Episode Transcript
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Hey, I'm Ryan Reynolds. Recently, I asked
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Unlimited slows. The
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Economist. Hello
0:43
and welcome to the Intelligence and the
0:45
Economist. I'm Jason Palmer. And I'm
0:47
or it can be. Every weekday
0:50
we provide a fresh perspective on
0:52
the events shaping. You won. A.
0:57
Trip to windswept Scottish islands reveals
1:00
are troubling trend for archaeology. Climate
1:02
change is unearthing national treasures over
1:04
the place, but the lands developers
1:07
who typically fun archaeological digs are
1:09
nowhere to be seen. And
1:13
a new. French biopic tells
1:15
the story of classical composer
1:17
Maurice rebels struggle to create
1:19
his distinctive nineteen Twenty eight.
1:21
Peace will ever it could.
1:24
It's repetitive. Nist had something
1:26
to do with the composer's
1:28
brain disease. First
1:34
out, the. Singapore
1:44
is often admired as one
1:46
of the world's most successful
1:48
societies. Well,
1:51
at least in financial terms. It
1:53
stability as well as it's tax
1:55
and government's regimes have long been
1:58
attractive to international and best. Human
2:02
hands, Strong links with China
2:04
and is criticized for it's
2:06
illiberal domestic policy. No
2:10
changes asserts at the top. And.
2:12
Singapore is about to come under
2:14
new management. I. Accept
2:17
this responsibility. With. Humility
2:19
and a deep sense of
2:21
duty. Nine One
2:23
Singapore's Finance Minister and deputy
2:25
prime minister who take a
2:27
their families yenlong later this
2:30
month. Every ounce
2:32
of my energy show be
2:34
devoted. To. The service of our
2:36
country and our people. Mr.
2:39
Wong will be just as for Prime
2:41
minister since Nineteen sixty five. The
2:43
year that Singapore gained independence from Malaysia.
2:46
And among the challenges he faces
2:49
is protecting islands economic progress. And
2:52
need increasingly tricky relations between
2:54
China and the West. Economists.
2:57
Foreign editor Patrick Thousand spoke to
2:59
Mr. Wong earlier this week to
3:01
discuss the future of Singapore, it's
3:03
model for government and the risks
3:05
that lie ahead. I
3:12
met Mr. Wong in a peaceful
3:14
room overlooking the skylight and Singapore
3:16
which is a mixture of really
3:18
old lady or buildings and hyper
3:20
modern architecture in the financial center.
3:22
On a wants to find out
3:24
what's his prime ministership would mean
3:26
for the country and how he
3:29
was gonna change Singapore compared to
3:31
what his predecessors dead and I
3:33
will be the first prime minister
3:35
the be born off the Singapore's
3:37
independence. All my predecessors
3:39
sang to lot three other
3:41
national and tons of that.
3:44
I've only saw one national enter. Mudra.
3:47
Lacing Up or our national motto
3:49
of fifty one years old as
3:51
to one was born seven years
3:53
and to Singapore's existence as a
3:55
nation and he'll be the source
3:57
Prime Minister since independence for Singapore.
4:00
Not l me a bit about mister One. What
4:02
was he like? Well. I
4:05
think she's much more of a
4:07
humble figure compared to some of
4:09
the prime minister's some the polls
4:11
hadn't. the pasties much more accessible
4:13
and also has a more typical
4:15
background. Said he wanted local school
4:17
in Singapore rather than one of
4:19
the elite schools. My. Background
4:21
is what it is, even if it's helpful
4:23
if it makes it more be made about
4:25
the Singapore and so much the better. He.
4:27
Grew up on one of the city's
4:30
public housing estates which are when they
4:32
Singaporeans. Less. Often studying
4:34
in Singapore, he went. To.
4:36
University in the States and he
4:39
spoke and fondly boxes time busking
4:41
or American streets during his university
4:43
years and a factors will say
4:45
become known for doing a guitar
4:48
solos on social media. says.
4:53
And actually man and money when. Mr.
