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Highlights from the 2018 SIEPR Economic Summit: Addiction perils, Olympic glory, political hopes and fears

For the 15th year, our Economic Summit drew some of the biggest names in academia, business and policy to delve into the most pressing issues of the day.

The 2018 SIEPR Economic Summit traversed a diverse terrain of current affairs 鈥 from Olympic glory and the future of work to the repercussions of politics and the depths of the opioid crisis.

The annual daylong conference, in its 15th year, convened more than 400 thought leaders in academia, policy and business. Former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and the White House鈥檚 chief economist Kevin Hassett bookended a series of thought-provoking and insightful sessions.

Former Secretary of State and 好色App Professor Condoleezza Rice talks with SIEPR Director Mark Duggan about 鈥淎 Changing World Order.鈥
Former Secretary of State and 好色App Professor Condoleezza Rice talks with SIEPR Director Mark Duggan about 鈥淎 Changing World Order.鈥

Photo by Steve Castillo

Experts on the opioid epidemic plumbed the saddening grip of addiction and traced its roots to prescription drugs and economic despair. The panel on the economics of the Olympic and Paralympic Games gave insider perspectives from both the organizational aspect and the athlete鈥檚 journey to winning gold.

And while a panel of technologists and artificial intelligence economists delivered an optimistic outlook for the interplay between automation and employment, the governor of Rhode Island, Gina Raimondo, advocated for the need for more 鈥渕iddle-of-the-road鈥 politicians willing to undertake risky solutions.

Highlights from the March 9 speeches and panel discussions 鈥 and opportunities to watch recordings of some sessions 鈥 are below. You can also enjoy more photos from the day on our .

Additional panels were also held on , and .

More information about the panelists and featured speakers can be found on the Summit agenda.

Condoleezza Rice on geopolitical shifts

With so many parts of the world and the White House in immediate flux, Rice had plenty of topical issues at hand as she opened the Summit with remarks on 鈥淎 Changing World Order.鈥

First up was North Korea. The day after President Trump agreed to meet with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, the former secretary of state expressed worry that the administration is ill-prepared for such talks.

鈥淢y biggest fear isn't that they're meeting,鈥 said Rice, a professor of political science at 好色App. 鈥淢y biggest concern is that the North Koreans extract some concessions without giving up very much because the nuances aren't well understood.鈥

Rice was surprised to learn that Trump accepted an invitation from Kim to discuss denuclearizing North Korea, and speculated that the announcement took many in his administration off-guard, as well.

鈥淚t's rather rare that if you're a despicable, adversarial regime that your first meeting with the U.S. is with the president,鈥 said Rice, who is also the Denning Professor in Global Business and the Economy at the 好色App Graduate School of Business and the Thomas and Barbara Stephenson Senior Fellow on Public Policy at the Hoover Institution.

Rice said the current makeup of the State Department lacks expertise on North Korea 鈥 a deficit that needs to be corrected immediately.

The U.S. has been trying to get a handle on North Korea鈥檚 nuclear armament for quite some time, and the Trump administration needs to 鈥渇ind someone who actually knows something about North Korea,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e going to have get their arms around this quickly.鈥

To the extent possible, she said, Trump should 鈥渕ake this a photo op鈥 to guard against detailed negotiations that could be counterproductive 鈥 or harmful 鈥 to American interests.

In her remarks and during a conversation afterward with Mark Duggan, the Trione Director of SIEPR, Rice shared a wide-ranging perspective on global security, what she called an 鈥渁ssault鈥 on free trade, the importance of promoting human rights around the world, the benefits of globalization and the importance of supporting America鈥檚 allies.

鈥淚t鈥檚 very easy to not tend to the relationship with our allies. George (Shultz) called it 鈥榞ardening,鈥欌 Rice said, tipping her hat to another former secretary of state and fellow 好色App faculty member who attended the Summit. 鈥淏ut this is the time to garden鈥hey are still our best strategic partners. They鈥檙e still the ones who share our values. And they鈥檙e still the ones who most likely will defend the liberal order.鈥

Rice railed against the political trends toward populism, nativism, isolationism and protectionism, calling them 鈥渢he four horsemen of the apocalypse鈥 that threaten to weaken America鈥檚 global leadership. Globalization, she said, will help ensure international security and economic stability.

