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Jun 13, 2021 • 1h 37min

"We need the eggs": Nicholas Gruen on Public Policy, Jokes and Loss

Nicholas is a prominent Australian economist, and has chaired various Australian government groups and initiatives as well as Kaggle, where he was an early investor. Lindsay Tanner has described him as "Australia's foremost public intellectual".We cover:Toyota, Tech and IsegoriaProblems with technological scale vs human-centred designOur inability to solve child abuse and indigenous disadvantageCorporate value phoninessThe surreal waste of government programsMentorshipInteresting peopleInvestment philosophyThe Australian Dream and Australian identityThe meaning of life and what Nicholas would do with a billion dollarsNew banking initiativesPlain packaging cigarettesRegrets and the long shadow of the HolocaustA PoemAdvice he’d give his younger self“We need the eggs”, a joke that gets better with age https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W-M3Q2zhGd4 This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.kvetch.au
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May 30, 2021 • 1h 16min

Big Lies, Babies and Dad Energy with Alex Kaschuta

In this conversation Alex and I discuss:The Big Lies we are told about relationships, family and meaning and the personal and social derangements that surround these issues todayRomania, where Alex lives, and the liminal space between Eastern and Western EuropeIndividual optimisation vs group optimisationAlex: “I’m here to bring the dad energy. Here are the facts of life. Place your bets”We end on a bleak note: our society may be dominated by childless smart people filled with ennui, but that moment will pass, and the future belongs to those who propagate themselves – for better and for worse www.mishasaul.com This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.kvetch.au
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May 1, 2021 • 52min

Australian Defence with Rory Medcalf

Professor Rory Medcalf, Head of the National Security College at the Australian National University and author of Contest for the Indo-Pacific. We cover a lot to do with Australian defence including China, nuclear weapons for Australia, political interference in defence procurement, where he sees potential for technology obsolescence in the next war, lessons from his time as diplomat in India, and much more including his book recommendations.What is the importance of steering Australian defence strategy towards the Indo-Pacific?What are the key military threats facing Australia over the next 50 years?Looking back, Australia first relied on British imperial support, then on the post-WWII US liberal order. What does Australia standing on its own look like going forward?How do you think about Chinese threat to Australia? Where else could realistically a threat come from, and over what time horizon?Should Australia get nuclear weapons?What’s going to be the big military surprise next conflict? That aircraft carriers are rendered obsolete by drones?How at risk is our strategic execution from provider capture and politically motivated employment schemes?What’s your biggest learning and fondest memory while a diplomat in IndiaBook recommendations: The Dark Valley: A Panorama of the 1930s by Piers BrendonEverything Under The Heavens: How the Past Helps Shape China's Push for Global Power, by Howard W. FrenchThe Leopard: by Giuseppe Tomasi Di Lampedusa This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.kvetch.au
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Apr 4, 2021 • 1h 19min

All things finance with Byrne Hobart

Byrne generates one of the highest insights per unit of speech or writing I’ve come across.Some of what we covered + highlights:Interest rates and bubblesWhy interest rates have been declining over the long runLow interest rates and private / public market valuationsStructural sellside optimismAre Google and Facebook undervaluedSigns we might be in a bubbleThis was recorded months before the Gamestop fiasco (!): “so you can find people on wall street bets who are just insanely exuberant and who are clearly just deranged gamblers who are buying out of the money call options and pyramiding up their gains until they get wiped out”On the Buy Now Pay Later phenomenonWhy Australia?All about CAC, baby! “My view on that is that in FinTech, the dominant factor is always customer acquisition cost. A lot of people come up with interesting ideas for financial products that are interesting to the kinds of people who dream up new financial products. Then they figure out that very few people are interested in a financial product as such people are interested in free money”How FinTechs typically unravel“A lot of that comes down to the fact that it's hard to market financial products, because it's just really hard to create an ad advertising something that is so ephemeral. You can't show someone on TV having insurance. You can't show a picture of alone.”Byrne’s journeyLearning to trade stocks in high schoolDropping out of collegeRealising he could be a tech analysis in a time before tech analysts – finding his niche and making it his thingHow he ended up writing full timeThe natural narrowing of focus in finance careersWhat he learned living in a former crack den in New York. One roommate was a currency trader who just listened to techno and day-traded the British pound all day: “I think practicing the ability to just grind out the normal thing at a fairly high quality level is a useful background for doing something different” (Byrne uses the Beatles and Picasso as examples)"Ricardian comparative advantage: I first really appreciated Ricardian comparative advantage the first time I paid a laundromat to do my laundry and fold my laundry and while I was there, I was able to write an article that paid for the cost of the laundry.InvestingWhat’s an overlooked asset class?On investing discipline: “I try to be very disciplined about having stop losses, just so that I don't talk myself into really dumb reasons to own something or short something.”Momentum investing: “Often being able to say, I agree only more so is actually a pretty powerful way to find things that don't look contrarian. That's why they are contrarians.”Why shorting is such a hard game (note John Hempton!)Self-perpetuating mechanisms for credit bubbles, and how in the short term they lead to volatility but in the long term can lead to stability and prosperityQuestion from Patrick McKenzie:I believe this is called a “lobster pot”: “In addition to being long short tech stocks and doing some stuff with futures from time to time, I have one company that is really tiny, illiquid enough that it does not trade every day. It's just a very deep value stock that I bought and have resolved to not pay attention to until the CEO dies and the company will presumably get liquidated then.”Impressive companies, determinant optimism and recursionWhether kids have made Byrne more or less ambitiousHow the Anglosphere, largely surrounded by bodies of water as it is (UK, US, Australia / NZ) is inoculated from the existential risk of tanks rolling through, which happens from time to time basically everywhere elseOn the meritocracy / nepotism tradeoff / synthesisWhat Byrne disagrees with Bryan Caplan and Peter Thiel on“You basically need a lot of natural Republicans to run a socialist country” This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.kvetch.au
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Feb 3, 2021 • 1h 58min

