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Transcript of Paul Romer, An Interview with Paul Romer on Economic Growth | Library of Economics and Liberty
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In the summer of 2007, I interviewed Paul Romer of Stanford University for
EconTalk. Paul has been the driving force behind the "new growth theory"
writing a series of influential papers that put the role of ideas at the center of
growth theory. Our conversation focused on the importance of ideas, the role of
institutions and the legal environment for creating incentives for new ideas and
how ideas spread beyond national borders helping people around the world.
Here are edited excerpts from that conversation.
The podcast can be found at Romer on Growth.
Russell Roberts
Features Editor
uss Roberts: Paul, let's start by talking about the importance
of growth as you do in your article for the Concise
Encyclopedia of Economics. You have an article there, "Economic
Growth." Why do small changes in growth rates matter? What's
important about that?
Paul Romer: This is a classic application of the power of compounding,
that if you have a slightly higher growth rate, as growth rates
compound over many years, it leads to dramatically higher levels of
income.
Paul Romer: For example, at 2.1 percent rate of growth per year,
income per capita in a nation can increase by a factor of about 8 over
100 years. So if income per capita is $30,000 per person in the United
States, just round numbers, in 100 years, it could be $240,000 per
person. Now imagine you had a slightly faster growth rate. Suppose it
was 2.6 percent instead of 2.1 percent. Then it could increase by a
factor of 13 instead of 8, so you'd end up with $390,000 per person
instead of $240,000—
Russ Roberts: Huge difference. Almost twice as much.
Paul Romer: Yeah, so small differences, half a percent per year,
accumulate into very large differences in standards of living and the
extra income will make life better for everyone in a nation—no matter
what it wants to do with those extra resources—spend them on
education, more vacations, more quality time with each other,
whatever.
Russ Roberts: How much richer are we in the United States than we
were 100 years ago? How have we been doing?
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FEATURED ARTICLE | NOVEMBER 5, 2007
An Interview with Paul Romer on
Economic Growth
Paul Romer*
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Paul Romer: Well, I picked the 2.1 percent because that's about the
average rate of growth that we had over the last century and we did
experience about an eight-fold increase over a period of 100 years. It's
a really phenomenal increase and something that's unprecedented in
human history. We've never seen the leading nation in the world grow
at such an astonishing rate. Now if you listen to the news reports, you'll
know that there's some places like China which are growing at 10—8
and 10 percent per year. That's because they're catching up with the
frontier and they're starting from way behind. When you start from a
low base, it's always easy to have a faster rate of growth. But as they
start to catch up with us, their growth rates will slow down.
Russ Roberts: You mean they're not going to pass us in five or six years
per capita?
Paul Romer: They're certainly not going to pass us in five or six years.
No, and they might not pass us ever.
Russ Roberts: I understand.
Paul Romer: We've had historical episodes where the United States
started out below the UK and it's also why I picked a half a percentage
point change. We grew over the twentieth century by about a half apercentage point more per year than the Brits, and we went surging
ahead of them in terms of income per capita.
So sometimes a nation that's behind can grow faster and can go
surging ahead of what was then the leading technology nation in the
world. But right now, the United States is still a real powerhouse in
terms of developing technology and sustaining growth.
Russ Roberts: You picked China as an example and you said their base
was low, so it's easier for them while they're catching up to grow at a
faster rate, but it's not just that their base is low. It has something also
to do with the reason that their base was low, which was both the
institutions and the technology that they were using at that low level.
Correct?
Paul Romer: That's right.
Russ Roberts: Because I'm interested in that American example. Why
do you think we've grown at a faster rate in America over the last 100
years than England? Technological opportunity in both countries are
relatively similar.
We don't have access to secret technology that they didn't know to use.
What are some of the reasons they might have grown more slowly than
we did? And other nations, for that matter, over the same period.
Paul Romer: Let me answer a different question and then come back to
that one. The easy question to answer is, "Why is China growing so
fast?" If you look back when the United States was at the same level
that China is at, we were growing more slowly. How can they grow so
fast?
Well, they have the advantage of being able to import—essentially just
copy—technology that already exists in places like the U.S. and adopt it
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very rapidly. So when they opened their economy, they could rapidly
take advantage of things that were already known. Now the question
about the U.S. versus the UK is a harder question about not copying
things that are already known but developing brand-new things. In the
United States, we developed a set of institutions. Institutions are the
rules—the rules of the game that structure what everybody does in the
nation.
We developed a set of institutions which encouraged more rapid
discovery. We discovered and implemented things more rapidly than
they did in the UK. And the interesting question that historians and
economists are still struggling with is, "What were the precise details of our institutions that made them better, just enough better to get an
extra half a percentage point per year compared to the British?"
Russ Roberts: Of course, one of the reasons that we're able to do it is
that we import people. You talked about China importing technologies.
We imported—because we have relatively open borders, we've imported
a lot of smart people from overseas that have helped us. But I want to
stop before we get into that and ask you to clarify something more
basic. You attribute the growth in the United States—the growth rate in
the United States being above that of England's—to our ability to
develop new stuff. Yet how important is it for a nation to be thedeveloper rather than the importer? Do we really care if the television
was invented in the United States versus Russia? Do we really care
where the car was invented or where the next great breakthrough
comes from? Does it matter?
Paul Romer: No, we don't and it's a really good point to emphasize.
People often use these national comparisons as if it's a race where
there's winners and losers. I often tell my students, "Any time you're
thinking about rivalry between countries, reframe the question as
rivalry between states in the United States."
Would it upset us if we lived in Illinois and Intel was making
microprocessors in California? Is it bad for us that Intel develops
microprocessors? Of course not. We're glad they make them and we're
happy to use them. We get the benefits from using them. Does it make
people in Illinois any worse off if people in California grow richer or
develop new technology? Absolutely not. People in Illinois are better off
being able to trade with California and people in California are better off
being able to trade with people in Illinois and New York and the rest of
the country.
So this notion that there's a kind of a rivalry with winners and losers
when we think about nations, it's really very misleading about theunderlying economics. This, by the way, was one of the advantages the
United States had in the early part of the twentieth century. We were
already a big free trading block when a lot of the world was still
relatively closed.
Russ Roberts: We had a big physical area. What about our level of
population and human capital at the beginning of the twentieth
century? Any thoughts on that?
Paul Romer: I think that we were already overtaking Britain in
population by around the turn of the century and then certainly grew
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faster as the twentieth century progressed.
Russ Roberts: Let's turn to the question of how economists have looked
at growth and how that view has changed.