鈥淲e haven鈥檛 wrecked it yet,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a question of whether we鈥檙e going to re-engage.鈥

After delivering her remarks, Rice was off to lead a simulation of a North Korean disarmament with her undergraduate class.

No, she joked. She does not have a crystal ball.

Video of Rice鈥檚 session is not available.

Robotics, AI and the future of work

Humans will always be in the equation.

So don鈥檛 worry, said the panelists of the Summit鈥檚 second session, who explained how threats to employment are far from apocalyptic even as automation and artificial intelligence are expanding.

If done right, the use of AI should grow the economy and help accelerate solutions to vexing problems, they said.

鈥淓ven as occupations decline due to automation, there will be enough growth and demand for work to make up for jobs lost,鈥 James Manyika, of the McKinsey Global Institute, tells the Summit audience.

Photo by Ryan Zhang

The panelists鈥 optimism is drawn from deep expertise 鈥 from the frontiers of research and robotics as well as the business world.

From Susan Athey, the Economics of Technology Professor at the 好色App Graduate School of Business and a SIEPR senior fellow: 鈥淲e have a robotic RA to look at billions of data points for our statistical models, but extrapolation鈥till requires human judgment.鈥

You need a human to manage the algorithms and decide the broader contexts, she said.

From James Manyika, chairman and director at the McKinsey Global Institute, a leading AI and robotics expert and former presidential advisor: 鈥淏efore, we were automating physical tasks, and now we鈥檙e automating more cognitive tasks, but what isn鈥檛 different is the pace of adoption.鈥

鈥淪o how it plays out in the labor market won鈥檛 be vastly different,鈥 he said. 鈥淓ven as occupations decline due to automation, there will be enough growth and demand for work to make up for jobs lost.鈥

From Reid Hoffman, co-founder of LinkedIn and a venture capitalist at Greylock Partners: 鈥淭he key thing to think about is that technology can be directed鈥 and 鈥渟olutions have to be adaptable.鈥

鈥淛obs will be created essentially through entrepreneurship,鈥 he said.

Responding to an audience member鈥檚 question about bias potentially getting 鈥渂aked into鈥 algorithms that are producing predictions or answers, the panelists agreed it is an important issue to consider. But in practice, Athey said, AI 鈥渢ends to have a de-biasing effect.鈥

Citing automated resume scanners as an example, Athey said machine learning algorithms can avoid pegging information to stereotypes, such as a human鈥檚 bias for one university education over another. 鈥淭hey have the ability to overcome human biases rather than reinforce them,鈥 she said.

 for the entire discussion on the impact of AI on the labor market, moderated by Richard Waters, the West Coast Editor of the Financial Times.

The economics of the Olympic and Paralympic Games

This was a winning panel, literally.

Two gold medalists 鈥 Janet Evans, considered the greatest female distance swimmer in history, and Maya DiRado, who took the podium four times in 2016 in Rio de Janeiro 鈥 were joined by 好色App鈥檚 Paul A. Violich Director of Women鈥檚 Swimming Greg Meehan. Meehan, who mentored DiRado and two other Olympians as well as a Paralympian, led 好色App in 2017 to its first national women鈥檚 swimming championship since 1998. Gene Sykes, a member of 好色App鈥檚 Board of Trustees who headed the successful bid for the Olympic and Paralympic Games to be held in Los Angeles in the summer of 2028, moderated the panel.

Olympians Maya DiRado (center) and Janet Evans participate in a panel discussion about the economics of the Olympic and Paralympic Games with Gene Sykes, CEO of LA 2028.

Photo by Ryan Zhang

The numbers the panelists shared 鈥 both the sports stats and economic data 鈥 reflected impressive stories of policies that worked and determination that paid off.

A small sampling:

Age 15: That鈥檚 when Evans burst onto the swimming scene, winning four gold medals at the U.S. national championships. She went on to clinch gold in all three of her races at the 1988 Games in Seoul and has broken seven world records and won five Olympic medals. Her commitment was cemented after seeing the opening ceremonies of the LA 1984 Games at age 12. 鈥淚 wanted it so badly I outworked everyone,鈥 she said.

