What COVID19 means for the future of commerce capitalism and cash Dan Schulman

Corey Hajim: Today, our guest
is Dan Schulman, CEO of PayPal.

When most of us think of PayPal,
we think of buying something online

or paying a friend back
for a drink using Venmo.

But PayPal has also become
a major financial services player,

often acting as an alternative
to a traditional bank.

During this pandemic,

PayPal has supported small businesses
around the world by providing loans,

waiving fees

and increasing cash back programs.

It has also worked with the US government

on its Paycheck Protection Program,

as well as distributing stimulus checks.

It has enabled an outpouring
of generosity online as well.

The trend towards digital payments,

or what we might now want
to think of as “contactless payments,”

has massively accelerated,

and it’s changing forever
how we think about commerce.

So I’m really excited
to have Dan here with us.

Thank you so much, Dan.

Dan Schulman: Thanks for having me, Corey.
Pleasure to be here with you.

CH: Glad to see you.

So let’s dive right in.

Within a few months
of this pandemic’s arrival,

more than 30 million people
have filed for unemployment

in the United States alone.

These are certainly unusual circumstances,

but it seems clear we were running
very close to the edge,

and now so many businesses
and their employees

are facing huge financial challenges.

How worried are you?

DS: Well, I think the crisis
has exposed three things.

Obviously, it’s a health crisis

for so many people.

Second thing is,
that health crisis has ricocheted,

and the world is now
in an economic crisis.

And the third crisis
that we don’t talk so much about

but I think is impacting the way

that we’re going to live
our lives going forward

is: this is a psychological
crisis as well.

People are reexamining
their place in the world,

what’s happening in the world,

how they’re going to live their lives,

both in the pandemic and postpandemic.

And so I think this is something
that each of those phases

will need to be dealt with.

But you said this,

and I completely agree with you:

there was an economic crisis happening

well before the pandemic exposed this.

It’s kind of like
the water level came down

and exposed what was already there.

You had, for instance, in the US,

185 million adults in the US

struggling to make ends meet
at the end of the month.

You have over 70 million adults that are
really outside of the financial system,

spending over 140 billion dollars
on high interest rates,

unnecessary fees

and struggling as well.

And so I think
what this has really done –

because you can’t ignore 20,
25 percent unemployment rates –

it’s exposed this crisis

and forced a lot of people into, maybe,
actions that they might not have taken

without this crisis happening.

CH: Yeah, I think that’s right.

There are so many challenges
and so many opportunities,

and I think you’ve spoken
of this opportunity

of digital transactions
being helpful to people,

and obviously the trend, as you’ve said,

has massively accelerated and pushed us
into this world even further.

So I’m curious:

What does the world
look like without cash?

Or less cash?

What are the advantages
and what are the challenges

of making that transition?

DS: I think some of the trends that are
emerging coming out of this pandemic

or coming into it
and as we look forward is,

clearly, this has been a discontinuous
change in the trend line

as we move from physical to digital.

I think we’ve accelerated
many forms of digital capabilities

by three to five years.

And that can be from digital payments

to telemedicine

to really changing the face of retail

and how we think about retailing,

changing the face of entertainment,

even changing the way governments
think about managing and moving money

and really thinking about
digital currencies going forward.

And so I think there are
a tremendous number of changes

that will occur

during this pandemic and coming out of it.

Digital payments is obviously
one of the big ones that will happen.

I mean, cash has been around
for quite some time,

thousands of years.

I would not be so bold
as to predict its full demise.

Many people have been wrong doing that.

But there is no question right now

that you will see an acceleration
of the demise of cash.

Last year, you had
over 18 trillion dollars of cash

spent at retail.

Eighty-five percent
of the world’s transactions today

are done in cash still.

But the really big change right now

towards digital payments,

and that’s both the advent
and the acceleration of commerce

that’s happening,

as well as the shift to in-store
contactless payments, as you said,

and the real impetus for that
is health reasons.

People do not want to hand over money.

They do not want to touch screens.

They don’t want to pick up a pen
and sign at the point of sale.

And so there is a demand

for contactless payments
and digital payments

to keep social distancing
requirements in place,

to protect the health of cashiers,

to protect the health of consumers.

And I think we are going to see,
we are already seeing in our business,

a surge in digital payments
across the world.

CH: It seems like a great opportunity,

but how do we make sure
that this transition is inclusive?

I mean, you’ve talked about
how so many people are underserved

by the traditional banking industry.

How do we make sure that those people

have that opportunity?

And it feels like a smartphone

becomes an essential item.

How do we address that?

DS: Yeah.

I do think that a mobile
is really a key to unlocking this.

I’ve often said that, really,

one of the big moon shots
for the financial services industry

is this idea of not just
financial inclusion.

Most people define financial inclusion

by somebody having
access to a bank account,

but just having access to a bank account
is not nearly enough.

I think what we need to aim for

is how do we think about financial health?

How do we make sure
that people have the ability

to have some wherewithal

to create savings to withstand some kind
of financial shock to the system?

I do think that mobile phones

will be the way that this occurs

and will be very inclusive going forward.

There are going to be something like
six billion smartphones in the world

over the next several years.

The cost of a smartphone is plummeting.

I think in India now you can buy
a smartphone for under 25 dollars.

So you’re going to have ubiquity
of smartphones across the world,

and, in fact, what’s very interesting
is, in lower-income populations,

there is a greater penetration
of smartphones than in higher income

because the smartphone
is the only device that somebody has.

Higher-income individuals
may have desktops or iPads,

that kind of thing,

but lower income can afford one device,

and they choose it to be a smartphone

because they can get and live their life
through that one device.

And think about that one device.

Really, you have all the power
of a bank branch

in the palm of your hands.

And when you can start
to create distribution of services,

financial services,

through a smartphone,

you then are able
to manage and move money

in ways that we couldn’t do traditionally.

In the physical world,

if you get a check,

you need to then go
to a cash checking place to cash it.

You stand in line for 30 minutes.

They then charge you anywhere
between two and five percent

to just change the format of currency

from a check to cash.

And then you have cash
and you want to pay a bill.

You need to stand in line again

at a bill pay,

and then you have to pay maybe 10 dollars

for an individual bill as a fee.

If you do that via a smartphone,

I believe that not only do you save
a tremendous amount of time,

because if you’re outside
the financial system,

managing and moving money
is practically a part-time job

to go and do that,

so not only do you save time
and return time to individuals,

but you can cut the cost of transactions

by anywhere between 50 and 75 percent.

And remember that $140 billion
number that I gave you?

And that’s just in the US.

Imagine if you could cut that in half

and return that to the most
vulnerable populations

that need it most.

So I think there’s tremendous promise

in the use of technology

to help provide both inclusion

and make sure there aren’t
digital haves and have-nots,

but also to start on this journey
towards financial health.

CH: Yeah, I think a lot
of people don’t realize

that you don’t need a bank
account or even a credit card

to open a PayPal account,

which is super-interesting.

I mean, do you see a time
where traditional banks don’t exist

or at least play a much smaller role
in the financial services industry?

DS: Well, I think the entire
financial services industry

is evolving right now,

and so I think banks
will always play a role,

or as far into the future as I can see,

but it will evolve.

I mean, think about basic credit cards.

Today, you think about a credit card,

and you think about it
predominantly as a form factor,

something that you pull
out of your pocket.

