 Hello everyone, and welcome back to Conversations with Tyler. Today I'm chatting with Mark Carney. Mark has a new book out, new and excellent. It's called Values, Building a Better World for All. Mark is best known for having run the Bank of Canada, having been head of the Bank of England. He has done much more than that and he will do much more yet. Mark, welcome. Thanks for having me, Tyler. It's a great pleasure. I'd like to start with what I call the Mark Carney production function. Now why didn't you become a marine biologist? Wow, that's good research. I've partly grown up on the prairies, number one. You know what? It was only once I got to college that I started to give up that because I went to Harvard, so at least I got to the coast by that point. But I got hooked by economics and then followed through with that. Some better came up. What about economics? Is more satisfying? Well, I wanted to try to understand how the world works. And in many respects, it's the only discipline, at least from my vantage point, that gave me the prospect of doing that, both on a micro level and on a macro level. Although I slightly feel we're better at micro than macro. Now, if I understand correctly, you were back up goalie on Harvard's ice hockey team and goalies deliberately try to put themselves in front of a moving hard piece of rubber that can be going as fast as 100 miles an hour. Are most goalies a little crazy? Funnily enough, you could say that, although my position on it was always that you're the one person on the ice that's facing outwards at danger. So if you're a defenseman or a forward or something, you can get hit from behind, you can hit from the side. Lots of bad things can happen to you, whereas your goalie, at least you, you're facing your opponent all the time, or at least you should be. In what way is it different temperamentally than being a central banker, if any? Great question. It is, you cannot be as anticipatory as a central banker. You're building up muscle, you're building up muscle memory, so that particularly at the higher levels that you realize what you've done after the fact you've done it. So you move before you tell your body to move. But as a central banker, obviously what you need to do is anticipate where the economy is going in and react in advance. If you meet someone who possibly is an eligible candidate to be a central banker, do you think you can tell how good a central banker they will be? If you know them a bit. If you know them a bit, yes. And I think particularly for the higher levels of central banking where you're trying to combine analytic rigor and synthesizing that into an ability to communicate, which is often the toughest thing. Now your book is about values. What would be the non-obvious value you look for in other potential central bankers? Humility. I think that would be the biggest one. And it took me a while to build up that value in a full disclosure. But it's incredibly important and if I may, I try to draw out why that value is relevant. And one of the lessons at least for me over the years as a central banker, as a policy makers, you have to plan for failure. And think about, don't always tell yourself you've got things sorted and that you can withstand the failure, plan for the failure and think of what would I wish I had done once that failure happens. And think about whether you should do it in advance. Your father's job, he worked on the affairs of native Canadians for some time. What did you learn from him or from that experience of what he did? I learned and I see this more clearly now. I learned just how long the tail of damage, how that passes through generations. So it's not just the generation that is affected initially, but it can have a life in how hard it is to break that cycle. So it's almost a bit like macroeconomic persistence of unemployment, but squared or cubed or all the more so. It is like that. It's also like, this is an imperfect analogy, but I enjoyed your conversation with Ben Friedman the other day, or a few months ago I guess, and his point about living on values, in his case it was Presbyterian values. Things can pass through both positively and negatively across generations and so you need bigger efforts either to reinforce them or to turn them the other way. Now you grew up in Northwest Territories and also Alberta, the Western Canada. How do you think that's shaped your perspective on economies? Well, the big thing I took from my time in Alberta is just, I mean it made me a market believer because, I'll give you an example, I was born just north of what was then known as the tar sands, now known as the oil sands, this huge deposit of oil, which was virtually impossible to get out of the ground economically, was sitting there, literally on the surface, separated from the sand was difficult and very quickly over the course of, as I was growing up by the time I was an adult, the issue had been cracked and so the ability to innovate and make a profit out of an opportunity. Your PhD thesis was called the Dynamic Advantage of Competition. Writing that thesis, what did you learn, not about the topic, but about yourself? I learned that I exhausted my capacity and desire to do game theory. In the end, the models were game theoretic, the explanations were rooted in case studies and some econometrics, but the models were formulaized from a game theory perspective. I also learned that I wanted to do policy at some point as well. What's the biggest misconception people have about Goldman Sachs? That it's everyone out for themselves. And how is it? When I was there, and I was there for 13 years in total, I found one of the biggest lessons I took from that place was teamwork. And I'll give you an example, it didn't matter who you were, if you needed to get a hold of somebody in the organization, they would be back to you certainly within 24 hours. They might be on the other side of the world. And that went from the CEO. Once when I was at the most junior level, I needed to speak to the CEO, Bob Rubin. And he didn't know me, but he got back to me because I wouldn't have left him a message if it wasn't important. And that's a lesson I've carried through. Now it seems to me that a lot of people trust you, even British people trust you, right? They trusted you with their central bank. So that's a skill. What else is it that you did to learn that skill? Obviously you decided to be trustworthy, but what else is in there? I think part of it is admitting when things go wrong, or when you've learned new information and you've changed your view, which is difficult to do. Maybe that's another aspect of humility. Part of it is confidence. I think it's hard to fully be trusted unless you're successful. You make more right decisions than not. And then we can debate how much of that is the product of luck in the end. But a combination of those things. Last thing, to be trusted, you need to feel someone's on your side that you're aligned. You're