Paul Romer: The basic economic analysis—starting with Adam Smith
and certainly with Malthus, who came afterwards—was an economics
based on physical objects, notions of scarcity. If you have a plot of land
or a piece of wood, only one person can use it and there's a finite
number of those pieces of wood and plots of land. Economists
recognized that there were other things out there besides physical
objects—things like ideas, a formula or a recipe for how to rearrangephysical objects and make them more valuable.
For a long time, they recognized that those formulas or insights or ideas
were extremely important and that we were discovering more of them
over time and that discovery was driving growth, but they felt like we
didn't have the economic tools to study that process of discovery or
technological change the way we studied the market for corn.
So economists said, "Let's just set aside the question of where
technology comes from," and they made up this highfalutin jargon to
cover up for their ignorance in this area. They said, "Let's treattechnological change as exogenous. It comes from outside the
economic system. We don't know where it comes from and why, but
given that there's technological change, let's study how an economy
transforms scarce resources like iron ore into tractors and forklifts and
structures and so forth." So we studied capital. We studied labor. We
didn't pay much attention to the underlying process of technological
change.
Russ Roberts: We didn't really pay much attention to what you call the
recipe, which is a metaphor that you use in your article, "Economic
Growth," and that is really a very powerful way for thinking about it. We
had a thing called the production function, which is really the ultimate
black box. Until recently, we didn't think much about what was going on
inside that black box. I mean, we realized there were things called
factories where the capital and labor were combined in different ways,
different materials, different things came out of the box, but the whole
idea of creativity and innovation was not really considered.
Paul Romer: I think part of why this question attracted me was because
of my background in physics, and to a physicist, the whole notion of a
production function sounds wrong. We don't really produce anything.
Everything was already here, so all we can ever do is rearrange things.
Think of conservation of mass. We've got the same amount of stuff we've always had, but the world is a nicer place to live in because we've
rearranged it. It's like we fixed up the house and it's nicer now that
we've fixed it up. So then you have to think about, "What is
'rearranging?'"
Rearranging involves connecting things, or modifying them chemically
or structurally. Then you realize there are recipes or formulas you'd use
to do that rearranging. It's like cooking. Take the same raw materials in
the kitchen. You can create something—a soufflé which is really
valuable. It gives us great pleasure when we eat it, or it could be sour
milk. Thinking about ideas this way makes you think about how we
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actually create value in an economy. It also helps you think about
questions of sustainability. It's not that we're using up raw materials
and we're going to run out of them at some point. It's really that there's
a lot of stuff like this huge Tinker Toy set we've got to play with, and we
can rearrange things and take them from states where they're not very
valuable and rearrange them into configurations that are worth much
more to us.
Russ Roberts: When you and I were in graduate school, we were taught
that you combined capital and labor and for a while you got a big kick
and then after a while, there were diminishing returns and you hit the
steady state. To add another metaphor, you could think of it as therebeing low-lying fruit. There are easy things to think of that are
productive about the way you combine things, and then you get to the
subtler things.
But that clearly isn't the way the world works because we wouldn't grow
at 2.1 percent per capita, year-in, year-out, if all the good stuff had
been discovered and all that's left now is mint-flavored floss. Adding
mint to the floss? It's a breakthrough, right? No one combined those
things. It's a new recipe, but it's not going to add so much to the pile of
goods and services. Yet the pile of goods and services grows in a
healthy way even though it's a very large pile now. Why is that?
Paul Romer: The notion of diminishing returns is very important and
none of this new work overturns diminishing returns.
Russ Roberts: Maybe you should start by explaining 'diminishing
returns.' I didn't say it very well.
Paul Romer: Think of an activity like moving goods around in a
distribution center. Goods come in from manufacturers, and then the
distribution center gets them on different trucks and sends them out to
stores. You could run a distribution center with 100 workers and just
one forklift, and the first forklift would be really valuable for moving the
heavy things.
Then you could add a second forklift and that would still add real value.
You'd get a lot more done in that distribution center. But by the time
you've added the 30th or the 40th or the 50th forklift, each additional
forklift is really not helping you very much. So with fixed recipes for
how you arrange things while you're adding more and more physical
capital, you do run into diminishing returns.
Economies which try to grow by just adding more and more forklifts
eventually do run into serious trouble. The Soviet Union tried to growlike that for a while with essentially no innovation but very heavy
investment in physical capital. And they grew for a bit because they
started out short on capital, but they rapidly ran into diminishing
returns from accumulating capital.
So you have to keep discovering ideas. Then the interesting question
you're posing is: Is it getting harder and harder to discover new ideas
because we found the good ones first? Or is it getting easier and easier?
To maintain a given percentage rate of growth, you've got to discover
more things every year. So if each discovery is worth X and you want to
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grow from 6 percent from a level of, say, $10,000 per capita, you've got
to add $600 worth of value in new things. But if you want to grow at 6
percent when you're starting from $30,000 per capita, you've got to
add a lot more new things. What it looks like is, as we learn more it's
getting easier to discover new things, so somehow knowledge is
building on itself. Newton had this great evocative phrase that he can
see farther because he "stood on the shoulders of giants."
But it's not quite getting easier fast enough to maintain a constant rate
of growth. It's getting easier to discover new things. But instead of
adding five, you know, 100 years ago and we can add ten now, it's
more like we could add five before and we can add six or seven now, sothat wouldn't be enough to keep growth going. So how have we kept
growth growing at the same constant rate? And there what it looks like
is we've been putting more and more people to work on the discovery
process. We've been training those people who do discovery more.
They spend more years in education getting really good at using prior
knowledge, so they're a lot more skilled than they used to be. But there
are also more people worldwide who are engaged in the discovery
process—more people per capita in the United States doing discovery,
and more total people worldwide.
We're getting the combined effects of knowledge building on knowledge
that makes it easier to discover, and having more and more people all
engaged in the discovery process. And those two things together seem
to explain why we've had growth rates which are actually getting faster
over time, not slowing down.
Russ Roberts: You're really talking about investment in what economists
call human capital. But a simpler way to say it is from the traditional
model of investment—you don't eat all your seeds. You put some aside
for fruit tomorrow or seeds tomorrow. And as we get wealthier what do
we choose and are we able to afford more folks doing the looking
around?
Paul Romer: Think back to 100 years or 150 years ago when the vast
majority of the labor force was engaged in agriculture.
Russ Roberts: About 40 percent in 1900.
Paul Romer: Yes. Where are we ever going to find jobs for all of those
people if agriculture becomes a much smaller source of employment?
