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Podcast episode

Inside Project FASTT: Real-Time Payments for All – EP278

Show host Gene Tunny and the World Bank’s Nilima Ramteke delve into the transformative impact of fast payments. They discuss how Project FASTT (Frictionless Affordable Safe Timely Transactions) bridges financial gaps and drives inclusive economic development worldwide. For example, they cover how QR codes and mobile apps make digital payments more accessible for small merchants and rural communities.

If you have any questions, comments, or suggestions for Gene, please email him at contact@economicsexplored.com.

You can listen to the episode via the embedded player below or via podcasting apps including Apple Podcast and Spotify.

Timestamps

  • Introduction (0:00)
  • Overview of Project FASTT (2:28)
  • Benefits and Implementation of Fast Payment Systems (7:50)
  • Challenges in Implementing Fast Payment Systems (14:51)
  • Role of Central Banks and Trust in Fast Payment Systems (20:33)
  • Impact of Fast Payment Systems on Cryptocurrencies (25:53)
  • Conclusion (31:36)

Takeaways

  1. Fast payments enable 24/7, low-cost, secure, real-time transactions, making them vital for financial inclusion.
  1. Project FASTT provides a toolkit and support for implementing fast payment systems globally.
  1. Central banks, in collaboration with private sectors, play a key role in designing and implementing fast payment systems.
  1. QR codes and mobile apps make digital payments more accessible for small merchants and rural communities.
  1. Fast payments offer an alternative to cryptocurrencies in emerging markets, significantly where volatility and regulatory risks hinder crypto adoption.

Links relevant to the conversation

World Bank Project FASTT website: 

https://fastpayments.worldbank.org

World Bank paper on “What Does Digital Money Mean for Emerging Market and Developing Economies”:

https://documents.worldbank.org/en/publication/documents-reports/documentdetail/099736004212241389/p17300602cf6160aa094db0c3b4f5b072fc

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Transcript: Inside Project FASTT: Real-Time Payments for All – EP278

N.B. This is a lightly edited version of a transcript originally created using the AI application otter.ai. It may not be 100 percent accurate, but should be pretty close. If you’d like to quote from it, please check the quoted segment in the recording.

Nilima Chhabilal Ramteke  00:03

So the inherent characteristics of FPS is to receive funds in instantly on a 24 by seven basis for 365 days over the year.

Gene Tunny  00:22

Welcome to the economics explored podcast, a frank and fearless exploration of important economic issues. I’m your host, Gene Tunny. I’m a professional economist and former Australian Treasury official. The aim of this show is to help you better understand the big economic issues affecting all our lives. We do this by considering the theory evidence, and by hearing a wide range of views, I’m delighted that you can join me for this episode. Please check out the show notes for relevant information. Now on to the show. Hello and welcome to the show. In this episode, I’m joined by nalimah Aram Takei, a senior financial sector specialist with the World Bank’s Payment Systems Development Group, nalima brings a wealth of experience from her extensive career, including over two and a half decades at the Reserve Bank of India, where she worked on implementing and overseeing Payment and Settlement Systems. Now at the World Bank, nalima is CO leading efforts to promote fast payment systems worldwide, including project fast FAS Double T, an initiative supported by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. These fast payment systems enable frictionless, affordable, safe and timely transactions, providing critical infrastructure for real time financial inclusivity the World Bank is supporting the implementation of fast payment systems in various countries and regions, including the Gambia Mauritania, Liberia, Sierra Leone, Guinea Somalia, Central African economic and monetary community and Georgia. You can find further details via our link in the show notes. In this episode, we discuss the benefits of fast payments, their transformative potential in both developed and emerging economies, and the challenges of implementation, ensuring access to underserved populations. Before we dive in, I want to thank Lumo coffee for sponsoring this episode, economics explored. Listeners can enjoy a 10% discount on their premium organic coffee from the highlands of Peru. You’ll find the details in the show notes. Now let’s jump into the episode. I hope you enjoy it. Helena, thanks for joining me on the program.

Nilima Chhabilal Ramteke  02:34

Thank you for having me here. Jen, it’s good to be part of this podcast. Thank you so much. Yes,

Gene Tunny  02:40

no problem. I’m keen to learn about Project fast that you’ve been involved in at the World Bank. So project FA s TT, can you tell us a bit about the project, please, what it stands for and what your involvement has been, please. Nalema,

Nilima Chhabilal Ramteke  02:59

thank you, June for the question, and as you spelled out yourself first with the double T stands for missionless, affordable, safe, tangy transaction. This is an initiative support on past payments, supported by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to further accelerate the adoption of past payments worldwide, and this is an ongoing work of the World Bank over the last two and a half decades in the field of payment systems, to basically Where we are supporting jurisdictions, as the developers say, reliable and efficient national payment systems. And this comprises a bit a lot of other things, like the legal and regulatory framework, the large value payment system, security, settlement, foreign exchange. Then we have the retail payments. One of them is the past payment, then the government payments, remittances, and also oversight and cooperation. And with the new developments which are happening, we are also supporting in the FinTech, notably on the crypto, CBDCs and open Banking project fast is a comprehensive knowledge product of the past payment FPS, and it’s organized as a toolkit across four broad thematic areas. One is the flagship reports, which covering the FPS developments framework and which incorporates the lessons learned through the wide number of technical assistance projects around the world, and also the research across all facets of FPS development. And this framework actually aims to provide the holistic tool for policy makers to manage their FPS journey and conceptualize this. Nine and implement the FPS, which again, is a continuous part. Then second is the portfolio of case studies covering a wide area of diverse experiences in terms of geography, Country Profile and the key aspects of FPS developments, such as the ownership models, payment types enabled, among the few things. Then the third point, the third thematic area, is focus notes, which we call technical notes and webinars, providing technical deep dives into topics of high relevance for fast payments, such as interoperability, cross border Overlay Services, then messaging standards. These are certain things which are there. And as part of the fourth one is a global tracker for the FPS, which provides the essentials of the past payments initiatives around the world. Our aim is to use the project fast in providing technical and financial assist support and help our client countries build technical, operational and regulatory capacity to implement the state of the art, safe, efficient and low cost past payments in their jurisdiction. Also the toolkit provides guidance on the aspects that authorities needs to consider when developing a FBA system. Another important objective of this toolkit, that is the project. First toolkit is to act as a catalyst in fostering an international dialog and facilitating a concerted agenda the global FPS development by involving global stakeholders, partners, including the standard setters like the cpmi, the central and regional central banks across the jurisdictions, And also in light of the FSB and the g20 cross border roadmap. This, this helps, and if you see the project Nexus is also referring to the the our FPS tracker, as well as part of their development thing. So these are certain things, and our aim is to keep on updating this and expanding the Toolkit by capturing the latest developments and innovations which are happening in this space. Gotcha.

Gene Tunny  07:28

Okay, so it sounds like your project. This project fast. This is providing the capability, is providing case studies lessons. So the is it typically central banks in in the countries which will be implementing the fast payments. I know in Australia, our reserve bank was involved with the, I think it’s the Osco system. If this is what we’re talking about, we’re talking about the almost real time payments that occur. You transfer money straight away to someone else or another business. And then, whereas years ago, it would have taken a day or two for it to get through, it had to, had to settle who’s implementing this in the different jurisdictions. Can you give us some examples, please? Elena,

Nilima Chhabilal Ramteke  08:13

well, it depends on the jurisdictions how they want to do. VC, the central banks themselves being implementing the system. There could be the collaboration as well between the central banks and the private or it could be a private initiative as well. But definitely the the central banks play a role as the regulator and overseer of this infrastructure. So if you, if you if you see like the, if we can go to the benefits of it as well, we can talk on that, yeah. But normally, it’s not that. It is only the central banks which we implement, like the in in Australia, like you mentioned, the NPP system. It’s like a collaborative effort, and market peers are quite involved in that,

Gene Tunny  09:01

yeah, yeah, yeah, absolutely. Okay. And so what are the what are the benefits to the the fast payments? So why would the World Bank be interested? Why would Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation be interested in this? What do they see as the benefits of it? Yeah.

Nilima Chhabilal Ramteke  09:16

So, like the past payments, like the name suggests itself. It’s instant real time for rapid payments and with various name it’s called. It’s basically a reflection of our meeting our end users demand for round the clock availability, and providing, instance, availability of funds for the pay space, in the sense the beneficiaries, and which actually resonates with the time where everything is so instant and is available around the clock. So the inherent characteristics of FPS is to receive funds in instantly on a 24 by seven. Basis for 365, days over the year, and the main characteristics of past payments, like I mentioned, it’s the instant so instance availability. It’s immediate exchange of messages from the payment messages, and immediate availability of funds for the beneficiaries. It also supports, actually, a wider area of use cases as well, like the P to P payment, person to person payments, person to merchant payments, and also supports bill payments as well. And you can the governments have also used for what to say, instant payments, or payments for the benefit in times of emergencies as well, like we have seen during the time of COVID. So many governments have used this infrastructure for transferring funds the beneficiaries as a social benefit transfer as part of this, using this infrastructure, also because of the the service the FPS, not only provides access, but definitely depends on the design as well access to the banks, but also the non bank players. And this expands the coverage and and what you say, availability of infrastructure to the underserved population as well. And this helps in facilitating financial inclusion, and this is one of the objective of the World Bank and for Financial Inclusion. And that’s why, apart from other reforms, which we always do in the payment systems, fast payments is one of the benefits out of that. Yeah, and also with the the the advent of technology, the fast payments also support QR payments aliases, like you have in in in Australia, you can use your corporate ID, your email ID. So similarly, these first payments across the globe also provide a lot of support various type of aliases. Then you have the near field communication. So this gives a good user experience, which actually has helped in expansion of the usage of the past payment one more from the merchant side as well, is the the the use of QR codes which pass payments facilitate a small merchants. Does not need to have a boss terminal. You can just have a QR pasted, printed and pasted. So it’s like an asset light infrastructure which is required, so which has also helped in the onboarding of merchants and merchant accepting digital payments on the far flung areas as well. So what we see is that the fast payments deliver a lot of benefits. It also offers as a gateway to other financial services for the other otherwise excluded population, and enabling them to get access to other financial services, like the credit which they were not otherwise having access to. And also, as I mentioned about allowing small businesses are also getting on board and and it has also helped the government to better deliver their social assistance payments, especially specifically during, especially during the crisis, pandemics or national disasters, as well a good fast payment systems also infrastructure also helps in reducing the cost and times associated with international remittances. So what we have seen is that the FPS has helped in reducing uncertainty, because you get the funds immediately responding to immediacy in a increasingly digital economy, fostering interoperability and competition. That is what we mentioned about access to banks, non banks and everybody can getting a level playing field, and also because of the support of areas. We don’t need to share your credential or bank details, you can just say, share your email ID, and that’s it. So you don’t the security aspects are also taken into account. So in a nutshell, this is where we see one of the drivers for fast payments adoption as well. Yeah,

Gene Tunny  14:36

no, it’s all it’s interesting. I mean, I like that example of the QR code. I can see how that can work. And I’d like to come back to that point you made about the underserved population and how there may be you look at what infrastructure is required, and I think we can talk about that in the challenges, the the of implementation. And okay, so I want to ask now to Lima about, what are the challenges in implementing these fast or instant payments? I think you sort of alluded to some of them before, in terms of, well, what if you have a population that’s underserved? I mean, in many emerging economies, as we know, there’s a large informal economy, still many people live and work on the land. It can be difficult to to reach those, those populations also, I imagine things like, I mean, yeah, just the basic digital infrastructure. Can you tell us a bit about the the challenges of implementing the fast payments, please?

Nilima Chhabilal Ramteke  15:37

Yeah, so I think you yourself had identified a few of that. But before we go to the challenges, probably what is required would help us. Yes, sure, yeah, standing better. What is the challenges? So for implementation, pass payments, like we see for all IT related payment systems development, it actually requires, thorough market consultation and preparation to onboard all type of stakeholders that would be part of it. It also needs to leverage bodies such as the National payments of financial institution inclusion councils. So because this is past payments we are talking about, then you need to look at those aspects as well. A lot happens also on the adaption, on the design choices, because who all will be there, how the system would be, will function, so that goes as part of the design. And because we see that the requirements varies across jurisdiction, so you cannot have one size fits all approach for this. So you have to have your systems designed to meet the needs of the country, and also needs to, because it also needs the countries, needs to, or whoever is implemented, needs to have the technical capability and the conducive legal and regulatory environment and framework for supporting that. So establishing a sound and efficient governance framework is also key, which involves that you have all your stakeholders on board. And this will also include that whatever system you design should give a good experience to the users as well. The other enabling environment which is required is the adoption of the smartphones also, if the if the smartphones are not there the country, mobile feature phones also, then you need to have the channels to support those type of transactions as well. So there is a cost cutting legal provision. So to tackle that is also key to that, and such as the cyber security aspects, because you are looking at infrastructure which is totally digital, so you need to have those aspects as well as consumer protection, because you are looking at serving population which was earlier and served they may not be financially literate. So that brings us to the challenges which are there, and some of the key challenges, typically, what you mentioned about the emerging markets is about the lack of infrastructure, both the payment infrastructure as well as the enabling IT infrastructure, also the internet penetration, specifically for the rural areas, the emerging and means markets also face issues and constraints because of the private player may not be wanting to so some of these areas also, as I mentioned about the smartphone or mobile phone penetration. So that’s an important key aspect, because we are looking at the first payments, which is more mobile based access channel. Then also, one needs to look at the financial literacy aspects, which is because we are trying to see population which was earlier, not financially included so and also because the trust the system should provide, and because so far, the economy was more cash driven, so now you’re moving from cash to a digital aspect, so you need to have all this enabling infrastructure and to overcome these challenges, we see that the Developing countries need to have a multi pronged approach that addresses all aspects of digital payments ecosystem, and not only implementing the technology but also creating and enabling regulatory environment and investing in initiatives to educate the end users, this is something which. We think is there, and towards this, we see that most of the championing role is of the central banks, which is very crucial to steer these initiatives, promote the ongoing commitment of all stakeholders. If they have also taken initiative, then there needs to be a commitment and align the interest of all private as well as public, so that these are certain things. And keeping this in mind, we also have one of our focus notes, the on this championing role played by some of the Select central banks in the same

Gene Tunny  20:39

okay, we’ll take a short break here for a word from our sponsor.

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Gene Tunny  21:14

now back to the show. I mean, I guess it’d be good to talk about the central banks, because the central banks obviously play a critical role in a payment system, because the well, at least in Australia, the banks bank with the central bank, they have accounts there. They’re exchange settlement accounts. And so when there’s a when there’s a deficit from one bank to another, or when one bank has to at the end of each day. Because of the flow of funds between customers at different banks, one bank may have to transfer some money to another bank, so there’s the settlement of accounts at the end of the day, so the banks have to trust each other. So the this is what I find really interesting about this. How did the how do the banks know that, like, if someone I’m I’m a farmer, say, and I’m going to buy seed or what, some, you know, some consumables or equipment from from a merchant in town, and I make the the fast payment on my mobile phone, and I’m at a different bank from the merchant how does the Yeah, how does the Merchants Bank know that I will have the funds in my account to that so that that merchant bank will get the funds from the the buyer’s bank. So how do they know that, in real time? Is that That’s all about the it? Technology? Is it?

Nilima Chhabilal Ramteke  22:39

So this is a good question, actually, and that is the i i said, one of the benefits and trust is that the beneficiary gets the funds real time I’m making a payment, I scan the QR and I make the payment that you as a merchant would receive it immediately, and it depends on how the banks are communicating with it, but normally, most of the jurisdictions, they have gone for the immediate response to the beneficiary as well that the funds have come to your account. So this has helped in bringing the trust. But then that is on the design side as well, because on alerting, both whose account is debited, but also the account the person whose account is credited. Yes. So that alert needs to go across, but with mobile apps and all, it automatically gets updated immediately. If you are your bank is providing that service to you. So on your app, you’ll always you’ll be able to get the response of the transactions which are there. So if you see many countries, like the India’s ups as well, you are able to make payment for online purchase of airline tickets, and you can do that using your first payments. So once you give your what you say, BPA, what’s your address that is either your areas, no, like we said about corporate or email ID. Once you give that and the payment is made by the beneficiary, it immediately gives time, and it responds back to the bank that this payment has been received, and you get your airline tickets immediately issued, because of this infrastructure, which is integrated, but then that depends On the various message that flow through the system. So the merchant should be able to get the response from his bank with whom he’s banking, because once I scan the QR, I’m making a payment to the merchant. My my transaction, my account is debited, and that transaction flow this to this channel which is there, and the the merch. And receives the funds immediately, right?

