people get depressed enough but if you selectively damage the area of the brain that is responsible for generating emotion a human being will cease to be able to make a decision so they can tell you why you should have fish instead of beef and then they won't be able to when you sit them down say do you want fish or beef they won't be able to decide we use emotions as the thing that propels us in a direction uh so given at uh any way we we could lose a lot of time there, but 10 toes down on that first principles. >> Before we started, I said I had a story for you on first principles. And let me tell you my story on >> emotional people. >> I looked and I asked myself, where's the most socialist state in the nation? And I came to the conclusion, it has to be Massachusetts. And I asked my what's the what's the most socialist city in that state? Cambridge. What's the most socialist institution there? Harvard. What's the most socialist moment there? What department there? Sociology. And what's the social most socialist moment? And it's in the front lawn of the sociology department at Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, when Bernie Sanders is giving a speech. Elizabeth Warren is in the front row. Everyone's going along this stuff. So what I did, I went to my pal. I got some pillowcases and I packed them full of $20 bills, tied a little dot. I went over here to Nashville BNA, the airport, flew to Logan. I got off there. I got an Uber. Took me right over to Cambridge. I went right to Harvard University. I went right to the sociology department. I went to that lawn where Bernie Sanders was giving his speech. And I got one of those foldout chairs. All these people were tearing off their clothes, screaming, hollering, redistribution, red tax, all this run. Oh, Bernie's hair was flopping back and forth. And so I stood up on this little chair. There was a slight wind blowing. And I opened up the pillowcases full of $20 bills. I threw them all and they floated over the crown in there. Within 20 seconds, every one of those $20 bills was picked up. Every single one. They are as capitalist incentive based as anyone. All of their emotions went to the wind. When one of them has a girlfriend and the other one wants to share that girlfriend with the first one, uh-uh. [clears throat] They're like all the rest of us. They live on those incentives. It's they just like the emotional crap of this. But when push comes to shock, we can manipulate them with perfectly good economics all day long and twice on Sunday. >> I love that story, by the way. It's hypocrisy, by the way. Just isn't it? >> Obviously, it is fun. So, uh again, any theory has to describe the world that I actually see. And the world that I actually see is a UK that's fallen on its face. Is uh Argentina that has struggled for over a hundred years because they actually embrace socialist policies. Is a world where you had the USSR but it fell only to be replaced with Putin. Uh you've got China that Mao which god I want to ask you about Mao since your time there in the 70s. Uh Mao killed tens of millions of people. Uh these things actually happen. They actually take control of people. >> You're right. Are we are we China? the thing. Well, we're we're getting there. Uh >> well, I don't think so. That that's where we do disagree. I think that's the real disagreement. I >> really fast. Let me just put a bow on that and then then we'll debate that. So, the bow on that is that America is uh historically from just a number of years that humans have existed, it's a total anomaly. Uh from the fact that uh every empire before it has collapsed, it's literally right on Q. We're now marching towards 130% debt to GDP. So you you look at all of this stuff and we fit the historical patterns. Uh no one before us has ever escaped and kept doing the right thing. Everybody does debt and money printing until they collapse. Literally everybody. Uh more places have lived under tyranny than have lived under a thriving democracy. So it's like you put it all together and that tells me that humans are a certain way. And from where I'm sitting, we have an opportunity to get out of this death spiral. But we will not get out of this death spiral by going ah this ain't it's all going to work itself out. So I'm like no this isn't going to work itself out on accident. We are going to have to really get into this. Now the reason that I say that >> that's what I do. I'm an activist. I'm a policy sh I'm not someone who sits back and waves my hands and oh don't worry it'll take care of itself. I'm in there every day fighting Prop 13 all the tax cuts. All those were my babies. I worked on them to get them to go there. I am an active change agent. So, I'm not someone who just sits back and goes, >> "No, that is for sure inarguable." Now, I will >> go in there and I think we're going to get it changed in the right direction. That's my thing. I'm working on it day and night. Property tax limitations in almost every state in the nation. Getting that tax rate down to 15% federal tax. I think I'm going to get that uh you know 15% corporate tax. I think I'm going to get that. I'd love to get I mean I think we're going to get a lot of I Trump gave me credit for price healthcare price transparency. That's one I really were I was chairman of the board of the Centennial over here. I saw how crappy the system was. So I'm an activist and I'm a revolutionary. I'm just not a commie. I I really believe in using incentives. I think the commies are cute little stupid people and they don't know they don't know what they're doing and they act in one way like the picking up the $20 bills and protecting their girlfriends and shoot this but their behavior uh their their speeches are just silly and I listen to AOC I listen to this one you know there and Bernie Sanders I dare him to debate me I dare him I dare say or picky I've asked all come on let's do it manuano let's go through They won't. And for obvious reasons, they won't. They'll lose their shirts. I've