4:59
Once ascendancy means that for the first
5:01
time in the country's modern history, there
5:03
is no member of the least family
5:05
either in charge waiting in the wings.
5:07
Mr. Wong believes he can live up to
5:09
his predecessors. I believe when push comes to
5:11
shop and the time cause of that hi
5:14
this is sense. I would do so. So
5:16
long as the dissenters in the in says
5:18
of Singapore and Singapore, it. In. One
5:20
time mentioned Singapore is still an
5:22
exemplar and that's the economy. It's
5:24
a combination of. Being.
5:26
Open. Embracing. Change
5:29
and technology. And. Trying
5:31
to be a small says possible
5:33
was government decision making. More
5:36
contentious bit of Singapore is
5:38
it's political system. Which.
5:40
Remains something rather different from
5:42
a fool fat western style
5:45
democracy. The latest
5:47
democracy and x for my
5:49
sister company, Economist Intelligence Units
5:51
pacify Singapore as a snored
5:53
democracy at D C. Mr.
5:56
Wong, strengthening samples democratic principles.
5:58
Mister Ones. People's Action Party
6:01
has been the dominant force
6:03
and Singaporean politics for six
6:05
decades. And rules continuously.
6:07
But it's level of control
6:09
has relaxed a bit. So
6:11
the Center Left Workers Party
6:13
one two of the country's
6:15
multi member constituencies, and Twenty
6:18
Twenty. A. First for any opposition
6:20
group in the country's history, and it
6:22
has roughly a tenth of seats in
6:24
parliament. And the opposition and
6:26
title has around forty percent of
6:29
votes say it's got some weight
6:31
said The Resistance in which politics,
6:33
while not a multi party system.
6:36
All. More contestable than in
6:38
the past. While the
6:40
majority today would like to be happy
6:42
to be in power to be in
6:44
government, they would also like to see
6:46
more opposition voices in parliament. So.
6:49
The opposition presence in parliament is here
6:51
to stay. And it's quite clear.
6:54
But. At the same time the current
6:56
outgoing Prime Minister Lee is like
6:58
these a play some role in
7:00
decision making. While. This is a
7:03
Singapore tradition I mean you don't find
7:05
is commonly in other countries by it's
7:07
a longstanding Singapore traditional without found it
7:09
very valuable. Mr. Wong launched
7:12
a policy called for would Singapore
7:14
in the last couple of years,
7:16
which is a really large scale.
7:19
Engagements Us citizens about two hundred
7:21
thousand people participated. Conversation.
7:24
Still has limits and perhaps mister One
7:26
will go further. During. His time
7:28
in office. Me: Will have to do
7:30
our best to engage Singaporeans. We'll have
7:33
to do our best. Were involved dance
7:35
in decisions that they care deeply about.
7:38
And. In shaping our future. Mr.
7:40
Wong Tobin. The next generation
7:42
holds hi democratic expectations. Is
7:45
myself my team. We are unable
7:47
to meet up the doors high
7:49
expectations. If we are unable to
7:52
deliver those standards and a better
7:54
team arises then. Singaporeans.
7:56
Would choose accordingly. I have no doubt about that.
8:00
I think what's happening in Singapore
8:02
is you got a dynamic, hyper
8:04
rich, hyper modern society that's undergoing
8:06
more change And that means I
8:08
think the government has to be
8:10
more accountable to have public opinion
8:12
is shifting. What? Other
8:15
challenges is mister one facing. Will.
8:17
Singapore had a kind of golden
8:20
era where as a trading center.
8:22
With. A growing population it was able to
8:24
grow really fast and the era of. Legalization
8:27
and what's happening now is some
8:29
of those. Underlying factors
8:32
are heading in the opposite direction,
8:34
say the world economy is no
8:36
less. Trade centric that it
8:38
was another same time, the number
8:41
of working age citizens is forecast
8:43
to decline by several hundred thousand.