Sometimes there’s status associated with
what you’re pulling out of your pocket,

depending on the color
of that credit card.

But really I think those
form factors start to go away

and become embedded in digital wallets.

So credit will always
be an important element.

You know, most people in the world,

it isn’t that their cash outlays
exceed their cash intake.

It’s just that they’re not
evenly distributed.

So there are times where your
cash outflows exceed your cash intake,

and there, you need some form of credit
to make up that difference.

And so I think forms of credit
will always be an important element.

But the way that you extend credit
will change going forward,

the way that you think
about scoring people

in terms of can they handle credit.

You know, traditionally,
in more developed countries,

you use what’s called
FICO scores or bureau scores,

but those ignore so many
of the financial transactions

that people who are outside
the financial system do,

like paying rent
or paying their bills on time.

And with the data and information
and machine learning around that –

and we need to be careful
that there aren’t biases

built into those algorithms –

we can start to do things
that could never be done before.

I’ll just give you one quick example.

We’re one of the largest providers
of working capital to small businesses

in the world.

We’re probably one of the top five
in the United States.

So we’ve done over 14, 15 billion dollars

of lending of working capital
to small businesses.

Seventy percent of that
goes to the 30 percent of counties

where 10 or more banks
have closed branches.

And where do banks close branches?

Banks close branches in neighborhoods

where the median income
is below the national average,

which makes sense because
for a branch to be profitable,

they need a certain amount of deposits

for that branch to actually be profitable.

And so, in lower income neighborhoods,

branches are starting to close.

So why are 70 percent of our loans
in those lower income neighborhoods?

It’s because we do machine learning.

We don’t even look at FICO scores
or bureau scores.

We look at a number
of different data elements.

And so we can lend into
those lower income neighborhoods

where nobody else can,

and when we do that,

the average sale of a small business
goes up by 22 percent.

And imagine the impact that has
on communities and neighborhoods

where they can finally get
the working capital

to expand those small businesses.

And I think that’s a perfect example

of the promise of what technology
and financial services

married together can do.

CH: I think it’s so interesting.

I’m curious.

The tech industry has been criticized
for amassing power over society,

not that the banking industry
isn’t criticized.

But what do you say about people
who might be worried about

tech companies taking on
even more influence and control

over what’s happening in their lives?

DS: Yeah.

Well, I think what’s so important
for any company and tech companies

is to respect the boundaries

in terms of what consumers expect
from a company that serves them.

I think the most important brand attribute
that a company can have is trust,

and trust comes from the understanding

that a company respects your privacy

and will not sell
your data or information,

that it can perform transactions
in a secure manner

so that your transactions are protected.

And I think those
are kind of foundational,

and I think any company
needs to respect that.

They need to assure that consumers

have the privacy that they desire

and the safety and security
that is required

to serve them the right way.

CH: And obviously, you’ve gained
a lot of trust with the US government.

Maybe we could talk a little bit
about how you’ve been working with them

to distribute some money
through the Paycheck Protection Program.

And I was curious,

I’ve been reading about it,
and it sounds like

30 million-ish small businesses
in the United States

are able to get those funds,

but only six million
have received the loans.

What do you think’s happened?

DS: Yep.

Well, I think initially, the government –
and I give them a lot of credit –

they responded quite quickly

with a 3 trillion dollar stimulus package.

These are massive numbers
that were happening

in very condensed time frames.

We were working with various agencies,

very closely with the Treasury Department,

in terms of distribution of the stimulus.

And they were working literally
night and day on this.

The Small Business Administration
was working night and day.

But these are volumes

that have never been seen before
running through these systems,

and the first tranche of those loans

was very difficult.

There were a lot of technical difficulties
in getting those out to small businesses.

And that first tranche was not enough,

and it was quickly used,

and there are still
a host of small businesses

that needed money.

The second tranche that came out

is still actually in effect.

It has not been used up,

and we are continuing to lend on that.

We’ve been able to lend
to some 50,000 small businesses.

We’ve lent out about 1.7 billion dollars,

and our loan size,

which really I’m proud of,

is about 31,000 dollars.

The average that a bank does
is between 100 and 125,000 dollars.

So we are lending
to these true small businesses

on Main Street,

and I’m proud that we’ve
been able to go do that,

and I think we should give credit
to the US government

and governments around the world

that are taking this quite seriously

and putting a tremendous amount,
a percentage of their GDP,

towards the rescue of small businesses

and towards trying
to take care of consumers

that find themselves
in really difficult straits right now.

And we’ve been trying to,

instead of people mailing out checks,
which is ridiculous in today’s world –

people aren’t living where they think
they’re going to be living,

they’re with their parents or with friends
or in a different location,

and mailing a check

and then having to take a check
and go somewhere,

which you can’t even go
if you’re sheltered in place,

to cash it,

doing that electronically
just makes a ton more sense –

and we’ve been working
with the IRS and Treasury

and other government agencies
to distribute that electronically.

CH: Yeah, that makes a lot of sense.

It’s a massive, massive project

for all of us.

Whitney is here with some questions
from our community.

DS: Hello, Whitney.

Whitney Pennington Rodgers:
Hello Dan. How are you?

So the community has
some interesting questions

following up on what you
were talking about earlier about security.

We have a question from Marc –

and I apologize in advance
if I mispronounce your name, Marc –

Marc Vanlerberghe:

“The move to digital cash
could be one more step

towards creating the perfect
surveillance state.

How do we avoid this from happening?”

DS: Yeah, well, this is what
I was talking about, Marc, before.

I mean, I think this idea of trust

is incredibly important.

I think the only companies
that will be successful –

and I think we hold a lot of this
in our own hands as consumers, by the way;

we need to be aware of data
and information that we’re giving

and to what companies
we’re doing that with –

but I think the companies
that will be successful

are those that have
a high degree of trust,

and trust happens
by protecting your privacy

but also very much assuring
that your transactions in a digital world

are safe and secure.

I mean, the idea of cybersecurity

has always been important,

but is ever more important
as we move from physical to digital,

and that’s where
large data sets are important,

because a consumer’s identity
is stolen every two seconds.

Every two seconds, some consumer
has their identity stolen.

And so we have to be, for instance,

we have to be sure
that even when you sign in

with your credentials,

they’re actually real credentials.

We have to look at 30 to 100
different elements of that transaction

to make sure it’s really you

before we let that money
out of your account.

And so there is a combination
of making sure you have enough data

to protect somebody

but also assure that your privacy
is held sacrosanct,

and I think that is a balancing act
and one that needs to happen

in order for us to do this successfully.

WPR: Great, and actually sort of going
from digital cash to digital currency,

we have another question
from Simone Ross in our community

about the opportunity that exists
for digital currency.

She mentioned that PayPal
pulled out of Libra.

What would it take for a truly inclusive
digital currency to take hold here?

DS: Yeah.

I think there is a tremendous
amount of promise

as we think about digital currencies.

Our pulling out of Libra

had nothing to do with our firm conviction

that blockchain and other forms
of maybe stable coin currencies

are extremely important

and can be very, very helpful,

especially in different
parts of the world.

As we think about stability
in different parts of the world

where currencies
can fluctuate up and down,

to have a more stable currency
where somebody can know,

if they have that,

that it’s going to be worth x amount,

and that they can transact,

either with other individuals
around the world

or, importantly,
at merchants around the world.