aligned with the people you're serving. As a public servant, as a central banker, you should be able to accomplish that, but it's important to establish that. If someone comes up to you younger and they say, I would like to learn how to give good speeches, how did you learn how to give good speeches? Which speakers? Do you go to YouTube? What do you do? I didn't have YouTube when I wasn't widely available when I was learning how to give speeches. One thing I would say is that you need to go over them multiple times. You need to give the speech in order to understand how to practice giving the speech. And then that reveals things that you can pull in or sentences which are too complicated, that which won't be well understood. Have stories, have things that illustrate your deeper point. I as a central banker, and maybe this is you're asking a general question, but as a central banker, put the substance as much as possible into footnotes. So you're well grounded in terms of your argument, but it's not cluttering the argument and losing your audience. And I think the last point I'd make, and hopefully this isn't the case on this conversation, but if you lose your audience, you've lost them. You don't get them back while you're giving the speech. And so it's crucial to keep the pacing and the insights spread so that you're retaining your audience. And who as a speaker has influenced you? I think that, I think Gordon Brown, who I had occasion to see on a number through the G7 G20 when I was a deputy governor in terms of policymakers, he is a technocrat that was a politician. And he had an ability to turn on his political voice and inspire in a way that both told you that he knew what he was talking about, but really helped to inspire you. If you're speaking in a meeting as the central banker present, do you prefer to speak first or speak last? I prefer, I tend to speak early. Yes, I tend to speak early. I'm not sure that's always the best strategy, but I tend to speak early. I will say one thing, Tyler, that's happened over the years at places like the G20 I'd noticed is the prevalence of social media and devices. And you do lose your, the audience drifts away over time, even at the G20, even on a discussion of the global economy. Maybe especially on a discussion of the global economy. Well, maybe especially a discussion of the global economy. And I mentioned it in the book that it was the discussion in Riyadh in February on COVID, which was one time that you saw everyone's heads snap up from their iPads in there and pay attention because it was the moment the pin dropped for the vast majority that we were in big trouble. Let's move to the thrilling central banking topic of the liquidity trap. So what I observe in my own country is that for over a decade, we have rates of price inflation really very close to 1.8%, right? Close to 2%. The liquidity trap in its essence claims the central bank can't control the price level. Maybe the price level is indeterminate. My view is simply the liquidity trap theories are wrong. But what's your view? My view has been that there is a liquidity trap or there can be a liquidity trap. So I guess I wouldn't fully subscribe that there can't be. Well, it wasn't. But there wasn't. I think you're absolutely right on that. I mean, it is revealed that there wasn't a liquidity trap. Further, that for a large portion of that period, it was not that fiscal policy was providing the support, so it wasn't the substitute for monetary policy. And I think the innovation that was done on the monetary policy side helped ensure that the Fed didn't quite get to its dual mandate, but it got pretty close. And actually by 2019, it certainly was there in my judgment at its dual mandate. So that showed the ability to innovate in terms of policy tools and provide that at the cost of some other risks that built up, of course. And what's the model you use for thinking about why the liquidity trap may not have applied? Because as you well know, interest was being paid on reserves. It wasn't identically equal to the T-bill rate, but it was very close. T-bill markets are extremely liquid. Why are bank reserves and T-bills sufficiently different assets to give monetary policy traction? Well, of course bank reserves exist for settlement between banks, and so bank reserves are not liabilities that the commercial bank can actually act on and lend out. Furthermore, of course, with quantitative easing, banks were in effect forced to carry these reserves, blessed with these extra reserves in order for the central bank, the Fed in this instant, to buy bonds. And the reason the liquidity trap has not existed, particularly in the United States, the UK as well, but has been because financial conditions have been easier than they otherwise would be because of asset purchases and other measures that have been put in place. Now, what I would argue, sorry, Tyler, is that there comes a point, even with those, where, for example, I would say that Japan, very close in fact in a liquidity trap, has been in a liquidity trap. As you know, right now we Americans are all debating as to whether the measured higher rate of price inflation will simply be transitory. Other than market prices, which is obvious, what are the indicators we should be looking at more closely that are perhaps a little underrated? Underrated? Well, I think the first thing, let me tell you what I would go to first is I would look to the labour market, adjust for compositional effects. In other words, is to what extent is wage inflation being driven by more high-wage jobs being created than lower-wage jobs? So look for a broad suite of labour market indicators including participation rates, hourly earnings, cut across various different segments. I think what is developing though is it's becoming obvious that input costs are moving more rapidly than one would have expected, at least I would have expected. And part of that is a product of supply bottlenecks as well. So that tells us something about potentially supply capacity in the economy. And if I go back to what I just said on the labour market because I didn't quite finish the thought is that, something I shouldn't do in a speech by the way, but I didn't quite finish the thought, which is that one would expect that the natural rate of unemployment has gone up as a consequence of relatively large proportion of the population being out of work, effectively out of work. And so one's looking for the risk here is that as the economy gets back to the level it was before, the supply in the economy is not going to get back to the level it was before, or at least not quickly, and so those price pressures will come through more quickly. And we're seeing some early indicators. We're seeing some indicators, I would say, that's consistent with that. Let's say we put you in charge of our central bank, the Fed. How would you change governance? Not monetary policy, not regulation, but the actual structure of the Federal