Well, what we've done is we've educated the children and grandchildren
of those farmers, and many of those people are now engaged in the
discovery of better ways to do things. As productivity has grown, we'vefreed up human resources which really is, in some sense, the scarcest
commodity: the power of the human intellect. We've freed up more of
that power to engage in this discovery activity.
Russ Roberts: We're so wealthy. In fact, we can even have people
spending their time listening to podcasts figuring out how growth
occurs, which is a glorious thing. Talk about what you mean by meta-
ideas.
Paul Romer: To recap, we've maintained accelerating growth over time,
partly because the more we know, the easier it gets to discover. But
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we've also maintained it because we've got more and more people
pitching in on this discovery activity.
Now how did we get more and more people pitching in on discovery?
Some of that has come purely from population growth. There are just
more people around. But the most important part of it has come from
changes in our institutions.
We have things like universities, and we have things like patent laws,
and we have things like research grants which have created incentives
for those individuals to engage in more discovery. The institutions—
again, the rules of the game—create incentives. And we've found waysto create incentives for people to do more discovery. So a meta-idea
would be something like the modern research university.
It's an idea that helps us get better at discovering ideas. When we
essentially invented the modern research university with the creation of
the land-grant university system in the United States with the Morrill
Act in 1870, we created a whole new idea-discovering system with
these universities that were focused on very practical problem-solving
tasks rather than abstract, ivory-tower examination of the classics. The
classical activity at a place like Oxford was to study Greek manuscripts.
The job of the universities in the United States created by the land-
grant system was to figure out how to grow more crops. The football
team at Purdue is still called the Boilermakers because engineers at
Purdue used to work on railroad boilers. They would weld railroad
boilers because boilers were very important technology for
transportation.
Russ Roberts: We seem to have invented a lot of the cool meta-ideas. A
lot of our institutions are really unusual and extremely productive.
Paul Romer: We in the United States did two things that were
complementary, that reinforced each other. One of those things was
committing to what we were just talking about: education, universal
primary education, then universal secondary education, developing the
university system, and encouraging research. We committed heavily to
institutions of learning and discovery. But we also committed heavily to
the market mechanism, to property rights, to free entry, to competition,
competition in all its many forms.
The institutions of the market and broadly speaking, the institutions of
science—we got both of those right. And it's the combination of those
two which has been so powerful. Many nations of the world have tried
to push the institutions of science alone and are learning but have beenslower to adopt the full institutions of the market.
When we were kids, when we were going through college, it was still an
open question whether market systems would turn out better than
centrally planned economies. A lot of intelligent people thought central
planning was a better system than the market.
In our lifetimes, everybody has been—virtually everybody's now been
persuaded of the power of the market system. Many institutions around
the world still lag behind where we are in the United States in terms of
committing to markets and competition.
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Russ Roberts: A dramatic example that comes to my mind is, you hear
that Cuba has a great educational system. You hear that the Soviet
Union in the heyday of communism had great scientific institutes, and
yet many of the things they spent their time on were not productive.
Lysenkoism was a dead end in science that didn't face the market test.
A lot of resources were poured into science with no value produced.
Paul Romer: The Soviet Union is an interesting example of how
powerful a force competition can be. Where was the Soviet Union
closest to the technology frontier? It was actually in military equipment.
A MiG fighter jet was not a bad airplane. Why was it good and their
washing machines were terrible? Well, the MiGs had to compete with—
at least they were worried about competing and staying up with U.S.
fighter technology. Competition clearly stimulates better performance,
new discovery, and better productivity.
A lot of the world has yet to really embrace competition in all of its
power and discomforts, because it is discomforting sometimes as well
as being powerful.
Russ Roberts: I think one of the great advantages we have in theUnited States is a tolerance for change that Europe, for example,
doesn't appear to have.
That may be masked by political forces that make it hard to figure out
what the real preferences are. But on the surface, they appear to have
more of a taste for security rather than dynamism and it seems to
handicap them tremendously.
Paul Romer: I sometimes tell my students that everybody's in favor of
growth but nobody wants change.
Russ Roberts: It'll be interesting to see how Europe copes if we're right,
and I think we are, that the cost of their desire for security is going to
become increasingly apparent.
Paul Romer: I'm sure many of your listeners are young people, possibly
college students, and I think it might help to give a little bit of historical
perspective on this. I was talking with somebody my age from France
and he was describing the thought processes, what the French were
thinking in the '70s and the '80s.
Even in the 1970s, their reaction was, "How could you possibly have
many different phone companies, and how could people even decide
which phone company to use? Wouldn't that be chaotic? Of course the
government has to run the phone company!" And so even in the last
30, 40 years, now the whole world has seen the power of cell phones.
My daughter lived in India last year. She could get cell phone service
out in the middle of India because instead of having to wait for the
government telephone provider to put a telephone line in, which took
decades in some of these countries, private companies, competing
private companies, entered and they put cell phone towers all over
India.
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So much of the world in our lifetimes has gone from thinking
competition would be this chaotic, wasteful process to recognizing that
this is how we produce a higher quality of life.
Russ Roberts: So to go back to our narrative about the evolution of the
way economists think about growth. We started off with this idea that
physical things mattered—adding capital, adding machinery to people to
make them more productive—and, clearly, that was part of the story.
But in recent years your work and that of others has focused on ideas
and the power of innovation of human creativity. What are the policy
implications that you think are relevant for both the United States as acountry that has a very successful growth record, and for poorer
countries that would like to emulate the United States' rate of growth?
Paul Romer: Let's spend a minute talking about institutions and the role
they have in fostering ideas as opposed to trading objects, and then
we'll get to the policy implications.
Russ Roberts: Okay, sure.
Paul Romer: We recognized that discovery is something where
incentives matter, and if we create the right institutions people will domore of it. What was missing was a simple economic theory that could
describe that process. And that was where endogenous growth theory,
the kind of growth that I worked on, came in. We tried to create models
where people had an incentive to go out and discover things like ideas,
not to do things like dig up another cubic yard of iron ore.
When we looked at that, we noticed that ideas differ in this very
fundamental way from a scarce resource like iron ore, so the optimal
institutions that we've used for fostering the production and distribution
of ideas are somewhat different from the optimal institutions for iron
ore.
With iron ore, there's this just wonderful, miraculous result from Adam
Smith that one price can serve two jobs. It can motivate the production
of an additional unit of a good, and it can allocate that good to the right
person.