had about five debates on income inequality, and each one of the other side conceds. Duh. I mean, >> that's awesome. We definitely need moreense. It's just common sense. And then I try to go in there to policies and you see how I explained it with regard to a check versus lowering tax rates. You see how I, you know, and the numbers really do bear me out. And you know, I've been pretty successful with presidents, pretty successful with Argentina, with Chile, with all those little my students down in Chile there. You know, those are the things I try to do. And I think we're winning on this one. And I think we're going to win big. >> And you're going to be really rich. You're going to be really happy. Do you have kids? >> I do not. >> Oh, see, I've got six kids, so you can tell what an optimist I am. >> And what? 14 grandkids, two great grandkids, something like that. >> Four great grandkids. Yes. you get into my diary, haven't you? >> Of course. Of course. >> But isn't it just I mean I've just never been happier. >> That's amazing. And I will say that comes across and Lord knows I hope that I am as energetic and sharp as you at 85. Uh it is thrilling to see somebody with your experience. >> Dick Cheney, one of my dearest friends, classmate of mine at Yale, Dave Gurgen just by they both co-croaked recently. And we get all these people, Lieberman, all all of my classmates at Yale and all there. I if I want to talk with them now, I have to use a Ouija board. You know, it's a I mean, but I'm going to live a lot longer and I'm going to really enjoy the and we're going to have a thing there where you're going to say, you know, Dr. Lafer, you were right on those issues. >> Lord knows I hope. >> So, uh, speaking of issues that I want to see, uh, who is mapping this correctly. So I think that we are starting to make choices much like China. We're taking positions in companies. I think that is a very big mistake. Um what's your read on the Intel situation and >> and we did we took it on what was the one that O Biden did that one that sun that sunlight shine one was it? Cylindra he did it in Celindra the big government buy out of that. Intel is just a lousy thing that they did it in Columbus, Ohio. They did all the buyouts and everything. They gave them so much money. The government did Ohio as well as federal. All of them did Intel and they're a loser. Uh they they fell behind and they became dependent on that. I don't like the government taking positions in companies. It's very hard for them not to given the size. I would love to shrink government back down to where it was in 1910. That's me. uh you know 1910 the federal government was about 3% of GDP >> you know and at that time we became the preeminent economic force on planet earth with 3% of GDP it's a little higher than that today I thought I'd mention that to you just I know you aren't aware but the government's got a lot bigger but I think we can shrink this quite substantially now on the state stuff I moved to Tennessee from California because it's the lowest tax state in the nation since I've been here we got rid of the death tax and gift tax we got rid of the unearned income tax I'm trying to get a property tax limitation like Prop 13. You know what I did there in California with 13? I'm going now working with Ohio. I'm working with Missouri. I'm working with all these states nonstop on getting good policies in. I think we're going to get government to be much smaller 15, 20 years from now than it is today. That's me. Now, I'm wrong a lot. I never try to be wrong. I really I am wrong a lot. You could just ask my first wife if you want to find out how bad I can be. Uh but I really think I'm not wrong. And I rethink we're at a big change in the US on bringing in free market economics back in your problems that you describe are true. But you know the stock market when I told you in 1973 was by law you had to pay 34 cents per share traded. It's now zero. Airline deontrol was amazing. Truck deontrol was amazing. Energy decontrol has been amazing. You should see the stuff that have happened there. You know, it used to be in America that you couldn't sell a product that was manufactured except that these manufacturers suggested retail price. Discount houses were illegal. We then got rid of Hubert Humphrey and we've now got discount houses all the hell all over the place. We are moving in the right direction and we're solving social issues with it. The bald eagle is back. My hometown, Cleveland, Ohio, Youngstown and Cleveland. Two crappiest places. If God had come back to Earth in the 1950s and Jesus come back to Earth and had made the mistake of landing in Cleveland to prove that he in fact were the Christ, he wouldn't have to walk on the water. Hell, anyone could walk on the water. He'd have to sink in the water back then. You know, today the water's clean. Kyogre River's clean. Lake Arie's got the fish. I mean, it it's amazing the progress we're making. LA three-stage smuggle. You couldn't go to school. People were there all gone. The air in the Los Angeles basin is massively improved. I mean I could take you through all these things. We are still have lots of problems as you point out very correctly. You're right. But the blackfooted ferret is hopping around. You know all these things. We are making enormous progress. If you look at the air quality in this planet, it is improving enormously without those stupid goofballs in the what is the something cord there? the quality error accord or whatever those people are. You know, we're doing it. We're getting there and the markets are adjusting and really providing this stuff and I'm just very excited about the future as you can tell. But I think we're solving lots of problems and we are have still a lot to go. You I mean debt is way too high. I will concede that to you here. I don't think it's rogue off high. 20 to 18% of total net wealth it is is too high but it's not I'm going to kill my country and especially when you see what's happening with the currencies