Reserve system? Ooh, that is a really tricky one. I don't think that, I mean, there's path dependence in all regulatory frameworks in central banks. The governance, the rotating regional Fed share, I understand why the regional feds exist, but the rotating share system, I probably would not have that. I would have a clearer obligation on the Federal Reserve to identify and use its tools to address financial stability risks. Ultimately, that's housed in something called the FSOC, as you know, chaired by the Treasury Secretary, but I would have the Fed more on the hook, I think they'd be happy with this, for identifying what can go wrong and what should be done about it. I'm not saying add powers to them in order for that to be the case. And I would, what we would like to see, look, I thought the system in, I'm prisoner of my past, but the system in the UK where there was quite a rigorous independence of the committee members on what's called the Monetary Policy Committee, the equivalent of the FOMC, and they felt individual responsibility. So they definitely would vote in different ways than the governor. They didn't feel a need to have a consensus that was consistent with what the governor thought, because they were individually on the hook for their votes, and you knew how people had voted. And that led to quite robust discussions in a healthy way about the outlook for the economy. And the Fed has elements of that, but it also, and sorry, I'll finish on this topic, which is it has a tradition or a convention that is more consensus-based than we had in the UK. Taking central banks just as autonomous institutions, putting aside monetary policy, putting aside regulation, just running them, what's the greatest challenge? They're very hierarchical institutions historically have been, and the older they are, the more hierarchical they are. So the greatest challenge is to, well, you have a formal structure for who makes the decision, whether the committee or the individual. The greatest challenge is to empower people below to say what they think and to be clear and to act as if they are making the decision. So they give clear advice as opposed to classic, on the one hand, on the other hand, type advice. And we tried various ways to make that happen. And at the Bank of England, I think with some success, I'm sure they're doing it much better after I left. Should boards of governors of central banks in essence have COOs, so they don't have to actually run the central bank? Absolutely. And we did have at the Bank of England. How should central bankers treat off-balance sheet risk differently, if at all? Off-balance sheet risk of private financial institutions? Of course, yes. Yes, okay. They should, and we started to take steps in this way, something called step-in risk. So the assumption is that the off-balance sheet risk, there will be either a moral or some other quasi-legal responsibility for the connected institution to assume those risks. So you should always assume that those risks collapse back on the central balance sheet, just as if you recall, the SIVs in 2008 collapsed back on the balance sheets of major institutions like Citibank, for example, and Merrill Lynch, and all of a sudden balance sheets that looked relatively healthy looked awful because they substantially higher risk assets. And of course, the assets that were off-balance sheet were off-balance sheet because they weren't that high quality. Now, this yourself, there's Stanley Fisher. As you know, there's a trend of recruiting central bankers from other countries. So far, it seems it's worked quite well. But what are the limits of this process of recruiting leaders in government from abroad? So you wouldn't name someone to run the Department of Defense, who is from another country, right? Yeah. What's the margin where that doesn't work anymore? Well, I think, candidly, I think it was a relatively unique set of circumstances when I was put in place. I mean, the UK had had a very bad financial crisis. We had a new central bank. In other words, the powers have been tripled. It had been doubled in size. And there's an opportunity to bring an outsider in in order to help try to make that work. I don't know. I'm a little hard-pressed to see the set of circumstances where it would be immediately obvious to bring an outsider back in again. My answer is there have been examples. The Governor of the Bank of Ireland, for example, is a third example. Gabrielle McClough at present. But it's very much the exception as opposed to the rule. And it relies heavily on the technocratic nature of the role. Are there classes of decisions where such a head should recuse himself or herself or would just feel hesitant? Would it be risky decisions or extending foreign lines of credit, which the Fed has done a lot, or exchange rate policy? No, I think if you take these roles, you have to be able to take every decision, no matter how small or how large. And I never felt any circumstance where either I didn't have adequate information or, God forbid, that I was somehow conflicted in my loyalties that it would have influenced a decision. OK, topic of the day is central bank digital currencies, as you know, right? Jay Powell spoke about that just the other day. If we move to some form of a central bank digital currency, how do we avoid or limit disintermediation as people pull their assets out of commercial banks and go directly through the central bank? Well, there's a couple of ways, and I think the way that the most likely route that this is, and I'll come to an issue with it, is that there are two tiers to the central bank digital currency. So the digital currency is as much a wholesale, or it's principally a wholesale digital currency. What faces you and I in those listening is some form of wallet. We have a relationship with whether it's a commercial bank or an emerging tech company or FinTech company that is through the wallet, and that's how we access currency. Now, as you know, but it bears repeating, most of that currency, most of that money will have been created by the private financial system itself. Very little of it actually is the digital currency. One of the decision points is whether we as citizens have a right to access the ultimate safe asset, or at least a portion of our earnings in the ultimate safe asset. In one model, the safest model, the one that doesn't avoid the question that solves the question that you very rightly put on the table, the digital currency is only at the wholesale level. It's the top tier between institutions, not at the customer facing, the retail facing level. But as you know, there's Medigliani-Mellor theorem, right? So maybe I, Tyler Cowan, can't legally access the digital currency, but an intermediary will give me an equivalent service, if only through crypto, right? So there can be a private layer that in essence gives me that access. Okay, so the extreme version of that is a private stable coins in which a form of