And we are looking at all forms
of digital currencies right now,

working hand in hand
with a number of different governments,

and I think we should all think about
how technology is going to evolve

and how currencies will evolve
as a result of that.

And I think this crisis
has really opened the eyes

of many governments around the world

as to the need for different tool sets

to create stimulus

and to efficiently and quickly
and effectively distribute funds

to their citizens.

WPR: Great. Well, I’ll be back shortly
with more questions,

and I’d just love to remind the community
that you can ask questions

on the “Ask question” feature.

Be sure to use the pull-down tab
to select Episode 2,

so those questions come.

Thank you.

DS: Thanks, Whitney.

CH: Thanks, Whitney.

Dan, I want to go back to something
we touched on in the beginning

about financial wellness.

PayPal has done something unique

in terms of calculating
how much to pay people

and how much you should spend on benefits.

Traditionally, wages
are set by the market,

but you’ve found that paying
as much or even more than other companies

wasn’t always enough.

Can you tell us about that moment?

DS: Yeah.

So I said, kind of, in our opening,
in one of my opening statements,

that two-thirds of Americans
struggle to make ends meet

at the end of the month.

They are financially stressed,

and it kind of wreaks havoc in their life.

I did a study to look at PayPal employees.

We did a research study,

and I did it because I thought I was going
to get back this great information

that I was going to talk about
at an employee meeting

about how well we pay,

because we pay, to your point,

at or above market

in every single location around the world.

And what I found is, unfortunately,
like the rest of the world,

even though we paid at market
or above market,

60 percent of our operations personnel,

our entry-level employees,
our hourly workers,

face the same thing.

They struggle to make ends meet.

And that was simply unacceptable for me.

I think the world is changing

in terms of the responsibility
of corporations,

the responsibility of CEOs.

We have a lot of different stakeholders
that we try to satisfy,

from regulators to shareholders
to customers to employees.

But I think the number one
responsibility that we have

is the health – financial health –
of our employees,

because nothing could be
more important to a company

than to have financially secure,
passionate employees working for you,

because nobody is going to serve customers

better than employees
who feel a part of something

and feel financially secure and glad
to be a part of that company.

And so then the real question becomes:
How do you measure that?

Because a lot of people think
about living wages or a minimum wage.

And we thought that was insufficient,

and we came up with a measurement
we called “net disposable income,”

which is, basically:

After you pay taxes and
your basically essential living expenses,

how much money do you have
left over for discretionary things

or to save?

And here’s the really unfortunate thing –
and I’m not proud of this,

but remember, we were paying
at market or above,

so I thought the market would
take care of this, right, by doing that –

we found that for that population,

they had four to six percent
NDI, net disposable income,

after paying taxes
and essential living expenses.

That is not enough.

You are going to struggle
to make ends meet.

And by the way, NDI changes
location to location to location

around the globe, right?

There’s a different NDI in Manila,
a different NDI in Omaha, Nebraska,

than there is in New York City, etc.

And so we basically
said to ourselves,

we need to take
NDI to 20 percent.

Because at 20 percent –

and that’s a huge shift,
from four to six to 20 percent –

but at 20 percent,
you actually have the ability to save

and to put money away and to take care
of discretionary expenses.

And so we did a pretty
massive reorientation

of our compensation systems.

We lowered the cost
of benefits by 58 percent,

because benefits
are like a regressive tax,

you pay the same amount
no matter what your salary is.

And so we had a lot of employees
who weren’t taking health care benefits,

because it cost too much
to be able to do that.

So we lowered it by 58 percent.

We made every single employee
of PayPal a shareholder

and an owner of the business,

and we gave them pretty big grants

so that they could be a part
of the success of PayPal going forward.

We raised salaries where we needed
to go and do that.

And then we wrapped all of that
into a financial education program,

because people had never
gotten equity before,

they were trying to think through,

“How do I save now that I’ve got
incremental dollars to go and do that?”

And that cost us quite a bit
of money to go and do that,

but I really feel,

just like how we spend a lot of money
to take care of customers,

as you mentioned up front, in COVID-19,

that companies need to stand
for more than just making money,

for more than just maximizing
our profits next quarter.

I firmly, firmly believe

that the costs associated
with taking care of our employees,

taking care of our customers,

will benefit us in the long run

multiplefold over the costs
associated with doing that.

And we’re already beginning
to see some of the impact of that.

And so, I think every CEO, every company,

needs to really now start to think about,

especially maybe
as a result of this crisis,

but as I mentioned,
we had a crisis before this,

how do we put our employees first,
take care of them?

Because if you do that,
you’ll take care of customers,

and if you take care of customers,

you’ll take care of
shareholders, inevitably.

And so this has been a huge part of it

about for the last year or so.

CH: It’s so interesting,

and it brings up
so many questions, I think,

for me and probably our community as well.

I mean, PayPal is a hugely
profitable tech business,

huge free cash flow and big margins.

Do you think this model is something
that every company can do,

whether it’s a tech company,
a manufacture, a meatpacking business?

I mean, is this what everyone
should be focused on?

DS: Well, I think that –
and I don’t want to moralize

or tell other companies
what they should do –

but to me, I think
everyone should understand

the financial health of their employees.

That’s a baseline thing to go do.

What you do post-that

is up to maybe your
financial strength as a company

or where you put your order of priorities.

But what I’ve found is,

I thought the market could tell you that,

and this is why I say, in many ways –

you know, I’m a big believer
in capitalism.

I think it’s, in many ways,

the best economic system
that I know of.

But, like everything, it needs an upgrade.

It needs tuning,

and at least for
these vulnerable populations,

just because you pay at market

doesn’t mean that they have
financial health or financial wellness.

And I think everyone should know

whether or not their employees have
the wherewithal to be able to save

to withstand financial shocks,

and then really understand, like,
what can you do about it?

I think this NDI measure

is a really interesting one.

It takes some time to go do it,

because you have to be quite thorough

and you have to really understand
living expenses by location

and what tax jurisdictions there are.

But you need to create an NDI

that’s to a certain level

where people aren’t struggling
to make ends meet.

Because if people are struggling
to make ends meet,

they are not as productive at work.

They’re worried about, like,
what am I going to do with my kids?

My kid just got sick.
I don’t have health insurance.

I think there’s a spiral that occurs.

You think you’re actually saving money

by paying less,

but the reality is,

at least in my belief system,

you take care of your employees,

and other things naturally flow from that.

They are more productive.

They love being a part of that company.

They take care of customers better.

And all of those things

inevitably accrue
to the benefit of a company

in terms of how it’s trying
to serve its ultimate end market.

But it starts with your employees.

CH: So obviously you believe
in this “capitalism needs an upgrade,”

and I think NDI is something
so many companies should adopt.

But do you think this happens
through benevolent corporate activity?

I’m channeling my inner Bernie Bro here,

but I think a lot of people
would be skeptical

that we should trust companies
to do better at this point.

Should the government step in
to raise minimum wages,

do other things to protect workers
in a more structured way?

DS: Look, I think the government
clearly has a role to play,

and I think the private and public sectors

need to work closer together

to address so many of the issues

that we face in our societies
across the world,

whether that be income inequality,

environmental issues,

health,

protections, that kind of thing,

privacy.

But the way that I think about this is,

it’s very difficult for governments
to regulate around this,

because there are so many
different ways of thinking about it.

If I were another CEO,

and this is like,

it’s actually in your best interest

to go and do this

because it’s a competitive advantage.

