Category: Political Science
*All the Kingdoms of the World*
The author is Kevin Vallier, and the subtitle is On Radical Religious Alternatives to Liberalism. This is an excellent and important book, starting with its defense of classical liberalism over Catholic integralism and indeed illiberalism more generally. But do note that Kevin, although a professional philosopher is also a Christian (Eastern Orthodox), and he is writing from a Christian perspective. This is also an excellent book simply for learning what integralism is. Overall, perhaps this is analytic political theology!?
In the final chapter, Kevin considers illiberal strands within Chinese Confucianism and Sunni Islam as well.
To be clear, if you are interested in neither religion nor political philosophy, this is not for you. But it is likely to be one of this year’s books that turns out really to matter.
Italy fact of the day
Before becoming Italian prime minister, Giorgia Meloni was one of the most strident voices on migration in the European Union. As an opposition politician, she warned darkly of efforts to substitute native Italians with ethnic minorities and promised to put in place a naval blockade to stop migrants crossing the Mediterranean.
During her time in office, she has taken a markedly different tack — presiding over a sharp spike in irregular arrivals and introducing legislation that could see as many as 1.5 million new migrants arrive through legal channels.
Do note this:
Meloni is presiding over a country that is economically stagnant and in demographic decline. Over the last decade, Italy has shrunk by some 1.5 million people (more than the population of Milan). In 39 of its 107 provinces, there are more retirees than workers. ..
Meloni’s legal migration decree estimates Italy needs 833,000 new migrants over the next three years to fill in the gap in its labor force. It opens the door to 452,000 workers over the same period to fill seasonal jobs in sectors like agriculture and tourism as well as long-term positions like plumbers, electricians, care workers and mechanics…
Given Italy’s rules on family reunification, which allow residents to bring in relatives, “it’s easy to predict that over something like 10 years, these figures will triple,” bringing in about 1.5 million migrants, said Maurizio Ambrosini, a professor of sociology and an expert on migration at Milan’s university.
The median voter surfaces yet again? Here is the full account, via Andrew McLoughlin.
“What Harvard can learn from Olive Garden?”
That is the title of my latest Bloomberg column, here is one bit from it:
One lesson is that it’s harder to convince poorer individuals to mingle with wealthier individuals in settings where the culture is shaped to align with a higher socioeconomic status. Churches, for instance, are usually free and open to all — but the poor do not seem so keen on attending religious services in wealthier neighborhoods. Maybe that’s because they don’t view the wealthier church as a “better service” (however that might be defined) but rather as an environment where they do not feel entirely comfortable or welcome.
In other words: Wealthier institutions or establishments attract a mixed customer or user base only when they give up cultural control. Taller stained-glass windows and more comfortable pews can do only so much to attract lower-income churchgoers. (An aside: One nice feature of marketing “culture” — for lack of a better word — on the internet is that it can be broadly appealing. Classical music on YouTube, for example, is not only free but also free of snob appeal.)
The business model of America’s nonprofit sector depends on producing status and reputation, both for itself and its affiliates. Many nonprofits work at creating environments of a very particular sort, both to raise money and to boost their influence. To elites, those environments are innocuous, even inspiring. But those same elites are starting to realize that what is inviting to one person is off-putting to another.
Here is a related (and very good) column from Catherine Rampell.
What should I ask Jacob Mikanowski?
Yes I will be doing a Conversation with him, here is Jacob’s self-description from his home page:
I’m a freelance journalist and writer based in Portland, OR. My academic training is in the history of Eastern Europe, but for over a decade, I worked as a critic and a science journalist. I write about art, books, movies, ancient history, anthropology, and – occasionally – food. I especially like to work on stories about the intersection of science and the humanities, photography, and people who are helplessly obsessed with whatever they’re doing.