Gene Tunny  25:02

So does it go from one bank to the other at the same time? Does it right? Okay?

Nilima Chhabilal Ramteke  25:11

The the, the the and that is the beauty of the system payment, real time credit on your real time credit to the beneficiary, the settlement between the banks could happen on real time, or we call at a defer net basis, depend on the design of the system so it could the settlement between the banks could happen real time, yeah, or at a designate point of time, yes. But in the end users, it’s immediate field. Gotcha,

Gene Tunny  25:39

okay, yeah, yeah. It’s all fascinating, trying to, yeah, I was just trying to figure out in my head how it must, how it must work. So, yeah, that’s great, okay, and the issue of, I find this issue of the internet and availability of that, I mean, that’s, that’s a critical part of it. I mean, mobile phones. I mean, there has been extensive mobile phone penetration through even in emerging economies, I’ve seen that. But what about the internet? I mean, does the program, I know some of this is confidential, but does project fast? Does it actually provide funding or support for connecting people to the Internet, whether it’s via actually, is it satellites or Starlink technology like that? Can you talk about that at all?

Nilima Chhabilal Ramteke  26:27

So the funding, financing of the product, a project, is for implementation of the system, but also the bank supports fraud social causes as well. So that goes as part of that social benefit, and all as part of that in some of the projects, the bank has supported the client countries as part of the not part of the project pass, but as part of the other projects where in the client countries have provided mobile instruments to the beneficiaries, so, but that that is a different channel. Totally

Gene Tunny  27:11

Gotcha. Okay, that’s fine, right? Oh, okay. And finally, I’m wondering, does does this help reduce the appeal of crypto currencies? I’m just wondering to what extent, you know, there’s a lot of buzz about crypto, and to what extent is there appeal of crypto in emerging economies, and is this something that is, this is something that is a substitute for that, or something that is will reduce the appeal of cryptocurrencies. Can you talk about that please? Yeah,

Nilima Chhabilal Ramteke  27:46

this is the good area, I think so. And yes, a lot of countries are looking at it, and the World Bank has actually published a technical note. What does digital money mean for emerging markets and developing economies. I share that link probably you can share with the and the note categorizes new digital money proposals, which includes crypto assets, and cryptocurrency is one of them, so stable coins and central bank digital currencies, the note also assesses the supply and demand factors that may determine in which countries these innovations are more likely to be adopted, and it compares actually the digital innovations such as mobile money, retail, fast payment systems, new products By incumbent financial institutions and new entrants, such as specialized cross border transport operators as well. So when we talk about crypto assets, actually, they suffer from various impediments, including high price volatility and scalability challenges, which actually prevents them from being adopted as a mechanism, as a mainstream means of payments or store of value, and much less unit of account. And this is, as per the BIS paper, 2018 I can share that link as well. And many jurisdictions have also banned the use of crypto, also due to these, these issues, but also from the angle of AMS, CFD aspects as well the other now we’ll hear more about stable coins, which has entered the free and more stable coins actually attempt to maintain a stable value relative to the fiat currency, or the basket of fiat currencies, which which they identify and but stable coins also face various challenges and post news new type of risk, particularly in the emerging and developing economies, though some of the countries have begun to accelerate. Their investigations, we see that some of the countries have started investigation into cbdc for consumers, central bank digital currency for consumers, but however, a new digital equivalent of cash, which is cbdc, also raises various challenges for the emerging markets and developing economies. We see that the research is ongoing, but it’s not yet clear whether cbdc are necessary or desirable for all jurisdictions. And when we look at this in a holistic manner with see it is it is seen that fast payments serve the payments needs of the people, and the other argument in favor of FPS is that it’s key to the needs of the bulk of the end users, because it also supports different type of use cases and the ease of with which it can be used, and also because of the cost consideration and convenience it provides, also fast payments have sort of put in place. Many jurisdiction have put in place fraud mitigation measures, consumer redressal measures as well, which could be a point in placing FPS over crypto and reducing the appeal of crypto, while we know that crypto caters to a different user base then so although and the appeal is still there for a different reason For the different

Gene Tunny  31:39

Yep, fair points. Okay, very good. Well. Nalima, thanks so much for this overview of project fast. I think, yeah, I’ve learned a lot, actually, about what’s going on and the issues with these fast or instant payments. I think that’s been that’s been really great. Is there anything you think we missed? Anything that’s worth reiterating before we wrap up, please.

Nilima Chhabilal Ramteke  32:02

Yeah, I would, I would like to, once again say about thanks for having us. And I would like to share the link of the fast payments as well, probably because this has a good publication on the past payments, on the focus notes, as well as the research which has gone into that. And people who are interested in the subject would also benefit out of this. So yeah, absolutely.

Gene Tunny  32:25

I’ll share that in the show notes. Okay, malema, thanks so much for for joining me this episode. I’ve I’ve really enjoyed the conversation. I’ve learned a lot. So thanks again. Thank you so much for having me. Thank you, righto. Thanks for listening to this episode of economics explored. If you have any questions, comments or suggestions, please get in touch. I’d love to hear from you. You can send me an email via contact at economics explored.com or a voicemail via SpeakPipe. You can find the link in the show notes. If you’ve enjoyed the show, I’d be grateful if you could tell anyone you think would be interested about it. Word of mouth is one of the main ways that people learn about the show. Finally, if your podcasting app lets you, then please write a review and leave a rating. Thanks for listening. I hope you can join me again next week. You

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Credits

Thanks to the show’s sponsor, Gene’s consultancy business, www.adepteconomics.com.au. Full transcripts are available a few days after the episode is first published at www.economicsexplored.com. Economics Explored is available via Apple Podcasts and other podcasting platforms.

Categories
Podcast episode

Bang for Your Buck in Economic Development: Access to Town Water, Roads to Connect Isolated Communities w/ Kate Schecter, World Neighbors – EP273

Kate Schecter, CEO of World Neighbors, returns to the show and reveals how empowering local communities leads to long-term self-sufficiency in developing economies. She explains that roads connecting isolated communities to local markets can massively improve opportunities. She also explains that even modest interventions, like access to municipal water, can have profound impacts. From disaster preparedness in Indonesia to sustainable farming in Africa, Kate illustrates how World Neighbors helps communities build resilience.

If you have any questions, comments, or suggestions for Gene, please email him at contact@economicsexplored.com.

You can listen to the episode via the embedded player below or via podcasting apps including Apple Podcast and Spotify.

About this episode’s guest: Dr Kate Schecter

Kate Schecter, Ph.D., joined WN as President and Chief Executive Officer in June, 2014. Dr. Schecter is responsible for managing World Neighbors’ programs and operations in 14 countries in Asia, Africa, Latin America, and the Caribbean. In her previous position, she worked for the American International Health Alliance (AIHA) for 14 years.  As a Senior Program Officer at AIHA, she had responsibility for managing health partnerships throughout Eurasia and Central and Eastern Europe.  Through her work with over 35 partnerships addressing healthcare and treatment, she has extensive experience successfully implementing AIHA’s health partnership model.

From 1997 to 2000, Dr. Schecter worked as a consultant for the World Bank specializing in healthcare reform and child welfare issues in Eurasia and Eastern Europe.  She taught political science at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor for four years (1993-1997).  She has written extensively about healthcare in post-Soviet states, and has made three documentary films for PBS. Over the past eight years at World Neighbors, Dr. Schecter has authored or co-authored 21 articles about the challenges of international development in very poor rural countries, the impact of climate change, and how to help alleviate mass migration through effective international aid.

Dr. Schecter holds a Ph.D. in political science from Columbia University and an M.A. in Soviet Studies from Harvard University. She is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and served on the Board of Children’s National Medical Center in Washington, D.C. from 2010 to 2018.

Timestamps for EP273

  • Introduction (0:00)
  • World Neighbors’ Geographical Reach and Recent Developments (2:34)
  • Improving Climate Resilience in Agriculture (6:03)
  • Disaster Preparedness and Community-Based Approaches (9:57)
  • Connecting Communities with National and Regional Administrations (14:05)
  • Funding and Operational Efficiency (23:21)
  • Impact and Future Plans (27:08)
  • Conclusion and Final Thoughts (29:24)

Takeaways

  1. Infrastructure can be transformative – Building a simple road or bridge can unlock market access for rural farmers, dramatically improving incomes and food security.
  2. Local savings and credit groups empower communities – These groups help farmers and entrepreneurs access capital for investments without relying on exploitative lenders.
  3. Disaster preparedness saves lives – Teaching communities to plan for floods, earthquakes, and other disasters helps them recover quickly and with fewer casualties.
  4. Indigenous crops can boost resilience – Reviving traditional drought-resistant crops helps communities adapt to climate change and maintain food security.

Links relevant to the conversation

Kate’s previous appearance on the show:

https://economicsexplored.com/2022/05/23/economic-development-through-savings-and-credit-groups-w-world-neighbors-ceo-kate-schecter-ep140/

World Neighbor’s website:

https://www.wn.org/

Francis Fukuyama’s book Trust:

https://www.amazon.com/Trust-Social-Virtues-Creation-Prosperity/dp/0029109760

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Full transcripts are available a few days after the episode is first published at www.economicsexplored.com.

Transcript: Bang for Your Buck in Economic Development: Access to Town Water, Roads to Connect Isolated Communities w/ Kate Schecter, World Neighbors – EP273

N.B. This is a lightly edited version of a transcript originally created using the AI application otter.ai. It may not be 100 percent accurate, but should be pretty close. If you’d like to quote from it, please check the quoted segment in the recording.

Kate Schecter  00:03

The government built a road, and all of a sudden they were able to bring their crops down from the mountain and sell at very good prices. And I’ve seen that happen all over the world. You know, just one small new road, one new bridge, something that helps link these isolated communities can change everything.

Gene Tunny  00:33

Welcome to the economics explored podcast, a frank and fearless exploration of important economic issues. I’m your host, Gene Tunny. I’m a professional economist and former Australian Treasury official. The aim of this show is to help you better understand the big economic issues affecting all our lives. We do this by considering the theory evidence and by hearing a wide range of views. I’m delighted that you can join me for this episode. Please check out the show notes for relevant information. Now on to the show. Hello and thanks for joining me in this episode. I’m excited to welcome Dr Kate Schechter, the President and CEO of world neighbors, an international development organization. This is Kate’s second time on the show, and I’ll put a link to a previous appearance in the show notes. For nearly 75 years, world neighbors has been helping communities in Africa, Asia and Latin America. It’s been helping them build resilience and self sufficiency. Kate is going to share valuable insights into how local savings and credit groups, sustainable farming practices and disaster of proudness empower people in some of the world’s most vulnerable areas. We’ll discuss how even a small investment like building an access road or connecting the village to municipal water, how they can significantly transform lives by creating economic opportunities and improving well being. Before we get started, I want to give a quick shout out to our sponsor, Lumo coffee. This top quality organic coffee from the highlands of Peru is full of healthy antioxidants. As a listener of economics explored, you can get a 10% discount. Details are in the show notes. Now let’s jump into the conversation. I hope you enjoy it. Hey, checta from World neighbors, welcome

Speaker 1  02:19

to the program. Thanks for having me. Gene it’s

Gene Tunny  02:23

good to catch up. So you’re on the show. Back in 2022 if I remember correctly, we learned about the work you do in emerging economies with the savings and credit group. So I mean all over the world, really. I mean play is it Nepal and Indonesia? Could Can you tell us a bit about that? And am I right that you’ve got that broad geographical reach we

Kate Schecter  02:46

do? Yes. We are in 14 countries, Africa, both in East and West Africa, and we’ve added Malawi since I spoke with you last. And we are in Asia, in South Asia, in Nepal and India, Southeast Asia in Indonesia and Timor Leste and in Latin America and in Haiti in the Caribbean. So we really, we cover the globe,

Gene Tunny  03:15

right? Okay, and so what have been the big development since, uh, 2022 so what have been some of the significant projects you’ve worked on in the last couple of years. Kate,

Kate Schecter  03:25

well, there’s, there’s more and more of a focus on climate change. Of course, just as as the more developed countries are facing extreme weather. Well, of course, these other countries are as well. And in the case of these subsistence level farmers, it can be very, very devastating. So we’re doing a lot of work to mitigate the impact of climate change through both working on planting a lot of trees and working on creating barriers for situations like flooding or landslides, of course, trying to have more drought resilient crops all around the world, going back to a lot of crops that were abandoned because they were considered kind of local and indigenous, but are actually more resilient in many cases and also very nutritious. Spending a lot of time now on maternal child health. You know, it were post we like to think that we’re post pandemic at this point. So really learn, trying to learn lessons from that about maintaining health, improving health, having more screenings for for the communities, and making sure that women are getting better anti and prenatal, prenatal and postnatal care. So really, the gamut the world neighbors approach. Approach is what we call a holistic approach. We don’t focus on one particular sector. We believe that if we want these communities to really be self sufficient, and we’re putting a big investment into them, we work with them and train the farmers and the communities for up to 10 years, we really want to walk away feeling confident that they will continue to be self sufficient on their own. So all of that is going on, but I would say there’s more and more of a focus on preparing for disasters and dealing with the impact of climate change.

Gene Tunny  05:38

Yeah, gotcha. And you mentioned drought resilient crops. So what does what does that look like? What types of crops are you talking about?

Kate Schecter  05:48

Well, we’re trying to make sure that crops will produce more. So you don’t want delicate crops that you know only that you you plant them and you only get one, one sort of product out of them. For example, there is, there’s a type of kale that we’re growing in East Africa that continues to produce leaves and and nourishing, you know, products for eight months, so the same plant keeps going. So everything we’re doing is really focused on trying to create nutritious food, food that will produce longer might, you might be able to have two or three crops a year, and also, you know, resilient to drought or flooding, and in cases where we have situations where there are floods, we also are teaching the farmers to grow crops that that that grow quickly. Beans are a good example. They grow very quickly, so you get them in the ground, and a couple weeks you’ve got you’ve got your vegetables. So all of these things are going on at the same time. Of course, the focus is on food security, getting people more food, healthier food, making sure that people have at least two nutritious meals, if not three nutritious meals a day, and that they have year round food. I mean, one of the biggest problems is, you know, there’s sort of this cycle of feast or famine, and we want to level it out so that people have food all year round.

Gene Tunny  07:33

Gotcha. Gotcha. One thing that comes up in economic development or or you hear about is this concern about the seeds that are being sold by the big the big suppliers, and I think one of the companies that used to be the accusations level against was Monsanto. And is it the case that you keep having to buy new seeds, that there’s some licensing or there’s some intellectual property issue. Is that an issue in economic development? Kate, Oh,

Kate Schecter  08:07

absolutely. It’s a big issue, and it’s problematic because many times these farmers are given seeds by big corporations, and the initial crop can look really fantastic, yep, but it can then damage the soil, and then the subsequent crops are either don’t really happen or are not very good. So one time I was in Haiti when Haiti was still safe enough to visit, and one of the communities started talking about Satan seeds, yeah, yeah, they were talking about Monsanto seeds. So we have spent a lot of time working with the communities to make sure that they are always growing new seeds. There are a lot of communities that have created seed banks so that they’re sharing the seeds and and making sure that they’re, you know, always providing for the next season. Also doing a lot of experimentation with seeds to, you know, again, find the most resilient and the most productive, for example, with corn and and also preservation. A lot of work on preserving the seeds, making sure that they’re good for the next season, but also preserving crops, you know, in in storage, that is, containers that are not going to allow for rotting or, you know, loss of the product.

