Bryan Caplan is an irrepressible and eclectic economist at George Mason University.
Our first two interviews for the 80,000 Hours Podcast were:
- Bryan Caplan on whether lazy parenting is OK, what really helps workers, and betting on beliefs
- Economist Bryan Caplan thinks education is mostly pointless showing off. We test the strength of his case.
This time I'm thinking of asking him about:
• Why its foolish to read the news • How I'm worried about advances in AI, while Bryan mostly isn't • His new book: Voters as Mad Scientists: Essays on Political Irrationality
What (else) should I ask him (about)?
I would be interested to hear Bryan Caplan's take on Georgism (Tyler Cowen for instance thinks it's a bad idea) -- in general Caplan is opposed to pigouvian taxation, despite its appealing efficiency on paper, because Caplan thinks that it's all too easy for government to start calling anything it doesn't like a "negative externality", thus eroding peoples' freedoms. I can see where he's coming from. But maybe land value taxes could be a good idea even if we don't jump all the way to "tax everything we can think of that strikes us as a negative externality"? Georgism is an interesting case of something that's fully supported by economic theory, but also somewhat of a challenge to traditional libertarian ideas of inviolable property rights, so I would love to hear Caplan's libertarian perspective.
Thanks, this is very interesting!