Portrait of an Effective Altruist as a Young Man (my conversation with Rob Wiblin)

Rob Wiblin is a founder and leader of the modern Effective Altruism movement…. and one of my oldest friends!This conversation is different because there’s not much about Effective Altruism – there’s Rob’s excellent podcast and prolific writing for that. This conversation is a chat between old mates, and it tries to track our intellectual development since we were teens. Is that self-indulgent? Maybe! But it’s the conversation I was excited to have with Rob.We cover a lot:What Rob learnt from his parentsHow we shaped each other’s viewsMy Theory of RobRob’s excellent conversation with Russ Roberts (best rebuttal of Effective Altruism on record)How Rob’s views have changed since starting out with EA and how confident he is in his viewsWhat keeps him up at nightWhether he’s winningShould we stop eating animals?What we’re watchingWhy has the Lord of The Rings held up so well?Podcasting tipsOn kidsWas learning Spanish a mistake?What was it like being an exchange student in SpainOn institutional decline and the US todayHope you enjoy, and let me know what you think. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.kvetch.au
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Jan 16, 2021 • 1h 37min

Georgian language and history

The Georgian language has one of the most beautiful scripts I have come across. Unique to Georgia, tucked away between the Russian, Persian and Ottoman empires, and unrelated to any other language in the world, I’ve always wanted to know how it came to be.I got to ask that and more in this conversation.Transcript at www.mishasaul.com This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.kvetch.au
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Dec 22, 2020 • 1h 25min

Investing and Fatherhood with Daniel Gulati

Daniel Gulati is one of the most all-round impressive people I know: brought up in Wollongong, NSW, he’s founded and exited 4 startups and launched his own VC fund, Forecast Fund, in the US.We kick off this conversation with fatherhood, a subject close to both our hearts, and then cover what opportunities he’s looking for, why he’s bullish on Australia, building his VC business, the role of a Board member and much more.Topics we cover and great quotes:“I'm interested in…the anti-Amazon”“I don't think there's any reason that the next great consumer company can't come out of Australia”Why he’s a Zero to One founder and not a One to Ten founder“If you're a really good idea or content creator or really good coder, you can take over the world. And if you're not one of those two things, better to invest in people that are”“School teaches you to address your weaknesses, and I think life teaches you that you actually need to double down on your strengths”“The best startups are the ones that exist in many categories or don't exist in any categories”The power of the immigrant chip on your shoulderHow he’s built out his investment funnel and sourcing network for his VC fundThe role of a board member: “not holding a mirror to a founder but actually doing the opposite and trying to counterbalance a founder is really, really important”“Good founders are able to execute on their vision and great founders are able to adapt” This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.kvetch.au
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Nov 24, 2020 • 1h 1min

Building a Brand Engine with Tim Doyle

Speaking to Tim is like drinking from a firehouse: singularly the most impressive growth marketing person I know, he seems to have seamlessly transitioned to company building. I love the way he thinks deeply about product and company strategy, building his team and capability, and the trade offs involved. But it’s really the insights that you get when he talks about his marketing craft, that you really won’t get anywhere else. Transcript at www.mishasaul.com This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.kvetch.au
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Oct 13, 2020 • 1h 21min

Agnes Callard on Philosophy of Aspiration, Family and Jewishness

I got to ask Agnes Callard questions about her work as well as on philosophical topics I’ve been pondering for years. I also appreciated her personal insights into family and Jewishness. “There's something thin and insubstantial about tech optimism” Full transcript at www.mishasaul.com This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.kvetch.au
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Sep 13, 2020 • 1h 41min

Building cities with Mark Lutter

I had a wide ranging conversation with Mark Lutter coveringThe impact of US riots on the future of citiesMark’s role in helping Hong Kong citizens find a new homeWhy mature societies stop building new citiesPopulation growth in the US vs AustraliaNIMBYs and why they might be right (or not)Importance of culture How to measure institutional decline and progressHow you can helpAnd much more! This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.kvetch.au

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