Gene Tunny  09:39

Yep, gotcha. Gotcha, right? You mentioned, I mean, climate change, there’s a lot of focus on that, and so investments in the community. So there’s the drought resilience you’re talking about. What are some other other ways you’re preparing communities for climate change? Could you go into some of the this? Pacific side, please. Kind Well,

Kate Schecter  10:01

we are creating in these communities a plan, but disaster preparedness plans, okay? And that entails one of the things I haven’t really mentioned is that we don’t have a lot of full time staff. The way we operate is that we work with local community based organizations, and we help those groups to create good governance around their organization, their local organizations, you know, to teach them to have good leadership and to to really create a community based approach to all of these different things that we’re talking about, and in doing that, we are also helping them to prepare for the worst. Many of these communities face yearly flooding or yearly droughts, and so instead of it being a big shock, and, you know, not being prepared at all, we’re trying to figure out ways to be prepared to handle it well, and also to help neighboring communities so that you don’t have, you know, if one community is okay and nobody else is, it’s not going to it’s not going To work out very well. So all of that entails a lot of training, providing some drills to, you know, kind of act out what could happen in certain cases. And in, for example, in Indonesia, where we have been working for many years, we have been very successful in helping during some of these very difficult natural disasters. There were, there was a series of earthquakes five or six years ago, years ago in Sumbawa and a couple of islands near Bali. And we, where we work and our communities were prepared. They had a plan, and they were able to immediately identify people who needed help and to and to really mitigate the impact of the earthquakes, because they had thought ahead, right.

Gene Tunny  12:18

Okay, so what? What’s thinking ahead, involved where to evacuate and how to get emergency medical assistance. Yeah,

Kate Schecter  12:26

where to go, if you know if there’s danger of a tsunami or an earthquake, thinking about a sort of plan for how to deal with the injured. If you know, if the hospitals and the clinics collapse, and just having, you know, assigned roles for people so that there’s not this kind of level of chaos where nobody knows what to do, so that Whole disaster preparedness is very important, buildings, homes and and and, you know, fields with terracing and different types of patterns to prepare for the possibility of landslides or flooding and to mitigate that, all kinds of different techniques that are emerging around the world to help people, especially people like this, who are living on the land, who are very exposed to to, you know, anything that might happen with a natural disaster. But as we’ve seen, you know, even in urban areas, you can’t always be ready and or protected. I mean, the tragedy of Los Angeles, I think, just shows that even in the most you know, wealthiest and most kind of you know, people who were who were not living on the land and weren’t so dependent on the land, they still were terribly impacted by a natural disaster.

Gene Tunny  14:05

Okay, we’ll take a short break here for a word from our sponsor.

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Gene Tunny  14:39

now. Back to the show. One of the things I’ve found out, or I think your colleague, John, sent me some information about some about some work that you’ve been doing in Nepal, and he mentioned that it’s. Uh, private organizations, I suppose, like, well, neighbors that that can connect some of these communities, like some of these communities are actually disconnected from the national or regional administrations and and organizations such as yours can actually help connect them and help, you know, actually get some of the assistance delivered, which I thought was, I think it’s a good point. And can you tell us about what’s been happening is, is it the ganja or ganja farmers group in Nepal, please. Okay,

Kate Schecter  15:30

well, this, that phenomenon, is, is really at work all over the world, but Nepal is a very good example of it. So one of the things that we do is we try not to work under the radar of the national or the local governments. We want the government to know what we’re doing, because we want to be in line with whatever their efforts are. So we’re trying to build on those as opposed to kind of, you know, go off and do something that we want to do that’s not necessarily what the local community wants. We we’re definitely looking to build on past investments and to eventually hand over the work that we’ve done with the communities, to local governments and to the national government, and have them continue to support their own people. So we’re dealing with a lot of countries where rural communities often do not get support. They may be off the grid, they may not have central you know, they may not have water from their municipality. And so a big goal of ours is to be a liaison to whatever is available and and that entails, many times, just informing communities, especially women, who are, you know, often the farmers in Nepal, because many of The men go off to to to send home remittances from, you know, working in the Gulf states. So you have a lot of communities in Nepal that are primarily women, and then they may be undereducated or completely illiterate, and they don’t know about benefits that they may be eligible for. So a big role we play is just informing the governments about what we’re doing and informing the communities and making sure that people get the benefits that they’re eligible for. In India, we work in Bihar, which is one of the poorest states. It’s in northern India. And again, we’re working with large groups of primarily illiterate women. Many of them are from the Dali class, which is our cast, which is the untouchable caste, and they just don’t even know about a lot of the things that they’re eligible for. So, you know, in an ideal world, we’re there. We we sort of get the ball rolling. We do all this training, we get people, we develop capacity, and in the communities, we help people start their own businesses, and then we hand it off to the local governments so that they can continue to keep all of this, going,

Gene Tunny  18:22

Yeah, gotcha, yeah, gotcha. And it looks like this example with this farmers group. So the 23 farmers and you help them set up a savings and credit group. So they this is something we talked about last time. They contribute small amounts of money each month, and then that capital that’s used to make loans to members at very low interest rates, and then they invest in in equipment that, or whatever they need to to boost their productivity, their agricultural productivity, or whatever they’re doing in their business. And then they have the regular loan repayments. And that goes back to that, that fund, and what I found interesting is that that group, they were unaware of some of the programs that could help them to buy or to fund those, those investments, and you you help them, you know, finding out some of that information, getting access to, I think there’s a subsidy for mulching plastic. There’s a subsidy for a mini tractor. So I think that, yeah, that’s that looks like. It’s really valuable work being able to help these communities tap into that. So are there any other examples of that, Kate, that come to your mind?

Kate Schecter  19:34

Yeah, so we, we’re doing that also in India. So you, you see that there are subsidies all over the world for farmers, you know, to for equipment and seeds and things like that. In addition, many times, there’s more health care available bull than people realize. So we’ll go into these communities. And women are not getting pre and postnatal care, and all it takes is letting them know about local facilities that they have access to, and they just simply don’t even know about it. Sometimes, again with water, we might be simply finding out about municipal water sources that could be brought to their communities with just the knowledge that that is that that is a benefit, that they are eligible for. Electricity is the same thing I’ve gone to visit. You know, some of the ward the ward managers in Nepal, and many times, they just don’t even know about what’s going on in these very isolated communities, and they’re excited to help them, because, of course, it helps their reputation to to help out the communities and for everybody to do better. Well, there’s a great example of a situation where there was a Dalit community, untouchable community, that lived on the other side of a river, and they built this really rickety wooden bridge, which I refused to try to even cross, because it was too scary. But they so they build this bridge. And every year the bridge would get washed away when the, you know, when it was heavy rains. And all we did was connect them with the local municipality, and together, they raised enough money to build a solid, you know, very safe suspension bridge with with a metal suspension bridge that I was willing to cross over. I mean, it just, just building a road or building a bridge, getting help from, you know, local government that they that they may not know about, it can change everything. Another great example was in Timor Leste. I went up into the mountains of in in which is this very isolated part of Timor Leste. And we get there, and there’s a whole, you know, group that’s very excited to meet with us, and the leader stands up and he says to this year, we saved $36,000 in our in our savings and credit groups. And I thought, Oh, where are they keeping that money? That’s a lot of money. And they said, the reason they have raised so much money is because the government built a road, and all of a sudden they were able to bring their crops down from the mountain and sell at very good prices. And I’ve seen that happen all over the world. You know, just one small new road, one new bridge, something that helps link these isolated communities can change everything.

Gene Tunny  22:56

Yeah, yeah, absolutely. It’s It’s so true. It’s so true getting that mobility and and that helps people connected. It helps economic activity. Yeah, absolutely

Kate Schecter  23:05

poor. I mean, they also have to have the knowledge and capacity to, you know, get the trucks and get the product to the market on time, etc, etc. But, but that one, you know, key factor, can really change things?

Gene Tunny  23:21

Yeah, absolutely. And Kate, where does the funding come from? Is it private philanthropy? Is there some some funding from international financial institutions? Where does the funding for your work come from? Our

Kate Schecter  23:34

funding is, is very diverse. We have a number of family foundations that have been giving to world neighbors for many, many years. We are about to have our 75th anniversary in 2026, and some of these families have been giving for 75 years. So it’s, it’s both private donations we get. We also get grants from several corporate foundations. Starbucks Foundation has been giving to world neighbors now for 10 years in primarily in Latin America. And then we also have individual donations, people around the country, primarily in the United States, some foreign donations, but primarily United States, and we’ve also received some grants from international foundations. Again, primarily our grants have come from us foundations, right?

Gene Tunny  24:35

Yep, yep, yep, absolutely. And you were founded in your headquarter in Oklahoma City is that rod and you’ve, you’re sorry, that’s

Kate Schecter  24:42

right. We keep our headquarters in Oklahoma City, where world neighbors was founded. We’re the only organization of our kind there, and so, you know, that makes us quite unique. We have a very strong base of support in Oklahoma. Both in Oklahoma City and in Tulsa. And I speak a lot. There’s a lot of universities in Oklahoma, and young people are very eager to learn about what we’re doing. So I speak at a various different universities throughout the state and in Texas as well. So it’s kind of it kind of defies the stereotype of Oklahoma and Texas as being kind of, you know, not as involved in international development as the east coast or the west coast. There’s a very strong interest and desire to be considered, you know, global citizens in Oklahoma and Texas,

Gene Tunny  25:42

yeah, yeah, no, it’s very good. There’s this idea of donor fatigue, or because there was a lot of skepticism about how official development assistance, how far will foreign aid, and whether it actually achieves its outcomes, or concerns about corruption. You know, money being wasted, money leaking. I mean, like in Indonesia, you’d be aware there are studies of, like, losses on World Bank road projects. They did some study in East Java and concluded that on one project at least, at least 20% was lost in corruption or something like that. I mean, just like, it’s really bad, you know. So people are concerned about that. How do you go about like when you’re talking to potential donors? How do you try to allay or sort of mitigate those concerns that people have about where development assistance goes? We

Kate Schecter  26:34

have all funding come to the United States, which is highly, highly regulated, yeah, so that, you know, we are in control. We’re a small organization compared to many others, and we are, you know, we’re extremely careful because we are. We’re working in places that have a reputation for being highly corrupt. So there’s very little cash. You know that we’re, of course, we’re paying our staff. We do give small sub grants to these community based organizations so that they can, you know, pay trainers and things. But compared to many organizations we’re, you’re getting a lot of bang for your buck from World neighbors. Yeah, we’re reaching, you know, hundreds of 1000s of people. We estimate that over the 75 years we have, we’ve had an impact on 29 million people. We, you know, the numbers are big, but the the actual operation is, is very streamlined and, and so, you know, you don’t have these, this huge bureaucracy where things can get a little bit fuzzy sometimes. And so, you know, that’s a big way to control the costs. We have a very good ratio of 87% of the funds that we get from various different, you know, from donors and from foundations, etc, goes to program. So we really have a pretty low overhead um, and we’re trying to always make it even better and and that way where, you know, the money is getting spent on what it’s supposed to be spent on, and not on expensive cars and fantasy offices. Yeah, most of us work from home at this point. Yeah. You know, that was actually kind of a challenge for me, because when I first got to world neighbors, and I saw that, you know, the two cars and and a nice office and everything. And I thought, no, no, this is we really got to cut back on this culturally. That was that was not easy in certain places where people just had a very hard time adjusting to the idea that they weren’t going to have an office where they could invite people for coffee, and then they weren’t going to have, you know, sort of this fancy place to to meet people. And, of course, now you know now that COVID has happened, and so much has changed. Everybody’s adjusted very well, but, but, but it took some time in in certain places where people just culturally, didn’t like the idea that that they were going to have to work from their homes.

Gene Tunny  29:25

Yeah, yeah. Well, okay, look, thanks for the update. This has been really interesting.

Kate Schecter  29:30

I really appreciate you, you know, coming back and your interest in the work we’re doing. It’s always, it’s always a pleasure to talk to you and to kind of delve into some of the these difficult issues. So thank you. Oh,

Gene Tunny  29:43

no problem. Kate, well, I mean, I’ve done, you know, I occasionally do work with Indonesian finance ministry or Baptist, and, you know, it’s some capability building courses. And, I mean, I just find it fascinating learning about the challenges they face and just real. Seen. I mean, there are things we take for granted here in developed economies, such as the ability of a functioning payment system and all sorts of things that they often come up that are impediments to, like the lack of these things in those countries. So I always, always find it fascinating learning.

Kate Schecter  30:20

Yeah, many years ago, when I was working on my dissertation, I looked into this question of trust. And there’s a wonderful book by Francis Fukuyama called trust, yeah, about how do developed economies create trust? You know, how can you, how can how can you sign a contract and be confident that it’s, it’s a legal document that you can rely on, and I’ve always thought about that as we, you know, go around the world and contract for consultants and things that it’s, it’s much shakier in some of these other places. Yeah,

Gene Tunny  30:59

yeah. Absolutely. Okay, Kate, check this. CEO, well, neighbors, thanks so much for your time, and look good luck with everything. And hopefully we can catch up again in the future and find out some more of the great work you’ve been doing.

Speaker 1  31:13

Thank you so much. Gene, you take care. You too. Thanks. Kate, bye,

Gene Tunny  31:19

righto, thanks for listening to this episode of economics explored. If you have any questions, comments or suggestions, please get in touch. I’d love to hear from you. You can send me an email via contact at economics explored.com or a voicemail via SpeakPipe. You can find the link in the show notes. If you’ve enjoyed the show, I’d be grateful if you could tell anyone you think would be interested about it. Word of mouth is one of the main ways that people learn about the show. Finally, if your podcasting app lets you, then please write a review and leave a rating. Thanks for listening. I hope you can join me again next week. You

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Credits

Thanks to the show’s sponsor, Gene’s consultancy business, www.adepteconomics.com.au. Full transcripts are available a few days after the episode is first published at www.economicsexplored.com. Economics Explored is available via Apple Podcasts and other podcasting platforms.

Categories
Podcast episode

From Academia to Impact: Transforming Workplaces w/ Achyuta Adhvaryu, Good Business Lab – EP251

This episode delves into the work of Good Business Lab (GBL), co-founded by Professor Achyuta Adhvaryu. GBL focuses on innovative workplace interventions to improve worker well-being and firm productivity, and it typically evaluates these interventions using Randomized Controlled Trials (RCTs). Show host Gene Tunny and Ach discuss the effectiveness of soft skills training programs and the importance of worker voice in creating a more engaged and productive workforce. They discuss methodological issues regarding RCTs and whether the Hawthorne effect is a concern. Ach is Tata Chancellor’s Professor of Economics and Director of the 21st Century India Center at UC San Diego.

If you have any questions, comments, or suggestions, please email us at contact@economicsexplored.com  or send a voice message via https://www.speakpipe.com/economicsexplored

You can listen to the episode via the embedded player below or via podcasting apps including Apple Podcast and Spotify.

About this episode’s guest: Professor Achyuta Adhvaryu

Achyuta Adhvaryu is the Tata Chancellor’s Professor of Economics at the School of Global Policy and Strategy and is the inaugural director of the 21st Century India Center at UC San Diego. Adhvaryu’s research interests are in development economics, organizational economics and health economics, and his experience in organizational development make him well-suited to lead our new center. Prior to this role, Adhvaryu was a professor at the University of Michigan and an assistant professor at the Yale School of Public Health.

https://gps.ucsd.edu/faculty-directory/achyuta-adhvaryu.html

What’s covered in EP251

  • Introduction. (0:00)
  • Achyuta’s Early Career and Research in East Africa (1:53)
  • Historical Examples of Private Sector Impact (17:03)
  • Good Business Lab’s Approach and Findings (21:45)
  • Methodology and Measurement of Impact (37:56)
  • Hawthorne Effect and Replication of Findings (43:33)
  • Economic Development and Convergence (49:44)

Takeaways

  1. Soft skills training can significantly improve productivity, even in blue-collar settings.
  2. Worker voice, when effectively harnessed, can reduce turnover and absenteeism while boosting productivity.
  3. Good Business Lab demonstrates the practical value of academic research when applied to real-world business challenges.
  4. A growing body of evidence supports the integration of worker wellbeing initiatives into business strategies globally.