Like, we attract, I think,

some of the best talent in the world

to PayPal,

because we have a mission
that people believe in,

that we actually are trying to make
some sort of positive difference.

I’m not saying we’re
the be-all and end-all,

but I don’t think people
should shirk their responsibilities

of at least making a small difference

going forward.

If enough companies did that,
if enough governments did that,

it would make a real difference

in the world.

And then the second thing is,

you have to have values that support that.

And those values are incredibly important.

Those values should be
all about inclusion.

They should be about
having a diverse workforce.

They should be about financial wellness.

And when you do that,

and you attract the very best talent,

then by definition,

I think the single biggest
competitive advantage for any company

is their workforce.

Strategies are great.

A whole number of things are great.

You have a great workforce

that’s passionate about what they’re doing

and is financially secure,

and they will do amazing things.

And I think it’s that kind
of competitive advantage

that will spur companies.

So there needs to be

a set of CEOs and companies

that start to move in this direction,

and I believe you’re beginning
to see more do this.

And once that happens,

it starts to tip everything,

and I think more and more need to do it

to maintain their competitive positioning.

And that may seem like a self-serving way
why people are doing it,

but honestly,

I don’t care whether they’re doing
it out of the goodness of their heart

or they’re doing it
because it’s competitively a disadvantage

if they don’t.

Creating financial health
for our employees is the goal,

and we’ve got to get that done.

CH: Yeah. I mean, it sounds like
you think of this as a win-win,

but it also sounds like you’re willing
to maybe think about your employees first

and sell it to your shareholders later.

Whitney is – oh sorry, go ahead.

DS: No, no, no – I was just going to say,

I actually do believe that,

and I think the idea
of a multistakeholder capitalism,

that is a time for today,

and we cannot just think

that we have one stakeholder
that we need to satisfy.

We live in our communities,
we live in this world.

To have people struggling
day in and day out

is not good for any company, and …

We can only do x amount,

but we can actually create
financial health for our employees,

and we should.

WPR: Great. So we have so many questions
coming in from the community.

One here is from Lara Pearson,

basically about whether PayPal
would consider become a B Corporation.

“Are you familiar with
the B Corp movement,

environmentally and socially responsible,
multiple-bottom-line for profits?

Presuming so, has PayPal considered
or would it consider

becoming a certified B Corporation?”

DS: Yep. I’m familiar with B Corp.

We have no intention to move

to becoming a B Corporation.

I think the values
and what we are trying to do

are very aligned with assuring
a multistakeholder point of view,

but what I really want

is for this to be a movement

across major corporations
across the world.

And you’re not going to have
major corporations around the world

moving into B Corp.

There’s a lot of other
side issues involved

with being a B Corporation

as opposed to just
a publicly listed company,

and so that’s going to be
a long way before that happens.

And so what I’m
really trying to do is

encourage and demonstrate

that being multistakeholder,

that putting employees first,

creates competitive advantage.

And I think I’m not the only CEO
who’s feeling that, by the way.

I think people like Satya Nadella
from Microsoft are doing a great job,

Marc Benioff from Salesforce.

I could go through quite a list of names.

But the list is not long enough yet,

but I think there’s some
quite important names

and individuals around the world

who are now talking about
multistakeholder capitalism,

and I think that’s an important element
as we think about our economies

and way of life looking forward.

WPR: And there was so much interest also
in your net disposable income program

and a lot of questions around that,

and one which I think is
along these same lines from Juan Enriquez

asking about a rational way
to address extreme income disparities.

And perhaps you could expand
beyond this program,

just sort of ways
that we might think about this

in a smarter way moving forward.

DS: Yeah.

Well, there’s no easy solution,
or it would have been done.

So I think there are a couple things
that I think about

that may not fully address
extreme income disparities.

Again, I try to think pragmatically
about these things,

and, like, what can we really do
to start to address this?

And again, I think about,

if we could take one step
and then another step,

then you’re starting your journey,

and without getting overwhelmed
by how far away the end state is.

So one, I think companies
need to take care of their employees,

and I think that will
immediately help to address

some of these income disparities.

Number two, I do think that,

ironically, if you have less money,

it costs you more to manage and move it,

which, think about that:

the less money you have,
if you’re outside the financial system,

the more you spend to manage
and move your money.

And I think that technology

is at least a foundational way
for us to think about

how do we cut the basic costs
of managing and moving money

by 50 to 70 percent,

like [check-cashing],

sending remittances,

which are such a huge,
important part of the world’s economy.

You know, you do it a traditional way,

you go into a store

and send the remittance to another store
and somebody goes and picks it up.

First of all, incredibly time-consuming,

and it can cost between
eight and 12 percent

of that remittance amount
that you’re sending.

So if you’re sending a hundred dollars,

the recipient who so desperately needs it

is getting 88 to 90 dollars.

If you do that electronically,
digital wallet to digital wallet,

that can be like three percent,

so you can get 97 dollars from that.

And so I think there are ways
of addressing the costs.

As I mentioned,

there is so much money
spent on unnecessary fees

and high interest rates,

and if we can drop that
by 20 percent, 30 percent,

the amount of money we can return
to vulnerable populations is quite large

and will start to make a difference.

WPR: That’s great.

We have a ton of questions
from the audience,

just one more before we turn things
back over to Corey

with her final questions.

This one is from Anna Tunkel,

which is just, I think, as we are rounding
to the end of the interview here,

“What are you most optimistic about,

and what do you see
as the biggest opportunities

for ‘Building Back Better’ after COVID?”

DS: Well, I mean,

one thing I’m actually optimistic about –

and I’ve always been a believer
in the human spirit

and the power of an individual
to make a difference.

I know that sounds very cliché,
but I truly believe it,

and I think every one of us
can make a difference.

But here’s what I’m seeing.

I’m beginning to see that
at a much larger scale

than I’ve ever seen before.

You know, we have different platforms,

either the PayPal platform
or the Venmo platform,

Venmo here in the US,
PayPal across the world.

The amount of giving that’s happening
through those platforms,

whether it be to local businesses,

to artists, to musicians,

to bartenders,

to places of worship, to schools,

to NGOs, to charities

has exploded on the platform, exploded.

We have helped to raise
on the PayPal platform

since COVID-19 struck

2.8 billion dollars
for NGOs and charities –

2.8 billion.

That’s incredible,

the amount of generosity
that is pouring out

from the global community around this.

And we’re just seeing people
randomly pay it forward.

Somebody gives 20 dollars to a bartender,

and that bartender takes
10 dollars of that

and gives it to somebody else.

And we’re watching that over our platform,

and that gives me a sense of optimism.

I also feel like this period of time

has exposed a number of things
that were happening

but were invisible,

and I think when things become visible,

that’s when you can start to address them,

and I think there’s a lot of attention

on some issues that
should have had attention before,

but vulnerable populations
don’t have as loud a voice as others,

and now that voice is being heard,
because you can’t ignore it.

And hopefully, that will create progress

against some of these
structural inequalities

that have been there for a long time.

WPR: That’s wonderful.

And there’s so much interest online.

You have some other questions
to ask as well.

CH: So I think we have one more
from our community

from Jacqueline Ashby.

Anna sort of stole my last question,

which was to restore
our faith in humanity.

But, there’s so much interest
coming in about NDI.

Is there a way for people to learn more,

for you to share your study
and your methodology?