Take something like ethanol. If you're using the price system correctly,
it'll tell you whether or not we should make ethanol and use it as a fuel,
and the same price decides who should get that ethanol. As an aside,
we don't use the price system for ethanol. The market for ethanol is
heavily distorted with subsidies and we might actually—scientists aren't
sure—but we might actually be destroying energy every time we makea unit of ethanol. If we did use the price system, that wouldn't happen.
We just take it for granted, but it's remarkable and just a subtle
mathematical fact that one price can do two very different jobs for
something like a gallon of ethanol.
Now it turns out that doesn't work with an idea. Take some really
valuable idea. My favorite really valuable idea is something called oral
rehydration therapy which is this formula, this insight, for how to save
the lives of kids who get diarrhea. Many of them will die of dehydration
if you don't give them fluids. If you just give them water or even give
them just water plus a little salt in it, they'll actually get an electrolyte
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imbalance and die. But it turns out if you mix in a little bit of glucose, a
little bit of sugar, along with the salt and the water, you can save
millions of lives—from figuring out just a simple formula to mix some
sugar in with the salt and a few minerals with the water.
Now what's the right price for a discovery like that? Well, society should
be willing to pay a huge amount to have somebody go discover
something like that because it can save so many lives. But then what's
the right price for deciding who gets to use it?
Once that idea is discovered, the efficient price for that idea is zero
because there's no cost associated with using the idea. Another way tosay it is there's no congestion.
If we had a field, a pasture, and we let everybody use it for free, we
know what happens. You get the tragedy of the common pasture. It
gets overused. You get congestion. You get waste. But there's no
tragedy of the intellectual commons. There's no overuse or congestion
from having everybody use an idea once it's discovered.
Russ Roberts: And let's emphasize we're talking about using the idea,
not the glucose, not the salt, not the water, just the knowledge.
Paul Romer: Any good recipe will have to have some ingredients, and
the ingredients are just standard old economic goods and standard
analysis applies. But the idea itself has this different characteristic. So
what we created were models that didn't rely on the classical
institutions of perfect competition.
We brought in models that had to achieve some kind of a compromise.
Some kinds of ideas, we might want to treat like oral rehydration
therapy and make them public goods. So you might have the
government pay for a research project to discover an idea like this and
then once it's discovered, we give it away for free. That's the kind of
difference between an idea and a standard kind of economic good.
We talked about the institutions of market and the institutions of
science. It's interesting how different they are. The market—the most
important idea in the market is the notion of a property right. You give
somebody an ironclad right over something like a piece of land. They
get to decide—and that right lasts forever.
They get to decide what to do with that land, but with an idea in
science, it's the opposite of a property right. You say, "We'll reward you
for publishing and giving away and renouncing any property rights, any
control over an idea, if you come up with something really, reallyvaluable." So we have these two extremes of the institutions of the
market and the institutions of science.
What's really interesting at the policy level, finally getting back to your
policy question, is where do most of the interesting ideas lie? Should we
treat them more like the market or should we treat them more like
science, with strong property rights like the market and ownership or
weak property rights like science? I think where we've come out in the
United States is a kind of a healthy middle point where we assign some
kinds of property rights and control over most discoveries.
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For most new things you discover, you can go out and potentially
become a wealthy person if you come up with a better idea, so we give
some property rights. It might be a patent. It might be a copyright.
Maybe it's just secrecy. You can keep people from copying you, but it's
not a perfect property right.
It doesn't last forever like your ownership of land. Somebody can copy
you. They can start to compete with you. The ideas leak out. So where
we've settled for most ideas is in the middle between pure systems of
the market and the pure system of science.
Russ Roberts: We're talking about two things here, the ideal and thefundamental nature of these things. The last part of your paper
"Endogenous Technological Change" is only accessible to a graduate
student or someone with a serious mathematics background. But the
first part is fascinating to anybody and there are a lot of interesting
insights there. In the first part of that paper you talk about how
physical goods are "rivalrous"—only one person can use the iron ore at
one time. But ideas aren't rivalrous—an infinite number of people can
use the oral rehydration recipe.
It's hard to make a living selling it once everybody knows what it is. It's
impossible to make a living selling it. So on the surface, it appears theeconomic incentives to discover these type of ideas are zero but they're
not zero because of secrecy. So, for example, take the oral rehydration
example. Suppose I can produce a bottled solution of this stuff and let's
assume there's no institution requiring me to reveal the ingredients.
Suppose there's no labeling requirement and I can make an immense
amount of money selling it. And if I can't make money because the
people I'm selling it to are poor, other people transfer income to these
folks to allow them to purchase my expensive, valuable solution. We
could be talking about pharmaceutical products here, not just this
example of oral rehydration therapy.
So the fact that the idea can be shared by many doesn't mean that it
has to be shared by many. We understand that the world would be a
good place if it is shared by many. That's where the tension is. But
there are many different ways to solve that problem. Correct?
Paul Romer: Yes. Secrecy, as you suggested—in a market system,
secrecy alone can create important incentives. Go back to the story I
was telling about the warehouse where you had workers and forklifts.
People at Wal-Mart actually developed an interesting idea about how to
build distribution centers.
It's what they call cross-docking. Instead of just having one set of
docks that some trucks would come up to and unload and then another
set of trucks would come up to and then load back up to go out to the
stores, they put a building with docks on both sides of the building, on
the east side and the west side.
So one set of trucks would come up to the east side and they'd unload
things from the manufacturers, and then they'd pick them up off those
trucks and then drive them over to the other side of the building and
put them on trucks going directly to the stores. And the efficiency
advantage there was that you only picked things up once. You didn't
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pick them up once, set them down, and then pick them up again a
second time.
That simple idea is part of how Wal-Mart can deliver goods to people at
lower price than anybody could before. Target and K-Mart and Sears
could see what Wal-Mart was doing. They tried to copy it. Wal-Mart
knew a whole lot of details about how to get that system right, so the
big picture idea could be copied.
All the details were harder to copy and Wal-Mart's made a lot of money
for the Wal-Mart family and then the shareholders of Wal-Mart by
discovering little ideas like that—seemingly little but very importanteconomically, keeping them secret, running faster than the rest of the
competition, and earning a real profit from it.
But, as I said, that kind of information leaks out over time, so
eventually Target catches up. They compete with Wal-Mart, so what
does Wal-Mart have to do? Well, they have to go out and discover the
next thing and move a little bit further ahead in productivity. That kind
of racing to stay ahead and discover new things is part of what drives
the innovation machine here in the United States.
Russ Roberts: And secrecy is like a patent with a finite life. Obviously,it's very hard. Coke had a formula for Coke that was supposedly a
secret. Pepsi tastes similar to it, not exactly the same, and there are
fans on both sides but these examples of innovations, the return to
them, they do get copied. Secrecy can't be sustained for a long time.