and all that stuff. Well, you've heard me lecture there. I'm I'm just trying to infuse you with some of that lithium so that you too can see the stars spango banners and happiness and dancing girls and lights and shining and [clears throat] [snorts] >> you don't have to wait till you die to have heaven. >> You could have it here to earth. Awesome statement. Uh let me ask in terms of what you see going on in the stock market today. Um what do you make of that? To me this looks like a liquidity I'll say problem where assets are going skyhigh because debt is so cheap. Uh we've printed so much money. We people are trying to escape inflation. Uh and so when I look at, you know, a company like XAI, uh raising money at like 150x, uh my heart skips a beat. Uh because we're so detached from fundamentals. Uh what do you see? >> Thank you. This is the best question of all. What what we have seen happening over the last 20 years or so is you've seen private equity replacing stock market equity. and uh for good reason. It's the regulations, it's all the taxes, all the treatment, everything like that. So the stock market is a smaller share of total wealth than it has been historically if you look at it. And yet all of a sudden the stock market starts really going way up. I think I see what the stock market sees. I think I see a very very boisterous wonderful future and the stock market is reflecting its expectations of higher profits and greater prosperity in the future and that you know stock market doesn't tell you what has been it tells you what it expects to be and I think the stock market is expecting the type of world I'm describing to you and so therefore I look at the stock market as reflecting what my view of the world is rather than telling me a bigger problem is here. [snorts] >> So when you look at the stock market, you don't think business fundamentals that's not really relevant. >> Oh yeah. >> This is more of a sentiment. Well, so we've got whatever seven to 10 stocks that have produced the entire uh performance and those are detached from business fundamentals certainly from anything historic. Um not troubling. That's just uh >> you're using you're using historical numbers rather than future numbers. And that's what I think the stock if you knew that there was going to be a huge boom in the economy next year and that profits were going to increase 10fold would you sell all your stocks now or would you buy more? >> I'd buy more. >> Thank you. I think that's what's happening. Now I'm exaggerating now the numbers >> but that's sidest stepping the business fundamentals question because I agree and that's fundamental. >> Yeah. You say the transactions costs are going to be gone. I mean, when you go buy things and look at all this life, the huge huge change in productivity that's going to come about by by get replacing all of these transactions and banks and clearances and all that stuff. It's huge by having transparency and healthcare prices. All of these things are going to be huge generators of productivity increase. I think that that's me and I think the market's reflecting that. >> Yeah. I'll say that once again, you and I agree on like the simple statements and then we take away very different conclusions. So that's all right. Agree. I I think that AI is going to be transformative in ways that we can't even imagine. >> Thank you. That's what I do too for sure. >> Reflected in the stock market. >> Yeah. In in a way that >> what is Nvidia but that >> I was a big investor in Nvidia in the beginning and then I got scared and I sold it four years ago. >> How stupid is that? But at least I held it for a lot of P. And by the way, I'm also just for your viewers, uh, I am not a guy you want to follow his market advice. If you follow my market advice, you're going to lose a lot of money. >> Yeah. I mean, so well, I I think that probably points out something fundamental which people need to understand, which is that markets are uh, first of all, they're gambling and second, it is people gambling based on emotion. Once you understand it's gambling based on emotion by people far more sophisticated than you, uh it becomes very difficult to make money if you're trying to trade. If you're just going to buy and hold, bet on sectors over the long run, >> I buy that's all I do and I still lose. [laughter] >> Yeah, it all comes down to when you sell. But >> well, no. Well, I there's no money. No, it doesn't come down to that. I start losing the day my check clears. Yeah, I just keep driving. I could sell it any day and I still lose. Um, but there is no money back guarantee with my statements about the stock market just for the record. But I am very optimistic as you can tell and I am fully invested in the market fully, fully, fully, fully and I love it. >> I've got all my trust funds for my grandkids and my great grandkids and I'm just wallowing in fun. >> Okay. So, you and I both agree that we've got a shot at the future being incredible, but it's not going to happen by accident. What should what should individuals do? Whether that's how they invest, how they vote, >> give money to good politicians and get those politicians that want to shrink government to lower tax rates to free enter markets, deontrol the place, g give them and get involved politically. People deserve the governments they get. And if you don't take care of that government, who does me? You know, come on. I'm working my tush off day and night to change government in the way you and I see the world. You got to do the same thing. And so to all your viewers, get out there and get in there and get and do the right markets. Get the good politicians in there. Get these guys out who are bad. It's not Republican. It's not Democrat. It's not liberal. It's not conservative. It's not leftwing, rightwing. It's just good economics. You know, I'm a Kennedy Democrat. I'm a Reagan Republican. I'm a Clinton Democrat. I'm a Trump Republican. You know, I was Gary Hart's economist when he ran for president in 88. I I was