For the past few years, I’ve been working on single project which combines all my interests: Goodbye, Eastern Europe: An Intimate History of a Divided Land – a book-length history of Eastern Europe, covering culture, politics, religion and ideology (essentially, everything which made Eastern Europe, Eastern Europe over the past 2000 years)…
I loved the book, and that led me to Jacob. Here are some of his articles. Here is Jacob on Twitter. Here is a good WSJ review of Goodbye, Eastern Europe: An Intimate History of a Divided Land.
The Mother Church of the Common Law
The Temple Church is a small church in London built in 1185 by the Knights Templar. It’s now hidden behind Fleet Street amid the Middle and Inner Temple, two of the four “Inns of Court”, the educational institutions and professional associations for common law barristers and judges. The Temple Church is known as the Mother Church of the Common Law both for its role in the creation of the Magna Carta and because of its location amid the Temple area.
King John used the Temple Church as his headquarters in 1214-1215 and it’s from here that he was forced to issue the first of the Magna Cartas. The real hero of the Magna Carta, however, was the knight William Marshal who negotiated the original agreement, reissued it again under his authority as regent to the boy King, Henry III, and then reissued it again–after, at the age of 70 personally leading troops into battle and defeating a French invasion–thereby cementing the Magna Carta and the rights it guarantees into British life.
William Marshall’s tomb can be found in the Temple Church.
Middle and Inner Temple were the heart of the common law for hundreds of years and the presence of the Temple Church meant that the idea of a bill of rights was always nearby. So much so that the Temple played a role in the American Revolution and not just as inspiration. Six members of the Inner or Middle Temple were signatories to the Declaration of Independence and seven were signatories to the US Constitution.
The Mother Church of the Common Law is well worth a visit if you are in London.

State Capacity as an Organizational Problem
We study how the organization of the state evolves over the process of development of a nation, using a new dataset on the internal organization of the U.S. federal bureaucracy over 1817-1905. First, we show a series of facts, describing how the size of the state, its presence across the territory, and its key organizational features evolved over the nineteenth century. Second, exploiting the staggered expansion of the railroad and telegraph networks across space, we show that the ability of politicians to monitor state agents throughout the territory is an important driver of these facts: locations with lower transportation and communication costs with Washington DC have more state presence, are delegated more decision power, and have lower employee turnover. The results suggest that high monitoring costs are associated with small, personalistic state organizations based on networks of trust; technological shocks lowering monitoring costs facilitate the emergence of modern bureaucratic states.
That is from a new NBER working paper by Nicola Mastrorocco and Edoardo Teso.
Every now and then Bryan Caplan writes a short essay (and here), dumping on the idea of state capacity, suggesting instead the alternative of “state priorities,” but I don’t think his argument is coherent. I think of state priorities as the demand side, and state capacity as the supply side. Of course both matter. Sometimes, in a partial equilibrium setting, state priorities will seem to be the only thing that matters. For instance, when the I-95 bridge collapsed outside of Philadelphia, it was repaired very quickly, in part because the governor made repair a priority. Enough resources were at hand, including enough legal resources to manage the changes in procedure. Most systems have some amount of slack. But when America tries to upgrade its infrastructure more generally, it is limited by both the supply side and the demand side, or in other words state capacity really matters. It’s not just that we don’t have a Mars colony, we don’t have enough lawyers and bureaucrats to lawfully repeal a large number of regulations at once.
YouTube does not polarize, yet further results in this direction
We find that while the [YouTube] algorithm pulls users away from political extremes, this pull is asymmetric, with users being pulled away from Far Right content stronger than from Far Left. Furthermore, we show that the recommendations made by the algorithm skew left even when the user does not have a watch history.
That is from a new research paper by Hazem Ibrahim, et.al. For further cites showing that YouTube does not polarize, see this CWT. Via Matt Grossman.
Diogo Costa on Brazil
From my email, via Gonzalo Schwartz:
The country ranks third globally in consuming information via digital platforms, a landscape that cultivates distrust in public institutions and ignites social unrest. This has fostered a rise in right-wing populism, including the election of former president Jair Bolsonaro, intensifying what Martin Gurri describes as a ‘crisis of authority.’ Efforts to counter this crisis, however, further destabilize Brazil’s democracy.
Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes exemplifies this turmoil with his controversial measures, including arbitrary digital content removal, ousting elected officials, and implementing unprecedented surveillance. Moraes and his peers have been criticized for investigating entrepreneurs and freezing assets over alleged anti-democratic private messages, probing executives from Google and Telegram for supposed disinformation campaigns, revoking passports of foreign-based journalists, and censoring a film about then-president Jair Bolsonaro.
The government’s endorsement of these measures amplifies the crisis. It has established a “National Attorney’s Office for the Defense of Democracy” to combat disinformation, while introducing a contested “fact-checking” platform. The Federal Prosecutor’s Office recently requested user data from followers of former President Jair Bolsonaro across major social media platforms to aid their investigation into anti-democratic activities.
Two key anti-corruption figures, Senator Sergio Moro, an ex-judge, and Representative Deltan Dallagnol, a former prosecutor, are under increased political assault. Accused of colluding in past investigations, they now face political retribution. Dallagnol has already been ousted from Congress by Brazil’s electoral court, and many speculate that Moro will follow suit. Their plight was summed up by President Lula’s statement, “I will only feel well when I f*ck with Moro”.
These high-profile cases are emblematic of a broader collapse of Brazil’s anti-corruption efforts. Initiatives like Operation Car Wash, which reclaimed R$3.28 billion out of R$6.2 billion in misappropriated funds, are now being undermined by political backlash. This underscores the urgent need for robust institutions that can effectively combat corruption without succumbing to political pressure.
Brazil’s circumstances resonate regionally due to its leadership role. As Ian Bremmer recently stated, commenting on the Supreme Court making former president Jair Bolsonaro ineligible for the next eight years, “Brazil [is] setting the standard for U.S. democracy”. This political meddling could influence other countries, potentially eroding the rule of law in other democracies.
Strengthening Brazil’s commitment to the rule of law transcends national borders — it’s a regional imperative. The advantages span from curbing corruption to advancing large infrastructure projects unimpeded by interference, as well as bolstering economic relationships given Brazil’s significant role in regional trade.
That was then, this is now — the culture that is Swiss edition
Tocqueville’s notes on the Swiss constitution confirm the poor impression he had quickly formed. There were cantons, he remarked, but no Switzerland. In most of these, he continued, the majority of people lacked any sense of “self-government”; the Swiss habitually abused freedom of the press; they saw associations much as the French did, as a revolutionary means rather than as “a slow and quiet way to arrive at the rectification of wrongs”; they had no sense of the benefits derived from “the peaceful and legal introduction of the judge into the domain of politics”; and, finally, “at the bottom of their souls the Swiss show no deep respect for law, no love of legality, no abhorrence of the use of force, without which there cannot be a free country.”
That is from Jeremy Jennings, Travels with Tocqueville: Beyond America, a new and excellent book that I will be covering again soon.
What makes for a good Royal Navy senior officer?
In most studies of talent, it is very difficult to get the top performers to respond or offer data. This paper is a major exception to that general limitation:
This paper assesses the impact of general intelligence, as well as specific personality traits, and aspects of motivation, on performance, potential, and advancement of senior leaders. A questionnaire survey was conducted on the full population of 381 senior officers in the Royal Navy with an 80% response rate. Performance, potential, and rate of advancement were established direct from the organization’s appraisal system; intelligence, personality traits and motivation were assessed, at the time of the study, using the Verify G+ Test, Occupational Personality Questionnaire, and Motivation Questionnaire. Findings suggest differences in motivation are more important than differences in general intelligence, or personality traits, in predicting assessed performance, potential within, and actual rate of advancement to, senior leadership positions. This is a rare example of a study into very senior leaders, validated against both formal appraisal data and actual rates of advancement. As a consequence of this study the Royal Navy has started to use psychometric-based assessments as part of the selection and development of its most Senior Officers.