Ideas get copied.
Some people argue we need a lot more incentives for ideas—they say
we need to extend patents. We need to create a big incentive for
research and development. Let's make the monopoly rights bigger .
Other people argue that's a mistake. Let's get rid of all the monopoly
rights. In this other view, what we should do is get rid of patents—get
rid of them—and we'll let the market evolve other methods for
protecting intellectual property and create these incentives. Where do
you come out on that?
Paul Romer: We know an awful lot about how to structure perfect
competition in the world of physical objects. There are things we don't
know about how best to get these institutions to do this tradeoff
between incentives and distribution.
Now I think one thing to recognize is that the right solution has got to
be both a lot of stuff which is somewhere in the middle of the extremes,and then also some real tolerance for letting a hundred flowers bloom,
to try lots of different systems.
Take software, for example. Microsoft is still the dominant provider of
software under the kind of property rights model. They have strong
copyrights. They've got strong monopoly power. They've got a lot of
incentives to develop their software system and a lot of market power.
They can charge a high price for their software compared to the cost of
selling it to one person, so we've got a property rights solution for
developing software.
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At the same time, we have the open source movement which is actually
developing software under the kind of no property rights system, and
it's good that we've got both of those. They're competing and it's not
100 percent clear who's going to win. There are different niches.
Open source has decisively won the day in a few niches like Web server
software. The Apache Web server is still the most widely used Web
server that serves up Web material throughout the world. And that was
developed purely by open source—no property rights, just the
institutions of science, just "you get credit for improving the Web—the
Apache system." On the other hand, the property rights solution from
people like Microsoft seems to have been a better system fordeveloping systems that are easy for lots of people to use.
You know, geeks wrote systems that were easy for geeks to use, but
the interfaces just weren't as clever. Take Steve Jobs. Steve Jobs used
Linux as the backend for the new operating system for Apple, but the
front end was developed with some property rights. And, you know,
they've come up with very wonderful front ends for us to use— music
players and now phones and operating systems. So it's great to have a
system that allows competition between different systems of
innovation.
But there's not going to be a one-size-fits-all answer. There will be this
middle ground, even with something like Microsoft or Apple or
pharmaceuticals.
If someone comes up with a new drug or a new interface, you might
want to let them have control over that for many years. But we
wouldn't want to give somebody blocking power so that no subsequent
innovation could ever take place without the permission of the initial
property holder. That could slow things down.
Imagine if we'd given an infinite life property right to the person who
came up with A minor, and nobody could play an A minor chord for the
rest of human history without negotiating a contract with the great-
great-grandchildren of whoever it was who came up with A minor.
It sounds absurd, but if we took extreme property rights to the limit,
that's what could happen. You'd have to negotiate with the owner of
every single different chord when you're trying to compose a song. So
even though infinitely strong property rights on land are a great idea,
infinitely strong property rights on ideas could really hamstring future
innovators.
And so we'll ultimately have to be in a position which is somewhere themiddle— where you can control something for a while and you can
control it for sale to consumers, but you can't stop somebody from
coming along and coming up with an even better version down the
road.
Russ Roberts: So let me give you my worry. When we put this in the
political process you have a situation where Congress perpetually
extends Disney's exclusive right to Mickey Mouse.
Mickey Mouse has a long life because Disney makes a lot of money off
of Mickey Mouse. The fact that creative people can't use Mickey Mouse
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without Disney's permission isn't really a big loss to human welfare.
But there are a lot of things that are a big loss. The holders of these
property rights use the political process to protect them. I have very
little confidence that the political process will pick the right mix.
Take another example. I'm a big fan of universities, as clearly you are.
We make a large part of our living in them and they're glorious and
there's wonderful things that happen here. We've subsidized them
tremendously in the United States and there's a strong intellectual case
for subsidizing them along the lines that you've talked about.
On the other hand, there's an enormous amount of stuff that takes
place here that has nothing to do with growth, nothing to do with these
ideals that we're discussing. They're just due to the fact that people can
use the political process, be it at the state house to get grants for their
state university or at the federal level to favor their own particular
flavor of stuff.
Does that push you at all, as it does me, toward lower property rights
for intellectual ideas because of the worries about public choice
concerns?
Paul Romer: Yeah. I think that when you set a variable somewhere in
the middle—you try and set the dial in the middle—and you have people
who have a huge stake in moving the dial one direction or the other,
you're going to create large lobbying efforts and political dynamics that
will move the dial in the direction of the people who have a very large
concentrated stake. They may not represent the interests of the nation
as a whole.
So as we think about policies, it's very important to think about the
political dynamic that you unleash when you create a policy framework.
I think patents and copyrights have been an area where people had a
lot at stake and they've really pushed in the direction of strengthening
property rights, potentially going too far.
What's interesting right now is we're actually going through a correction
in the area of patents. And there's even a little bit of discussion in the
legislative area, although we haven't seen legislation yet. But the
Congress has been talking about it.
The courts have been responding. We're actually moving a little bit back
towards the middle without making patents quite as strong as they
were. There are some restoring forces even in the political dynamic, so
I don't worry quite as much. And copyrights are not as damaging aspatents if they get out of control, so I'm not quite so worried about it.
And I'm encouraged by the movements towards slightly narrower
patent rights. But this leads to a very interesting question which is that
if you have weak property rights on discovery, we won't get as much
discovery—
Russ Roberts: What do you mean by that?
Paul Romer: If we let people copy ideas or even if patents expire after a
certain period of time, or we move more towards the open source
system for discovery, in general, the value to society for somebody to
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develop something new would be bigger than the value to that
individual. The innovator just won't capture all the value. So there's a
good reason why we might want to encourage more of that discovery.
We'd like to create institutions. I mean meta-ideas here again. Let's
come up with a meta-idea that could help encourage discovery using
our collective resources—let's use the government to try and encourage
discovery.
Now you could do that in ways which unleash strong lobby groups, or I
think you can come up with ways to do it which are much less likely to
create those kind of lobbying forces. I think we should really focus on
that issue when we decide what policies to adopt.
For example, I'm very big on government incentives which could reward
students, young people, for going on and getting additional training in,
say, science and engineering. Science and engineering training is great
for the discovery process.
I think the government should give out more grants to students to just
pay for their graduate education—like vouchers—or even maybe their
undergraduate education in science and engineering.
But then once they've graduated, they just go out in the market and tryand discover new things. You don't know what they'll do, but they'll do
something clever.