DS: Happy to do so.

There is nothing proprietary about it.

We would love for this to be –

look, and this may not be
the be-all and end-all measurement.

It’s the best one we could come up with,

but if working within the community,

we can evolve it and think about
maybe things that it missed

or maybe things that could be done better,

that would be fantastic.

I don’t know the best way of doing that.

I’ll leave that to Corey and Whitney
to help me think that through,

but of course we’d be willing to share it.

There is nothing about that
that I don’t want to share.

CH: Sounds like a good TED Talk.

Thank you so much, Dan. This has been
a super-interesting conversation.

I think we could talk for another hour,

but thank you so much for being here.

DS: Thank you, Corey. Thank you, Whitney.
Thank you, everybody.

WPR: Thank you, Dan. Thank you.

Corey Hajim:今天,我们的嘉宾
是 PayPal 的 CEO Dan Schulman。

当我们大多数人想到 PayPal 时,
我们会想到在线购买东西


使用 Venmo 向朋友付款。

但 PayPal 也已
成为主要的金融服务参与者,

通常
充当传统银行的替代品。

在这场大流行期间,

贝宝
通过提供贷款、

免除费用

和增加现金返还计划来支持世界各地的小企业。

它还与美国政府

就其薪资保护计划

以及分发刺激支票进行了合作。

它也促成
了在线慷慨解囊。

数字支付的趋势,

或者我们现在
想要的“非接触式支付”,

已经大大加速

,它正在永远
改变我们对商业的看法。

所以我很
高兴丹能和我们在一起。

非常感谢你,丹。

丹舒尔曼:谢谢你邀请我,科里。
很高兴和你在一起。

CH:很高兴见到你。

因此,让我们开始吧。


这种流行病到来的几个月内,仅在美国就有

超过 3000
万人申请失业

这些当然是不寻常的情况,

但很明显,我们已经
非常接近边缘

,现在如此多的企业
及其员工

正面临巨大的财务挑战。

你有多担心?

DS:嗯,我认为这场
危机暴露了三件事。

显然,这对很多人来说是一场健康危机

第二件事是
,健康危机已经反弹

,世界现在正
处于经济危机之中。

第三个
我们不怎么谈论

但我认为正在影响

我们未来生活方式的危机

是:这也是一场心理
危机。

人们正在重新审视
他们在世界上的位置、世界上

正在发生的事情、

他们将如何过自己的生活,

无论是在大流行期间还是在大流行之后。

所以我认为这
是每个阶段

都需要处理的事情。

但你这么说

,我完全同意你的看法:

在大流行暴露这一点之前,就发生了一场经济危机。

这有点
像水位下降

并暴露了已经存在的东西。

例如,美国有

1.85 亿成年人在月底

挣扎着维持生计

您有超过 7000 万
真正处于金融体系之外的成年人,他们

在高利率、

不必要的费用

和挣扎中花费了超过 1400 亿美元。

所以我认为
这真的做了什么——

因为你不能忽视 20
%、25% 的失业率——

它暴露了这场危机

并迫使很多人采取了,也许,如果没有这场危机发生
,他们可能不会采取的行动

.

CH:是的,我认为这是正确的。

有很多挑战
和很多机会

,我认为您已经谈到

了数字交易
对人们有帮助的机会

,显然,正如您所说,这种趋势

已经大大加速并将我们
推向这个世界。 .

所以我很好奇

:没有现金的世界
会是什么样子?

还是现金少?

进行这种转变有哪些优势和挑战?

DS:我认为
从这场大流行中出现

或进入的一些趋势
,正如我们所期待的那样,

很明显,随着我们从物理转向数字,这是趋势线的不连续
变化

我认为我们已经将
多种形式的数字能力加速

了三到五年。

这可以从数字支付

到远程医疗

,真正改变零售业的面貌

以及我们对零售业的看法,

改变娱乐业的面貌,

甚至改变政府
对管理和转移资金的看法,

以及真正考虑
未来数字货币的方式。

因此,我认为

在这场大流行期间会发生大量变化并从中走出来。

数字支付显然
是即将发生的大事之一。

我的意思是,现金已经存在
了很长一段时间,

几千年了。

我不会那么
大胆地预测它的完全消亡。

许多人这样做是错误的。

但现在毫无疑问

,您将看到
现金消亡的加速。

去年,您在零售上花费
了超过 18 万亿美元的现金

当今世界上 85% 的交易

仍然以现金完成。

但是,正如您所说,现在对数字支付的真正重大变化

商业的出现和加速,

以及向店内
非接触式支付的转变,

而真正的推动力
是健康原因。

人们不想交出钱。

他们不想触摸屏幕。

他们不想拿起
笔在销售点签名。

因此,

需要非接触式支付
和数字支付

来保持社交距离
要求

,保护收银员

的健康,保护消费者的健康。

而且我认为我们将看到,
我们已经在我们的业务中看到了全球

数字支付的激增

CH:这似乎是一个很好的机会,

但我们如何
确保这种转变具有包容性?

我的意思是,您谈到了传统银行业
服务不足的人有多少

我们如何确保这些人

有这样的机会?

感觉就像智能手机

成为必不可少的物品。

我们如何解决这个问题?

DS:是的。

我确实认为手机
确实是解锁这一点的关键。

我经常说,真的,

金融服务行业的一大亮点

是这种不仅仅是
金融包容性的想法。

大多数人

通过可以
访问银行账户的人来定义金融包容性,

但仅仅拥有银行账户
是远远不够的。

我认为我们需要瞄准的

是我们如何看待财务健康?

我们如何
确保人们有

能力拥有一些资金

来创造储蓄,以抵御
对系统的某种金融冲击?

我确实认为手机

将成为这种情况发生的方式,

并且在未来将非常具有包容性。 在接下来的几年

里,世界上将会有大约 60 亿部智能手机

智能手机的成本正在直线下降。

我认为现在在印度,您可以
以低于 25 美元的价格购买智能手机。

所以你将
在全球范围内拥有无处不在的智能手机

,事实上,非常有趣的
是,在低收入人群中,

智能手机的普及率要高于高收入人群,

因为智能手机
是人们唯一可以使用的设备 拥有。

收入较高的人
可能拥有台式机或 iPad

之类的东西,

但收入较低的人可以买得起一台设备

,他们选择它作为智能手机,

因为他们可以通过这台设备获得并过上自己的生活

想想那个设备。

真的,您
拥有银行

分行的所有权力。

当您可以开始
通过智能手机创建服务分销、

金融服务时,

您就能够

我们传统方式无法做到的方式管理和转移资金。

在现实世界中,

如果你拿到一张支票,

你需要
去现金支票的地方兑现。

你排队30分钟。

然后,他们向您收取
2% 到 5% 之间的任何费用

,只是将货币格式

从支票更改为现金。

然后你有现金
,你想付账。

您需要在支付账单时再次排队

然后您必须为个人账单支付大约 10 美元

作为费用。

如果你通过智能手机来做这件事,

我相信你不仅可以
节省大量时间,

因为如果你
在金融系统之外,

管理和转移
资金实际上是一份兼职

工作,

所以 您不仅可以
为个人节省时间和返还时间,

还可以将交易成本

降低 50% 到 75%。

还记得
我给你的 1400 亿美元的数字吗?

