Nobel laureate Paul Krugman argues automation isn't killing jobs, the US safety net is needlessly cruel, and politics shapes the economy.

Paul Krugman — Nobel Prize-winning economist, professor at CUNY, and New York Times columnist known for work on international trade, economic geography, and liquidity traps. He is also a prominent and outspoken commentator on the intersection of economics and politics.
Lex Fridman talks with economist Paul Krugman about what a just and well-functioning economy looks like, from safety nets and the welfare state to the limits of markets and competition. Krugman argues the US has produced a uniquely cruel society for a rich nation, especially in healthcare and support for children. He pushes back hard on the popular narrative that automation and robots are destroying jobs, pointing to slow productivity growth and arguing wage stagnation is largely political. The conversation also covers universal basic income, international trade and the China trade war, the reliability of economic theory versus physics, and the value of public infrastructure investment.
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