Here is the full (gated) paper by Mike Young and Victor Dulewicz. I’ll pull out and repeat the key sentence there: “Findings suggest differences in motivation are more important than differences in general intelligence, or personality traits, in predicting assessed performance, potential within, and actual rate of advancement to, senior leadership positions.“
The Root of the Problem
It’s almost like the government’s imposing its will on its residents,” Trayon White, the D.C. council member for Ward 8, said at the council’s June 6 legislative meeting. He wasn’t talking about a proposed highway, a subway station, a power plant, or—perish the thought—an apartment building…White said he was concerned about the potential risk to property values and what he sees as a “reasonable fear”…[of] a public-safety concern.” He asked his colleagues to support an emergency resolution to remove them before this happened.
An incredible story by Jerusalem Demas about local politics that starts with small absurdities but raises larger questions. Can you guess the subject of concern?
The power of the agenda setter
We model legislative decision-making with an agenda setter who can propose policies sequentially, tailoring each proposal to the status quo that prevails after prior votes. Voters are sophisticated and the agenda setter cannot commit to future proposals. Nevertheless, the agenda setter obtains her favorite outcome in every equilibrium regardless of the initial default policy. Central to our results is a new condition on preferences, manipulability, that holds in rich policy spaces, including spatial settings and distribution problems. Our findings therefore establish that, despite the sophistication of voters and the absence of commitment power, the agenda setter is effectively a dictator.
That is from a new paper by S. Nageeb Ali, B. Douglas Bernheim, Alexander W. Bloedel, and Silvia Console Battilana, forthcoming in American Economic Review. We already have ten (?) percent less democracy! Of course you might think that who becomes the agenda setter has something to do with democracy, and indeed it is. But in limited, roundabout ways…at the margin it is still not very democratic.
The true nature of American polarization
Adding marital status to the mix, the GOP advantage among married men shoots up to 20 points (59% Republican to 39% Democrat) and shrinks among unmarried men to just 7 points (52% Republican to 45% Democrat).
But what most people don’t know, including everyone who works at Politico apparently, is that among married women, Republicans still maintain a sizable 14-point advantage (56% Republican to 42% Democrat).
But if Republicans are winning married men by 20 points, married women by 14 points, and unmarried men by 7 points, then who is keeping Democrats competitive?
Single women are single-handedly saving the Democratic Party. By a 37-point margin (68% to 31%), single women overwhelmingly pulled the lever for Democrats.
Any discussion of polarization really does need to put that fact front and center — why have single women become such political outliers? Here is the full piece, via i/o.
One worry I have about the costs of climate change
The size of the costs of climate change is a matter of frequent dispute, but current methods seem to leave out some important variables. In particular, how we will choose to bear and distribute our adjustment costs will bring complications and distortions of its own.
Consider, for instance, some recent economic estimates of the costs of climate change from carbon emissions. I have seen serious estimates in the neighborhood of five per cent of global gdp by 2100.
Whether or not that is exactly the right range, there is another issue at stake: it will also cost us time, energy, attention, and resources to decide how to bear the burden of that five per cent, or whatever the number may be.
In a very simple economic model, the cost of five per cent of global gdp is overcome rather easily. The global economy typically grows several per cent a year, and in good times a global rate of economic growth of three to four per cent a year is not impossible. It then seems that a five per cent shortfall can be overcome in a year or two.
If someone told you “the world won’t attain the year 2100 standard of living until 2102,” that might not sound so tragic to you. Instead it seems very far off and abstract. Who really has a very concrete sense of what to expect in 2100 anyway? Flying cars? Very cheap energy? From today’s vantage point it is hard to say. Your expectations for both 2100 and 2102 were already an uncertain blur, so having to trade one expectation in for the other makes the costs seem nebulous.
I suggest a different approach. Forget about the climate, at least temporarily, let’s say we had to play a political game where five or ten per cent of U.S. gdp is going to be redistributed from one set of groups to another. How well do we expect the politics of that dilemma to play itself out? Will those burdens fall on capital or labor, the wealthy or the poor, cities or the countryside? Should taxes go up or should other budgetary expenditures go down? You can imagine all the choices that would face us, and all the different coalitions and political battles that would result.