这只是在美国。

想象一下,如果你能把它减半

,然后把

它还给最需要它的最脆弱的人群。

因此,我认为

使用技术

可以帮助提供包容性

并确保没有
数字富人和穷人,

而且还可以开始
迈向财务健康的旅程,这具有巨大的前景。

CH:是的,我想
很多人都没有

意识到你不需要银行
账户甚至信用卡

来开一个 PayPal 账户,

这非常有趣。

我的意思是,您是否
看到传统银行不存在

或至少在金融服务行业中扮演的角色要小得多的时期

DS:嗯,我认为整个
金融服务行业

现在正在发展

,所以我认为银行
将始终发挥作用,

或者在我所见的未来,

但它会发展。

我的意思是,想想基本的信用卡。

今天,您考虑信用卡,

并且
主要将其视为一种形式因素,


您从口袋里掏出的东西。

有时,根据信用卡的颜色,您从口袋里掏出的东西会与状态相关联

但实际上,我认为这些
形式因素开始消失

并嵌入数字钱包中。

所以信用永远
是一个重要的因素。

你知道,世界上大多数人

,并不是他们的现金支出
超过了他们的现金摄入量。

只是它们
分布不均。

因此,有时您的
现金流出量超过了您的现金

摄入量,您需要某种形式的信贷
来弥补这一差异。

所以我认为信用形式
将永远是一个重要的因素。

但是,您提供信用的方式
将在未来

发生变化,您考虑

根据人们是否可以处理信用来评分的方式。

你知道,传统上,
在更发达国家,

你使用所谓的
FICO 分数或局分数,

但那些忽略

了金融系统之外的人所做的许多金融交易,

比如支付租金
或按时支付账单。

借助数据和信息
以及围绕它的机器学习

——我们需要注意

这些算法中没有内置偏见——

我们可以开始
做以前从未做过的事情。

我只给你一个简单的例子。

我们是世界上
为小型企业提供营运资金的最大供应

商之一。

我们可能是美国前五名
之一。

因此,我们已经向小企业提供了超过 14、150 亿美元

的营运资金贷款

其中 70%
流向

10 家或更多银行
已关闭分支机构的 30% 县。

银行在哪里关闭分支机构?

银行在

收入中位数
低于全国平均水平的社区关闭分支机构,

这是有道理的,因为
要使分支机构盈利,

他们需要一定数量的存款

才能使该分支机构真正盈利。

因此,在低收入社区,

分支机构开始关闭。

那么,为什么我们 70% 的贷款都
在那些低收入社区?

这是因为我们做机器学习。

我们甚至不看 FICO 分数
或局分数。

我们研究了
许多不同的数据元素。

因此,我们可以向其他人无法贷款的低收入社区提供贷款

,当我们这样做时,

小企业的平均销售额
会上升 22%。

想象一下
对社区和社区的影响

,他们最终
可以获得营运资金

来扩展这些小企业。

我认为这

是技术
和金融服务

结合在一起的承诺的一个完美例子。

CH:我觉得这很有趣。

我很好奇。

科技行业
因积累对社会的权力而受到批评,

而不是
银行业没有受到批评。

但是对于
那些可能担心

科技公司

对他们生活中发生的事情产生更大影响和控制的人,你怎么看?

DS:是的。

嗯,我认为
对于任何公司和科技公司

来说,重要的是尊重

消费者对
服务于他们的公司的期望。

我认为公司可以拥有的最重要的品牌属性
是信任,

而信任来自

对公司尊重您的隐私

并且不会出售
您的数据或信息的

理解,它可以
以安全的方式进行交易,

以便您的交易是 受保护。

我认为这些
都是基础

,我认为任何公司都
需要尊重这一点。

他们需要确保消费者

拥有他们想要的隐私

以及

以正确方式为他们服务所需的安全保障。

CH:很明显,你
在美国政府中获得了很多信任。

也许我们可以
谈谈您如何与他们

合作
通过薪资保护计划分配一些钱。

我很好奇,

我一直在读它
,听起来美国有

3000 万左右的小企业

能够获得这些资金,

但只有 600 万
获得了贷款。

你认为发生了什么?

DS:是的。

嗯,我认为最初,政府
——我给了他们很大的信任——

他们很快就

推出了 3 万亿美元的刺激计划。

这些是

在非常紧凑的时间范围内发生的大量数字。 在分配刺激措施方面,

我们正在与各种机构

合作,与财政部密切合作

他们
在这方面夜以继日地工作。

小企业管理局
夜以继日地工作。

但这些是

在通过这些系统运行之前从未见过的数量,

而且这些贷款的第一批

非常困难。

将这些技术推广到小企业有很多技术困难。

而且第一笔还不够

,很快就用完了,

还有很多小

企业需要钱。

出来的第二批

实际上仍然有效。

它还没有用完

,我们将继续借给它。

我们已经能够
向大约 50,000 家小企业提供贷款。

我们已经借出大约 17 亿美元,

而我真正引以为

豪的贷款规模约为 31,000 美元。

一家银行的平均收入
在 100 到 125,000 美元之间。

因此,我们正在向大街上的
这些真正的小企业提供贷款

,我为
我们能够做到这一点

而感到自豪,我认为我们应该
赞扬美国

政府和世界各地的政府

,他们对此相当重视 认真

地投入大量资金,
占其 GDP 的一定比例,

用于拯救小企业,


试图照顾

那些发现
自己现在陷入困境的消费者。

我们一直在努力,

而不是人们寄出支票,
这在当今世界是荒谬的——

人们不是住在他们认为
他们将要生活的地方,

而是与父母、朋友
或 一个不同的位置,

然后邮寄一张支票

,然后必须拿一张
支票去某个地方,

如果你在适当的地方避难,你甚至不能

去那里兑现,

以电子方式进行这样
做更有意义 -

和 我们一直在
与美国国税局、财政部

和其他政府机构合作,
以电子方式分发。

CH:是的,这很有意义。 对我们所有人来说

,这是一个巨大的、巨大的项目

惠特尼带着
我们社区的一些问题来到这里。

DS:你好,惠特尼。

惠特尼·彭宁顿·罗杰斯:
你好,丹。 你好吗?

所以社区有
一些有趣的问题来

跟进你
之前谈到的安全问题。

我们有一个来自 Marc 的问题——

如果我把你的名字读错了,我提前道歉,Marc——

Marc Vanlerberghe:

“转向数字现金
可能是

朝着创建完美
监控状态迈出的又一步。

我们如何避免这种情况发生 ?”

DS:是的,这就是
我之前所说的,Marc。

我的意思是,我认为这种信任理念

非常重要。

我认为唯一
会成功的公司——

顺便说一句,我认为作为消费者,我们自己掌握了很多这些;

我们需要了解
我们提供的数据和信息以及我们正在

与哪些公司
合作——

但我认为成功的公司

是那些
拥有高度信任的公司,

而信任是
通过保护 您的隐私,

但也非常
确保您在数字世界

中的交易是安全的。

我的意思是,网络安全的概念

一直很重要,


随着我们从物理向数字化转变,它变得越来越重要

,这就是
大型数据集很重要的地方,

因为
每两秒就有一个消费者的身份被盗。

每两秒钟,
就有一些消费者的身份被盗。

因此,例如,我们必须

确保即使

您使用凭据登录,

它们实际上也是真实的凭据。

我们必须查看该交易的 30 到 100 个
不同的元素,

以确保

在我们将这笔钱
从您的帐户中取出之前确实是您本人。

因此
,要确保您有足够的数据

来保护某人,

同时还要确保您的隐私
是神圣不可侵犯的

,我认为这是一种平衡的行为
,并且需要发生这种行为

才能让我们成功地做到这一点。

WPR:太好了,实际上有点
从数字现金到数字货币,

我们社区的 Simone Ross 提出了另一个

关于数字货币存在的机会的问题

她提到 PayPal
退出了 Libra。

真正具有包容性的
数字货币在这里站稳脚跟需要什么?

