Bibek Debroy and Aditya Sinha on India’s Urban Local Bodies: “There is a need for urban local bodies across the country to find an alternative mechanism for financing development and reduce their dependence on transfers. Only then, the strong Wicksellian Connection will empower residents to question their city governments to carry out necessary developmental works.”
NYT: “In September, scientists at the University of Hong Kong published the most complete census of ants ever assembled. The numbers are so big as to seem made up. The study estimated that there are at least 20 quadrillion — that is, 20,000,000,000,000,000 — ants on Earth…What has always beguiled me about ants is how their similarities to humanity — they live in societies, they’ve all got jobs, they endure arduous daily commutes to work — are offset by incomprehensible alienness. So much of ant life makes no sense to us: There’s the abject selflessness, the subsuming of the individual to the collective. There’s the absence of any leadership or coordination, their lives dictated by instinct and algorithm, out of which emerges collective intelligence. There’s the way they navigate and communicate through chemical signals, creating road signs from pheromones and never getting stuck in traffic jams…Ants were here before us, and they are likely to long outlast us. They run the place. We’re just visiting.”
Ninan: “The Indian economy is manifestly an out-performer just now…So why is it that, for many observers, optimism about the present does not extend much beyond the visible horizon? It boils down to familiar issues, the most important being a structural unemployment problem which is hard to tackle, and which carries within it the roots of social unrest. Allied with this is the poor state of education and health care, and the nutrition deficits that show up in extensive stunting and wasting among children — tomorrow’s workforce. It needs no elucidation that, with such drag factors operating, a country cannot expect to maintain or improve its speed of ascent. There is also a third set of issues, linked to the limited range of systemic safeguards that exist to block pilot error.”
Peter Boettke: “I am an optimist because of the creativity of individuals and the power of the market; I am a pessimist because of the moral intuitions hard-wired into humans through our evolutionary past in small-group settings and the tyranny of government controls in the affairs of men. The logical outcomes of both are fundamentally opposed: complete and unregulated trade with all or isolation and war against all. Human history, I contend, can be seen as the long drama of these two forces battling it out to determine which norms of interaction will be dominant. Put another way, we can follow the Smithian propensity to truck, barter, and exchange, or we can follow the Hobbesian propensity to rape, pillage, and plunder. Optimism comes from Smithian propensities winning out over Hobbesian ones, whereas pessimism comes from the Hobbesian propensities sweeping aside the Smithian ones.” [via CafeHayek]
John McDonnell: “In 2022, large language models (LLMs) finally got good. Specifically, Google and OpenAI have led the way in creating foundation models that respond to instructions more usefully. For OpenAI, this came in the form of Instruct-GPT (OpenAI blogpost), while for Google this was reflected in their FLAN training method (Wei et al. 2022, arxiv). Flan’s which beat the Hypermind forecast for MMLU performance two years early. But the best is yet to come. The really exciting applications will be action-driven, where the model acts like an agent choosing actions. And although academics can argue all day about the true definition of AGI, an action-driven LLM is going to look a lot like AGI.”



