
The Marginal Revolution Podcast The Baumol Effect
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Oct 21, 2025 The discussion revolves around the Baumol effect and its impact on rising costs in sectors like education and healthcare. Alex argues that labor-intensive services become more expensive as productivity in manufacturing increases, while Tyler challenges this view, suggesting it lacks predictive power. They debate examples from doggy daycare to Soviet ballet prices, exploring how countries like India illustrate varying service costs. The conversation also touches on the potential future influence of AI and other technologies on service prices.
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Relative Prices Explain Service Cost Rise
- Prices are relative: rising productivity in manufacturing makes services costlier in relative terms.
- Alex Tabarrok argues this shift explains long-term rises in education and healthcare shares of income.
Limits Of Baumol For Prediction
- Tyler Cowen critiques Baumol's predictive power and application to higher education.
- He stresses organizational incentives and quality improvements often drive costs, not just relative-price shifts.
Expensive Car Repair Example
- Alex Tabarrok recounts a minor car fender bender and a $3,500 repair bill.
- He uses it to illustrate how repairs (labor-intensive) rose in price relative to cheap manufactured replacements.