DS:是的。

我认为,

当我们考虑数字货币时,会有巨大的希望。

我们退出 Libra

与我们

坚信区块链和其他形式
的稳定

币极其重要

并且可能非常非常有帮助的坚定信念无关,

尤其是在
世界不同地区。

当我们考虑
世界不同

地区货币
可以上下波动的稳定性时,

为了拥有一种更稳定的货币
,人们可以知道,

如果他们有

,它将价值 x 金额,

并且他们可以进行交易,

要么与
世界各地的其他人,

或者更重要的是,
在世界各地的商人那里。

我们现在正在研究各种形式
的数字货币,

与许多不同的政府携手合作

,我认为我们都应该考虑
技术将如何发展

以及货币将如何
发展。

而且我认为这场
危机确实

让世界各地的许多政府大开眼界

,他们需要不同的工具集

来创造刺激,

并高效、快速
、有效地将资金分配

给他们的公民。

WPR:太好了。 好吧,我很快就会回来
提出更多问题

,我只是想提醒
社区您可以

在“提问”功能上提问。

请务必使用下拉选项卡
选择第 2 集,

这样就会出现这些问题。

谢谢你。

DS:谢谢,惠特尼。

CH:谢谢,惠特尼。

丹,我想回到
我们一开始

谈到的关于财务健康的话题。

贝宝

在计算
向人们支付

多少钱以及您应该在福利上花费多少方面做了一些独特的事情。

传统上,工资
是由市场决定的,

但您发现支付
与其他公司一样多甚至更多的工资

并不总是足够的。

你能告诉我们那一刻吗?

DS:是的。

所以我说,在我们的开场白中,
在我的一个开场白中

,三分之二的美国人在月底
努力维持生计

他们的经济压力

很大,这对他们的生活造成了严重破坏。

我做了一项研究来看看 PayPal 员工。

我们进行了一项研究

,我之所以这样做是因为我认为我
会找回

我将
在员工会议上

讨论的关于我们支付多少薪水的重要信息,

因为我们支付的费用达到你的

水平或更高

在世界各地的每个地方都有市场。

不幸的是,我发现,
就像世界其他地方一样,

即使我们按市场
或高于市场的价格支付工资,我们

60% 的运营人员

、入门级员工
、小时工也

面临着同样的事情。

他们努力维持生计。

这对我来说简直是无法接受的。

我认为

,就
企业

的责任、CEO 的责任而言,世界正在发生变化。

我们试图满足许多不同的利益相关者

从监管机构到股东,
从客户到员工。

但我
认为我们的首要责任

是员工的健康——财务健康
,因为对于公司来说,

没有什么

比拥有财务安全、
热情的员工为你工作更重要的了,

因为没有人会为你服务

客户比
那些感觉自己是某事的一部分

并感到财务安全并
乐于成为该公司的一部分的员工更好。

那么真正的问题就变成了:
你如何衡量它?

因为很多人会
考虑生活工资或最低工资。

我们认为这还不够,

于是我们提出了一个
我们称之为“可支配净收入”的衡量标准

,基本上是:

在你缴纳税款
和基本的生活费用之后,

你还剩下多少钱可以
用于可自由支配的事情

或 保存?

这是真正不幸的事情
——我并不为此感到自豪,

但请记住,我们支付的价格
是市场价或更高,

所以我认为市场
会解决这个问题,对,这样做——

我们发现 在这个人口中,

他们在缴纳税款和基本生活费用后,拥有 4% 到 6% 的
NDI(可支配净收入)

这还不够。

你将
努力维持生计。

顺便说一句,NDI 会

在全球各地不断变化,对吧?

马尼拉
有不同的 NDI,内布拉斯加州奥马哈有不同的 NDI,

与纽约市等不同

。所以我们基本上
对自己说,

我们需要将
NDI 提高到 20%。

因为在 20% 时

——这是一个巨大的转变,
从 4% 到 6% 到 20%——

但在 20% 时,
你实际上有能力存钱

,把钱存起来,并
照顾可自由支配的开支。

因此,我们对薪酬系统进行了相当
大的重新定位

我们将
福利成本降低了 58%,

因为
福利就像一种累退税,无论您的薪水是

多少,您都支付相同的金额

所以我们有很多
员工没有享受医疗保健福利,

因为这样做的成本太高
了。

所以我们把它降低了 58%。

我们让
PayPal 的每一位员工都成为公司的股东

和所有者

,我们给了他们相当大的赠款,

这样他们就可以成为
PayPal 未来成功的一部分。

我们在需要去的地方提高了薪水

然后我们将所有这些都
纳入了一个金融教育计划,

因为人们以前从未
获得过股权,

他们试图思考,

“现在我有更多的钱可以用来做这件事,我该如何存钱
?”

这让我们花了很多
钱去做这件事,

但我真的觉得,

就像你在 COVID-19 中前面提到的那样,我们如何花很多
钱来照顾客户,

公司需要 代表
的不仅仅是赚钱

,不仅仅是
在下个季度最大化我们的利润。

我坚信,从长远来看

,与照顾我们的员工、

照顾我们的客户相关的成本

将使我们受益

多倍。

我们已经
开始看到它的一些影响。

所以,我认为每一位 CEO,每一家公司,

现在都需要真正开始思考,

尤其是可能
是这场危机的结果,

但正如我所提到的,
在此之前我们有过危机,

我们如何将员工放在首位,
采取 照顾他们?

因为如果你这样做,
你就会照顾到客户

,如果你照顾到客户,

你就会
不可避免地照顾到股东。

因此,在过去一年左右的时间里,这一直是其中很大一部分

CH:这太有趣


,我想,这

对我,可能对我们的社区来说也带来了很多问题。

我的意思是,PayPal 是一家
利润丰厚的科技企业,拥有

巨大的自由现金流和丰厚的利润。

你认为这种模式是
每家公司都能做到的吗,

无论是科技公司
、制造商还是肉类加工企业?

我的意思是,这是每个人都
应该关注的吗?

DS:嗯,我认为
——我不想说教

或告诉其他公司
他们应该做什么——

但对我来说,我认为
每个人都应该了解

员工的财务状况。

这是要做的基线事情。

你做

的事可能取决于你
作为一家公司的财务实力,

或者你把优先顺序放在哪里。

但我发现,

我认为市场可以告诉你这一点

,这就是为什么我说,在很多方面——

你知道,我是资本主义的忠实信徒

我认为,在很多方面,


是我所知道的最好的经济体系。

但是,像所有东西一样,它需要升级。

它需要调整

,至少对于
这些弱势群体来说,

仅仅因为你在市场

上支付并不意味着他们有
财务健康或财务健康。

而且我认为每个人都应该知道

他们的员工是否有足够
的资金来储蓄

以抵御金融冲击,

然后真正理解,比如,
你能做些什么呢?