Russ Roberts: We wouldn't tell them to go discover a hydrogen car. We
wouldn't subsidize that.
Paul Romer: Yes, but you could think about another system which is
where the government gives grants to firms for specific kinds of
discoveries, and that raises two problems. One, can the government
really pick the right things? And, two, even if they can pick, it's going to
create a lot of lobbying pressure from those firms who get those grants,
so—
Russ Roberts: You don't worry about lobbying pressure from the music
department and the French department and the philosophy department
for those science and engineering grant vouchers?
Paul Romer: Well, that's why I'd give them to the students, because the
students get to vote with their feet. I would put a fence around this
which would say these students can go get a degree in science and
engineering but not in music or history. But, you know, that would be—
Russ Roberts: You start doing the science of music. We have a lot of
neuroscience in music going on here at Stanford, actually.
Paul Romer: Somebody will have to draw a line that says "this is
science and this is not," but I think if you look back in our history, we
really benefited as a nation from subsidizing discovery and innovation
and, as you said, universities were a good way to do that. Universities
have developed, I think, some wasteful features and I would like to
shake things up a little bit.
Part of the problem in universities right now is we give all the research
subsidies to the professors and the students, the bright young students,
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you know, the Isaac Newton, the 24-year-old Isaac Newton of our day,
can't get subsidies, can't get research dollars. They've got to go cater to
some old professor like me or you, and we tell them to go work on
some dumb thing we're interested in. With innovation it's great to free
up the young people, give them the resources and turn them loose.
So I wish we devoted more of our support for innovation not to
universities, not to firms, but to young people who have lots of
freedom.
Russ Roberts: It sounds like we need a new type of university. That
sounds like a good project for the next 20 years of your life, Paul.
Paul Romer: Well, if you gave students these portable fellowships, you
might actually see new universities. If somebody came up with a better
university, those students would actually go there.
Russ Roberts: I think one of the reasons that we're so well paid relative
to the average is the difficulty of entry both into our profession but
especially into the university and it's hard to start universities.
And one of the reasons is because they do things unrelated to
education that are much more difficult to copy. They create identity andlifestyle experiences that go well beyond the educational process.
Interesting challenge.
Paul Romer: Well, the three ways universities get money—research
grants, alumni giving, and then tuition—the research grants and the
alumni giving set up very serious barriers to entry. Graduate education
is funded almost not at all by tuition. If there were students out there
with tuition dollars—funded by government vouchers—clambering for
graduate education, we might actually see some entry into the creation
of new fields of training.
Russ Roberts: Graduate education would look more like MBA training in
the sense of its desire to cater to the consumer, which is missing from a
lot of graduate education, as you point out.
Paul Romer: Yes and worrying if those people could actually get a job.
Just as an aside, part of why I shifted from an economics department to
a business school is I think business schools are somehow the model of
how the world should look— that we as professors should live in an
environment where tuition is an important part of the incentives that
guide what we do. And so I wanted to not just talk the talk from an
economics department where I could ignore students and tuition. I
wanted to come live and work in a business school and see if that really
is the way more of higher education should look.
Russ Roberts: One of the great meta-ideas of the last 20 years was the
ranking of business schools. Business Week , was, I think, the first
organization to publicly rank business schools in a way that was widely
shared. Their methodology has been criticized. It's silly. It's imperfect
and, of course, it is. But, boy, did it shake up the world of graduate
education in business, mainly for the best in my opinion.
Paul Romer: Yes.
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Russ Roberts: I want to come back to something you mentioned in
passing which intrigued me. You said in the case of these ideas where
there's weak property rights, the inventors won't capture all the value
and, therefore, we don't get enough of it. So we want to make sure to
keep it going, subsidize it perhaps.
But in the physical world, the less "intellectual property" scope of things
—nobody captures all the value. Nobody comes close to capturing the
value of their discoveries and yet we get a ton of it.
There are many other motivations besides money. There's pride and
glory and fame and all the things that go with that that are oftenfinancial, so there are some things in place that keep those discoveries
coming even in the absence of capturing the right amount.
Paul Romer: This was a point you mentioned earlier I meant to
comment on—even if we had no legal protection for ideas whatsoever,
there are still lots of incentives for discovery. Some would come from
secrecy, as you mentioned, you know, like cross-docking at Wal-Mart.
Some comes from just reputation and curiosity, so there are lots of
things that will keep discovery going. What my claim is, is that if we can
keep it going at a pretty exciting rate right now with reduced incentives,imagine how fast it could go if we just turned up the dial a little bit.
Russ Roberts: Fair enough.
Paul Romer: But the challenge, the difficulty is in turning up the dial—to
really mix my metaphors—you could also strangle the golden goose.
You know, if you provided the subsidies in a way which bureaucratized
the whole discovery process, you'd be better off with no subsidies at all
than creating this bureaucratic structure which sucks talent away from,
you know, exciting things and puts them onto terrible things.
So when I say that we could subsidize it and get more discovery, you
have to approach that with a fair degree of caution and think about the
political dynamics. But when we provided, say, universal primary school
education back early in our history or universal secondary school
education and then subsidized university education, part of what we did
was we gave lots of people just the basic problem-solving analytical
skills to go out and discover more effectively.
And those kinds of investments really paid a huge return for us as a
nation. So those, I think, are pretty safe. What's more problematic are
these more targeted ones to particular firms, to particular areas, and I
think we'd do well to stay away from those.
Russ Roberts: Well, you also raised the point earlier and you emphasize
it in the "Endogenous Technological Change" article, the role of the
price system in steering innovation. We don't just want innovation. We
want innovation that changes people's lives and makes those lives
better. We want innovation that delights and inspires and is more than
just a new flavor of dental floss. If you rely on the non-market
incentives—glory, fame and curiosity—you'd still get innovation. But you
won't get the same type.
Paul Romer: Well, one example that I use comes from colleagues at the
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University of Chicago. I think it was Bob Lucas or perhaps his wife,
Nancy Stokey. They describe why research grants to universities are not
the best way to develop all different types of ideas. They said, "Well,
imagine that all music that we could listen to was produced by
academic departments of music on college campuses." Have you ever
listened to what music people write when they do research on music?
It's often pretty unlistenable stuff.
So the pure university research grant path isn't necessarily the way I
want to get the music I listen to or the books I read. But on the other
hand, if you had things like open source, there is a kind of a democratic
element where people in open source have to cater to not just a narrowgroup of peers but to a wider audience. There's an incentive for people
to create things that are valuable for large numbers rather than for
small elites.
