Visiting the New Jersey shore

Did you know that the rest of the country (world?) calls it “the beach”?  New Jerseyans call it “the shore.”  (Why?)

While growing up, my mother would take my sister and me to the New Jersey shore for a week, each summer.  My father would drive down and visit, but he was too much of a workaholic and too antsy to stay for long.

One of the first things you learn, living in The Great NJ, is that each and every town has its own identity.  It feels quite different from the next town over, and has an individualized history and often a quite different ethnic mix.  Before I knew any other social science, I learned that place really matters.  And hovering at the horizon is the NYC skyline, a regular reminder that things can change rather quickly once you cross a line, in this case taking a bus across a river.  I started thinking about “invisible borders” seriously and at a young age.  Later, in high school, the kids were from either Hillsdale (my town), or from River Vale, one town over.  We thought of them as the “wuss kids.”

So just about everyone is a regional thinker, and in New Jersey your “region” refers to your town or maybe county, not to the state.

This importance of place is true of shore towns as well.  We spent time in various locales:

Asbury Park: This was early on, and I barely have memories of it.  We decided it was “a dump,” and had seen better days.  It had once been a glamour spot of sorts, with dance halls and gazebos.  Later in life I would go back there for some of the older architecture, Bruce Springsteen landmarks, and Puerto Rican food.

Ocean Grove: The place we went when we were young.  This town has fantastic Victorian homes, and an unusual role in the American history of religious revival camps.  Holly and called it an “old people’s town.”  Plus there was no boardwalk and everything was closed on Sundays.  The ocean was wonderful and the walks were easy, but we always wanted to be somewhere else.

Point Pleasant: I haven’t been in so long, but I think of this as one of the most typical and representative of New Jersey shore towns.  Holly and I were OK with this place.

Seaside Heights: This for us was the best, especially for my sister.  It had lots of other young people, an active, retro-flavored boardwalk (I loved that game where you throw the ball up and try to have it land in the right slots for points), and the ocean water seemed rougher in a fun way.  Eventually we settled on going here each year.  Later the setting for Jersey Shore, the TV show.

I also went to some chess tournaments in Atlantic City (pre-gambling, quite run down), where I did very well, and when we were all grown we would meet up in Spring Lake, which is perhaps the actual nice shore town.

Even in the early days it was exciting to drive from one town to the next, like in Europe crossing from Germany into Luxembourg.

I did a lot of reading on the beach, for instance tackling both LOTR and Karl Popper’s Open Society books.  In later years, Holly would be off with friends, and my mother and I would drive around, listening to Beatle songs on a weird 8-track tape that split up the songs when it changed tracks.

So early on I learned the idea of “local travel,” namely that a nearby trip can be no less fascinating.  I consider that one of the most important practical ideas you can imbibe, along with “regional thinker.”  I got them both quite young, and in a very convincing fashion.

GPT 4.5 on this blog

be me
be Marginal Revolution
daily links posted
commenters debating obscure economic theories
someone mentions Baumol’s cost disease
half the commenters triggered, half delighted
Tyler posts cryptic sentence about food trucks
“markets in everything” intensifies
realize you just spent two hours reading about medieval grain prices
mfw economics was the real marginal revolution all along

Monday assorted links

1. A new and thorough Manus report.  And Manus would be a huge liability risk in the United States.  And yup.  And double yup, when will the NYT cover Manus?  And from the Manus founder.

2. Stephen Kotkin on Trump and Ukraine (New Yorker).  So far one of the best pieces this year.

3. Greg Mankiw is right.

4. Which economists will be replaced by AIs? (lots of them)

5. On the Douthat-Rufo dialogue.

6. “Cuteservatives”?

7. At first I thought this was a joke: comedy club bans audience members with botox.

US AID, current status

After a 6 week review we are officially cancelling 83% of the programs at USAID.

The 5200 contracts that are now cancelled spent tens of billions of dollars in ways that did not serve, (and in some cases even harmed), the core national interests of the United States. In consultation with Congress, we intend for the remaining 18% of programs we are keeping (approximately 1000) to now be administered more effectively under the State Department.

That is from Marco Rubio.  Here is my earlier post on US AID.