Links relevant to the conversation

Good Business Lab:

https://goodbusinesslab.org/

UC San Diego 21st Century India Center that Ach directs:

https://india.ucsd.edu

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Transcript: From Academia to Impact: Transforming Workplaces w/ Achyuta Adhvaryu, Good Business Lab – EP251

N.B. This is a lightly edited version of a transcript originally created using the AI application otter.ai. It may not be 100 percent accurate, but should be pretty close. If you’d like to quote from it, please check the quoted segment in the recording.

Achyuta Adhvaryu  00:03

You know, Morton Salt did this purely through competitive forces. They wanted to stay in business again. They said, Hey, we better get on board with this thing. And it turns out, you know, they were able to solve a huge public health issue.

Gene Tunny  00:22

Welcome, to the economics explored podcast, a frank and fearless exploration of important economic issues. I’m your host, Gene Tunny. I’m a professional economist and former Australian Treasury official. The aim of this show is to help you better understand the big economic issues affecting all our lives. We do this by considering the theory evidence and by hearing a wide range of views. I’m delighted that you can join me for this episode. Please check out the show notes for relevant information. Now on to the show. Hello and welcome to the show. This episode features a conversation with Professor Arch advaio from University of California San Diego arch is the co founder of good business lab, a non profit dedicated to improving worker welfare and firm productivity through innovative interventions. According to the lab’s website, worker well being is good business. We believe that building the business case to support better conditions for workers is the most sustainable way to transform labor markets and enable everyone to reach their economic potential and live a dignified life. Hutch shares his fascinating journey from his early work in East Africa studying healthcare delivery to his current focus on leveraging the private sector to drive positive change. He discusses the lab’s groundbreaking findings, such as the significant productivity gains from soft skills training for garment workers and the importance of empowering workers through improving worker voice, the ability of workers to communicate issues and concerns to management. This conversation offers valuable insights at an intersection of academic research, business practices and economic development. Join us as we explore how arch and his team are bridging the gap between theory and practice to create meaningful impact. One of the highlights for me in this conversation was how arch explained how his interest in economic development was stimulated by his work in East Africa, and that came about because he followed his girlfriend, who later became his wife, to the region. It’s a story that appeals to the romantic in all of us. Thanks to Lumo coffee for sponsoring this episode. This grade one organic specialty coffee from the highlands of Peru is jam packed full of healthy antioxidants. There’s a 10% discount for economics explored listeners. Details are in the show notes, as always, I’d be interested in your thoughts on this episode or others, and any ideas you have for future guests or how I can improve the show. My contact details are in the show notes. Okay, without further ado, let’s dive into the episode. I hope you enjoy it. Arch Welcome to the program.

Achyuta Adhvaryu  03:00

Nice to be here. Thanks for having me on

Gene Tunny  03:03

terrific I’m keen to learn about all the good work that you’re doing with good business lab. Before that, I’m interested in what’s your story in terms of getting to setting up the good business lab with your with your co founders, you did a PhD in Economics from Yale. Could you tell us a bit about what you studied and what led you to this work you’re doing with the good business lab, please?

Achyuta Adhvaryu  03:32

Yeah, sure, that’d be great. So I’m an economist. You know, I have never had a real job in my life. I think been, you know, college student, I went straight to grad school. They went straight to faculty jobs and and, you know, part of that pathway has always been, you know, yearning on my end to not only have impact in the academic sphere and generating knowledge and, you know, producing things that are consumed by the academic, you know, world, but also, kind of having some of my work influence policy making, influence or decisions on the ground and influence people’s lives. That was always the goal, getting into the PhD. And I realized pretty early on, when I was in graduate school and as a junior faculty as an economist, that while we often research things that are, you know, very adjacent to the real world, the sort of esoteric nature of academia and the kind of, you know, way that the knowledge production industry is structured, we’re almost encouraged not to be, you know, get our hands too dirty in the real world. Yeah. So I’ve had. You know, mentors and professors tell me, you know, don’t bother with all this policy stuff. You know, I think if your stuff gets picked up by the policy making world, that’s great, but if not, you know, that’s not what you’re here to do. We’re very strictly sort of trying to push out the knowledge frontier. And I sort of didn’t agree with that notion. And I think actually, I’m, you know, I’m not the only one who felt this way. And one kind of academic generation before me, you know, folks like Esther Duflo and Abhijit Banerjee and Michael Kramer and several others were were kind of forging this path of having one foot in academia and doing really rigorous work that’s informed by the kind of cutting edge, you know, of academic work, but also having a foot in the policy world and dedicating a lot of time and resources towards advancing, you know, policy goals. And in this case, I came to economics with a with a deep desire to impact the lives of of low income populations around the world, much like I think Esther and Abhijit and others. And I think that that journey began actually in East Africa, and a lot of my early work was around healthcare delivery to poor populations. Like, how do you sort of make that more efficient and more universally accessible, especially in kind of remote rural areas where there’s not very much healthcare access. So I was working in that space in Tanzania and Kenya and Uganda and a few other places for the first part of my career. But I think I always acknowledged that at the core of a lot of the stuff that we do as economists, there is a private sector role. So it’s not just about government delivery of policy, of policy, you know, and resources to the poor, while that is a big part of, you know, the safety net and always will be, I felt that there was an under emphasis on understanding the role of the private sector. How could the private sector be involved in delivering, you know, welfare enhancing interventions to poor populations and make their lives better. There are some great examples historically of how this has, you know, been possible, but there wasn’t kind of a clear business rationale for a lot of this, and, you know, lots of things I saw early on in the healthcare space around, you know, trying to distribute medicines to rural, remote populations through these agents who were then kind of paid, you know, and so that you might consider that a private sector framework, a lot of that kind of fell short of what I was really hoping for in academia and in the policy world, which was, can you actually generate a business case for intervening amongst poor populations? And I think that the sort of easiest way you might be able to do that is within large firms that are very labor intensive. So, you know, take your average, you know, manufacturing sector, firm, big place, employees, 1000s of people, all working back jobs, most of them being, you know, low income individuals. Maybe there’s a vested interest there for that business to take care of its workers, and maybe that can actually generate, you know, improvements in their lives that are compatible with the business, uh, functioning as well. So that’s the sort of hypothesis that I felt was under explored, both in academia and kind of in the real world, where you’re seeing more and more sort of conflict between, you know, workers and management and kind of dividing up this fixed pie, or fighting over wages, fighting over benefits and training and all that kind of stuff. You’re seeing strikes all over the world related to this that we’re sort of missing the thread a little bit on maybe there’s an area of common ground where we can all function, and what does that area look like? What are the kinds of interventions that might work? What are the kinds of interventions that have gained traction but don’t actually work? And those are the kinds of questions that I sort of becoming interested in from an academic perspective. And then to your question about good business lab, we realized very quickly, my co founders and I, who started working in this space, in a large garment firm in India, that just publishing academic work was. Just not going to do it. It wasn’t enough to actually move the needle and change the minds and the actions of decision makers who could actually generate impact. So, you know, in addition, the fact that nobody, nobody reads the work that we do, it makes up for a sort of select, you know, group of academic elite, or something like that. It’s also the case that it’s often hard to translate what we’re doing in academia and the questions we’re asking into real world, practical knowledge that can be applied, that can be used to change a policy in a firm, etc. So that’s why we set up Good Business Lab, along with another huja. And we thought, hey, you know, we’re generating some interesting insights here, but they’re going to sort of echo in the in the ether, so to speak, if we don’t really kind of devote serious resources and time and attention towards actually generating some change in people’s thinking. And so that’s sort of how we came up with the concept for the for the NGO, and it’s just grown from

Gene Tunny  11:12

there, right? Okay, geez, a lot to talk about there arch That’s fascinating. A few things I’d like to follow up on, so you ended up working in East Africa. Was that part of a research project? Was that, after you did your PhD, how did you, how did you end up in East Africa?

Achyuta Adhvaryu  11:30

Yeah, that was actually during my PhD, after, after my first year in the it was, to be honest, a little random, I knew I wanted to work in the sort of development economic space, basically the areas of poverty alleviation. I was interested. I was drawn to health care access. And I was, I was dating my wife at the time, who was just starting out, or she was doing her senior thesis in college, and she was going to do it in Tanzania. And I said, Hey, I like this girl. I’m gonna go Tanzania too. So I started blindly emailing my professors and saying, hey, I want to go to Tanzania and look at something related to health and development. What do you think? And I, you know, was fortunate enough, through a chain of emails to be connected to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention The CDC mission in Tanzania. And the head of that mission was a extremely nice man who kind of said, Hey, sure, why don’t you come over and help us with the survey we’re doing, and you know, we’ll see where it goes from there. So I said, Great, this sounds like a wonderful summer, and I get to be, you know, with this girl that I was, you know, head over heels for. So I was excited to do it. That’s the really kind of serendipitous start to the My Work in East Africa. But, you know, I grew to love it. And I think there’s, of course, so many really interesting and meaningful questions to tackle in that space around health and development, I worked in the delivery of a new malaria therapy, because malaria is obviously a huge problem in parts of Sub Saharan Africa, you know, one of the leading killers of kids Around the world. And you know, it’s entirely treatable with therapies that you know you just have to get access to them. So it’s one of these problems of last mile delivery that are both incredibly important, literally life and death questions, and also really interesting from the kind of program delivery and academic perspective of, how do you kind of ensure that all potential beneficiaries receive access? Yeah,

Gene Tunny  13:49

and what did you conclude in that project into because you mentioned before that there are issues with efficiency and accessibility. How did That’s right, yeah, What? What? What type of findings did you end up making?

Achyuta Adhvaryu  14:01

I think there are two broad learnings, one of which was kind of specific to the work that I was doing. And I was around how people learned about new therapy and choose to try it out. Because, you know, the easiest thing to do is kind of default to what you already know. And so if your kid is sick, you say, Okay, I’m gonna go to the drugstore and pick up Chloroquine, or, you know, one of these therapies that has existed for 50 years, but it’s not very anymore. But then you gotta, you know, in the case where that doesn’t work, you might take a gamble and say, hey, the, you know, government clinics got this new artemisinin based combination therapy. Why don’t I give this a shot and see how this works for my child? But kind of taking that leap of faith is costly, because government clinics are very far away from these remote, rural populations. So you know, this meant probably losing out on a couple days of work. And, you know. Walking all the way to the clinic and all that kind of stuff. So my research really was about sort of how people learn, as they kind of experiment with these new therapies, how you might learn about the effectiveness of new therapy, and in a environment where misdiagnosis of malaria was extremely prevalent. So you know, often you just say, I think you have a fever, you should go have some malaria medication. But, you know, half the time it’s not malaria. And so, you know, if you actually had good diagnosis, then you’d get much more effective adoption of treatment, which is the kind of, kind of 10,000 foot takeaway from my dissertation work. But the other thing it taught me was, again, the role that the private sector plays, inevitably, because in all of these villages, there was at least one, what they called Duka, which is like a little shop that sold medicines and is usually staffed by someone who, literally, you know, has no medical experience, no training, etc. It’s just a person who, you know, could get their hands on some meds. And maybe, you know, in a lucky case, it was a, it was a nurse or something, but usually it was somebody who just, you know, my uncle, you know, can get me these medicines. And so I’m going to sell them in the village. And they have no idea about how to diagnose kids with these kind of life threatening diseases, etc, so, you know, but they’re nevertheless that that’s the sort of like first line of defense against malaria and other important diseases, right? Because everybody’s using these guys. So how do you guys started thinking, you know, we can’t just focus on the government clinics, because those are useful, but they’re really far away. Nobody from until they’re really forced to. We really should be focusing a lot on, how do we strengthen the capacity of these guys, who are these shopkeepers and owners? Maybe make them a little bit more in tune with what works and what does and what are the newest therapies, maybe connect them to supply chains, et cetera. So that’s when the wheels started turning. The private sector being an important

Gene Tunny  17:04

player, right? Okay, okay, that’s, that’s all fascinating. And you mentioned, historically, there have been some good examples of private sector doing, you know, positive things for I’m trying to remember what, what exactly you you were saying, but I guess you, I imagine, are you talking about things, organizations like friendly societies. What type of organizations are you? Do you have in mind? Well, you

Achyuta Adhvaryu  17:28

can just, sometimes the the private sector, just doing its thing, just, you know, out there to make a profit, still, kind of tax society. So one great example that I love giving. I’ve done some work on this in an academic paper, is the story of Morton salts, the, you know, big salt company in the US. And, you know, I’m sure you’ve seen that you can, when you go to the grocery store, you can buy salt that’s iodized, which has iodine added and salt as and, you know, we’re all instructed to to buy the iodized kind because it, you know, prevents goiter and, you know, cognitive deficiency. It’s particularly valuable as micronutrient for pregnant moms, etc. So iodine is kind of a really critical to, you know, all kinds of cognitive and brain development. Turns out that most countries in the world, including the US, before the 1920s had just rampant iodine deficiency disorder and depended on where you were. So if you’re near the coast and or, you know, these iodine kind of reserves around the country, then you were okay, because a lot of the sort of plants you ate and the meat that you ate had iodine in there. But if you didn’t, for example, you didn’t eat fish, which is a great source of iodine, or you lived inland or lived in a mountainous region, Switzerland was particularly bad with iodine deficiency then, then you were just not getting enough. And so this actually prompted the government to work with, you know, a bunch of physicians and researchers who had kind of discovered this link between iodine deficiency and cognitive disorder to try to figure out, how are we going to get iodine into the population? And they concluded that one easy way was to add it to salt. It was a very simple process that you could fortify the salt with iodine. And Morton Salt was the largest salt distributor in the country at that time. And you know, the the there’s a doctor at the University of Michigan who actually convinced some local producers in Michigan to say, hey, you know, you guys have a big problem with iodine deficiency. I think it might be a competitive edge for you if you’re competing with this big name Wharton salt, if you just, you know, put iodine in your salt, and you kind of advertise the benefits of that. And. They ended up, you know, being convinced. And they went ahead and did that. And so Morton Salt had to compete with this, you know, new newfangled salt that had iodine. And so they said, Well, you know what, instead of just changing what we’re doing in Michigan, why don’t we offer I iodized salt across the country, and we’ll make it exactly the same price. It was 10 cents at the time for a canister of salt. So we, they said, you know, we’ll have the regular canister and we’ll have the iodine fortified canister, and we’ll, you know, they’re going to be on the shelf, and they’re both going to be 10 cents, and people can do what they want. And of course, it turned out, you know, through good, good messaging and marketing, they made people aware that this was actually a problem, and people chose to go with the iodized salt. It’s so cheap to fortify iodized salt that this sort of really made Morton Salt corner the market, and within a matter of basically 10 years, 15 years, iodine deficiency disorder was erased in the US, except for very remote communities. So that was just like a really wonderful story. You know, Morton Salt did this purely through competitive forces. They wanted to stay in business again. They said, Hey, we better get on board with this thing. And it turns out, you know, they were able to solve a huge public health issue that had massive implications for cognitive ability, and, you know, rates of goiter medical condition in the US.

Gene Tunny  21:29

Okay, we’ll take a short break here for a word from our sponsor.

Female speaker  21:35

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Gene Tunny  22:04

Now. Back to the show, arch. Can I ask about now Good Business Lab, so we’re up to, would be good to talk about that? So you mentioned you were studying development economics, and there was a view among some academics, or don’t get your hands dirty, but you saw that there are a lot of good insights from development economics that could be applied in the real world or some of the research that was occurring. You mentioned colleagues of yours, the flow and and Banerjee, is it? Yep, and you’ve got your your good business lab, you’ve set up this NGO or this nonprofit, and you’re looking at your, you mentioned, large firms, labor intensive, and potentially, there’s some interventions that can be undertaken to to get better outcomes. Can you tell us about some of the the work you’ve been doing with good business lab and how you’re trying to get those better outcomes in business, please.