Russ Roberts: Speaking of music, do you think the incentives for music
creativity right now are pretty healthy or do you think they've been
damaged by Napster and the parts of the Web that have not been
controlled?
It's all well and good to theorize about the optimal mix of property
rights, but sometimes market forces are going to overwhelm the idealpolicy no matter what. What are your thoughts on the music world?
Paul Romer: I'm an amateur here. I haven't studied the economics of
this industry very well but I like music. My sense is that I wish there
was more competition in the discovery and promotion of new talent. I
wish it was easier for new talent to get heard and for people to become
aware of that talent.
I think the Web has great promise for encouraging that. We're moving
away from a system where a small number of record labels have such
predominant influence. The record labels and the radio stations still
seem to have a huge impact in this area.
Russ Roberts: They're the primary filters. I'm surprised iTunes isn't a
record label. I don't know why that hasn't happened. I guess they're
busy. They've got a lot of stuff they're working on, but I think that'll
happen.
Paul Romer: So when I wonder whether stronger property rights in
music are good or bad, I always pass it through the filter of, "Will it
actually create more competition in this business of discovering new
talent and getting them out there?" iTunes succeeded partly because
they have some property rights. It's a better form of property rightsthan the old CD form, but they have some property rights. Why don't
they just become a label and just discover new talent and become the
intermediary?
Russ Roberts: And they do to some extent but not in the traditional
way. Maybe it will never happen in the traditional way now.
Paul Romer: But I'm not alarmed at all by the de facto weakening of
property rights in the music business because it's become so much
easier to copy the music. On the other hand, I don't think it's
necessarily a bad thing that Apple figured out a way to create some
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property rights in music. I hope what happens is that people like Apple
end up shaking up that business and we'll see lots more entry and
turnover both in artists and in record labels.
Russ Roberts: One of the unintended results of people copying music is
that it's put a premium on live music. You can still close the doors of
the concert hall. So there's going to be more touring and other benefits.
Let's shift gears. We've interviewed a number of people here on
EconTalk about growth in the past and some of them point to different
causes of growth. People specialize in looking at different things—the
role of religion, the role of cognitive ability, the role of institutions,which we've touched on here.
What about those things? In your mind, do they all work through
whether they enhance ideas or not? Is that the bottom line? It seems to
me it is. I think it's a good bottom line.
Paul Romer: I think that's probably right. There's a whole cluster of
institutions that influence the incentives for the production and
distribution of new ideas, and so religious systems can either foster or
hinder that process. Legal systems can do that. Cultural norms can do
that.
Think of Wal-Mart again. Cross-docking might have been invented by
some university researchers, but if there wasn't somebody out there
who built the distribution centers and built the stores and got the shirts
to people, it wouldn't have been very valuable. So institutions that
encourage the discovery and the distribution of new ideas alongside a
market system with lots of competition— that's what we want. There
may be many different paths towards those kinds of systems, but that's
ultimately where we want to end up.
Russ Roberts: What's the role of trade, in particular, international trade,
in this conversation?
Paul Romer: That's a great question. Now think about a developing
country, for example. There are at least two fairly different paths that
some nations have used to try and get ahold of ideas that exist in the
rest of the world. Some places like China and Singapore rely very
heavily on direct foreign investment. Foreign corporations know a lot of
great stuff. Bring that stuff in. Use it with our local talent and let's
produce some goods.
Some other nations—Japan, South Korea—tried to use domestic firms
and some licenses, but mostly domestic copying and domesticincentives for copying ideas that existed in the rest of the world. Now it
turns out that South Korea has actually done pretty well. Singapore did
pretty well, too, so there's not a decisive answer about whether direct
foreign investment is the best system or not. I tend to think direct
foreign investment is actually a good system but it's clearly not central
—
Russ Roberts: A good system for the nations that attract it.
Paul Romer: Yes. For a place like China, it's been a phenomenally
effective way for them to bring in all kinds of knowledge that might
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have taken them a long time to develop—rediscover on their own. But
still there are some nations that have done pretty well without relying
much on direct foreign investment. What matters in those nations is,
are they finding ways to take advantage of the use and production of
state-of-the-art ideas?
The one thing we know that doesn't work is a case like India 20 or 30
years ago where they let some car manufacturers from Britain come in.
Then they threw up trade barriers and said, "Okay, you manufacturers
can continue to produce those cars you brought in, protected from the
rest of the world." Well, the same darn cars were produced for 30 years
with no change while all the rest of the world was getting better cars.There was no incentive, no structure, that led to improvement in the
ideas and the use of new ideas.
So there are multiple paths for getting all nations of the world using
state-of-the-art ideas and discovering new ideas, but interaction with
the rest of the world through trade seems to be an extremely powerful
one.
Russ Roberts: But the critics of international trade would argue that
multinational corporations exploit the nations that host them. What's
your answer to them?
Paul Romer: I think that's just a misunderstanding. If you look at a
worker in a Nike factory in Vietnam, that worker is worse off and has a
lower quality of life than a worker in the United States. That feels wrong
to many of us, and that's a reasonable kind of moral or ethical
response. It's sad that there are people who live lives that aren't as nice
as ours, but that's not the question here.
The question is, did Nike's coming in make the life of that person better
off or worse off? The unambiguous answer is that Nike coming in really
helps that person and helps many other people in that country.
So the fact that they're still worse off than we are is not a sign that
Nike's doing something wrong. It's just the fact that the workers are
starting from a very low level. But if you look at the change through
entry of somebody like Nike, it's unambiguously positive for these
people.
Russ Roberts: What's the mechanism? Does Nike improve the life of
that worker out of kindness or does competition force them to?
Paul Romer: Oh, I think it's overwhelmingly competition. There's
sometimes a little bit of pressure which makes them do what isbasically charitable giving. But look at China right now or India right
now. Why are foreign firms that are operating in China and India or
Vietnam—why are they paying workers more than they used to?
What happened was that it wasn't just Nike that came in. The
government let in a lot of other firms. All of those firms started to
compete for the best talent there in the nation, and that process of
competition started to drive up wages. You don't want to use the Indian
strategy of saying, "Okay, we'll let in one big firm and then we're pulling
up the drawbridges and, you know, you can do whatever you want."
What you want to do is open it up and say, "Hey, any firm that wants to
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come in, go for it. Compete as hard as you can to get our best
workers."
And that'll reward the workers who have the best skills. It'll give
incentives for those other workers to acquire skills and it'll give them
opportunities to do things with their skills that they couldn't have
otherwise done.
