The benefits of economic growth for tolerance only kick in much later. But also, if you look at the very early years of colonizing the world, it arguably needed economic growth to project so much imperial power kill many indigenous peoples. I don't see who's being exploited in modern economic growth. Is that a u shaped curve? However, so we know the dutch republic, the later british empire, the united states were havens for persecuted people....
Benjamin Friedman has been a leading macroeconomist since the 1970s, whose accomplishments include writing 150 papers, producing more than dozen books, and teaching Tyler Cowen graduate macroeconomics at Harvard in 1985. In his latest book, Religion and the Rise of Capitalism, Ben argues that contrary to the popular belief that Western economic ideas are a secular product of the Enlightenment, instead they are the result of hotly debated theological questions within the English-speaking Protestant world of thinkers like Adam Smith and David Hume.
Ben joined Tyler to discuss the connection between religious belief and support for markets, what drives varying cultural commitments to capitalism, why the rate of growth is key to sustaining liberal values, why Paul Volcker is underrated, how coming from Kentucky influences his thinking, why annuities don’t work better, America’s debt and fiscal sustainability, his critiques of nominal GDP targeting, why he wouldn’t change the governance of the Fed, how he maintains his motivation to keep learning, his next big project on artificial intelligence, and more.
Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links, or watch the full video.
Recorded December 4th, 2020 Other ways to connect