Achyuta Adhvaryu  23:03

Yeah, sure. So that’s, you know, it’s a, it’s a big blank slate when we started out in terms of what might work, right? So I think there’s lots out there that people, you know, with reasonable amount of common sense might think, okay, if your workers are really poor and unhealthy, for example, then improving their health a little bit in the workplace might actually generate some, some gains, you know, for them, and also kind of be useful for the firm. They might they might be more productive at that work. They might be able to do more. They might be absent less. They might stick around longer. Same thing with skills, you know, it’s another big bucket. Lots of firms provide skills to workers, and the idea is that, you know, well, if you, if you make the worker more productive by providing the skills on the job, then they might generate more productivity for you, and also kind of stick around longer, etc, but a lot of these theories were kind of untested, right? So there was a lot of kind of going with your gut here in terms of what firms were doing and also what academics were advocating for, right? And the NGO sector was advocating for so we came into the space and said, Look, some of these things may actually work, and they might actually be great. Some of them may not, and might actually generate, you know, either nothing for workers or may not actually feed back into any kind of productivity or profit for the firm, in which case, let’s not spend resources on that stuff. So can we actually generate a menu of things that firms can look at and say, I want to invest in my workers in a way that benefits them, and also then in some way? Comes back to me some and affects my bottom line that we can generate. What does it look like? What are the types of interventions? So we went in on on some of the most obvious ones first. So the first kind of set of studies we did were around skilling inside the firm, and in particular, we focused on soft skills, which is actually, you know, a little counterintuitive for most people, when you’re thinking about a blue collar workforce, right? Like imagine a factory worker on a production line. What good is, you know, leadership and communication and teamwork skills and conscientiousness and all this kind of stuff that you usually think about when you are thinking about soft skills. What good is it for that worker? Right? We usually think that those are skills that white collar workers might use, that you know, a good CEO should have, etc. Turns out that, according to our research, those skills actually end up being incredibly important, even for frontline workers. And start, you know, digging a little past the surface, you sort of start to understand why. It’s because the production line is really just a large team, right? And you’ve got 50 other team members on that line, or 70 other team members. You’ve got a boss you’re communicating with. There’s lots of stuff that you need to do on that line that has nothing to do with the technical skills, like, you know, putting a car part on a car, or, you know, stitching together the sleeves of a T shirt or whatever, right? All this stuff that you know you’re doing on the on the factory floor is also related to how you know, skilled you are at communicating with your team members, right? So, if there’s a, if there’s a, you know, a block in, in the line that’s kind of slowing you down. You have to look back and say, Hey, can I help what’s the problem? How do we, you know, how do we speed things up? If there’s, you know, a problem with your machine, you have to raise your hand and talk to your boss and say, Hey, there’s, there’s something that’s stuck here. I need some help fixing this. If I’m not feeling well, I might need to raise my hand and say I need some help today. Or if I have a friend who’s not feeling well, I might tell my boss, maybe we should help out. You know my friend over there, because, you know, Gene’s not feeling well today, and he’s he’s likely to be unproductive. All of those things are soft skills. And you know that seems easy enough to do, you know if, if you went to good schools, had a good education, you know, grew up in a good community that sort of fostered those kinds of communication and teamwork and leadership skills and patience, etc, then those things are sort of ingrained in you already, but for people from low income backgrounds, that’s often not the case, right? That you know, they went to a school that didn’t teach any of that they might have. You know, not grown up in a family that encourages people to speak up and say what they’re feeling. So you know, for a variety of reasons, they’re coming into the workplace with low levels of these skills, and so just improving those fundamental skills and connecting them to the kinds of activities that that workers do in the workplace generates both kind of increases in the skills that those people have, but also feeds back into productivity. So in one program we evaluated, which is called the PACE program, which is essentially the flagship CSR corporate sustainability program for gap, the clothing company, which was kind of trying to, you know, proliferate across its supplier network all across the world, that program, which is a soft skills training program for female garment workers, generated an 18% improvement in productivity and a net rate of return because of that huge increase In productivity of about 250% after 18 months. So it was a huge, huge, you know, hugely beneficial program, both to workers who really, really thrived after taking the program and to management, because productivity went up substantially. So that was our first kind of foray into the soft skills space, and since then, we’ve run several other trials that have basically confirmed the importance of soft skills in the workplace. So we did this at a higher up level, which I can talk about more if you’d like, but that was a managerial training program we evaluated, which we developed ourselves based. On firsthand, on managers in these garment firms that we’re working in, and that also generated six or 7% increases in productivity. And given that it wasn’t very expensive, a program to implement, the rate of return was was astronomical. So the program, you know, returns about 50 or 60x in the two year period. Kind of following programs implementation to the firm, which is kind of about as good a rate of return as you’ll ever get on any intervention. So I think, through a variety of work, you know, I’m convinced, in general, that soft skills at all levels are incredibly important for workers. The other kind of bin that we’ve been working for quite some time in is around worker voice. And so this is the basic idea workers when they don’t feel heard, when they feel like I have a grievance or a concern, and I keep telling my boss about it, but he’s not listening. He’s not changing anything. Or I can’t even speak up to tell my boss about it because I’m fearing repercussions, etc. They feel disempowered, and at the best, you know, they’ll quit and, you know, move on to another firm. But at worst, you know, we see some of the worst examples of this playing out in the strikes and protests sometimes that turn violent all over the world, where workers don’t feel heard enough, and that feeling kind of just boils over and results in a lot of strife. So we kind of have been interested in this space for a long time, especially in environments where you know the union for workers is really supposed to be the megaphone, right for concern, for airing out your grievances for negotiating, you know, with with management on important things like wages and benefits. But in a lot of parts of the world, unions either don’t exist or are extremely weak. You know, they have very low membership for a variety of reasons. You know regulation, you know the court cases against them, you know the sabotage on the part of firms. You know there’s, there’s lots of, lots of, you know, bad stories about this, but basically in a lot of places, you know, you rarely see workers as part of a union. This is true in India, where I work a lot. So, you know, we started thinking about it. You know, in short of that kind of best case scenario of having a union rep that can really advocate for you. How do you kind of air out grievances in a way that kind of results in something changing about your situation. And so we did a series of trials, basically to enhance worker voice through technology. And you know, this could be as simple as just asking you how you’re feeling through a satisfaction survey, or, you know, custom a worker pulse sort of check, or it could be sort of more involved, or, you know, use more technology. For example, there are a lot of apps out there now that that help workers, you know, anonymously convey their messages to HR. So we basically tested all the above, and through a series of trials, we concluded that worker voice is incredibly important. It actually generates a lot of turnover amongst workers when you don’t have appropriate voice for your concerns, and when you provide technology or an intervention that enables people to air out their concerns, if they have them, they leave at lesser rates. They’re less likely to be absent. And in the best case scenarios, especially when you get HR really into it and incentivized to do a good job with these complaints, you can actually increase productivity as well. So you know that work has kind of taught me broadly that worker voices matters a lot, and simple interventions that encourage the voice of workers and encourage HR to respond appropriately in a timely manner can make a big difference for workers and also for the bottom line. Rod,

Gene Tunny  34:55

okay, that’s fascinating. I’ve got a couple of few follow up questions. It’s first on that worker voice one. So is it the fact that you mentioned there’s improved productivity? Is it? Do you know what the mechanism is? Is it the fact that HR resolves whatever dispute there was, or is it just the fact that the worker feels better, they’re less likely to slack off, or that, or they’ll work a lot harder, like, because you’ve got some choice into the level of work effort you put in any job, okay,

Achyuta Adhvaryu  35:28

yeah, yeah. So I think it’s a combination of those. So, you know, part of, part of the, the mechanism here is that I’m kind of more likely to reciprocate, you know, the effort that I’m you know, in terms of the sort of effort that I perceive is given to me, right? So, yeah, if I’m over here being like, Hey guys, my supervisor is, like, really yelling at me. He’s not behaving nicely. It’s not that I’ve done anything wrong, and he treats me really badly every day when I come to work and I keep telling HR this, and they don’t do anything. Ultimately, I’m, you know, kind of convinced, like nobody’s paying attention, or if they are, they just don’t care. And that’s potentially going to make me also do the same thing, like, Hey, I’m not going to, you know, put out for like, a, you know, somebody who doesn’t care, care about me, and I’m not going to sort of break my back over, over, you know, creating, you know, more production for these folks who are just not, you know, listening. And I think that that’s what generates absenteeism and turnover and that kind of feeling of not being valued. But there’s also kind of a instrumental feature of voice that I think resembles the Kaizen system, if you’ve heard of that in Toyota, sort of famous management system that Toyota uses to be so efficient in their workplaces. That’s something that you that’s a central tenet of the Kaizen system, is constant feedback and revision of processes. So there’s a constant, you know, we have an open channel from workers to say, do you guys are the ones on the ground. Sometimes we’re not gonna be able to see what the problems are and how they arise and all that. You know, you have a new model of a car in there, you’re gonna have to figure out, you know, how to attach all the parts together. And sometimes they don’t go together exactly how they should, and we have to modify things. The workers are the ones who are gonna be kind of coming up with those ideas first, and if they feed those up, you know, to management, then you can kind of change that process and become more efficient. So having that open channel, in addition to sort of just, you know, allowing workers to air out their grievances and have them be addressed, is also a method of communication within the hierarchy that allows workers to suggest things that might be beneficial or useful, and for those things to then filter up and change processes change the way that production is

Gene Tunny  38:09

done. Yeah. Okay, I’d like to ask about the you mentioned gap clothing company before the female garment workers that had a 18% improvement in productivity. PACE program, right? Yeah, PACE program, right. How do you measure this? How do you set up the like, how do you set up the study? Is it a randomized control trial? Or can you tell us a bit about the methodology please?

Achyuta Adhvaryu  38:35

Yeah, sure. So. I mean, when possible, we use the sort of gold standard for impact measurement, which is a randomized control trial. And, you know, we’re used to this in the post covid world, where we all hearing about the trials that were done on the various covid vaccines and all that, but they’re, you know, it’s pretty simple in the sort of medical setting you usually have, you know, a treatment group that’s randomly selected from a population. And given the, you know, the treatment, or the vaccine or whatever it is, we’re trying to test the impact up, and then we test that against the control group who’s randomly selected and receives the placebo. You know, in most medical cases, or, you know, something similar, that that that might generate placebo effects, but doesn’t actually like convey the the medication or the or the or the vaccine. So same thing happens when you do trials in social science research. You essentially have, you know, a treatment group who gets an intervention and a randomly chosen control group who doesn’t. And depending on the type of intervention it is, you know, you might get a placebo or not have placebo. You might have a blinded trial or not. It also depends on the setting. In our settings, you know. Being these kind of large workplace environments, we often use a method of randomization that essentially amounts to a lottery, because we’re introducing these new programs, these new benefits, and we want to test their effects. And so we often kind of say, hey, we come into these factory settings, and say we’re trying, trying this new program out. If it works, then, you know, there’s a possibility that everybody will get it. But right now, there’s not enough resources to give this, you know, intervention to everybody, so we’re going to try it out on a subset of the folks who are interested. And just to be fair, we’re going to do this totally randomly through a lottery, and so we have everybody sign up to see if they’re interested. When the people that sign up, we run a lottery, and we pick out people will be part of the treatment group, and the, you know, remainder will serve as part of the control. So that’s the sort of basic methodology we use. And it ends up, you know, being quite palatable in a lot of workplace environments, because think a lot of people buy into the idea that there’s something fair about random allocation, right, that, you know, there’s nothing that’s making, you know, you more likely to get it than I am, and that sort of thing. We’re just, there’s a limited resource, and we’re, you know, allocating it in the sort of most fair way possible that allows us to really measure impacts by controlling by tracking the outcomes of the treatment and the control groups over time, and we can figure out what sorts of impacts the program had on workplace, things like productivity and retention and things like that, as as well as you know, survey outcomes like you know or or outcomes that are relevant to workers, like their health or, you know, mental well being or satisfaction. So that’s the sort of methodology that we use. And, you know, in terms of in terms of measurement of productivity, that I think, is actually a really critical innovation that that I’m proud to say we spend a lot of time on, because we work, we tend to specifically, kind of like, focus on industries where we have labor intensive, you know, production, but, but also we can, in Some way, measure productivity really well, you know? So that sometimes is pretty easy because the firm’s already measuring it like, you know, we work a lot with the retail industry, and there’s really good measures of the items that come through a cash register. So know who’s standing at that cash register, right? Who’s working there, you can track their productivity really, really well. And sometimes it’s a little harder, like, you know, when you’re working on a production line, often the firm doesn’t really care what each particular worker is doing. They just care what the whole line is doing, right? How many T shirts came off this line? How many cars came off this line today, that sort of thing. So there is a little harder and we have to go in and do our own measurements. So we’ve installed all kinds of fancy devices to do that, including tablets and push buttons and, you know, RFIDs on and tags and all kinds of stuff. But we, you know, you know, with the end goal being, what firms really care about is productivity. So if we’re measuring productivity, we’re missing out on a big part of the story. And so that’s what we’ve devoted a lot of, you know, blood, sweat and tears to in our research. Yeah,

Gene Tunny  43:33

okay, that’s it all. Sounds great. Just wondering. Have you given any thought to this? There’s this concept of the Hawthorne effect, that people change their behavior in response to being monitored or taking part in that in a program, and that’s why, you know, it’s good to have some sort of, you know, might be good to have some sort of placebo involved, but in social science research that could be very difficult to do, how do you think about the Hawthorne effect, and how Does it affect your interpretation of your results? Is it something you’re concerned about at all?

Achyuta Adhvaryu  44:04

Yeah, that’s a great question, and we’re definitely concerned about it in most of the trials we do, and something that our academic reviewers are often concerned about when we when we are publishing the work and having it reviewed in academic journal. Because, actually, it turns out, you know, that the Hawthorne effect itself was in a factory, I think, in Hawthorne, Ohio, or something like that, right? Like it was, it was a, is a factory, you know, here in the US, where those original trials were done, and it was actually related to, like, light on the factory floors and things like that, but, but, you know, it’s a very important concept, and I think the you know, short answer is, for some outcomes, you can actually, you. You know, test for Hawthorne effects in a reasonable way. So, for example, if you’ve got a treatment group and a control group, and you know, they’re selected into this experiment, and we, you know, we ran this sign up first, and then we ran a lottery, and we are surveying everybody, you might think that even the control group is kind of changing their behavior, right? Because they’re being monitored, they’re being asked questions, etc. But we usually have that’s usually a sort of a minority of the participants of the workers in any particular factory that we’re working in, right? So doing a trial, it might be several 100 workers in the trial, not the like three or 4000 that are in the factory. So there’s lots of other workers in the factory who we are also passively seeing the outcomes for for certain things like retention, absenteeism, productivity, you know, salary, all these kind of kind of workplace stuff. And so, you know, we can actually look at them and compare them to the treatment group and the control group. To see, are our treatment control groups looking very, very different once, once we start the experiment, start measuring them. The answer, you know, across most of our trials for those kinds of set of outcomes is no, there’s, there’s really no difference in how, in the behavior of, you know, people who are not in the trial versus people who are in the trial, but in the control group or treatment group. So you know, so I think that on those outcomes, sorry, the control group, the treatment group, we hopefully see an effect over time. So those kinds of outcomes, we don’t see big evidence of Hawthorne effects, certain outcomes we can’t really test. Like, for example, if we, if we surveyed everybody in the treatment group and control group, then that might change their behavior. But we’re not surveying people outside of the two groups. So, you know, can’t really tell whether, whether that’s going to sort of like, affect things. Then sometimes there are these, like questions that you you know, survey methodology, questions that that that sort of reveal that some people, some respondents, are actually more likely to be swayed by being observed. And if you can measure that then you can look for whether the treatment effects were bigger or smaller in that group. And so, so we do that sometimes too.