crypto which is backed with the, could be the central bank digital currency or treasury bills and some other safe assets that mimic it. That is, that's possible. It doesn't in and of itself, since it's a private layer, isn't of itself fully resilient. And I use the example in the book of effectively the Bank of Amsterdam, which lasted almost a century, well more than a century, was a form of stable coin. They're offering the bank bills supposedly fully backed by the gold that people had deposited. Now over time, they gradually ran a mismatch. And that's the danger with that structure, if that becomes the core structure. Tyler, what I didn't, sorry, I didn't quite finish my point earlier. I gave you one model which is keeps the central bank digital currency at the top layer, the wholesale. I think there is a very legitimate argument of citizens and others to say, well, actually today I can carry around cash. I have access to the ultimate safe asset. I and if, and if we're only going to be in a digital world, I should have a right to that safe asset as well. And I think at this stage is at least for my limits of my imagination, the only way I can see directly around your issue is to limit the portion of my assets that I can hold in cash. Sorry, central bank digital currency in this example, because otherwise that instantaneous run risk very much does exist. And you collapse the private money into public money in times of stress. So it is a real issue. If it's wholesale only the digital currency, or if my participation is limited, those are like limits on capital flows. So will the digital currency sell at a different price than say the dollar, the euro, the regular currency? It should not, because money will be indistinguishable between the private money that's created just as it is today between central bank reserves and cash. But they do different things. Cash and the digital currency, they do different things. There's a kind of capital flow restriction on funds in and out from one to the other. It would seem you'd end up with separation of the unit of account and you'd have two media of exchange, two currencies. I don't mind this scenario. No, but we don't want to have separation of unit. Exactly. In the wholesale example, I can't reach up to that level. I can't. Now you can say in the wholesale market then you could and in stress there would be a premium for that, which I suppose is a possibility. In the hybrid model, so there's some retail and some, the bulk of it is private. There is a, I don't envision, I'm sorry, I guess I left out a point. I don't envision the central bank digital currency paying a return. So I'm not one who says let's have a central bank digital currency so we can have wildly negative interest rates so we can add another tool to the toolbox. And so that exchange ratio, my term, but I think it's the same concept ends up showing up in what the deposit rate is at the financial institution as it does today. How should we regulate decentralized finance, DeFi, as they call it? Another great question. I think the first thing is that is recognizing that that is a real possibility that we will have a world which is a combination of centralized and decentralized finance that there is potential value. And I hedge it a bit because I can see the potential but I haven't really seen it at scale being applied in so-called native currencies that exist and facilitate decentralized finance and the smart contracts that are part of that. I think we have to regulate, there's a couple obvious things we have to do in terms of regulation, going in and out of decentralized finance which is classic, know your customer, anti-money laundering, counter-terrorist financing, those sort of boundaries between the two. The resilience of the institutions that operate within decentralized finance. Thirdly, the nature of the crypto asset or that's used as the, quote, native currency and its resilience, so its supply algorithm, whether or not it's backed, whether or not it is itself a stable coin. And if it is a stable coin, who oversees the nature of that stable coin? There are some that had represented, as you probably know, I'm sure, that they were fully backed by cash and it turns out that they're very much not. So there's a conduct, anti-money laundering, know your customer element, going in and out of DeFi and then there's the resilience of the DeFi segment itself. As you know, there are truly anonymous forms of crypto, whether we like it or not. How many degrees of freedom do we really have in regulating non-anonymous crypto, given that people have the option of switching into anonymous crypto? We can only regulate them as it comes into the formal financial system, but we certainly can regulate anybody who is in the formal financial system and how they dock into that system. So a crypto exchange, I've long been saying that crypto exchanges should be regulated as other exchanges are and should be subject to the same quality standards and know your customer standards and others. And I think the best crypto exchange is absolutely agree with that, private financial institutions and their interactions between. Ultimately, it is interesting how essential much of crypto, that crypto for a decentralized system ultimately needs to come back into the centralized system in order to be a true medium of exchange. So those who have been taking ransomware in crypto, likely will ultimately come back into the formal financial system at some point and that's where the regulation has to catch. If I look at IPCC estimates of the costs of climate change, I see talk of a base case of maybe 5% to 6% of global GDP, possible risks of up to 20% or maybe 30% of GDP, all this you discuss in your book of course. But given that wide range of estimates which perhaps will get wider yet, what can central banks usefully do with this information given that they're not really special adjudicators of wisdom about climate change? That's right. We're not special adjudicators of wisdom about climate change. There's a couple of things we can do and of course there's a difference between the flow estimate and the GDP estimates. And I'd center it and I do in the book more around 25% of GDP and that's a level effect farther out and we can debate that. But also there's the asset price effect and this is a critical element and whether it's commercial real estate or value of fossil fuel assets or other investments and or loans that banks themselves and investment pools have. So what can central banks do? First thing is to take a look at the risk profile associated with climate change. Most of the risk in the course of let's say the next decade, 15 years relates to what's called transition risk. Yes, there is risk for certain activities because of increase of extreme weather events and the knock-on effects of that. That's absolutely there. But most of the risk and I'll give you an example. If you're lending or investing in the European auto industry