Jerry Brown's economist when he ran in 1992. We wanted to get rid of all taxes and put in two flat rate taxes. The 13% flat tax, if you remember that. I did that with him. I think Jerry Brown was cool. I wish he'd won. It's not party. Get your guys to get in there and become political activists cuz it's your future. It's your kids' future. It's everyone's future. Get them out there. If they aren't involved in politics, they don't deserve to have good results. How was that? >> That was amazing, Arthur. Uh, I cannot thank you enough for coming on. I can't thank you enough for all the books that you've written. Where can people follow you? >> Right through you. I, you know, there they can find me in the internet. I have a thing there, but I don't I don't even do emails. I don't know how to do emails. I have I had a flip phone until built security people broke my flip phone. I had to get this new one, and I'm butt dialing everyone all the time. I don't know what the hell to do with this stupid thing. And uh, so there is a thing called the Laugher Center if they want to get involved with it. 1065 Inc. it's called and I have a firm here in Nashville, Laugher Associates, which is but it's just small, just me and 10 other people, but we do all the work we do here and we just put it on the line. And you know, I I have made a vow that I'd never go to work for government because once you take a paycheck, you're an employee. >> And once you're an employee, you have an oath of loyalty. You know, I worked in the Nixon White House as I mentioned to you in 1970 to72 and I found out what I don't do well. I don't work for government well, but but when I'm not there, when I go in with Trump or with Reagan or with any of the others, I never took a job with any of them. And I did get offered really nice jobs, but I didn't take him because I want to be independent and tell him what I think is right. I hold his confidences, you know, if he talks to me and stuff. I try not to listen to what he's going to do, but I then keep my mouth shut about it. And I but I never operate against them in any way, shape, or form. But when I see my colleagues, and you know, my colleague at Yale, classmate of mine's married to Janet Yellen, uh I know all of them there. I know Austin Goulby, he has my position at the University of Chicago. I had tenure professor there as well. And I see them and these people, I mean, especially, you know, ROR, I mean, you know, ROR and Jared Bernstein and all these guys, they will rebut arguments they know to be true in order to curry favors with their political benefactors. And I'm not willing to do that yet. Okay? When I go in there, I talk with him, he hears what I say. He can't fire me. He can't hire me. He can't double my pay. He can't have my pay. He can yell at me, but all of that. So, you know, it's like with you, you know, I we can have a good firm discussion, but you know, I'm trying to be straight with you. You know that. And I'm trying to give you the best and you know, you make the decisions that you make. And President God knows he has 10 times more information than I do. He makes it. But all I want to do is make sure that he understands what I'm talking about. Let's say in trade or in deregulation or taxes, all that stuff. and make sure he understands and uses that in his calculations. I'm not going to talk trash about him or good. I'm just going to step aside and that's what I view my role at in this work. Now, in state stuff, I go in and do tax plans and do all that stuff and campaigns and stuff like that. And I was very involved in the tax cuts and jobs act as you know in the ' 86 tax act was my paper the complete flat tax that they use. Kemp Cast as well as Bradley Gart with that. I really get involved in all that stuff right down to the nitty-gritty. But I never take a job with a politician and I never ever ever once they pay you, you're an employee. And [snorts] then you got to say nice things about your boss, even when he does it wrong. I was with Nixon uh as George Schultz's right-hand person when I was 29 years old, 30. I remember telling my mom, I said, "Mom, you won't believe it. I just wrote a speech for Nixon." Mom, I wrote a speech for the president of the United States. I mean, he loved the love. He only changed two words. Mom, only two words he changed. He said, "Wherever I is, he put is not. And wherever I put is not, he put is. But mom, it's my speech." And I learned, you know, that that's not where I belong is in government. I belong outside giving really what I consider measured correct base advice and then I go home play with my great Danes and my family and my kids and all that. But you you follow me. It's really you get you get you get you get co-opted when you buy into being a government official. You do. And you're completely right. They want power and power and power. My job is to just blow up all this all the positions of power until we we get to the world that you and I really want is a 3% of GDP government, state and local 1 and a.5% 4 and a.5% total. We have a low rates broad-based uh property tax that never exceeds 1% of market value. You have an income tax or flat tax rate. That's it. And get the hell out of the way and let the market solve the problems. Yeah, you're going to get problems. Free markets have problems all over the place. They do. But government's even worse than free markets when you talk about problems. >> Ain't that the truth, Arthur? Thank you so much for joining me today, man. I really appreciate it. >> Everybody at home, if you have not already, be sure to subscribe. And until next time, my friends, be legendary. Take care. Peace. >> If you like this conversation, check out this episode to learn more. >> The only thing that's bipartisan is reckless spending. The Trump administration is a lot more socialist than what mom Donnie is proposing. Golden share in US Steel because Donald Trump's so good at bankrupting casinos, he should run a steel company. Budgets and taxes are a reflection of our values.