Gene Tunny  47:29

Oh, good. Okay, I have to look at some of your your your papers. That sounds yeah, there’s all of these, all of these tricky methodological issues. I’m sure you’d have clever reviewers, peer reviewers, asking about a couple more questions just before we wrap up. Because this is fascinating. Oh, actually, might be three more questions. What’s the level of replication of these type of findings? Do you see other researchers replicating findings like this? Yeah,

Achyuta Adhvaryu  47:57

yeah, absolutely. So for some of the work that we’ve done, you know, the two examples I’ve mentioned, there’s been really great work that’s come out of the World Bank that followed up on our study and tried to, you know, Institute similar programs around soft skills in, for example, in factories in East Africa, because East Africa has these big manufacturing hubs as well. And similarly, actually, there’s been some work kind of in parallel to ours that looked at soft skills interventions in I believe it was German firms, German retail firms, if I’m not mistaken, and they’re also working with frontline workers. They also found, you know, pretty substantial impacts of soft skills training. There’s another really interesting trial in Togo that a bunch of World Bank researchers did on something called personal initiative training, which essentially involves a lot of soft skills. Then this was for sort of micro enterprise owners. So basically, people who are, like, selling, you know, stuff on in their carts or on the street, or, you know, in these very, very small businesses, I just usually have, you know, the owners, the the only employee, and there too, this kind of soft skills training resulted in huge gains in profit for those micro enterprises. In fact, that trial ran a horse race between soft skills training and the World Bank’s flagship business training program, and that then and beat the pants off the business training program. So that was really interesting trial, too. So in general, I think soft skills, we have really seen a huge growth in in trials and evidence on this that really complements the stuff, most of which was in the US, you know, like Jim Heckman and folks have been thinking about this for a long time in the US. Labor. Market, but hadn’t, kind of made it outside of the US. And then same thing for worker voice, tons of research has emerged right around the same time that we’ve been writing ours trials as well as kind of observational stuff in very varied contexts. There’s a great trial in Chinese auto firms that that looks at improving worker voice and finds big impacts on productivity and retention there. And then there’s a, there’s a great study on improvements in worker voice from kind of white collar firms in Denmark, and that also finds it back. So, you know, I would say in some Scandinavian country, I can’t remember, but, you know, you find very kind of ubiquitous impacts of voice as well. So some of these things I find, you know, it’s nice to see that sometimes, you know, if you do one trial, that’s sort of like it gives you sort of one data point. But then, you know, is that echoed around the world. And can you really say something more general about this? And I think that’s at least in these two domains, we’re seeing very similar findings emerging all around the world.

Gene Tunny  51:13

Yeah, I think I’ve seen that study. Yeah, maybe I can’t remember the country. It may have been Denmark, but yeah, I’m pretty sure I talked about that on a previous podcast episode to dig that out that that’s good. Yeah, yeah. So that’s that’s great. And the final question is, how do you see this as part of the whole convergence, or whole economic development catch up story? Is this a big part of it? How does it compare with other other factors, you know, technological transfer, that sort of thing, how big a part of it is?

Achyuta Adhvaryu  51:50

It was to say two things on that front. I mean, first, I actually think that, you know, a lot of the things we do are, I think, relevant, not only for, you know, workers in low income country contexts, but also low income workers, or workers that are sort of resource poor in in even in high income context. So like, you know, your average and we’ve been starting this work across, across these various contexts, Good Business Lab has an office in Colombia that has been doing a lot of work with firms across Latin America and the Caribbean, and we’re finding exactly the same issues, even though it’s a very different context, generally higher income levels than India and South Asia and East Africa. So, you know, I think you see these issues cropping up with sort of frontline workforces all over the world in terms of convergence. It’s a great question, and I don’t have a numerical answer for you, but I think my intuition is that it does play, you know, a substantial role in some of these interventions kind of do play a substantial role in the kind of, at least, when you’re thinking about productivity differences that we see across countries. Because, you know, there’s some really great work that you know, Shay and kleenow and Chad Severson and other folks have done the macro setting, looking at productivity across countries and finding these astonishing numbers like, you know, the US is something like, you know, 10 times as productive as the worker in India, okay? And even if you control for the kinds of technology that people use, and the industry and a bunch of other things, that even that residual productivity difference is like 4x the average one in India is four times less productive than in the US. And that gap is even bigger if you look at Sub Saharan Africa. So you know, then the real, sort of motivating question behind a lot of my work is what the heck is going on there? That’s crazy, right? That that, you know, even if you take away all these kind of, you know, industry specific, technology specific, capital specific differences, you still get this really low productivity. And my answer to this has been to look at the kinds of inputs that workers are getting, and managerial and organizational inputs that the firm is getting. So on both those fronts, I think that there’s kind of a dearth of for example, like the average worker in the US is going to have slightly more soft skills at baseline than the average worker in India, just because the educational system, the average manager in the US is going to have more managerial skill in the than the average manager in India. So, you know, those kinds of differences, I think, do play a big role in that convergence. If you’ve seen the work by Nick bloom and John Van Reenen. Look a lot of cross country productivity differences, and can attribute a substantial portion of them, you know, I don’t want to quote a number without looking it up, but, you know, it’s a sizable fraction can be attributed to managerial quality differences. So, and I see that as a form of skill as well for workers. So I think, you know, without getting too specific, I do think that this has to play a role. And the more we can, kind of, I think our point is that, in our work, is that sometimes you can, you know, a lot of people think, Well, look, there’s a fixed pie here. The more we give to workers that’s going to make them better off, but it’s going to leave less profit for us, right? And I don’t think that’s necessarily the case. And we’re trying to find counter examples to that intuition such that that common ground can be large enough that firms can feel comfortable living in it.

Gene Tunny  55:57

Yeah, that’s terrific. It’s good work. I’ll put a link in the show notes to Good Business Lab. Is there anything else I should link to? Any anywhere else we can find what you’re up to?

Achyuta Adhvaryu  56:10

Oh sure. Well, if you if you just link to india.ucsd.edu, it’ll take you to the other hat that I wear is that I direct, the 21st century India Center at UC San Diego, which is kind of a policy center related to economics, political science and science and technology policy on India and US India relations. So, you know, we deal with a lot of the same ideas we’ve been kind of talking about in this podcast. But broader than that, there’s lots of fantastic faculty at UC San Diego. It’s really sort of a one of a kind place when it comes to, you know, economics in India. And you can find out much more at that website, but encourage folks to to go check it out, in addition to GBL work.

Gene Tunny  57:02

Oh, terrific. Okay, I’ll have to check that out. Might have to chat sometime in the future about that work. But actually, has been terrific. I really enjoyed this conversation. Yeah, I think it’s, it’s, it’s great that you’re, you’re seeing these positive results and from programs such as worker voice and the the also the soft skills, I think, yeah, that that makes sense intuitively to me. And yeah, I’ll, I’ll make sure that I keep up to date with with what you’re up to. And yeah,

Achyuta Adhvaryu  57:36

that sounds great. Yeah, I appreciate being on and, you know, I will say I was unable, probably did not do justice to the to the breadth of the menu that we’ve been able to create. So I would check out the GBL website if you’d like you know more information, or if you’re interested in getting, you know, involved in what we’re doing. So thanks a lot for highlighting that.

Gene Tunny  57:59

Yeah, no problem. And absolutely. I mean, that’s, yeah, that’s the that’s the challenge with this sort of thing. When you when you’re doing so much good work, how do we cover it in an hour? But yeah, we might have to. I’ll have another look at it, and might have to connect with you again in the future. All the best with the work, and hopefully I’ll connect with you again soon. Thank you. Cheers, righto. Thanks for listening to this episode of economics explored if you have any questions, comments or suggestions, please get in touch. I’d love to hear from you. You can send me an email via contact@economicsexplored.com or a voicemail via SpeakPipe. You can find the link in the show notes. If you’ve enjoyed the show, I’d be grateful if you could tell anyone you think would be interested about it. Word of mouth is one of the main ways that people learn about the show. Finally, if your podcasting app lets you, then please write a review and leave a rating. Thanks for listening. I hope you can join me again next week.

Obsidian  59:07

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Credits

Thanks to the show’s sponsor, Gene’s consultancy business, www.adepteconomics.com.au. Full transcripts are available a few days after the episode is first published at www.economicsexplored.com. Economics Explored is available via Apple Podcasts and other podcasting platforms.

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Podcast episode

Charter Cities: A Public-Private Partnership (PPP) model w/ Kurtis Lockhart – EP147

In episode 147 of Economics Explored, Kurtis Lockhart, Executive Director of the Charter Cities Institute, tells us about the benefits of charter cities – cities with their own rules or charter, independent of national or subnational governments. Kurtis argues the best way to implement charter cities is via public-private partnerships (PPPs). Learn about the fascinating work the Charter Cities Institute is involved in around the world, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa, with a view to stimulating economic development and lifting millions out of poverty.  

You can listen to the episode via the embedded player below or via podcasting apps including Google Podcasts, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and Stitcher.

Here’s a video clip of Kurtis’s conversation with show host Gene Tunny to give you a flavour of what is covered in the episode.

About this episode’s guest – Kurtis Lockhart

Kurtis Lockhart is Executive Director & Head of Research at the Charter Cities Institute. Kurtis is also a PhD candidate in political science at the University of Oxford. His research examines the effect of institutional reforms on public goods provision with a regional focus on sub-Saharan Africa. At Oxford he has taught both quantitative methods and African politics. 

In the field, Kurtis has previously worked as a Research Manager for the International Growth Centre (IGC), for Warc Africa (both in Sierra Leone), and for the ELIMU Impact Evaluation Center in Kenya where he managed the implementation of several randomized control trials across many different sectors (health insurance, rural electrification, tax administration, and legal aid). Kurtis has also completed consulting projects with both Oxford Development Consultancy and with Warc Africa. He holds an MSc in Development Management from the London School of Economics where he graduated top of his class, as well as a BA in Economics and Development Studies (First Class Honors) from McGill University. 

Find him on Twitter @kurtislockhart.

Links relevant to the conversation

The Charter Cities Institute 

Podcast Archives – The Future of Development (Charter Cities Institute podcast)

Paul Romer: Why the world needs charter cities 

The Charter Cities Institute on Twitter: @CCIdotCity

Transcript: Charter Cities: A Public-Private Partnership (PPP) model w/ Kurtis Lockhart – EP147

N.B. This is a lightly edited version of a transcript originally created using the AI application otter.ai. It may not be 100 percent accurate, but should be pretty close. If you’d like to quote from it, please check the quoted segment in the recording.

Gene Tunny  00:01

Coming up on Economics Explored…

Kurtis Lockhart  00:05

As an organization, CCI’s vision is to empower new cities with better governance; to lift tens of millions of people out of poverty. So, we’re all about poverty alleviation.

Gene Tunny  00:17

Welcome to the Economics Explored Podcast, a frank and fearless exploration of important economic issues. I’m your host, Gene Tunny. I’m a professional economist based in Brisbane, Australia, and I’m a former Australian Treasury official.

This is episode 147 on Charter Cities. We’re going to learn what Charter cities are exactly, and what progress has been made setting them up. My guest this episode, is Kurtis Lockhart, Executive Director at the Charter Cities Institute, and a PhD candidate at Oxford. One important takeaway for me from this episode was the importance of having a genuine partnership with host countries. So, Charter cities aren’t seen as Neo colonialism.

In the show notes, you can find relevant links and details of how you can get in touch with any questions, comments, or suggestions. Please get in touch and let me know your thoughts on this episode, or have any ideas that you have for future episodes. I’d love to hear from you.

Right on, now for my conversation with Kurtis Lockhart on Charter cities. Thanks to my audio engineer, Josh Crotts for his assistance in producing this episode. I hope you enjoy it.

Kurtis Lockhart, Executive Director at the Charter Cities Institute, welcome to the program.

Kurtis Lockhart  01:33

Thanks so much, Gene. I’m happy to be here.

Gene Tunny  01:36

It’s great to have you here. I’m keen to learn about what you’ve been up at the institute. As an economist, this is a concept that’s I’ve been fascinated by since, I think it was Paul Romer, famous Economics Professor Nobel Laureate, if I remember correctly; he had this great TED Talk, probably about eight years ago now on Charter cities. I’ll put a link in the show notes.

To begin with, Kurtis, could you just tell us a bit about the Charter Cities Institute, please? Where’s it located, what you’re doing, what your mission is, please?

Kurtis Lockhart  02:17

The Charter Cities Institute is a 501C3. That just means a nonprofit Think Tank and nonprofit research organization. We are headquartered here in Washington, DC. There’s a Zambian office of CCI in Lusaka, that we’re really proud to have opened late last year. That now has three full time staff there, so we’re ramping up quickly there. And I can break down CCIs activities around Charter cities into a few buckets. And they’re all-around building the ecosystem for Charter cities. So, one is around just research, right? So, we provide very nerdy, longer papers on academic jargon and that you’re more e-con inclined audience members would probably resonate with, around why Charter cities are an idea whose time has come. Why they are; we think they’re convincing from a public policy standpoint, to pursue, and why we think that they could be game changers in terms of economic growth, and spurring economic development. So, that’s research, in addition to this longer, more academic oriented pieces, we also, you know, we want to start a movement, and we want people to be involved. You also need to communicate it in other forms, like blogs, like media outlets in more popular press, and exactly like I’m doing with you here today, Gene, on podcasts. So, that’s the research bucket.

The second bucket is around events; we host various events and conferences and summits. One other things that we’re really excited to do, later this fall is co-hosting a conference, a two-day conference with MIT in Boston. They have a sustainable urbanization lab there. And we’re hosting a two-day conference with them, where the first day will be focused on academics; talking about this idea of Charter cities and new city developments as a way to grapple with really rapid urbanization that we’re going to experience as a species over this century. And then the second day, we’ll be less academically inclined and more focused on practitioners and policymakers and new city developers themselves.

So, we’ll go from, the abstract and the academic on day one to the practical and the real world on day two. And I think that’s really necessary in a new space like this with a new novel idea is to get those two silos talking to each other and that’s one of the key things that we see CCI doing in terms of building the ecosystem. So, first bucket – research, second bucket – events.

The third bucket of activities that CCI engages in, is around technical assistance and partnerships. So, engaging in and providing advisory to new city projects on the ground to get these things built in thriving new Charter cities out there in the real world.

Gene Tunny  05:24

Great. I mean, I’m keen to learn about new cities being built. And because this Charter cities idea, it’s designed to stimulate economic development to improve outcomes for people out there in the real world. So, you’re keen to learn what’s going on there? Would you be able to explain first, what is a Charter city? How do you conceptualize it? How would you describe it, Kurtis?

Kurtis Lockhart  05:48

Our simple definition of a Charter city is new city with new rules. And there are two pieces of that: the city component, which is the built environment, or the urban space, and the rules, which economists, have a fancy jargon word; institutions for rules. And economists of all stripes pretty much come to agree that the fundamental determinant of long run economic growth, long run economic development, is institutions and governance. And the issue is, across a lot of countries, low-income countries, lower middle-income countries in the Global South, you have poor governance and poor institutions. And they’re really hard to change. So, we see Charter cities as a mechanism to bring about deep reforms needed in governance and institutions that can then lead to increases in long run economic growth, which is, we think, the major way to lift masses of humanity, from poverty, to prosperity, in its short amount of time as possible. And that’s the main reason; I can go more into why we think that Charter cities are a great mechanism to bring about that institutional reform and institutional transition, if you want. But I’ll pause there.

Gene Tunny  07:17

So just first, why is it called a Charter city? The Charter, is there an actual charter that you give to the city? Is that the idea there’s a document or a set of principles, a set of rules? Is that the idea?

Kurtis Lockhart  07:32

Yes. So, I mean, it comes from history, where new jurisdictions being settled, were granted charters; and basically charter is a standing for the new rules that apply in this new jurisdiction. And it’s a stand-in for institutions. That’s what we mean by charter. And then city, I always break it down by those two words, because that’s what we’re all about at CCI is cities, which is about the physical, geographic space, and urban planning, and land use regulation, and how the city is kind of planned, it is super important. Transportation, urban infrastructure, the built environment. And then on the other hand, the charter, right? That’s what you could call the soft infrastructure of the city, which is the rules that govern different policy domains in a city. Both of the soft and hard infrastructure need to be right, in order for a city to thrive.

Gene Tunny  08:39

So, it’s a new city with its own rules. So therefore, you either need to carve out, or you need to carve out territory from an existing country. I mean, you’ve got to; most of the world’s is going to be covered by sovereign nations, isn’t it? Like, how does this work? I mean, you have to get the agreement of a government, is that right to get a new bit of land and have your own rules? Is that correct?