Russ Roberts: In what sense are those workers using the knowledge
that that multinational has? I love that idea. What do you mean
exactly?
Paul Romer: Nike's discovered a recipe for taking rubber and cloth and
a few other things and then creating something that people value in the
United States for a price of, say, $100. They can take raw materials
worth probably pennies and create something that I might go to the
store and pay $100 for.
To create that additional value, they have to go out and find somebody
who does the rearranging according to their recipe. If they could get
somebody at an extremely low wage to do that rearranging, then they'd
pay that low wage. But over time what they find is they're competing
with other employers. They have to pay higher and higher wages to getpeople to do that rearranging.
Now if there are lots of people like Nike trying to find workers to do
high-value rearranging tasks, they'll be willing to pay quite a bit as they
compete with each other. But imagine that Nike only had ideas that
could produce things that were worth, say, $10. Nike could never afford
to pay—and its competitors could never afford to pay—very high wages
to get people to rearrange something to make something worth $10.
But when they're making something that's worth $100, they'll compete
and ultimately start to pay higher and higher wages. So the fact that
they've got an idea, a recipe, that can create quite a bit of value means
that they'll pay quite a bit to have somebody follow that recipe.
There's lots of people out there with good recipes competing for
workers. They'll bid up those wages and, in a sense, part of the value
that Nike creates will in some sense be taken away by those workers,
and taken in a way that we feel is good for the world as a whole. It's
good that workers throughout the world will have higher wages in the
future than they have now.
Russ Roberts: One last thought on trade and then I want to ask you a
final question. At the end of "Endogenous Technological Change" yousay that human capital—that is know-how, knowledge—it's a bunch of
subtle stuff along with basic cognitive skills—human capital is more
important than population. That as economists we've focused a lot on
the size of the market in thinking about growth and not enough about
the things that come along with the people, the knowledge.
You say something very profound. You point out that India and China
are very large. You'd think that they'd get all the benefits of trade from
domestic trade. Same with the United States. We're also very large. So
it's tempting to say that we capture a lot of the advantages that
economists attribute to trade—the idea of comparative advantages.
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There's enough diversity here that international trade's not that
important for us. But your argument suggests that that misses
something profound. Talk about that.
Paul Romer: Thinking about these non-rival goods, these things like oral
rehydration therapy that everybody can use if one person discovers it,
gives a very different rationale for why free trade—worldwide free
trade, global free trade—can be so powerful. It's not just that other
nations have different endowments of physical goods from our
endowments—
Russ Roberts: Ricardian stuff.
Paul Romer: Yes. Say we have a sunny climate. You've got a rainy
climate. Let's trade goods that grow in sunny climates for goods that
grow in rainy climates. But think about this discovery process we talked
about earlier. Imagine that the whole world in 50 or 100 years looks a
lot like California, that a large fraction of the population worldwide is
out busy trying to discover things. Take a particular industry,
biotechnology.
If we trade with the entire world and we can take advantage of any new
drug discovery anywhere in the world, we're much more likely to comeup with, say, a treatment for Alzheimer's or some really valuable good
than if we have to discover it ourselves. As more and more people are
engaged in discovery, the odds of any particular discovery or the odds
of valuable discoveries go up.
So we'd really do ourselves a disservice if we cut ourselves off and said,
"Okay, California is big enough to trade with. We don't need to trade
with the rest of the world," or "The United States is big enough to trade
with. We don't need to trade with the rest of the world." But already
important things are being discovered in other parts of the world, and
we can take advantage of those if we engage in trade with people who
discover those things.
Russ Roberts: So those articles that talk about the threat to our
prosperity of 200 million Indian engineers or 200 million Indian
software designers are missing the boat.
Paul Romer: Yes, or even worse, the threat to our biotechnology
industry if everybody else develops a biotechnology industry. What do
we care about?
We don't care about whether our biotechnology industry makes a profit.
What we care about is whether we have a drug that treats Alzheimer'sfor somebody who might otherwise have a miserable quality of life. The
emphasis on the importance of non-rival goods, such as ideas and
discoveries, means that there are gains from scale, from trading with
bigger and bigger markets that don't max out. You keep getting more
and more benefits from having more people to trade with. This sounds
similar to the usual rationale for trade but it's really quite different.
And what's interesting is, is that we also get more benefits if the people
we trade with are more like us. It's not bad for us if they all look like
California, with one exception, which is that right now, we pollute in
California. We emit a lot of stuff and we don't get charged for emitting
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carbon dioxide.
If they start to live like us, they'll do more of that, too, so there will be
more pollution. So there are reasons why governments should try and
stop pollution. As long as the governments keep pollution under control,
we'll all be better off if they're more like us and there are more of them.
Russ Roberts: Well, I don't know. If they're more like us, they're going
to pollute a lot less. If China had our standard of living, they'd have a
demand for cleaner air plus there are going to be all those meta-ideas
that we're going to come up with on how to make the air cleaner. I just
wish there were more engineers in Jupiter, to outsource stuff to, butwhat can you do?
My last question, I think, is rhetorical but I'll ask you anyway. Are you
optimistic about the future? Are there limits to growth?
Paul Romer: Oh, you know, I've been an optimist ever since I got
started in economics. It may be just a personality trait but I think it's
been reinforced by the research. I started work during the '70s back in
a time when people talked about the limits to growth and real
pessimism about our prospects. People were saying that our standard of
living—it wasn't just that we were going to grow more slowly. Ourstandard of living, they said, was going to collapse.
There was no way we could sustain it. Those kinds of pessimistic
forecasts have been made ever since the time of Malthus. And they've
always been wrong. The historical pattern has been one of accelerating
growth, not just sustained growth but accelerating growth. I think that
process can continue throughout our lifetimes and our children's
lifetimes, and the world will just be a much better place because of it.
So I am pretty optimistic.
Russ Roberts: I hope we both live to 200 to see it.
Paul Romer: Right. We just need somebody to discover that pill that
makes sure that we're not only alive but we're actually functional, you
know, mentally competent when—
Russ Roberts: And with those artificial hips and knees we'll have, we'll
be playing tennis at 170.
Paul Romer: Yes.
Russ Roberts: My guest today has been Paul Romer, the STANCO 25
Professor of Economics in the Graduate School of Business at Stanford
University. Thank you, Paul.
Paul Romer: Great. Thanks, Russ.
*Paul Romer is the STANCO 25 Professor of Economics in the Graduate School of Business at Stanford University and the founder of Aplia, which develops and appliestechnologies for improving student learning.
To read or post a follow-up to this essay, go to Romer on Growth.
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