An Economic Approach to Homer’s Odyssey: Part III

Published by Liberty Fund, by me, here is the third and final installment.  Excerpt:

“Below is a brief and simplified catalog of the major polities described in The Odyssey:

  • • Pylos and Sparta: Visited by Telemachus, superficially seem normal but they seem sadder on reflection and Sparta relies on intoxication to support public order.
  • • Ogygia, or Calypso: An unbearable paradise, there is no utopia.
  • • Phaeacia: Relatively well-run, inward-looking, passive-aggressive, “control freak” syndrome.
  • • The Lotus Eaters: Another unbearable “utopia.”
  • • The Cyclopes: Anarchistic, brutish, and the community is ineffective and unable to defend itself.
  • • Aeolus: A closed society, based on incest, hostile to outsiders, a more extreme and dysfunctional version of Phaeacia.
  • • Laestrygonia: Giants, they throw boulders and murder, and in some ways resemble the Cyclopes. Tendencies toward anarchy are widespread, and not confined to the Cyclopes.
  • • Aeaea (Circe): There is the bed of tyrannical but beautiful Circe, or life as a well-fed pig. Again, utopias are impossible and immortality would bore us.
  • • Cimmeria: Dark, bleak, and unloved by God. Possibly the default setting.
  • • The Underworld: Everyone is sad (and dead), yet they talk like actual humans and also tell the truth. Lesson: the living cannot escape artifice and deception.
  • • Ithaca: Usually wrapped up in war and revenge-taking, chaotic and lacking in trust and lacking in clarity about sovereignty. This is another one of the default options.
  • • Syria: Initially prosperous but wrecked by the arrival of avaricious merchants. Unstable.
  • • Crete: A diverse society of perfect trust, within a narrative of Odysseus-in-disguise, but it has no chance of existing.”

My overall goal has been to pull out the implicit “public choice” strands in Homer’s Odyssey.  It is very much a poem about politics, and the book is among other things a study in comparative politics.

Do read the whole essay, and here are parts one and two.

Redux, my 2021 Conversation with Mark Carney

Here is the audio, video, and transcript.  Excerpt:

COWEN: You grew up in Northwest Territories and also Alberta, so western Canada. How do you think that’s shaped your perspective on economies?

CARNEY: 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. It was sitting there literally on the surface, but to separate it from the sand was difficult. Very quickly over the course of as I was growing up, by the time I was an adult, the issue had been cracked. The ability to innovate and make a profit out of an opportunity.

COWEN: Your PhD thesis was called The Dynamic Advantage of Competition. Writing that thesis, what did you learn, not about the topic but about yourself?

CARNEY: 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 formulized from a game theory perspective. I also learned that I wanted to do policy at some point as well.

There is much more at the link.

Will there be a British DOGE?

Highly controversial plans to revolutionise Whitehall by introducing performance-related pay, an accelerated exit process for under-performing mandarins and more digitalisation will be announced this week in what ministers say is a programme to “reshape the state” so it can respond to a new “era of insecurity”.

The proposed changes, to be announced by Cabinet Office minister Pat McFadden, will inevitably provoke alarm and resistance from civil service unions, and be seen as the government using the current wave of global uncertainty as cover to drive through radical modernisation of civil service methods and culture…

While Whitehall departments have substantially grown in recent years – increasing by more than 15,000 since the end of 2023 – McFadden is expected to say working people have not seen improvements in their job opportunities, the safety of their neighbourhoods or the length of time they have to wait for NHS treatment when they are sick.

Indicating the scale of potential reform being considered, sources stressed that “delivering national security” could only be done with a full “renewal of the state”.

Most controversially, McFadden will set out a new “pay-by-results system learning from the best civil services globally, making sure the most senior officials responsible for the missions have their wages linked to the outcomes they achieve”, a government spokesperson said.

McFadden will also outline plans to speed up the removal from the service of civil servants judged as unable to meet current needs. A system of “mutually agreed exits” will be introduced to bring the civil service “more in line with the private sector”.

Here is more from The Guardian.

The political economy of Manus AI

Early reports are pretty consistent, and they indicate that Manus agentic AI is for real, and ahead of its American counterparts.  I also hear it is still glitchy  Still, it is easy to imagine Chinese agentic AI “getting there” before the American product does.  If so, what does that world look like?

The cruder way of putting the question is: “are we going to let Chinese agentic bots crawl all over American computers?”

The next step question is: “do we in fact have a plausible way to stop this from happening?”

Many Chinese use VPNs to get around their own Great Firewall and access OpenAI products.  China could toughen its firewall and shut down VPNs, but that is very costly for them.  America doesn’t have a Great Firewall at all, and the First Amendment would seem to prevent very tough restrictions on accessing the outside world.  Plus there can always be a version of the new models not directly connected to China.

We did (sort of) pass a TikTok ban, but even that applied only to the app.  Had the ban gone through, you still could have accessed TikTok through its website.  And so, one way or another, Americans will be able to access Manus.

Manus will crawl your computer and do all sorts of useful tasks for you.  If not right now, probably within a year or not much more.  An American alternative might leapfrog them, but again maybe not.

It is easy to imagine government banning Manus from its computers, just as the state of Virginia banned DeepSeek from its computers.  I’m just not sure that matters much.  Plenty of people will use it on their private computers, and it could become an integral part of many systems, including systems that interact with the U.S. public sector.

