The Way the World Works: A Tuttle Twins Podcast for Families
Planning works well at home when someone knows everyone's needs — but falls apart when governments try to plan for millions of people they don't understand.
Central planning often fails because no single person or government agency can possibly know what every individual needs, wants, values, or prefers. But there may be one exception: your mom. Inside a household, moms often know who likes which foods, who needs new shoes, who is struggling in school, and what each family member needs day to day.
In this episode of The Way the World Works, we use Mother's Day as a fun way to explain the knowledge problem — economist F.A. Hayek's warning that central planners can never gather enough information to successfully manage an entire economy. We explore why moms can plan well for their own families, why that knowledge doesn't scale to neighborhoods, cities, or countries, and why government planners fail when they assume they know what's best for everyone.
The closer decision-making stays to the people affected, the better those decisions tend to be.
0:00 Can Anyone Be a Good Central Planner?
1:30 Why Moms Know So Much
4:00 Why Household Planning Works
6:30 What Happens When Families Grow and Change
8:30 Hayek's Knowledge Problem Explained
11:00 Why Government Planners Fail
14:00 Why Local Knowledge Matters
16:00 Why Mom Might Be the Exception
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