Kurtis Lockhart  09:09

Yeah. So, this is a great time to bring in Paul Romer, who you alluded to in the first question. So he had a TED Talk back in 2009, that you talked about, where he coined this term Charter cities and defined this concept to begin with, or at least early versions of the concept. And his model, Romer’s model of Charter cities is what we can call the foreign guarantor model to Charter cities where he advocated for a high income, well governed country like Canada to come into a low income poorly governed country like Honduras, and Honduras would cede a large city scale chunk of land to Canada. Canada would then effectively you know, import its good institution. And in that delimited chunk of land that it’s been ceded, and because of that institutional shift towards good institutions, and being administered by Canadians; I’m Canadian, so I’m kind of, patting myself on the back right now, then you would therefore, get economic activity, you’d attract investment, you’d get business formation. And those things would spur sustained rates of growth moving forward, and you get all these good outcomes.

So that was kind of Romer’s foreign guarantor model – a candidate coming into Honduras. As you’ve brought up now, that idea was seen as controversial by a lot of people because it has implications for sovereignty, right. A lot of Hondurans are going to say, wait a second, you’re telling me that we don’t have sovereign control over all of our Honduran territory, and we’re ceding that sovereignty to foreigners? Like no, I did not agree to this.

Well, I think that critique, that sort of, Neo colonialism critique is a bit misguided in certain ways, nonetheless, it’s real. And it rubbed a lot of people the wrong way and was seen as controversial. So Romer tried to implement this model in Honduras, and in Madagascar, and it didn’t work out so well, and then he sort of, receded from this charter cities movement. So, the Charter Cities Institutes, CCIs model is different from Romer’s, We advocate for Public Private Partnership, a PPP between a host country and an urban developer. And ideally, it’s an urban developer from that host country so that they know the context, they have appropriate connections and whatnot. And the reason we think that’s better is basically two reasons:

One is it sidesteps all of these issues of sovereignty that are implicit in Romer’s model, right. This space of land that the developer is going to build is not at all, a separate entity. It is part of the sovereign jurisdiction of the country, subject to its constitution, subject to its criminal law, subject to its international treaties. The only other things that it has kind of special control over is commercial law and everything else other than those three things; constitution, criminal law, and international treaties.

So, number one, it sidesteps these issues of sovereignty implicit in Romer’s model. Number two, we think that this PPP model does a much better job aligning incentives between the urban developer on the one hand, and both the host government and the population, the city residents on the other. The reason is because, urban developers make their profit from the appreciation in land values over time, right? And so that’s their main incentive; is to maximize land values. How do you maximize land values? Well, you attract as many people, as many residents and businesses to your city as humanly possible. How do you do that? You create a livable city, you govern that city well, you provide urban services and urban amenities to the businesses and residents of that city and you will attract more residents and businesses, and therefore see land values increased.

So, we think that aligning incentives is done much better under this PPP model than the foreign guarantor model. It’s a lot sort of, analogous to, you could say, the way a shopping mall is set up. I think that’s a good model in a lot of people’s heads, maybe your listeners. You have a shopping mall, where there’s the mall owner, and then they rent out storefronts, or store space to various shops. And the shopping mall owner provides public goods like lighting, garbage removal, and cleaning and security to the public space within the mall. And in exchange, they get rents from the various stores within the mall to the extent that it then therefore attracts foot traffic to those various stores, and therefore the force base within that mall increases. That benefits the shopping mall owner. So, it’s a very kind of similar model and you can use that as an analogous thing to the way it aligns incentives.

Gene Tunny  14:50

Right. You mentioned that Paul Romer had; there were some practical examples of this that he was involved in. He was advising them, was he? And they just didn’t work out. Do you know why they didn’t work out? What were the problems that occurred?

Kurtis Lockhart  15:07

His full involvement is still unclear; the extent to which was involved. I know that the Hondurans in particular saw the Ted Talk that both you and I have alluded, and I think he was the adviser to the President, really resonated with him. And so, he called Paul Romer and got the Presidential in support and they said, let’s go with these things. And there were a few, several iterations that I don’t want to go into all the history. But eventually, this new Charter cities law, you could say was passed called the ZEDE law, which basically stands for the Zone for Economic Development and Employment. And Romer, as part of this law was placed on the transparency commission. So, there was like an oversight board, that would make sure there’s not a lot of, abuse going on with these zones and the developers kind of, given a lot of powers within these special jurisdictions, these ZEDEs,

The issue then became that potential developers or deals started to arise between folks that wanted to govern these ZEDEs and the government that were being held without the oversight or input from the transparency commission. So, Paul Romer said, okay, I’m done with this, you’re kind of, not at all going about this in a transparent way that I had signed up for. So, he left the ZEDE project.

There have since been a few that he’s started. I think there are three in operation right now, including well known one called Prospera, on the Island of Roatán.

Gene Tunny 

Sorry, Roatán; where’s that? Sorry.

Kurtis Lockhart 

Roatán is an Honduran Island. Those were the first kind of, ZEDEs under this law, a socialist was elected president last fall in Honduras. And she was elected with one of her platform planks being the abolishment of this deadly law. The Honduran Congress just passed that abrogation earlier this year. And so that’s kind of a huge blow to this ZEDE regime.

I think the three ZEDEs that are currently in place, that were passed before that law came in or was abolished, aren’t going to be abolished, they still have the ability to function. But obviously, if you’re an investor, and you see a president in place, that is hell bent against this concept of a ZEDE, that’s going to likely give you pause about getting involved. So, it’s great for the space. But I think what the Honduran example goes to show you is that you need legitimacy. And you need buying from the local population. And I think the way that the ZEDE law was passed in Honduras in the early days, did not at all, have that legitimacy necessary for long term success.

Gene Tunny  18:19

Right. Did you mention Madagascar as well? I can have a look into it. It’s just fascinating, I wasn’t aware that that was happening. And I mean, if I can get Paul Romer, on the show in the future, or, I’d love to chat with him about that. But you did mention Madagascar, was that right?

Kurtis Lockhart  18:38

Yeah, Madagascar happen. I think Paul Romer met with the president whose name is long, and so I’m not even going to attempt to say it, but they had a conversation and the president, I think was on board. But for many other reasons in addition to this one, what was happening is I think a South Korean company was going to come in and get a large tract of land, and the local population didn’t like that idea. So, a kind of protests broke out. Again, this is somewhat related to the Romer presidential conversation, but there were other factors involved that spurred the protests and riots. So the reform didn’t end up going through. Both attempts, well-attempted and in the Honduran case, it did get implemented, t just hasn’t been very successful. They didn’t end up having an enduring impact and Romer has since receded.

Gene Tunny  19:39

I was interested in that point you made about the new; there was a new government in Honduras and it’s a socialist government. They’re not going to like a Charter city. If you think about it, because is the idea of a Charter city, it’s going to have more liberal or more free market institutions, lower taxes, lower tariffs, more business friendly regulations, is that the idea? That they want to try and replicate what Hong Kong was in a few decades ago. I mean, Hong Kong is still a prosperous place. But there’s concerns about the, the administration or the influence of Beijing in Hong Kong now. Is that the idea that it’s; you want to have a free market type of city state? Is that the idea?

Kurtis Lockhart  20:34

By our simple definition of Charter city being new cities with new rules, that’s a pretty politically agnostic definition, right. So, if you think about it, that could be taken on either end of the spectrum and ran with. I think the model that CCI advocates for is more in line with what you’ve been saying. So, liberalizing and introducing market-oriented reforms, just because if you look at history and how well you know Hong Kong has done and Zen Jen has done and Singapore has done and Dubai has done when they’ve liberalized, that would seem to indicate that that’s a good idea to do. And then you contrast that with reforms on the other end of the spectrum and how those worked out. And I think that effective option is pretty clear from history.

But that’s not to say that we have been approached by, for example, indigenous groups that are interested in this model of Charter cities, because they want as a group, and want to push for an advocate for more decentralized, and devolved authority and autonomy over the jurisdiction that their group resides in. And they see this Charter cities model as a potential way to do that. So, I wouldn’t label that as kind of libertarian or free market fundamentalism in any way; that’s more just an indigenous group seeking some more ability to control their own fates. And I think this is an interesting avenue of the Charter cities movement is around this kind of more traditional local groups that are pushing for more reforms or more powers over their areas.

One other things that; I’m from Vancouver So, I’ve been following this. I guess, developments around this section of Vancouver that’s reserved, a first nation’s reserve, it’s called the Squamish nation. And they own some very, the reserves on some very prime real estate within Vancouver, and just as other in thriving cities elsewhere in Vancouver, real estate prices are astronomically high. And so, what this Squamish nation decided to do was partner itself with an urban developer and say, hey, instead of letting this very pricy and scarce, urban land lay vacant, and just dedicating it to a park or something, let’s build some skyscrapers. Let’s build some housing and apartments for Vancouverites. We have an equity stake in this development. We partner with this urban developer that they bring in the technical expertise and the financing to get the project built. The urban developer benefits, we benefit as the Squamish nation, and each of our members can benefit and was voted positively, overwhelmingly by the Squamish nation. And now, this indigenous group is going to benefit immensely from an urban development project. It’s also going to provide a lot of housing that’s very sorely needed in the city of Vancouver.

So, there’s win-win situations. And I think the model of Charter cities can span the gamut between these helpful models that indigenous groups can like as they want more devolved authority, all the way to more libertarian like sea steading models or something like this have in the past.

Gene Tunny  24:10

I remember listening to an episode of, I think it was Ross Roberts econ talk show about see steady, it just sounded like something that couldn’t work. I couldn’t see how that would be feasible. You just have to give up too much of your lifestyle. I mean, like I often complain about regulations where I live here in in Brisbane in Australia, but I do recognize that there are a lot of good things about living in Brisbane and I couldn’t imagine as much as I am relatively free market and I do have some sympathy for libertarian views. I couldn’t imagine going on to; I don’t know what would you go on to, an oil rig or something or you’d have to buy an island somewhere, I suppose. But I mean the amount of investment you need to get a critical massive population, don’t you? I mean, they’re all these things that you’d have to get right.

But I guess we can talk about your Charter city model in a minute and how that’s going to work and how it’s going to grow and develop.

I want to ask you about this concept of institutions. So, you’re talking about institutions and how important they are to economic development, and then they facilitate trade, and they facilitate innovation. Now, there was a great book about, I don’t know, maybe a decade or so ago, why nations fail, and that really emphasized the importance of institutions. And the problem is in some many developing economies, the ones that can’t get beyond that, per capita income of a few or a few thousand US dollars a year or So, they’re trapped because those institutions are so bad, and they’ve got kleptocrats in charge, and they’ve got marketing boards, which are extracting surplus, and you’ve got all of these really bad institutions. I mean, Reimer gave an example of regulations that mean that electricity companies won’t, they’re not covering a lot of the population. So that’s where you really want the Charter cities, is it in developing economies, particularly in Sub Saharan Africa? Is that where your focus is?

Kurtis Lockhart  26:35

Yeah, I would say that’s accurate. As an organization, CCIs vision is to empower new cities with better governance to lift 10s of millions of people out of poverty. So, we’re all about poverty alleviation. And so our focus does tend to be on those places in low and lower middle income countries, because that’s where most of the poverty lies, almost teleologically. And so that’s where we focus our efforts. And, like, I want to go into the mechanism of institutional change that sort of our theory of change, because you kind of alluded to that we’re talking about kleptocracy and marquee awards and sort of incumbents that kind of dominate the current rule set in the current system. And I think this is really important.

Some of your listeners may be familiar with, not just Why Nations Fail, which is a fantastic book on institutions, but also a book called The Rise and Decline of Nations by Mancur Olson. And he writes about this phenomenon called, The Logic of Collective action. And in essence, you get collective action problems when you have concentrated benefits and dispersed costs. So, what do I need? Let me unpack that. I’ll give an example. So, the main example given in the book and in the States is around sugar tariffs. So, you have these Florida sugar farmers that because of this sugar tariff in the States, sugar therefore, in the US is a lot higher per unit than elsewhere. That tariff puts a lot of money and profits in the pockets of these sugar farmers. Because there are a few farmers, they’re really incentivized and mobilized to go lobby their politicians to keep this sugar tariff in place and not abolish it.

On the flip side, consumers of sugar like you and me that maybe go to the store to buy a bag of sugar once every year for like a few bucks, we are maybe going to have to pay 50 cents extra because of this tariff. And while the group of consumers that are impacted by that 50 cents is huge, much larger than the number of farmers, because that impact is so small at 50 cents is so sort, of trivial. We, I mean you are not going to get all mobilized and angry and co-lobbying our politicians to abolish this tariff. That is completely the opposite for the farmer, they are going to be mobilized.

And so, you get this bad equilibrium for these rules where despite the tariff being suboptimal for society as a whole, it is continued because of this dynamic of the logic of collective action. And you can apply this example with the sugar tariffs to institutions writ large. There are incumbent political elites that are currently benefiting from the status quo institutions, right. So, they have every incentive to see the status quo institutions continued and undermine attempts to reform them, despite reforms, potentially bringing these institutions into a much better and more optimal equilibrium. And because, on the flip side, everyone maybe, has to deal in that place with those institutions, maybe as to kind of, give a bribe once every three months or so. We’re not hugely, hugely impacted in our day to day lives, or perhaps we have other worries to worry about. We are less mobilized as a group of citizenry to push for institutional change on a national level, than the small group of political elites who currently benefit from the status quo are at mobilizing to keep those subnational suboptimal institutions in place.

So, we see Charter cities as a way to, instead of attempting to pass national level reforms, where you’re going to get and threaten all of these political elites interests, and therefore those elites are going to try and stymie and undermine reforms. We see Charter cities as a way to circumvent those interests in elites by situating themselves in a delimited, small geographic space. Ideally, greenfield space where it’s sparsely populated, so you’re not bumping up against any of these incumbent elites interests, and therefore, these spaces can get a lot deeper institutional reforms than otherwise possible. And so that’s the mechanism and theory of change, and why we think Charter cities are this great policy tool to get very deep and needed institutional reforms.

Gene Tunny  31:28

Okay, we’ll take a short break here for a word from our sponsor.

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Gene Tunny  32:02

Now back to the show.

So, could you now tell us please, Kurtis, where your institute is involved in new Charter cities? Like where are we talking about? Where will these cities be? Where are they in the development cycle? What’s happening? I’d love to know.

Kurtis Lockhart  32:22

So, we are an organization CCI, we were founded in 2017. So, we’re in year five, that’s in the think-tank world, we’re still a baby. And, it does take a long time to build driving new cities. So we’re talking on the timeline of decades, not years.

We are involved in several projects. They are nascent, so I’ll go over some of them. One of them is in Lusaka, Zambia, just outside Lusaka, Zambia, it’s called Nkwashi. It’s a Charter city, a new city development that’s aimed at 100,000 residents. And its anchor tenant is anchored around a university. So, what the model is, is to have this stem University of science, technology, engineering, math, attract really bright smart Zambians to this university, train them up in STEM subjects, and then connects those graduates that STEM graduates with remote work in either Europe or the states. And that does two things. I mean, you’re going to earn more being employed by these European and American tech companies – number one.

Point number two, these graduates are also going to earn in American dollars or euros and that allows them also to hedge against the volatility of the Zambian kwacha, which is really tied to copper price, copper price fluctuations, which can be it can experience really wide swings. And so that’s the model for Nkwashi. Nkwashi attracted its first few residents; I think it’s a few years in operation, the groundwork foundations have been laid for the building of the university. There’s also a feeder school, a high school that will attempt to feed students into the university called Explore Academy; that’s I Nkwashi.