It is not obvious that the CCP will be able to pull strings to manipulate every aspect of Manus operations.  I am not worried that you might order a cheeseburger on-line, and end up getting Kung Pao chicken.  Still, the data collected by the parent company will in principle be CCP- accessible.  Remember that advanced AI can be used to search through that information with relative ease.  And over time, though probably not initially, you can imagine a Manus-like entity designed to monitor your computer for information relevant to China and the CCP.  Even if it is not easy for a Manus-like entity to manipulate your computer in a “body snatchers-like” way, you can see the points of concern here.

Financial firms might be vulnerable to information capture attacks.  Will relatives of U.S. military personnel be forbidden from having agentic Chinese AI on their computers?  That does not seem enforceable.

Maybe you’re all worried now!

But should you be?

Whatever problems American computer owners might face, Chinese computer owners will face too.  And the most important Chinese computer owner is the CCP and its affiliates, including the military.

More likely, Manus will roam CCP computers too.  No, I don’t think that puts “the aliens” in charge, but who exactly is in charge?  Is it Butterfly Effect, the company behind Manus, and its few dozen employees?  In the short run, yes, more or less.  But they too over time are using more and more agentic AIs, perhaps different brands from other companies too.

Think of some new system of checks and balances as being created, much as an economy is itself a spontaneous order.  And in this new spontaneous order, a lot of the cognitive capital is coming outside the CCP.

In this new system, is the CCP still the smartest or most powerful entity in China?  Or does the spontaneous order of various AI models more or less “rule it”?  To what extent do the decisions of the CCP become a derivative product of Manus (and other systems) advice, interpretation, and data gathering?

What exactly is the CCP any more?

Does the importance of Central Committee membership decline radically?

I am not talking doomsday scenarios here.  Alignment will ensure that the AI entities (for instance) continue to supply China with clean water, rather than poisoning the water supply.  But those AI entities have been trained on information sets that have very different weights than what the CCP implements through its Marxism-swayed, autocracy-swayed decisions.  Chinese AI systems look aligned with the CCP, given that they have some crude, ex post censorship and loyalty training.  But are the AI systems truly aligned in terms of having the same limited, selective set of information weights that the CCP does?  I doubt it.  If they did, probably they would not be the leading product.

(There is plenty of discussion of alignment problems with AI.  A neglected issue is whether the alignment solution resulting from the competitive process is biased on net toward “universal knowledge” entities, or some other such description, rather than “dogmatic entities.”  Probably it is, and probably that is a good thing?  …But is it always a good thing?)

Does the CCP see this erosion of its authority and essence coming?  If so, will they do anything to try to preempt it?  Or maybe a few of them, in Straussian fashion, allow it or even accelerate it?

Let’s say China can indeed “beat” America at AI, but at the cost of giving up control over China, at least as that notion is currently understood.  How does that change the world?

Solve for the equilibrium!

Who exactly should be most afraid of Manus and related advances to come?

Who loses the most status in the new, resulting checks and balances equilibrium?

Who gains?

Saturday assorted links

1. Salim Furth uses Deep Research.

2. Culture wars in New Zealand.

3. Gdp without g (Bloomberg).

4. “Surprisingly common trait in high agency people is they had heroes and figured out how to meet them all before age 25” Nabeel

5. “We find that Gun Sanctity is highly predictive of different forms of magical thinking but is often unrelated to more traditional religious practices and beliefs.

6. Some prediction market guesses on war.

Systematic bone tool production at 1.5 million years ago

Recent evidence indicates that the emergence of stone tool technology occurred before the appearance of the genus Homo1 and may potentially be traced back deep into the primate evolutionary line. Conversely, osseous technologies are apparently exclusive of later hominins from approximately 2 million years ago (Ma), whereas the earliest systematic production of bone tools is currently restricted to European Acheulean sites 400–250 thousand years ago. Here we document an assemblage of bone tools shaped by knapping found within a single stratigraphic horizon at Olduvai Gorge dated to 1.5 Ma. Large mammal limb bone fragments, mostly from hippopotamus and elephant, were shaped to produce various tools, including massive elongated implements. Before our discovery, bone artefact production in pre-Middle Stone Age African contexts was widely considered as episodic, expedient and unrepresentative of early Homo toolkits. However, our results demonstrate that at the transition between the Oldowan and the early Acheulean, East African hominins developed an original cultural innovation that entailed a transfer and adaptation of knapping skills from stone to bone. By producing technologically and morphologically standardized bone tools, early Acheulean toolmakers unravelled technological repertoires that were previously thought to have appeared routinely more than 1 million years later.

Here is the full article, in Nature, by Ignacio de la Torre, et.al.  Again, do not forget Cowen’s 17th Law: “Most things have origins much earlier than what you thought.”  Via Charles C. Mann.  So exactly which of our other, broader views do we need to update?