productivity growth is fully but let's say paper work for researchers is increasing. How do we get that to be negative five per cent a year as an effect? Is it that we're throwing cryp to night at our top people? Your productivity is not declining 5 per cent a year? Is it? Colvit aside, cove it aside e you. I find it very hard to predict. It increasingly comes fom working with basically great and often younger co why is it happening? At the aggregate level? I think there are three reasons going on....
What might the electrification of factories teach us about how quickly we’ll adapt to remote work? What gives American companies an edge over their competitors on the international stage? What value do management consultants really provide? Stanford professor Nick Bloom’s research studies how management practices, productivity techniques, and uncertainty shape outcomes across companies and countries.
He joined Tyler for a conversation about which areas of science are making progress, the factors that have made research more expensive, why government should invest more in R&D, how lean management transformed manufacturing, how India’s congested legal system inhibits economic development, the effects of technology on Scottish football hooliganism, why firms thrive in China, how weak legal systems incentivize nepotism, why he’s not worried about the effects of remote work on American productivity (in the short-term), the drawbacks of elite graduate programs, how his first “academic love” shapes his work today, the benefits of working with co-authors, why he prefers periodicals and podcasts to reading books, and more.
Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links, or watch the full video.
Recorded July 13th, 2020 Other ways to connect