now, you probably want to take into account that you can't sell an internal combustion engine vehicle in Europe after 2030. That is a regulation. That is transition risk. The question that central banks can do with financial institutions is working through with them, the extent to which they've assessed those financial institutions have assessed these types of risks and then those private financial institutions make the judgments about which ones are worth bearing. And just to be clear, some of the biggest risks in the system are that if I can put it this way, we do what we say. In other words, whether it's through private innovation, public regulation, some combination of the two that we move to an economy that is lower carbon and more consistent with the overall objective of 130 countries, which is one and a half degree temperature increase. But 25% of global GDP seems very, very high to me. So with central bankers, we look at market prices, right? Most insurance companies are not insolvent. That's a forward-looking market price. Coastal property, the prices of some of it are down, but not radically so. Obama bought a house at Martha's Vineyard. No one said that was a huge mistake. If the actual costs are 5%, 6% of GDP, maybe that's a year and a half's global growth, which is still highly significant. But a lot of it happened slowly. It's predicted it's signaled by market prices in advance. If the central bank just went about doing its old ordinary business and did a good job, I mean, what exactly is going to go wrong? That makes it necessary to extend their mandate to climate change. A couple of things. Three things that you added a third at the end. First is having been a regulator of the insurance industry, I can tell you, and particularly the property and casualty in the reinsurance industry, they think this is a big risk. In fact, if you're the regulator, if you were the regulator of Lloyds of London, one of the biggest reinsurers in the world, it's number one, number two in terms of their risk. And the reason why Lloyds is doing, you know, does well, it has some good years better than others, and the big P&C companies is because they write relatively short term contracts and they reprice. So they reprice coverage and they reprice risk. And so they're following the impact of climate change on the physical risks and they're able to react to it because they're not writing a whole ton of 30 year cat risk, catastrophe risk in their books. They write some, but they don't write, that's not at the core. So that's the first point. Second point is that, and it goes to your last point, which is that some central banks have this responsibility because of whom they oversee. Not some central banks, Bank of Canada, for example, it's a monetary institute, for lack of a better word. Its job is price stability largely. It does a bit of analysis on the financial stability side, a bit on payments, but it's largely price stability. But if you oversee major financial institutions and there is large risk, perspective risk, clearly in insurance, potentially in banking because of the transition risk I was talking about a moment ago, and just give an example, this week, the week we're talking, the IEA has come out with their forecast for, or their scenarios I should say, for what's necessary in order to achieve one and a half degrees. The orders of magnitude of stranded assets of known reserves in energy are three quarters of coal, proven reserves, half of gas, and more than a third of oil. And so you have to think about as a central bank, or not as a bank or as an investor, well, am I exposed to the bit that gets produced or the bit that won't get produced if we're in this scenario, or do I think we won't end up in this scenario and it all get produced and the real risk will be on the physical side. So just to wrap up, some central banks have that direct responsibility. Bank of England absolutely clearly did is the insurance regulator, but also the financial stability, the macro-prudential regulator. Others don't because they only do monetary policy and many are somewhere in between. But I would say, I said that was going to be the last point, I'll make one other, that we have 90 central banks from around the world that cover 85% of global GDP, which is part of the central bank group, self-selected into that group, that is looking at these risks and how to make sure the system is resilient because to loop back to something else that we were talking about earlier, we need to plan for failure. We need to make sure the system is resilient for these type of risks so that the financial system is not part of the problem and it can help support things going forward. Given that climate change is such a highly politicized topic, do we endanger the independence of central banks by giving them a climate change mandate? Okay, so it depends. That presumes that there is a new mandate and the nature in which it's given. So what has happened in the UK is that the Chancellor, and this is the way the system works in the UK, is for the monetary policy committee, the financial stability committee, and then the regulatory committee, the one that oversees just the micro-prudential health of banks and insurers, the government has clearly said your responsibility includes taking into account climate change risks, each of those committees. That is a direction. That is democratic accountability. It's consistent with the law. It's consistent with the set of risks, the law that governs the central bank, but it is not the central bank reading into its mandate a new responsibility. There's a difference between given something or directed to do something, again consistent with the legal framework, and having the central bank appropriate that responsibility, which is not the case in the UK. Now as we are talking in mid-May, Canada is doing a wonderful job catching up with vaccinating Canadians, and that's great. But if we think of the very slow initial procurement and the pretty slow initial rollout, is that telling us something about problems with state capacity in Canada, which we typically think of as a very well governed nation? But is there anything we're learning there? Absolutely. I think you put it well. Three things. One is, I think there's a problem with state capacity in advance, so we had inadequate vaccine production capacity. We didn't have any. There's a bottom line. We had inadequate supplies of PPE and arguably inadequate capacity in our healthcare system. And as you well know, the less capacity in your healthcare system, the riskier it gets, even small increases in infections. So all of that was in advance. Secondly, in terms of the track and trace system put in place in Canada is not really operable. I mean, it's there in theory, but it is not an effective part of the pandemic response. And then thirdly, the vaccine rollout has been slow. It's been slow relative to the U.S. and the U.K. Now it is catching up. It's very much catching