8:45
To about one point nine million. By
8:48
twenty thirty the will that means is
8:50
higher health care costs and at the
8:52
same time it means it needs grace
8:54
in the workforce to keep expanding the
8:56
economy. And that's why migration comes and.
8:59
We. Welcome foreign professionals to work
9:02
in Singapore, but it's. It's
9:04
control because if it's not control, I
9:07
think they will be easily swapped. And
9:09
rising numbers of people create more
9:12
competition. Some native Singaporeans feel that
9:14
the odds are stacked against them,
9:16
with lights of highly qualified outsiders
9:19
getting a better chance of the
9:21
top jobs. And. Singapore sits
9:23
in a precarious position between
9:25
China and America. It's open
9:27
to both. Tell me that
9:29
more about that. One. Time says
9:32
Singapore's economy is split between
9:34
trading and take business with
9:36
the West and with. Asia.
9:39
Including China. Meanwhile, the
9:42
population majority Chinese have
9:44
strong cultural. And. Often
9:46
ancestral links with China. And
9:49
that does create some tensions in the
9:51
global all day shifting. the you need
9:53
for the moment for America has ended.
9:56
Yet it remains a preeminent power
9:58
in the world as friends. The
10:00
Eating to a multipolar world. Balancing.
10:03
This line between. The. Two
10:05
Superpowers is tricky for a small country.
10:07
When. A big country deals with a small
10:10
country that the country often doesn't realize how
10:12
imposing they are. And. Is very hard
10:14
to find a happy balance between the two. The.
10:16
Big and small country at the same time. To.
10:19
Hear more about this and an version
10:21
of the interview with Lawrence. One listened
10:24
to Money Talks which Will Be at
10:26
the Ceiling on the Economist podcast feet.
10:28
And. A set Sounds like the new prime
10:30
minister has lots of challenges ahead of him.
10:32
He think he's got what it takes to
10:34
deal with them. I think
10:36
in. The. Economic Sphere: Mr.
10:38
Wong said gender is exactly
10:41
the right one. The.
10:43
Focus is on keeping Singapore as
10:45
open as possible to the world
10:47
economy. Even though it's scope more
10:49
turbulent. The reality is we are
10:51
still a very tiny little island
10:53
in avast and dangerous world. Which.
10:55
Is going to get more dangerous in the
10:57
coming years. The area where I
10:59
think. Mr. Wong, she probably
11:01
do more. Is. On politics.
11:04
It's better to have a political system.
11:07
There's. More resilient, more flexible,
11:09
more open to new ideas. But
11:11
it's still a bit of an
11:14
open question how far Lawrence Warm
11:16
and the fourth generation Singaporean the
11:18
To see represents are prepared to
11:20
get in that direction. What?
11:23
Has happened in the last sixty years has
11:25
been nothing short of America. And. My
11:28
mission. Is a kid this miracle
11:30
going for as long as I can? And
11:32
to mix well, Little red.shines brightly for
11:34
as long as possible. Whether.
11:37
Singapore succeeds is important because
11:39
it's an example of how
11:41
to get wealthy hi to
11:43
succeed to lots of other
11:45
countries around since was watching
11:47
closely. And was completely lil pets.
11:49
I think you say much for coming on the say.
11:52
Thanks sorry. Two,
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12:46
have I not five suffer? Wrong.
12:50
Uncle Globe has Monroe the treasure
12:52
of the most fun drive which
12:54
is an archaeological site that contains
12:56
the remains of iron age and
12:58
know settlement I get. I get
13:00
blown over if is yes as
13:02
wow I'll get. Muddled right right
13:04
about Foreign affairs for the Economist were.