We encounter precisely such battles when the two parties square off over debt ceiling crises, as happened in 2011 and also this year. And what was the outcome of those negotiations? Virtually everyone agrees that America faces major medium- to long-run fiscal problems, but we haven’t agreed on what to do about them. And thus the recent debt ceiling negotiations ended up with some cosmetic adjustments to the budget and a lot of can-kicking. Whether the proposed remedy was a major spending cut or a big tax increase, it was possible to find enough legislators who didn’t want to do it.
If we end up applying those can-kicking tendencies to climate change scenarios, suddenly matters look a lot worse. Let’s say that the city of New Orleans was endangered by climate volatility. We could either incur an irreversible urban and territorial loss, or we could agree on some method of financing a remedy for the problem, typically with an associated opportunity cost.
The traditional American remedy in such situations is to borrow more money and figure out some way of paying the bill later. But will that still be viable say ten to fifteen years from now, when both fiscal problems and climate volatility are likely to be bigger issues yet? At some point the actual fiscal burden of all these decisions, including climate neglect, will need to be borne.
When the time comes, we are likely to bicker about how to pay the bills, especially as some of the can-kicking opportunities become impossible. And I fear that the bargaining process for how to confront this ultimate reckoning will itself be very costly. Political hostages will be taken, bipartisan cooperation may break down, reaching agreement may distract us from solving other problems (check out the UK history with Brexit!), and national decisions will become all the more politicized.
There is a classic problem in economics known as the rent-seeking game. In this dilemma, if say $1 million is up for grabs in the political process, how much will individuals spend trying to capture that $1 million for themselves, or alternatively trying to avoid being the patsy who loses the $1 million to someone else? One theorem suggests that we will be, collectively, willing to spend up to $1 million to fight over the $1 million allocation. Full rent exhaustion probably isn’t the right answer here, but the point is that when the stakes are large and the key policies are up for grabs, the political infighting grows correspondingly large as well.
So often we Americans are our own worst enemy, and fixing climate change may become another example of that.
My views on the UFO hearings
I found them very interesting to watch, and wrote my last Bloomberg column on them. Here is one excerpt:
I do not think that the US government has the remains of alien spacecraft, for example, including some alien bodies, as claimed by retired Air Force Major David Grusch. But the rest of the evidence was presented in a suitably serious and persuasive manner. It is clear, at least to me, that there is no conspiracy, and the US government is itself puzzled by the data about unidentified anomalous phenomena.
As for the more serious claims:
Members of Congress, to the extent they desire, have independent access to military and intelligence sources. They also have political ambitions, if only to be reelected. So the mere fact of their participation in these hearings shows that UFOs/UAPs are now being taken seriously as an issue.
The Pentagon issued a statement claiming it holds no alien bodies, but it did nothing to contradict the statements of [Ryan] Graves (or others with similar claims, outside the hearings). More broadly, there have been no signs of anyone with eyewitness experience asserting that Graves and the other pilots are unreliable.
As is so often the case, the most notable events are those that did not happen. The most serious claims from the hearings survived unscathed: those about inexplicable phenomena and possible national-security threats, not the hypotheses about alien craft or visits.
And to conclude:
I suspect that, from here on out, this topic will become more popular — and somewhat less respectable. A few years ago, UAPs were an issue on which a few people “in the know” could speculate, secure in the knowledge they weren’t going to receive much publicity or pushback. As the chatter increases, the issue will become more prominent, but at the same time a lot of smart observers will dismiss the whole thing because they heard that someone testified before Congress about seeing dead aliens.
I am well aware that many people may conclude that some US officials, or some parts of the US government, have gone absolutely crazy. But even under that dismissive interpretation, it is likely that there will be further surprises.
I thank commenter Naveen for the point about declining respectability. A broader question — which I will continue to ponder — is why it is the United States that held these hearings, rather than other nations (NB: I hope you don’t fall for that Twitter map suggesting that UAP sighting are mainly an Anglo phenomenon).