Tyler Cowen on Immigration, DOGE, and 'The Great Forgetting'
"Bad ideas have been making a comeback," the host of Conversations with Tyler tells Reason.

Tyler Cowen, an economics professor at George Mason University, chairman and faculty director of the Mercatus Center, and host of the podcast Conversations with Tyler, regularly invokes what he calls "The Great Forgetting." This collective amnesia, he says, doesn't apply only to ancient history but also to hard lessons learned only a few decades ago. In January, Cowen joined Zach Weissmueller and Liz Wolfe on the Reason podcast Just Asking Questions to discuss what we are forgetting and what he predicts for Donald Trump's second term.
Q: What exactly is The Great Forgetting?
A: One example would be a lot of individuals today—some of them even economists—think rent control is maybe a decent idea. Several decades ago, virtually everyone would have realized that rent control creates shortages, quality problems, corruption. But bad ideas have been making a comeback. The use of excess inflation to try to stimulate the economy. Or the notion that high crime is not so bad for your city's economy. We learned that lesson, but we seem to be forgetting that again.
Q: A MAGA civil war has broken out over issues like high-skilled immigration and antitrust. Any intuitions about how that will play out?
A: I think the MAGA movement is held together by Trump. As he, over time, becomes a lame duck, it will more and more splinter; decisions and outcomes will be more and more random. I think in the first year, there's a good chance for many good things to happen. I'm hoping they do. I'm not convinced they will.
The way you initiate social change is to have a fair number of cadres of people working on something for long periods of time. They're in government, they infiltrate institutions. The Democratic Party has done that wonderfully. The Republican Party, far less well. Libertarians, almost not at all.
Q: So much of the debate in the past has been about the low-skilled immigration coming over the southern border, and now there's a fracture growing because so much of Silicon Valley was openly backing Trump in a way they weren't last time. But there's disagreement about the H-1B visas that are important for their labor market. Were you surprised to see the discourse shift to debating high-skilled immigration?
A: I'm not surprised at all. I've been predicting this for some while. Once you get people riled up with nationalistic feelings, it's hard to control those feelings. And they spread to being anti-foreigner.
I prefer a world where people want more legal immigration of both kinds. I know that's not what we're about to get. There are these fights going on, and the first round, the pro-immigration people actually won it. I wouldn't say I'm hopeful, but it would have been worse if they had lost it.
Q: You've noted that MAGA is better at tapping into what you call negative contagion than progressives have been. But this time it does feel a little different, mostly because of the Silicon Valley techno-optimism that's been infused. Is this the shift from malaise into hopefulness that Americans have been waiting for?
A: I hope so, but I wouldn't predict it. My fear is that after year one, the best Silicon Valley people will be some mix of fed up, burnt out, kicked out, have better things to do, and will move on. But on the energy front, AI front, let's try to get done what we can while we can because there is some momentum in those directions. But it's hard for me to see that as the ruling principle for another four years of Trump.
Q: Are you bullish or bearish on DOGE?
A: I don't know. The original plans were badly misguided—great ideas that I agreed with, but the people involved didn't at all seem to know what they were doing. Do they currently have a workable plan? I'm not sure. If they get done a 10th of what they say, it's much better than nothing. I suppose that's my prediction.
This interview has been condensed and edited for style and clarity.
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If they get done a 10th of what they say, it's much better than nothing.
Absolutely. If they can reduce the annual deficit AT ALL, that would be a major turnaround.
At twat PRICE? Collectively nuking us all world-wide back to the sticks-and-stones age would sure get that them thar annual deficit reduced!
If'n ye have been paying attention, Germany just relaxed its financial rules to deal with the threats of the Russian Power-Pig-Bear... Ass the USA did during the Big WW II... Sometimes ya gotta do twat ya gotta do...
Pick a script on whether Trump is Putin's puppet or will start WW3 against Russia and stick to it, you lazy Democratic party shill.
I have the humility which is required to change my mind from day to day, ass new evidence cums in.
Twat about YOU, Oh Great PervFected One?
At twat PRICE? Collectively nuking us all world-wide back to the sticks-and-stones age would sure get that them thar annual deficit reduced!
Again, proof the whole so-called libertarian "abolish-everything-maaaaan" was never serious. It was just something uttered after turning on the black light and sparking up the bong.
Couldn't agree more.
"The Great Forgetting" has GOT to include the Great Stupidity of believing that taxes, to include tariff-taxes, will make us all rich!
The most recent inhabitant of the White House is profoundly stupid and uneducated! And has ZERO wisdom or selfless benevolence, to boot! Shit's HIM and HIS Fame and Glory... All must respect HIM, no matter HOW stupid and evil He gets!
Trump has just proposed an enormous tax cut, eliminating income tax for those under $150,000. Reason was almost as upset about that as they were over DOGE finding government waste.