The other ones worth mentioning are a Talent city, in Nigeria. The founder of Talent city, his name is Iyinoluwa Aboyeji. He is one of the most successful Nigerian tech founders in the country. He’s co-founder of Andela and Flutterwave, two or the more successful African tech startups and unicorns. So, he wants to give back to the Nigerian tech community that’s growing really rapidly. But he sees the biggest constraint on that tech ecosystem in Nigeria as tech talent. And so, he wants to establish this space, this jurisdiction with new rules that especially allow for freedom around things like crypto and more innovative technologies, and provide very reliable digital infrastructure, and power and electricity, and all those things that you need in order to function as a tech company in the modern world. So that’s talent city.

Another one in Nigeria is called Enyimba Economic city. It’s in the south west, not on the outside of Lagos like Talent city, but in a place called Abia State, and that’s in the Delta region. And so those familiar with Nigeria know that the Delta region is sort of the oil and gas sector, oil and gas region of Nigeria. This city is aiming for 1.5 million residents, it would in phase one, be oriented around logistics and processing around the O&G sector in the Delta region. But it envisions and phase two and phase three, to expand beyond that focus on logistics and O&G processing, to having a university and a world class research hospital, because some of the social sector provisions in the south and southeast of Nigeria are just really, really lacking. And so that’s probably our biggest and most ambitious, single project.

The other, and this is the most recent project that we’re engaged with is in Malawi. And we’re really, really excited. So, we’ve just signed an MOU with the National Planning Commission in Malawi, who have spent the last three years coming up with these secondary cities plan. This plan is really and this has happening across the continent. It’s aimed to address this challenge across a lot of African countries of really rapid urbanization. As it stands right now today, Malawi, is actually among the least urbanized countries on planet Earth. It’s about 17% urbanized. But what we’re going to see in the next 30 years, 28 years to 2050 is Malawi’s urban population is going to more than triple. And so very kudos and plaudits to the National Planning Commission, they see this trend and say, okay, well, we need to get our ducks in a row, and plan for this really, really rapid urbanization in advance. So, the secondary cities plan that they’ve created, and they launched on May 31, I spoke at the launch, it lays out eight new secondary cities, and lays out the spatial development plan for those eight cities.

Malawi is a North South country. So, the cities are spread out from the north, all the way down to the south. What we are going to do as CCI, after we’ve signed this MOU, and we’re now an official implementation partner of this secondary cities plan. We’re in the process with the National Planning Commission, the Ministry of local government, the Ministry of lands, the president’s office, writing up the special jurisdiction laws that are going to apply to these eight secondary cities across Malawi.

So, this, to me is one of the most exciting projects because we have, government buying across a slew of needed ministries, including the President. There’s already been a lot of resources and thought put into this over a sustained period of time. So, you have a demonstration effect that there is that political buying. The plan is already in place for these eight secondary cities. And we’re getting in at the ground floor to shape the legal jurisdiction around those eight cities. So, this is a huge opportunity for us. And we’re really excited about what we’re seeing in Malawi.

Gene Tunny  38:56

Yeah, that’s fantastic. Are you involved in getting any of the financing or any funding from say, World bank or other donors? Do they get any funding from those organizations? You mentioned PPP, Public Private Partnerships? So, there’s an infrastructure developer, or what did you call it? An urban developer or a development company that develops it and they’ve got some deal with the government that the government will not pay them for providing infrastructure? How does that work, Kurtis?

Kurtis Lockhart  39:30

One of the roles that we will play as implementation partner is to help facilitate financing. This is one of the constraints I think most African cities and towns face is this ability to adequately finance urban expansion, right. It’s the most rapidly urbanizing place on planet Earth. In Africa, the estimate is that almost a billion people are going to move into their cities over the next 30 years. So this is a huge transformation. Yet, African towns and cities are not able to issue municipal bonds to the same level that historically, European cities and American cities were able to tap in order to fund and finance urban infrastructure.

So we see these kinds of municipal bond markets in Africa are either kind of, really nascent, or more commonly just nonexistent. So we want to help number one, come up with a de risk model of municipal bonds. And number two, help fill that financing gap by not just kind of public sector debt in the bond market, but also deifies. Like you mentioned the World Bank; the IFC is a World Bank arm that invests in privates. I know, the Millennium Challenge Corporation was also at the launch of the secondary cities plan in Malawi on May 31. And they’re involved in work in Malawi. So, they would be great partners, because they focus on infrastructure growth and institutions.

You have the municipal bonds that need to be figured out, that’s on Malawi, you have the DFIs that will be involved in financing as well. And then the hope is that once those two financial pillars are in place, that a third financial pillar will be then convinced that this is a good idea, and that’s the private sector. Typically, in these new emerging frontier markets, it’s the government that needs to get its house in order, and then the DFIs that come in ahead of the private sector, and that’s a signal to the private sector that okay, this is now a place where I can do business and start offering different financial instruments to.

Gene Tunny  41:47

Can I just clarify Kurtis DFI, do you mean Development Finance Institutions, the World Bank, Asian Development Bank, etc? Is that right?

Kurtis Lockhart  41:58

Yeah, that’s exactly right.

Gene Tunny  41:59

That’s okay. I was just wondering, because I used to work in the Treasury in Canberra, we call them IFIs. I think International Finance Institutions, or I can’t remember. I remember there was some sort of abbreviation or acronym…IFIs.

Kurtis Lockhart  42:12

IFIs is more fun than DFIs. So, I’m happy to go by if IFIs.

Gene Tunny  42:18

Right oh, yeah. Sorry, I interrupted you there. We’re talking you’re going to help sort of, sort out financing and all that. One thing I’m wondering is about the deal or the relationship with the host country? Because I mean, one of the; and you would have thought about this. I know, and this is why I’m interested in your thoughts on it. How do you constrain or tie the hands of the host country of the host government? Because I mean, one of the risks is that you have this thriving Charter city, and the economy is going gangbusters. And, everyone’s wanting to move into it. And if you’ve got lower taxes, or it’s running itself, the host country, their finance ministry, they’re going to look enviously on this little Charter city, aren’t they? And, I mean, they’ll want to get a piece of the action. So, isn’t there a risk there that they could then impose? They could ramp up taxes, they could try and, take, extract some money out of the Charter city, and that threatens the viability of it. How do you deal with that situation?

Kurtis Lockhart  43:32

You hit on what I think of as probably the biggest risks to Charter city projects. And that’s just the fact that there’s a political risk. And, the urban developer is going to enter into a public private partnership in a point in time with a particular political regime. And because these city projects are decade’s long projects, the project is going to span multiple political regimes. And so how do you as the developer know that the political regime that’s agreeing to the public private partnership today, is going to also agree to that same public private ship, public private partnership tomorrow, when that political regime has changed or altered? How do you know that there is a credible commitment? So that risk of the government’s killing the birds that laid the golden egg is ever present.

We’ve thought of this, and there are several ways that we can go about trying to mitigate that risk, that political risk of expropriation, two of the simplest, I think, are just about, again, aligning incentives. One, I think, within that public private partnership, there should be a revenue sharing agreement that’s embedded. So, every year the developer within that jurisdiction collects user fees, they collect taxes, they collect land leases, right land lease rents, from those within that jurisdiction. And I think a proportion or percentage of those funds should be remitted to the host country so that every year, the country gains something in their coffers from the success of that Charter city. Therefore, it has less of an incentive to, see that pot of money that it gains every year, destroyed.

Another way to do exactly that is by giving an equity stake in the development company, to the host country, right. So, if the urban developer succeeds immensely, as has happened in kind of Sangen, and Singapore, and Hong Kong and Dubai, and the city grows, 5, 10%, on average year on year, then the post country also reaps huge rewards from that success. So those are two pretty simple ways to align financial incentives.

Another simple way is that there are organizations that do offer political risk insurance MIGA, M-I-G-A, I forget what the acronym actually stands for, but they are the entity under the World Bank Group of organizations that offers political risk insurance. A few other things that could be attractive to help mitigate this risk is floating the development company and publicly trading the development company. So, then you have big sort of institutional investors within that host country, like pension funds, for example, invested in the success of this Charter city, and whether we like it or not sort of business elites, and political elites kind of talk with each other and influence each other. And if the political elites are threatening to expropriate the Charter city, and that’s going to have adverse consequences for the pension fund folks. They’re going to raise a stink and say, hey, don’t do that, that’s going to hit our pocketbooks, and we might not support you in the next election. And so that could also be some cover.

Another way, and I think this is this is probably really effective, is to include sort of an objective, international organization in the project. You mentioned the World Bank. So, by including the World Bank in a Charter city project, whether that’s alone, or I don’t know, if they would do equity investments in a private company, that would more be IFC, which is their private arm. But including them in the project would mean that if the political elites decide to expropriate or jeopardize or threatened interfere with that Charter cities project, and the World Bank is involved, that means they’re also jeopardizing a bunch of other loans and projects that the World Bank is investing in their country. And they’re also jeopardizing their access to concessionary loans and finance that the World Bank offers their country. So, they would not want to, ideally, they would not want to do that.

So, there’s a bunch of ways to lessen the risk, to de risk, but you cannot fully get rid of that risk of political expropriation, just because, again, unlike Romer, our model doesn’t create a new sovereign, right? These are not sovereign entities, they are subject to the constitution, and criminal law and international treaties of the host country. And so that’s sort of an ever-present list. But again, I just listed off a bunch of ways you can help de risk and mitigate that risk such that it’s, it’s less, much less likely to occur.

Gene Tunny  49:01

I just wanted to ask, those examples you gave of how you can de-risk. Have they been any of those been applied? Or is that just your ideas of how you can de-risk?

Kurtis Lockhart  49:12

I know revenue sharing agreements are part of it. And I know for example, Enyimba Economic city, which I mentioned in Nigeria, both the state government, located in Abia state, as well as the federal government in Nigeria, have equity stakes in the Enyimba development company. And so that risk mitigation technique has been implemented there. There’s also a revenue sharing agreement embedded in the PPP.

When it comes to others that I recommended; it’s not a Charter cities project, but it was a pipeline project in Cameroon. And it was, oil was discovered in Cameroon and Exxon Mobil at the time. I think this is the late 90s or the early 2000s. Exxon Mobil saw an opportunity there to operate in the country. But there had been some protests in the past about the oil sector. So, ExxonMobil was worried about, engaging in all this upfront investment and investing all this capital only to have these protests breakout and then to have to, leave the country. So, they wanted reassurances, they wanted a credible commitment on the part of Cameroon and the Cameroonian government, that that wouldn’t happen. And that also the sort of funds, the revenues derived from the pipeline project would not be expropriated by the Cameroonian government. So, it is what both the Cameroonian government in negotiation with ExxonMobil agreed to, was there would be this escrow fund, that the revenues flowing from the pipeline project went to, and there would be a council approving disbursements from that escrow fund. And some of the spots on that council would be appointed by Exxon, some of the spots on that council would be appointed by Cameroon, but that basically, the tie breaking vote on that council would be the World Bank. It was seen as sort of legitimate from both sides from both Exxon and in the Cameroonian government. Any sort of dispute or kind of corruption or revenue issue was sort of mitigated by having the World Bank involved. Again, for this reason that I brought up earlier that the World Bank is involved in a lot of these low and lower middle-income countries in terms of a bunch of infrastructure projects, or health projects, or education projects, and gives loans of various sizes and numbers to a bunch of really important political projects across the country. If they’re involved, the host government is much less likely to interfere with and expropriate the project than otherwise would be the case. So, I use that example, as kind of illustrative of that, of that power of that risk mitigation technique.

Gene Tunny  52:15

Right. Now, I do want to just ask about special economic zones. This idea of a Charter city, this is broader than a Special Economic Zone, S-E-Z or SEZ because you’ve got people living there, haven’t you? You want to actually establish a city? It’s not just a sort of an export processing zone or whatever it says is, is that right?

Kurtis Lockhart  52:40

Yeah. So, there are a few main differences between a special economic zone and a Charter city. They’re kind of analogous in that both are delimited jurisdictions with different rules, right. But there are a few main differences that we think make Charter cities much more impactful than SEZs. One is just size, right? So Charter cities are cities scale, SEZs are usually much smaller and more narrow. And that just affects how many people and how many businesses can agglomerate within a particular area. Both you and I, being economics nerds, we know the importance of agglomeration economies, and this is why cities are fantastic, because of all these agglomeration economies. So, that’s number one is size.

Number two is SEZs tend to be focused on a single or one or two different sectors or industries. So, you have textile or manufacturing, or tech hubs, those types of zones that have one sector that they really want to focus on. Whereas, Charter cities are mixed use and multisector. They’re cities, right.  There’s not just an industrial component, there’s also a commercial component, and very importantly, residential component.

A lot of zones and industrial parks don’t have people living there, right? And again, that impacts this urban agglomeration potential, and we really, really want conglomeration economies to take off. So, the mixed use so multisector and the residential component are super key differentiator.

The third difference is around governance and the rule set. SEZ legislation, when it’s passed, is sort of, you could say setting stone; my whole thing is humility. So, we’re not going to get the rule set exactly perfectly right at the beginning of these things. And the zone operator or administrator is going to figure out that, okay, hey, we didn’t get this law that we wrote, five years ago, completely right. There are a few clauses that are causing us a lot of problems that we need to change pretty quickly, otherwise, these businesses aren’t going to like it. When that happens with SEZs, they have to go to higher tiers of government or Parliament even and get Parliament to pass an amendment or pass a new SEZ law. As you can imagine, that takes a lot of time and slows the reform process down immensely. And, usually the reform doesn’t even happen at all. And so that hurts business dynamism and the ultimate success of those zones. Whereas, Charter cities, we devolve that ability to change the rules over time, down to the city administrator and the city operator. And so instead of having to do that slow process of every time they need to change, they have to go up to higher tiers of government, they can make those changes really quick on the fly as needed within the Charter city. So, those are the four main differences.

Gene Tunny  55:44

Good one. Okay. Just finally, I’ll try and sneak this in. You’re doing a PhD at Oxford. Are you nearly finished? And is it on Charter cities?

Kurtis Lockhart  55:51

Yes, I have a year left. I mean, I’m knocking on wood right now. I am doing a Doctorate in Political Science at Oxford. It’s focused on political decentralization. So, a couple of the articles will be around New City developments and Charter cities, and the potential of these for economic growth and prosperity around the globe. So, that work really aligns with the work that CCI is dedicated to.

Gene Tunny  56:18

Brilliant. Okay, Kurtis has been fabulous. I’ve really enjoyed and I’ve been blown away learning about what you’re doing. And the sheer potential of Charter cities is something that excites me. So terrific work, I’ll put links to your institute and to your social media in the show notes. I really enjoyed the conversation. If there’s anything you want to say to wrap up, please do otherwise. Yeah. I’ve really enjoyed it. And thanks so much.

Kurtis Lockhart  56:50

Yeah, thanks so much, Jean. I will just say if people are hearing this, and they want to learn more and get involved in the Charter cities movement, we are starting and has started a coalition this year called the next 50 Cities Coalition. So, it’s really easy to sign up, you can sign up as an organization, or even an individual, and you’ll get notifications of upcoming events and conferences, you’ll get newsletters and all that stuff. So, I’d encourage you to go to our website, Chartercitiesinstitute.org. And it’s backslash nxt50. And you can join the movement that way.

Gene Tunny  57:26

Great. I’ll have to look into that. I mean, one of the things I found fascinating about this conversation, you talked about the indigenous people in Canada, we’ve got indigenous people in Australia. I don’t know whether any of the indigenous leaders in this country have been thinking about Charter cities, but that’s something I might follow up. Yeah, absolutely fascinating. Kurtis Lockhart from Charter cities institute. Thanks so much for the conversation, I really enjoyed it.

Kurtis Lockhart  57:51

Yeah. Thanks so much, Gene. This has been fun, appreciate it.

Gene Tunny 

Okay, ciao.

Gene Tunny  57:56

Okay, that’s the end of this episode of Economics Explored. I hope you enjoyed it. If So, please tell your family and friends and leave a comment or give us a rating on your podcast app. If you have any comments, questions, suggestions, you can feel free to send them to contact@economicsexplored.com and we’ll aim to address them in a future episode. Thanks for listening. Till next week, goodbye.

Credits

Thanks to the show’s audio engineer Josh Crotts for his assistance in producing the episode and to the show’s sponsor, Gene’s consultancy business www.adepteconomics.com.au

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