Episode 150: Shruti Rajagopalan discusses talent in India
Elucidations20 Elo 2024

Episode 150: Shruti Rajagopalan discusses talent in India

In this episode, Matt sits down with Shruti Rajagopalan (Mercatus Center) to talk about what the future holds for India.


We often have a tendency to think of the current economic and geopolitical situation as simply the way things are. Especially for people who grew up in the United States over the past 50 years, the fact that it is an economic and military superpower sorta feels set in stone. But in this episode, Shruti Rajagopalan encourages us to take the long view, regarding the current state of the US as just one phase in a decades or possibly centuries-long economic development life cycle. First, the country logs a certain number of decades as a manufacturing hub, under conditions of minimal top-down interference from regulatory bodies. This enables it to build wealth, which eventually pushes it away from being a manufacturing economy, but it’s a race against the clock. With economic growth comes a rise in average life expectancy, plus a lower birth rate, which together can lead to large aging population. Once the aging population increases, the country’s economy needs to be strong in order to accommodate all the caregiving that an aging population makes necessary.


Interestingly, it’s starting to look like some other countries—particularly India—are currently poised to undergo a similar trajectory of economic development that the US did. What makes India stand out is that among the countries in the world with a large young population, they have an unusually high GDP per capita. They also have a pretty sizeable early-career, STEM-savvy middle class that is ready to move anywhere in the world, build a life wherever they end up, and culturally assimilate.


Our esteemed guest argues a) that the relaxation of economic restrictions which took place in India in 1991 made this siutation possible, and that b) a few conditions still need to be met for the future to unfold in the optimal way. One is that India needs to build up its manufacturing sector that the country can get richer before the population gets too old. Another is that other countries need to take advantage of the fact that India’s young workforce is ready to emigrate. She even suggests that wealthier countries with a rising elderly population, low birthrate, or declining heritage language could perhaps address those issues by welcoming an incoming population of young workers from India.


Join us as our guest outlines the (hopefully) upcoming rise of India on the world stage!

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Jaksot(153)

Episode 121: Aaron Ben Ze'ev discusses the arc of love

Episode 121: Aaron Ben Ze'ev discusses the arc of love

In this episode, Matt Teichman and Julia Liu talk to Aaron Ben Ze'ev (University of Haifa) about lifelong romantic love. What is love? Is it just a private feeling that each individual person experien...

5 Joulu 201941min

Episode 120: Robin Dembroff on going beyond the gender binary

Episode 120: Robin Dembroff on going beyond the gender binary

Ever wonder what 'gender non-binary' means? Don't worry--Robin Dembroff (Yale University) is here to walk us through the relevant terminology, along with the everyday moral issues that are tied up wit...

10 Marras 201932min

Episode 119: Stephanie Kapusta discusses misgendering

Episode 119: Stephanie Kapusta discusses misgendering

In this episode, our guest argues that in addition to ordinary individual cases of misgendering, in which one person gets another person's gender wrong when they address them, there's a broader sense ...

15 Loka 201945min

Episode 118: Tyler Cowen discusses Stubborn Attachments

Episode 118: Tyler Cowen discusses Stubborn Attachments

In this episode, Tyler Cowen lays out an interesting normative ethical theory according to which we should be utilitarians, but with a twist: we should be utilitarians who care just as much about the ...

12 Syys 201952min

Episode 117: Brian L. Frye says to plagiarize this podcast

Episode 117: Brian L. Frye says to plagiarize this podcast

In this episode, Brian L. Frye (University of Kentucky) argues that we should think more carefully about our moral reaction to instances of plagiarism. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more ...

30 Elo 201938min

Episode 116: Tommy Curry discusses black male studies

Episode 116: Tommy Curry discusses black male studies

In this episode, Tommy Curry argues that if we really want to understand gender-based oppression, we have to look at how black men have been targeted for it. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for...

5 Elo 201959min

Episode 115: Katherine Ritchie discusses social groups

Episode 115: Katherine Ritchie discusses social groups

In this episode, Katherine Ritchie (CUNY Graduate Center, City College) lays out what it means to belong to a social group, and what kind of thing a social group is. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/pri...

1 Heinä 201940min

Episode 114: Sally Haslanger discusses ideology

Episode 114: Sally Haslanger discusses ideology

What is the nature of a person's political outlook? Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

14 Touko 201940min

Suosittua kategoriassa Yhteiskunta

olipa-kerran-otsikko
siita-on-vaikea-puhua
kaksi-aitia
gogin-ja-janin-maailmanhistoria
i-dont-like-mondays
poks
antin-palautepalvelu
kolme-kaannekohtaa
sita
mamma-mia
aikalisa
yopuolen-tarinoita-2
lahko
rss-murhan-anatomia
loukussa
rss-palmujen-varjoissa
rss-nikotellen
meidan-pitais-puhua
terapeuttiville-qa
mystista