You're not going to learn much watching MSNBC all day, crazypants.
"Trump has just proposed an enormous tax cut, eliminating income tax for those under $150,000."
And I proposed FREE ponies for EVERYONE! This shit will NEVER happen! A world-wide Great Depression over unprovoked (except by Dear Leader) trade wars is FAR more likely to happen!
The way you initiate social change is to have a fair number of cadres of people working on something for long periods of time. They're in government, they infiltrate institutions. The Democratic Party has done that wonderfully. The Republican Party, far less well. Libertarians, almost not at all.
The long march through institutions.
Sarc and Jeff demand none of the people be fired for this exact reason. To defend the infiltration and take over by unelected bureaucrats.
This is not a good thing.
So then THIS is twat explains how tariff-taxes will make us all rich?!
Thank YOU, Oh Great JesseBahnFarter-Fuhrer! All Hail The Great JesseBahnFarter-Fuhrer!
Jesse lies, lies, and then lies some more.
Judges aren’t political, that’s impossible!
"Several decades ago, virtually evenness would have realized rent control creates shortages..."
Which is why it was universally repealed back then. Oh wait. It was not. It just was not pushed very hard outside of certain urban centers like NYC.
I do not disagree about the perverse incentives of rent control, but the universal disdain for it which he thinks is "forgotten" is a mirage. The idea that market pricing is an evil conspiracy that must be regulated always comes up strongly in times of inflation, or high scarcity, such as proceeded the French Revolution.
I prefer a world where people want more legal immigration of both kinds.
You just outed yourself as a leftist you leftist. That means everything you say is wrong you leftist.
Blackout alcoholics are sad.
You noticed he made the incredibly rare qualification of "legal"?
The only surprise to me is that economists aren't yet being tarred and feathered.
Can we teach them to lay eggs?
The tar would jam up the woodchippers.
That’s why drawing and quartering works so well.
I kind of consider us to be in the middle of the Great Remembering... you know, remembering how to do all those things that we've pretended to not know how to do over the last 10 years or so...
Like how to tell if someone has a peepee or a hooha. Used to be pretty easy. Now, according to 1/3 of the Supreme Court, it takes a biologist.
ROFL. Glad I had just swallowed my coke. But to be fair, it May take a biologist these days to tell. After all, in a country & society that provides the ability to change your sex organs on a whim (and I'm talking about lopping off that peepee and carving out a hooha, or the reverse [though that's a process I'm not clear on and will remain blissfully ignorant on]) it may take a biologist to determine what the actual sex is (like doing a cell examination and finding XX or XY chromosomes). You know I think myself, & most of the general population are fine with whatever you want to do to yourself. The problem comes when you start infringing on My (and others) rights. I'm not going to learn someone's personal pronouns. If you look like a he, I'll call you he. If you look like a she, I'll call you she. Simple enough. Your rights end where they start infringing on mine.
The movement has a tinge of hypocrisy anyway. The left preaches about social & economic injustice, but does nothing to make real change. There are places in the world where people still don't get enough to eat. Why don't you fix that before getting bent out of shape about sex change operations & hormone therapy that's only available because of this capitalist system you rail against so vehemently.
The way you initiate social change is to have a fair number of cadres of people working on something for long periods of time. They're in government, they infiltrate institutions. The Democratic Party has done that wonderfully.
Sure, with the result being campus sex police and Soviet style political officers nominally focused on racial equality instead of financial equality.
Q: You've noted that MAGA is better at tapping into what you call negative contagion than progressives have been.
Man, it's like 2015-2025 just didn't happen for some people, I guess.
It’s almost like they had a: “Great forgetting”. Jesus, these people.
>>A MAGA civil war has broken out
you shot who in the what now?
>Q: A MAGA civil war has broken out over issues like high-skilled immigration and antitrust. Any intuitions about how that will play out
Fucking seriously.
Some people had a Twitter spat over Musk's support of H1B. It's over. That's all it was.
Civil fucking war
Who the fuck is Tyler Cowen?
Wasn't he in One Direction?
I think so. Had a bit part in "Weekend at Bernie's" as well.
Funny, that's exactly what I said when I read the title. I clicked the article (bait) just to find out. I knew it would be bad when I read "... Tyler Cowen economic professor at ... [insert generic liberal university here]". But I read the whole thing, so I can't be accused of not having read his whole take (even the disclaimer at the end "This interview has been condensed and edited for style and clarity..") Style? LOL. l guess Reason is better than most other news out there. Though they do have a few authors that are pretty suspect. As is most of this article.
DOGE reduced the number of leases it said it canceled, dropping its claimed savings by $150 million
--- Business Insider
At this rate, will it take long for us to start counting how much DOGE has cost everyone instead ?