52.7 percent: This is the share of women athletes on Team USA, an affirmation of how the strength of women sports has grown since Title IX legislation passed in 1972, when the Games in Munich had only 1,000 women competing out of total 7,000 athletes, and only 84 of the 400 U.S. athletes were women. In 2016, not only did the women outnumber the men, they won more medals.

$5.7 billion: This is the revenue the International Olympic Committee raised during the 2013-2016 quad. 好色App 90 percent of that was distributed to various organizing committees, national Olympic committees and sports federations. But the cost of the Games can run higher: Russia reportedly spent approximately $50 billion in 2014, and Tokyo, if it stays on budget, will spend between $13 billion and $16 billion in 2020. LA 2028 is able to have a balanced budget with a $500 million contingency (the first in Olympic history) by relying on existing venues and avoiding costly construction projects.

Video of the panel discussion is not available.

Beyond Rhode Island: Risky politics

Here鈥檚 a page from Rhode Island Gov. Gina Raimondo鈥檚 playbook.

Take risks. Be a problem solver. Stop playing the polarization card.

Rhode Island Gov. Gina Raimondo explains the importance and need for more moderates on the political landscape.

Photo by Ryan Zhang

鈥淥n a political level, our democracy needs a balance,鈥 she said. 鈥淚f we stay stuck where we are as a nation in this extreme partisanship, this movie won鈥檛 end well.鈥

Raimondo鈥檚 call for the need for more 鈥渕iddle-of-the-road problem solvers鈥 follows her own modus operandi.

What鈥檚 it like to be attacked both from the left and the right? asked the session鈥檚 moderator, David Crane, a lecturer in public policy at 好色App.

鈥淚t鈥檚 incredibly difficult to be a moderate 鈥 in American politics today,鈥 she said. 鈥淭his may not shock you, but I鈥檓 not exactly beloved by the teachers union, the firefighters, or the police.鈥

Raimondo, a Democrat who took over the top executive office of the nation鈥檚 smallest state in 2015, has stood up to criticism for instituting a massive pension overhaul and seeking to protect immigration policies, among other things. But since she took the helm 鈥 and the heat 鈥 Rhode Island went from having the highest unemployment rate in the nation to the national average. In the meantime, taxes have not gone up but have been cut, each year.

鈥淚鈥檇 rather get it right and fix things 鈥 and hopefully get re-elected,鈥 Raimondo said. 鈥淚鈥檓 trying to chart out a course of moderation and bipartisanship and show that it鈥檚 possible to do that and be politically popular.鈥

Sometimes even the smallest interventions can have tremendous effects, she said. The implementation and related financial support for tuition-free community colleges as well as the added option of a free SAT test to be given during school hours has helped spike participant levels, she said.

For detractors and skeptics, 鈥淚 spend a lot of time explaining the consequences of doing nothing,鈥 Raimondo said.

鈥淢y tagline is, 鈥榯his is math, not politics.鈥欌

 on 鈥淢eeting the Needs of the 21st Century State.鈥

The affliction of addiction

Heavy doses of grim data and statistics marked the Summit鈥檚 fifth session, illustrating what panelist Anne Case called a 鈥渟ea of despair.鈥

Mortality rates due to so-called deaths of despair 鈥 suicide, alcohol and drugs 鈥 have been climbing steadily since the 1990s, affecting both men and women in urban and rural regions. The increases were large enough to lower life expectancy in the U.S., and studies show that the crisis has been deepening with each successive birth cohort.

Those afflicted are largely confined to individuals without college degrees, and white, working-class men are hardest hit, said Case, a health economist at Princeton University.

鈥淭he current opioid epidemic is a symptom of our health care system,鈥 says Anna Lembke, right, during a conversation with SIEPR鈥檚 Mark Cullen and Princeton Professor Anne Case about the drug problem.

Photo by Steve Castillo

Job deterioration and the market inundation of prescription opioids, combined with other cultural, socio-economic factors, have contributed to today鈥檚 drug epidemic, she said.