up. Why did those go wrong? What's the general problem or reconsideration about Canadian government? A lot of people think you're better governed than a lot of places, right? Well, we are better governed than a lot of places. I think that in the case of systemic risk, we're talking about another systemic risk around pandemics, that there was an absence of clear responsibility, who's responsible for it, and empowering those who's responsible still. There's a lot of finger pointing between the federal governments and the provincial governments. So some of it is a question of responsibility across jurisdictions, as opposed to taking full ownership of the issue and saying that we are jointly responsible for Canadians' health in the middle of a pandemic, and we will jointly work together and share the positives and the negatives of the outcomes for Canadians. Because after all, I mean, I'm talking to you from Ottawa. I don't view myself as Ottawa and Ontario, and I view myself as a Canadian first and foremost, and I expect my governments to deliver for me. Why is Ottawa such a nice and interesting city and yet so cheap? Serious question. It's cold in the winter. But all Canada is cold, right? Well, it's not as cold. This is the second coldest capital in the world after Ulaanbaatar. So it's not as cheap as it used to be, but it is certainly value for money. Yes, I don't have a good answer for that. Why is there so little populism in Canada? You have plenty of immigrants, right? Arguably in Ontario, you've had some local populism, but nationally it doesn't seem to have taken off. Well, I think it's good observation. It's partly populism, the way I think of it is it moves into an us versus them, the people versus the elite type approach. And so part of what determines populism in my way of thinking is how much do people believe that there is a quality of opportunity or an ability to move through the system? How much do people believe that there is equal access? And so a couple of things that underscore that in Canada, universal health care, virtually everybody sends their kids to the state education system, so you have universal on that. And one of the things which has slowed our response and actually on the pandemic is application of that universality, for example, for vaccines and universality for lockdowns and other requirements in a way that meets equality but is not as effective as it could be on a risk management basis. I'll give you an example. It would make more sense to go and vaccinate the teachers and vaccinate those who are working in meatpacking plants and Amazon warehouse and other hot spots for the disease. But that's not the approach. The approach has been very rigorously equal, working down through age cohorts. And I think that has its downsides, but it reinforces we're all in this together and therefore weighs against the populism possibilities. Are the Toronto Raptors doomed to be on average a subpar NBA team due to higher taxes? Fiscal policy question, right? Fiscal fantastic question, no. Short answer, wildly popular and they're able to gross up. Second, from a basketball competitiveness perspective, we're pleased to see the Biden tax proposals and the U.S. coming in this direction. And I think the track record does indicate that an NBA championship and getting close last time is so far so good. Where's the best food in Canada? For me, Vancouver. Chinese or a Nouvelle or what? Everything, because of the range. Fantastic Indian, Nouvelle, absolutely amazing Japanese, Isakaya type. And part of it is my parents are originally from that area, not Vancouver itself, and so I have nice associations with it. What's your favorite movie and why? My favorite movie was Gallipoli, oddly, an Australian movie, Peter Weir. It's about the First World War and the Dardanelles, Attack on the Dardanelles. And I just thought it was a brilliant film and the sense of foreboding that comes with it and beautifully shot and I don't know, it's always stuck with me. And to refer back to the theme of your book, how does that stem from your values? There is, okay, there's a couple of things in that. One is the main characters who are actually one of them is Mel Gibson. They basically have to sacrifice themselves for the group. And so that sense of solidarity that is part and parcel of that and a big component of the book. What's your favorite Oh Henry story? The Magi. Why? Because it has, which I use for the purposes of, for two reasons. One, I liked it as a child, the irony of the, you know, Della cuts her hair and in order to buy Jim a watch, Shane and Jim sells his watch in order to give her a hair comb and so I like the irony of it. I did like Henry a lot actually as a kid. And then I, you know, stumbling across this Joel Wadfogel article and him saying that, you know, he's well actually wasn't, he didn't use that as an example. I'm using it as a counter example to him, but the AER is his paper in the AR, which is about the deadweight loss of gift giving at Christmas because I can't perfectly, even with all these questions, you won't be able to perfectly anticipate what I want next year for Christmas. And the story is about the primacy of values, right? Absolutely. Yeah. And that was, you know, they didn't have and the fact that they were willing to sacrifice that which was most dear in their beloved to get a present at Christmas, you know, demonstrated, you know, their love for each other more than hanging on to that which they cared most about. Alice Monroe or Margaret Atwood? Margaret Atwood read more. What's the best Clash album? Fantastic question. London Calling and one of my best memories. I was very fortunate they came to Edmonton when I was in 12th grade in high school and I went to the concert and that was fantastic. I also saw them. I think in what would have been 12th grade had I been in school that year, but London Calling is too commercial for me. I much prefer the Green Album like Career Opportunities, Janie Jones. Well, I thought the law was the best song at the concert. And I have to say they had got to Combat Rock by this time, you know, Relative Combat Rock was more commercial, I thought, than London Calling, although they threw it all out the door with Sandinista. Why was there such a big productivity slowdown in the United Kingdom? If indeed you accept that premise? The productivity slowdown, you mean in the last decade? More than a decade, but again, people dispute exactly the nature of the facts here. Okay, well, I think there's a few factors. I do think broad brush, and I'll give you four explanations. First is a bigger aftermath of the financial crisis than in many jurisdictions, so just access to capital and the starving of investment that came from that. Relatedly from a statistical perspective, quite a lot of the productivity, as much as a third of the productivity in the run up to the crisis, came from financial services, at least as productivity was measured, and basically lending, the