{"id":24269,"date":"2016-01-27T14:15:30","date_gmt":"2016-01-27T03:15:30","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/?p=24269"},"modified":"2016-01-27T15:27:55","modified_gmt":"2016-01-27T04:27:55","slug":"the-astonishing-david-hale","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/the-astonishing-david-hale\/","title":{"rendered":"The astonishing David Hale"},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/a><\/p>\n The last time I saw David Hale was at a dinner in a restaurant at the Griffith shops in Canberra. He was passing through Australia on one of his regular visits and suggested we get together. David was a most remarkable polymath and any encounter with him was master-class in understanding how the world worked, how economies could grow and shrink, how national politics was shaped by the random endowments of resources and human ingenuity and how all of it fitted together into a global system, hissing at the seams, but still chugging along.<\/p>\n As luck would have it, we met close to Valentine\u2019s Day and so it was that the restaurant was full of sparkly-eyed couples drinking champagne and seemingly saying not too much at all while David and I opted for Shiraz, steak and chips and a thorough-going discussion on the dysfunctional economies of Africa and the Middle East. \u2018Nigeria\u2019, he would say with a ringing Bostonian intonation: \u2018failing in terms of political reform.\u2019 Chips. \u2018Corrupt. Hopeless.\u2019 \u2018Oil production down 6.2% on last year.\u2019 Shiraz. \u2018But amazing spread of mobile telephony.\u2019 Steak. Thus round the Continent and the Fertile Crescent until coffee.<\/p>\n As David spoke his eyes would look inward to his astonishing cray computer-like mental database. He retained facts about the economics and politics of every country on the planet. Time series; dates of coups; forthcoming elections; year on year comparisons of crop yields and mineral outputs and all cross referenced and instantly accessible. He would rock slightly as he spoke, a mannerism which many Australians would recall from his dozens of interviews on Lateline<\/em> (and here in this ASPI interview<\/a>) about the Australian economy and our place in a rapidly transforming world. But David Hale was no Bower Bird collector of random information. He synthesised it all into coherent and balanced assessments of the world around us. He also had a dry humour and would look at you shyly to see if you got his jokes. Australians did. That\u2019s probably why he liked us so much and why we liked him.<\/p>\n