13:06
On the island a rousing which is
13:08
one of the Orkney Islands of the
13:10
North coast of Scotland. As soon as
13:12
he is a nice here and it's
13:14
history all around us. Yeah and that
13:16
sits Rams in the has since all
13:18
the way back to Ram. And
13:21
and cool. Is the know
13:23
slows has would just make me the coast
13:25
and a big bay. In. Front
13:27
of me is what looks like a
13:30
load of rubble. the in it is
13:32
an archaeological do it. Also sticky say
13:34
they see the right side here so
13:36
all the way alone here there's a
13:39
little iron age building. The
13:41
know if one time has been here for
13:43
thousands of years. But. It disappearing
13:45
first. Night with
13:47
Happening. Oh coastal erosion
13:50
has destroyed most of the
13:52
know sunrise. Solving puzzles a
13:54
concise I'm things rerouting
13:56
all. The Time to Julie
13:58
Bowen and Huh? On.the thieving
14:00
don't grow. Lead ongoing excavations
14:02
at the North. Wonder if.
14:05
I spoke with bases m. I
14:07
six. Years
14:10
for the rank. As what's
14:12
written around as classic. The final third.
14:15
Will. Go within. The
14:17
next year to be unequally. That
14:20
it's it's just retracing back from the
14:22
say it'll be that. These.
14:24
Deposits for gone from underneath and the
14:26
whole thing will and start say the
14:28
same can sit disappear that players of
14:30
England. And
14:32
then a big storm of events. the
14:34
beach that he says library science as
14:36
soon as you. Got the
14:39
no Experience is more wind turbines old and
14:41
had been predicted for twenty fisted. Rising.
14:44
Sea levels are more frequent, storms are
14:46
washing away the sediment. Let aside said.
14:49
Rising. Sea levels, more frequent storms. The sounds like
14:51
it's going to be a closer to history. Is
14:53
day said. Steven. Julie
14:55
Things I take. With climate
14:58
change the story this is increasing,
15:00
The sea level is definitely increasing
15:02
and so erosion is getting faster
15:04
and so it's important that will
15:06
have to. Decide before they get. Scotland,
15:09
Is not the only place like change in
15:11
weather patterns are causing a problem. Unesco.
15:14
Reckons that one in six cultural heritage
15:16
sites are threatened by climate change in
15:18
England. Says of i'm I'm thought called
15:20
Than Than and Out and the waterlogged
15:22
conditions that preserved as phone is lacking
15:24
tablets for millennia. I'm not going up.
15:27
And outset some as possible as
15:29
eaten away and ditches, artifacts. And
15:31
sites across the Middle East have been buried
15:33
under tons of sand. But. When it
15:36
comes to climate change, akio of civil
15:38
preservation. It's hardly a pirated. So.
15:41
Is anything at all being done? Can anything
15:43
be done? A climate emergency
15:45
was declared and twenty twenty by the
15:47
International Council on Monuments and Sites, which
15:49
deals with this kind of thing. But
15:52
many archaeologists say policymakers have been
15:54
slow. The mark. Funding. Is
15:57
the main problem. Archaeology Concerned
15:59
about world. Milan developers. But
16:01
when it comes to climate related damaged, there's no
16:03
one's pay for it. Is. Costly bill
16:06
protective measures I'm so it doesn't happen
16:08
too often these days. But. There
16:10
are some benefits that com climate change. Go
16:12
on. What was the good side of the story? Well.
16:15
Archaeologists are coming across nice sites.
16:18
Several. Of the most exciting discoveries a
16:20
recent years some nazi war sits in
16:23
the don't need to ancient book carvings
16:25
and amazon or revealed only aston severe
16:27
drought. Storm. And expose hidden
16:29
gems to. Skara. Brae which
16:31
is a near less excite in Orkney with
16:34
concealed by son James until it was disturbed
16:36
by storm and the nineteenth century. As.
16:38
Centuries old sit let repaid under
16:40
similar circumstances this year. So.
16:43
The way to think about this and is that we are losing
16:45
some sites but along the way we're going to gain some or.
16:47
Yeah for even for those newly
16:49
discovered sides to change poses a
16:51
problem. And so outrageous and
16:54
heritage institutions are faced with a
16:56
brilliant politician. Which. Sites
16:58
will they save a wizard School
17:00
day allowed to disappear of decay,
17:03
Given. The sheer numbers sites on the
17:05
threat and unlimited resources a foldable
17:07
many flights will be lost. And
17:10
as those sites that damaged or
17:12
disappear historical knowledge and tourism know
17:14
go with them. I
17:16
spoke with some I'm from his.environment Scotland.