lending spread, I'm simplifying, counted as productivity. So if you were in a credit room, you were getting productivity, so that's one aspect. Second aspect is a managerial explanation that my colleague Andy Haldane did a lot of work on and has written extensively on, which is that there's a longer tail of, if you look at productivity on a firm basis, the tails have lengthened and fattened, so there's less of a diffusion of productivity and obviously economies of scope and scale that are also concentrated in those larger firms. And then the third thing, and this will be, there's different views on this, I think the numbers are pretty clear, is from 2016 to 2020, from the Brexit referendum until Brexit, a period of pretty intense uncertainty and basically a flatlining of investment over that period, and it's hard to grow productivity as fast if you're not investing. Now you've been a well-known critic of Brexit and I was myself pro-remain, but when you watch the handling of the pandemic, especially the vaccines, the EU doing such a bad job on procurement, do you have second thoughts and think as I do, maybe Brexit wasn't so terrible after all? Well, two things. One, my job was, again, was to plan for a difficult outcome and so we had to make sure that the financial system was ready in case there was a no-deal Brexit or a very disruptive Brexit. In the end we didn't have that, but we put the financial system in a position so they could withstand that. A lot of what we said and did was interpreted as one of my colleagues said, we've been called at the Bank of England Merchants of Doom, which he took as a compliment, because our job was to plan for that failure. That's the first thing and so we put the system in a stronger position so that the financial system at least could be part of the solution as we came out. In terms of the pandemic, I think it is clear that the UK had its issues, we've all had our issues, but has handled it better than the EU and that elements of the EU's approach have been actively counterproductive. So in that respect, yes, it has been better. And as you know, the British pound has bounced back entirely, right? There was a plunge right after the referendum, which was truly a surprise to the markets. But now the pound is back, doesn't that mean in essence there weren't really macro costs to Brexit? It just looked that way for a short while? Well, I'm not sure. I wouldn't say that if you look at broader asset prices, there has been some recovery in UK equities and other assets, but I would be hard pressed to say that they followed the trajectory that they would have if this hadn't happened. That's not to say that these are all relative and so it matters what the UK does with Brexit and talk of new trade deals and using more and more of this flexibility that they've gained from a consequence and so that can lead to growth as well. If Scotland and Northern Ireland were to leave the United Kingdom, would that make being the central banker of England alone harder or easier? It would make it, it's not a desirable outcome. No, I agree it's bad. Northern Ireland doesn't look to me like an optimal currency area with the rest of the UK. Scotland does. Scotland is, yes, Scotland is more of an optimal currency area and certainly, I think the challenges which were a little underestimated by some of Scotland leaving the UK and losing the fiscal stabilizer that came naturally as being part of the United Kingdom, that was underestimated. Would it make it easier on the margin? Would it make it easier? Yeah, look, the honest answer is this is marginal revolution. Yes, on the margin it would be easier. Yes, because it would, but it would be harder for, it would be harder for Scotland, the mix, I think. And to be clear, neither of us favours Scotland leaving, but if they did leave, should they choose the British pound, the Euro or a new currency of their own? I think the logic of the governing party in Scotland is that they would likely, they're a little hedged on this, but part of the purpose of leaving, there are other motivations, but part of the economic purpose would be to be part of the European Union. And if they were part of the European Union, they would have to at least agree to be on a path to choosing the Euro. And there's a challenge of retaining the pound and losing the integration of the financial system. It's one of the financial risks there. The question is, would they have a time path so that they could move directly from Stirling to Euro? It's a big, it's a big, big issue. I don't pretend to have the answer, but I would think it would be more likely to choose the Euro. And certainly for Northern Ireland, if it were to leave, and we are deeply into speculation here, well, it's almost certain it would be the Euro. And would Scotland have a problem of oversized banks relative to GDP of an independent Scotland? And what should they do about that? It is possible to re-domicile those banks. One of the challenges, and the short answer is, it's an addressable issue with sufficient time to address it. And one of the challenges with the last referendum is the timetable for withdrawal was on the order of magnitude of 18 months, and that was not sufficient time to do it. What should Switzerland do about having had banks that are quite large relative to GDP? And they're not in the EU in the typical way, as you know. No, I think, well, what Switzerland has done is a couple of things. One, it's made those banks less likely to fail by having running higher capital requirements and higher liquidity than even the new standards. Secondly, been pretty rigorous, and one of my responsibilities at Bank of England was working with them because they had big UK operations in terms of putting in place what are called living wills, so an ability to unwind aspects of those banks if they hit the rocks, separate out the domestic banking assets of those banks so that retail banking continues on, and the hit is seen largely in the wholesale side. As an Irish citizen, what should the Irish government have done in 2008? So Irish austerity is much criticized, but it does seem they ran out of money, right? What could they have done better? They ran out of money. What could they have done better? I mean, I think broadly they handled it in a terrible situation. Well, we worked closely with, funnily enough, well, not funny, but Canada and Ireland are in the same constituency in the IMF, and we worked closely with them during the crisis, including with determining how and when to support their financial institutions and how that support ranked in terms of the overall, and it sounds like an esoteric point, but I think it's an important point in terms of the overall debts of the country. In other words, that support was junior as opposed to peri-passu, and I think that contributed to their recovery. Now, as you know, Mario Draghi, who was a central banker, he's now running Italy for at least some while, and he's put forward