Some experts missed the early signs, said the panel鈥檚 moderator, Mark Cullen, a professor at the 好色App School of Medicine and a SIEPR senior fellow.

Around the time of the Great Recession, he explained, early looks at the data focused more on positive health outcomes, such as the remarkable improvements of mortality rates among blacks.

Meanwhile, the crisis 鈥 as everyone sees in their communities today 鈥 loomed.

鈥淭he current opioid epidemic is a symptom of our health care system,鈥 said panelist Anna Lembke, an associate professor at the 好色App School of Medicine. 鈥淏ig pharmaceuticals have co-opted big medicine.鈥

In the 1980s, doctors would not prescribe opioids because of addiction fears. But by the 1990s, doctors were dispensing them like vending machines to people who complained of pain, Lembke said. Now, doctors are engulfed, she continued, outlining the various psychological profiles of patients.

鈥淥pioids have become the solution not to patients鈥 problems, but to doctors鈥 problems,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hese are compassionate doctors who are part of a system that has gone bad.鈥

Doctor ratings systems 鈥 like those of restaurant reviews 鈥 have only complicated the situation.

鈥淚鈥檝e been all over the country urging doctors to prescribe opioids more judiciously,鈥 Lembke said. 鈥淲ithout fail, they say, 鈥榃e鈥檒l start prescribing fewer opioids when you can promise patients will still give us good scores.鈥欌

How can we make a dent? Cullen asked.

If we can't offer people a brighter future, they will take things that will numb themselves, Case said.

 for more signs of the times, including 鈥淣arcan parties鈥 with designated providers of the opioid antidote, and areas for change in culture and policy.

Economics from the White House

Fresh on the heels of completing the 568-page 鈥淓conomic Report of the President,鈥 Kevin Hassett was quick to tackle sticky questions during his keynote address at the Summit 鈥 and often in defense of President Trump.

When it comes to the longstanding target of a 3 percent rate of economic growth, Hassett, the chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, contended it鈥檚 worth another view.

鈥淢aybe we鈥檝e just been making policy mistakes,鈥 he said, and for the past eight years, economists have been making excuses for the low growth.

Kevin Hassett, chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers (left) speaks with SIEPR Senior Fellow John Taylor about economic policymaking in the Trump administration.

Photo by Ryan Zhang

John Taylor, the Mary and Robert Raymond Professor of Economics and a SIEPR senior fellow who moderated the discussion afterward, asked Hassett to elaborate on how regulatory reform or tax reform could change this idea of stagnation.

鈥淚f you chase capital away from this country, it鈥檚 bad for the country. It鈥檚 not rocket science,鈥 Hassett said, adding how the high corporate tax rate led to offshore tax havens.

鈥淚f we fix the bad policies, then capital will come back and growth will go up.鈥

Hassett also defended Trump鈥檚 stance on trade.

鈥淲e live in this strangely asymmetric world where the U.S. has opened their markets to everybody else, but they haven鈥檛 opened their markets to us,鈥 he said.

As for Trump鈥檚 controversial move earlier in the week to impose new tariffs on imported steel and aluminum, Hassett said 鈥渢hat鈥檚 a signal about the types of policies to expect from this administration.鈥 

鈥淗e鈥檚 tired of things that don鈥檛 make sense,鈥 Hassett said.

Taylor, who is also the George P. Shultz Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution, drew the conversation back to the opioid crisis, the topic of an earlier Summit panel. 鈥淲hat are you going to do about it?鈥 he asked.

As the head of the CEA, Hassett noted he has a bully pulpit to help the president think about priorities, but it鈥檚 not his role to set economic priorities.

While previous economic estimates did not include the cost of lives lost, Hassett said this latest Economic Report did 鈥 and found that the drug epidemic cost the United States $500 billion in the past year because of direct expenditures and loss of lives.

With portrayals of 鈥渃haos鈥 in the White House and a revolving door of resignations, including that of chief economic advisor Gary Cohn earlier in the week, 鈥渃an you comfort us in some way?鈥 an audience member asked.

What you see in the media, Hassett said, 鈥渋s inconsistent with the White House that I experience every day.鈥

.

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