17:18
He works on credit Wholesome and she
17:20
says communities need to come to terms
17:23
with changing them states. And adapt
17:25
accordingly. To
17:28
know play there is hope sites
17:30
like one day a tendency laser
17:32
scanning and other technologies to capture
17:35
a ditch to record says he
17:37
should animation and told me about
17:39
that on the coastline of Roses
17:41
the site is be lazy scams
17:43
says or less see cove Nicole
17:45
person who's doing a phd so
17:47
she's lays a scam this and
17:49
she's from of pay for your
17:51
ugly scanned the whole thing so
17:53
we got free the models of
17:55
its were recording with all the
17:57
modern technology drugs. And overhead.
18:00
Top of a fuzzy grammar tree.
18:02
Saw west. Says they were recording
18:05
everything we can and the sea
18:07
so called speak publicly available when
18:09
with actually finished and. While goes
18:11
far as intense. New
18:15
technology That this means we can size
18:17
and least some of this. Wonderful he
18:19
says. Madeline.
18:21
Thanks very much Freedom Honky Tonk. Murray's
18:34
Rebels Bolero is a pretty
18:36
weird peace. Matt.
18:39
Stained Glass is the economist and
18:41
deputy editor. Starts
18:43
off with this and do for and. That
18:51
rhythm with seats and the snare
18:53
drama for the entire duration of
18:56
the peace. One Hundred and Sixty
18:58
Nine ties are just too. melodies
19:00
in the Peace Fair repeated over
19:03
and over again a times each.
19:07
Starts with the some of. And.
19:12
And tunes are repeated over and
19:15
over again, being passed around to
19:17
different instruments in the orchestra. The
19:21
peace is basically it sees. It
19:23
uses that repetition to build up
19:25
the expectation of the something big
19:27
happening, and then in the end,
19:29
it just explodes all those expectations.
19:32
It was originally the score to a
19:34
short ballet. It's danceable and very catchy,
19:36
and it has a tendency to keep
19:38
running in the listeners had long after
19:40
the peace ends. A.
19:50
New Friends biopics called Bolero tells
19:52
the story of Rebels, struggles of
19:54
composed of Peace and Nineteen Twenty
19:56
Eight and it employs a similar
19:58
kind of rapid. Remove. Him
20:01
an at it as as often as
20:03
you know this wasn't for newcomers. The.
20:06
Director and Fontaine keeps coming back
20:08
over and over to Rebels. Fascination
20:10
with the chemical noise is tortured,
20:13
sexuality is habit of procrastination. That
20:15
and his long mental deterioration. He
20:17
died in Nineteen. Thirty Seven have
20:20
a brain disease, and some neurologists
20:22
think that brain disease may have
20:24
been a condition called frontotemporal dementia,
20:26
which is associated with obsessive repetition.
20:33
Whether the pieces a symptom
20:35
of neurological dysfunction or not,
20:37
it's one of the most
20:39
performed pieces around in the
20:42
classical repertoire. Royalties from performances
20:44
and recordings and film scores
20:46
have done some to something
20:48
like a hundred million dollars,
20:50
But the issue of who
20:52
gets all that money is
20:54
complicated. Rebels had no descendants
20:56
on his desk and copyright
20:58
past his brother who got
21:00
into a car accidents, married
21:02
his caretaker. See them
21:04
left the rights to her first
21:06
husband. he married his manicurist who
21:08
had a daughter from a previous
21:10
marriage and the copyright to all
21:13
of Rebels works wound up belonging
21:15
to that donors ever been tend
21:17
to custom under French law, the
21:19
peace and to the public domain
21:21
and two thousand and sixteen but
21:23
like the music of Pull their
21:26
whole the copyright story never seems
21:28
to and in two thousand and
21:30
eighteen Miss Pentecostals sued System which
21:32
is Francis Musical. Copyright Agency.
