Skip to content

Details

This week's location: Mission Delores Park.

PLEASE LISTEN TO THE PODCAST BEFORE ATTENDING THE EVENT. If you find you're unable to do so, please instead join one of our future events when you're able to prepare so that we can all be engaged in the discussion.

Source: https://80000hours.org/podcast/episodes/mushtaq-khan-institutional-economics/
Pocket Cast: https://pca.st/episode/4b36fd29-9ab5-42bb-84e9-40b1ac8a2997
Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/nz/podcast/80-000-hours-podcast-with-rob-wiblin/id1245002988

Length, 3h

What's this week's podcast about?

If you’re living in the Niger Delta in Nigeria, your best bet at a high-paying career is probably ‘artisanal refining’ — or, in plain language, stealing oil from pipelines.
The resulting oil spills damage the environment and cause severe health problems, but the Nigerian government has continually failed in their attempts to stop this theft.
They send in the army, and the army gets corrupted. They send in enforcement agencies, and the enforcement agencies get corrupted. What’s happening here?
According to Mushtaq Khan, economics professor at SOAS University of London, this is a classic example of ‘networked corruption’. Everyone in the community is benefiting from the criminal enterprise — so much so that the locals would prefer civil war to following the law. It pays vastly better than other local jobs, hotels and restaurants have formed around it, and houses are even powered by the electricity generated from the oil.
In today’s episode, Mushtaq elaborates on the models he uses to understand these problems and make predictions he can test in the real world.
Some of the most important factors shaping the fate of nations are their structures of power: who is powerful, how they are organized, which interest groups can pull in favours with the government, and the constant push and pull between the country’s rulers and its ruled. While traditional economic theory has relatively little to say about these topics, institutional economists like Mushtaq have a lot to say, and participate in lively debates about which of their competing ideas best explain the world around us.
The issues at stake are nothing less than why some countries are rich and others are poor, why some countries are mostly law abiding while others are not, and why some government programmes improve public welfare while others just enrich the well connected.

---

What's a podcast club?
It's like a book club for podcasts. Each week we discuss an episode from podcasters like Sam Harris, Ezra Klein, or Michael Shermer. We start off as a large group and spend most of the time chatting in smaller groups. Our conversations are casual and open. We encourage everyone to speak freely, respectfully, and concisely. To do this we try to adhere to Grice's Maxims: https://bit.ly/2p4uSQm

Ultimately, the idea is to help each other think a little differently, learn a thing or two and have some fun.

---

Feedback
If you have any suggestions or feedback about this event, we'd really like to hear about it: https://forms.gle/DdN6JJY3HPKzsGAX8

---

Donations: If this is one of your first MindFood events, please join us gratis! If you'd like to chip in, anything between $1-$10 is greatly appreciated. Here's how:

Members are also interested in