a plan to have a very aggressive fiscal policy, spending about $200 billion euros, whatever. From my great distance, it seems to me, is not mainly one-of-demand. It's been running on for 25 years. It's a real problem, often resulting from local or even municipal rigidities, and if that's the case, why would spending $200 billion when debt levels are quite high already? Why would that help? What do you think? Yeah, first thing, obviously, I can't speak for Prime Minister Draghi, but I get used to saying that, but I would think that he would agree with much of your premise, and I'll make a following observation. First thing, Italy, the level of GDP is the same as it was in 1999. It's an absolutely astonishing figure. We've had a COVID shock and everything, and whereas Germany is 25%, 27% above today, even before they get the COVID recovery. And that is fundamentally your point. It's a question of supply capacity. Ultimately, productivity, given a weak population growth, where productivity has not gone in Italy. Part of that is absolutely the regulatory aspects. One famous example, a very important example, is around bankruptcy laws in Italy, and it just takes a very long time to unwind a business and prosecute bankruptcy. And then, of course, you don't want to lend if it takes a long time to do that if it does. And so there's a series of those types of reforms that are necessary. That said, most of that 200 billion is around infrastructure, around measures to improve the supply side of the economy. I think the Prime Minister would absolutely agree. We need these other reforms on the regulatory side and the way business operates in Italy. But at the same time, their bridges need to be built. There's a grid that needs to be greened. There are a series of opportunities. For example, we talked earlier about climate change, and Italy is one of the jurisdictions that has huge opportunities in the hydrogen economy, actually. And there's ways for them to kickstart that, which would provide an export engine. To return to your new book, Values, which was the hardest part of it to write? The hardest part was going through the history of value theory and trying to condense that. And whether I got that right, you're condensing the canonists to a couple of paragraphs, the physiocrats, and then trying to draw the distinction... The distinction between the objective value and subjective value, as you know, is straightforward to draw, but to try to give a fair representation of that. And what was the most surprising thing you learned writing the book that you hadn't known before you started? I think the most surprising thing was the... Okay. The most surprising thing that came to me as I was writing, but this was also in real time in the world, was that this point about moving from a trade-off approach on a big issue, so the flattening of values is what I talk about to a hierarchy, and how powerful that can be in terms of market dynamics and investment. Something I believe, but I didn't think I would necessarily see. And what I'm talking about is that over the course of the time of writing that book, it started before and it's really accelerated after, is that the world has been moving more and more towards saying, okay, let's deal with climate change. Let's anchor this on net zero, and then let's figure out how to get there. And in that process, one of the four points in the book is that you can flip that risk into value creation if there's a shared objective, the shared objective around net zero. And that's what we're seeing today in financial markets and in the real economy. So it surprised me that it... I had that thought with me, but I thought I would spend more time in the book about the values that are necessary for markets to function well as opposed to this other point which has the bigger real-world impact which is if you have a hierarchy of value, if you have a clear objective and those don't come along every day, but a clear social objective like sustainability net zero said another way, just what... just the power of the market that is starting to be unleashed as a consequence. And what did you most learn about yourself writing the book? Sorry to hesitate. I learned that I... there was a lot that I didn't know number one and in reinforcing that and it sounds right, but I'm just reinforcing this point on humility and where that comes in, where that is valuable. It's not just about knowing that things can fail, but also recognizing that you need to combine that ambition in order to move things forward. Last question. You wake up each morning surely you still think about central banking. What for you is the open question about central banking where you don't know the answer that you think about the most? You know I gave a speech at Jackson Hole on this issue and I started which is the future of the international monetary system and how we adjust the international monetary system and I'll say parenthetically that you know we're potentially headed to another example of where the structure of the system is going to cause big problems for the global economy because it's quite realistic, sadly, that we're going to have a fairly divergent recovery with a number of emerging developing economies really lagging because of COVID, you know, not vaccinated limited policy space and knock on effects well major advanced economies move forward. Okay so and that's a world where rates rise in US dollar strengthens and you get this asymmetry and the challenge of the way our system works bears down on these economies and so I think about that a lot and I gave a speech at Jackson Hole on this and I started it by saying Ben Bernanke's last speech to central bankers it was in Basel, the central bank club as he said, the one thing I can't figure out I didn't quite put it, he's a modest person but he basically said is what to do about the international monetary system it's a big problem and then five years past and then I gave the speech and I said well this is the one thing I can't figure out and I'm going to describe the problem I'll give a half hearted attempt at trying to fix it so I continue to think about how we can adjust that last point Tyler is that I think that there is something in the move to digital the move towards digital currencies how that shapes out that could help with this, it won't necessarily do so but it's in my mind that in past times when there had been a shift in reserve assets when there had been a rebalancing it starts first with means of payment dollars started to take over from sterling as means of payment that helped accelerate the shift and that how we organize the payment system and if we organize as opposed to we just let it happen organically there's a potential for some rebalancing and I underscore potential I'm not as convinced we'll get it. Again everyone, Mark Corney's new book is values building a better world for all and Mark Corney thank you very much. Thank you Tyler it's a great pleasure.