21:35
Arguing that Valero was actually
21:37
a collaborative work. Of off. And
21:42
the choreographer Than Islam Unleashing
21:45
scar. That would
21:47
mean that the copyright should
21:49
and on the basis of
21:51
the death of the last
21:53
collaborator, the choreographer, he didn't
21:55
die until Nineteen Seventy Two
21:57
and a decent continued receive
21:59
royals. Nine.
22:05
Hundred or before. This
22:12
weekend's movie starts off with Roselle
22:14
in the middle of a severe
22:16
case of writer's block. Either
22:18
Rubenstein, who is a flamboyant Russian
22:20
dancer in Paris in the nineteen
22:22
twenties, commissioned him to write a
22:24
ballet, And Nineteen Twenty eight. Hazards
22:27
of recess any tune and is
22:30
it didn't look for something. He
22:32
agreed to compose something that evoked his
22:34
Basque Spanish roots. But then he began
22:36
procrastinating and became obsessed by an emotional
22:38
affair with the wife of one of
22:41
his patrons and another see. And he
22:43
takes he to Rubenstein who commissioned the
22:45
Peace to A Factory and says he
22:47
should do ballet. that's an ode to
22:49
mechanical modernity based on the scenes and
22:51
so forth. She
22:58
says she loves his vision but then
23:00
she goes ahead and ignores it's and
23:02
creates this kind of seems spanish fantasia.
23:09
Valera was immediately a huge hit.
23:11
Arturo Toscanini conducted a rendition with
23:13
a New York Philharmonic and Nineteen
23:15
Thirty that was massively popular. Rebel
23:21
said he pleaded much too fast and to
23:23
modern your sound that way. In
23:26
the seventies, the movie Ten came out
23:28
in Nineteen Seventy Nine, which was a
23:30
massive comedy hit. Oh, Derek plays a
23:33
young Uns and knew who insists on
23:35
playing the peace during sex with doubling
23:37
more. Or
23:40
less. The credits at the end of
23:42
Miss on Tens movie claim that Bolero
23:44
is played by an orchestra somewhere in
23:46
the world several times in our. It's
23:49
also been me imagined by modern
23:52
artists, for example, the legendary Detroit's
23:54
Dj Carl Craig and Berlin's dubbed
23:56
techno originator More, It's On Oswald.
24:02
It is hardly surprising that Miss
24:04
Pentecostal wishes that all of these
24:07
performances were still earning her money,
24:09
but the copyright agencies sam says
24:11
her suit is nonsense. The
24:14
set designer and the choreographer had
24:16
nothing to do with composing the
24:18
Peace, and she never claimed that
24:20
it was a collaborative work until
24:22
after the copyrights expired. But
24:26
there's something about that repetitive,
24:28
permanent quality of boleros melody
24:31
Rebel himself supposedly asked. Think
24:35
there's something. Terribly consistent about the melody,
24:37
and you might have found something sitting
24:39
about the idea that stores seems to
24:41
keep going. That
25:00
souls anticipated the intelligence. if you
25:03
haven't caught bounds and listening to
25:05
last a nice Saturday Sunday. Now
25:09
be taught. In this weekend
25:11
for the rest of mean will
25:13
be offering free access to the
25:15
weekend Intelligence are special ended the
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the episode. The Guys in
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some poignant companion and sometimes
25:22
personal stories from our correspondent
25:24
a favorite of mine. Was
25:27
one of our earliest to say something
25:29
Finity and ideas and an eighteen. May
25:32
need issues and if you're already
25:34
subscriber to Clinton's put customs think
25:36
he sees didn't keep the didn't
25:38
need to tell you send in
25:40
send me to take any the
25:42
weekend intelligence me for the next
25:44
to be neat to see that
25:47
kid. he. I.
26:00
Met a guy recently who told me that
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he spent roughly two hundred fifty thousand dollars
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a month. I talked to another person recently
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made fifty million dollars at the age of
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it? How do you not spend it? Would
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