我认为这项 NDI 措施

非常有趣。

这样做需要一些时间,

因为您必须非常彻底,

并且您必须真正了解
按地点划分的生活费用

以及有哪些税收管辖区。

但是您需要创建

一个达到一定水平的 NDI,使

人们不会
为维持生计而苦苦挣扎。

因为如果人们
努力维持生计,

他们的工作效率就会降低。

他们担心,比如,
我要怎么处理我的孩子?

我的孩子刚生病。
我没有医疗保险。

我认为有一个螺旋发生。

你认为你实际上是

通过少付钱来省钱,

但现实是,

至少在我的信仰体系中,

你照顾好你的员工

,其他事情自然而然地由此而来。

他们更有生产力。

他们喜欢成为那家公司的一员。

他们更好地照顾客户。

就公司如何努力服务于最终终端市场而言,所有这些事情都

不可避免地
为公司带来了好处

但它始于你的员工。

CH:很明显,您
相信这种“资本主义需要升级”

,我认为 NDI 是
许多公司应该采用的东西。

但是你认为这是
通过仁慈的企业活动实现的吗?

我在这里引导我内心的伯尼兄弟,

但我认为很多人

怀疑我们是否应该相信公司
在这一点上做得更好。

政府是否应该
介入提高最低工资,

采取其他措施
以更有条理的方式保护工人?

DS:看,我认为政府
显然可以发挥作用,

而且我认为私营和公共部门

需要更紧密地合作,

以解决

我们在世界各地社会面临的许多问题,

无论是收入不平等 ,

环境问题,

健康,

保护,诸如此类的事情,

隐私。

但我的想法是,

政府
很难围绕这个进行监管,

因为有很多
不同的思考方式。

如果我是另一位 CEO

,就像这样,

去做这件事实际上符合你的最大

利益,

因为这是一种竞争优势。

就像,我认为,我们吸引

了世界上一些最优秀的人才

加入 PayPal,

因为我们有一个
人们相信的使命

,我们实际上正在努力做出
某种积极的改变。

我并不是说
我们是万能的,

但我认为人们
不应该推卸他们的责任

,至少

在未来做出一点改变。

如果有足够多的公司这样做,
如果有足够多的政府这样做,

那将给世界带来真正的改变

然后第二件事是,

你必须有支持它的价值观。

这些价值观非常重要。

这些价值观应该
是关于包容的。

他们应该是关于
拥有多元化的劳动力。

它们应该是关于财务健康的。

当你这样做时

,你吸引了最优秀的人才,

那么根据定义,

我认为任何公司最大的
竞争优势

就是他们的员工队伍。

策略很棒。

很多事情都很棒。

你有一支优秀的员工队伍

,他们对他们正在做的事情充满热情,

并且在财务上是安全的

,他们会做出令人惊奇的事情。

我认为正是
这种竞争

优势会刺激公司发展。

所以需要

有一批 CEO 和

公司开始朝这个方向发展

,我相信你
开始看到更多这样做。

一旦发生这种情况,

它就会开始给一切带来小费

,我认为越来越需要这样做

以保持他们的竞争地位。

这似乎是
人们这样做的一种自私自利的方式,

但老实说,

我不在乎他们是
出于善意

还是这样做是因为如果他们这样做
,在竞争上就会处于劣势

别。

为我们的员工创造财务健康是我们的目标

,我们必须做到这一点。

CH:是的。 我的意思是,听起来
你认为这是双赢的,

但听起来你也愿意
先考虑你的员工,

然后再把它卖给你的股东。

惠特尼是——哦,对不起,继续。

DS:不,不,不——我只是想说,

我确实相信这一点,

而且我认为
多利益相关者资本主义的

想法是今天的时代

,我们不能仅仅

认为我们有一个利益相关
者 我们需要满足。

我们生活在我们的社区,
我们生活在这个世界上。

让人们
日复一日地挣扎

对任何公司都不利,而且……

我们只能做 x 量,

但我们实际上可以
为员工创造财务健康

,我们应该这样做。

WPR:太好了。 所以我们有很多
来自社区的问题。

这里有一个来自 Lara Pearson,

主要是关于 PayPal 是否
会考虑成为 B 公司。

“您是否熟悉
共益企业运动、对

环境和社会负责、
利润的多重底线?

假设是这样,PayPal 是否考虑过
或会考虑

成为经过认证的共益企业?”

DS:是的。 我对 B 公司很熟悉。

我们

无意成为 B 公司。

我认为我们的价值观
和我们正在努力做的事情


确保多利益相关者的观点非常一致,

但我真正想要的

是让这成为

全球各大公司的运动

而且你不会让
世界各地的大公司

进入 B 公司。

作为 B 公司

而不是仅仅
一家上市公司,

还有很多其他的附带问题,所以这将是
一个很长的路要走 那个会发生。

所以我
真正想做的是

鼓励并

证明作为多利益相关者

,将员工放在首位,

可以创造竞争优势。 顺便说一句,

我认为我不是唯一
有这种感觉的 CEO。

我认为像
微软的萨蒂亚纳德拉这样的人做得很好,

来自 Salesforce 的马克贝尼奥夫。

我可以浏览相当多的名字。

但这份名单还不够长,

但我认为世界各地有一些
非常重要的名字

个人现在正在谈论
多利益相关者资本主义

,我认为这
是我们考虑未来经济

和生活方式的一个重要因素。

WPR:
您的净可支配收入计划也引起了极大的兴趣

,并且围绕它提出了很多问题

,我
认为胡安·恩里克斯(Juan Enriquez)

提出的问题
与解决极端收入差距的合理方法类似。

也许你可以
超越这个计划,

只是我们可能会

以更聪明的方式思考这个问题的方式向前发展。

DS:是的。

好吧,没有简单的解决方案,
否则就会完成。

所以我认为有几
件事我

认为可能无法完全解决
极端的收入差距。

再一次,我试着务实地
思考这些事情

,比如,我们真正能做些什么
来开始解决这个问题?

再一次,我想,

如果我们可以迈出一步
,然后再迈出一步,

那么你就开始了你的旅程,

并且不会被
最终状态有多远而不知所措。

所以一,我认为公司
需要照顾他们的员工

,我认为这将
立即有助于解决

其中一些收入差距。

第二,具有讽刺意味的是,我确实认为

,如果你的钱越少,

管理和转移它的成本就会越高

,想想看:

你拥有的钱越少,
如果你在金融系统之外,你

的钱就越多。 花费来管理
和转移您的资金。

而且我认为,

技术至少是
我们思考

如何
将管理和转移资金

的基本成本降低 50% 到 70% 的基本方式,

例如 [支票兑现]、

汇款,

这些都是如此巨大的,
世界经济的重要组成部分。

你知道,你是用传统的方式来做的,

你去一家

商店把汇款寄到另一家商店,
然后有人去取钱。

首先,非常耗时

,它可能会花费您发送的汇款金额的
8% 到 12%

因此,如果您发送 100 美元

,那么迫切需要它的收件人

将获得 88 到 90 美元。

如果你以电子方式进行,从
数字钱包到数字钱包,

这可能是 3%,

所以你可以从中获得 97 美元。

所以我认为有
办法解决成本问题。

正如我所提到的,

有很多
钱花在了不必要的费用

和高利率上

,如果我们能把它
降低 20%、30%,

我们可以返还
给弱势群体的钱是相当大的,

并且会开始产生 不同之处。

WPR:太好了。

我们有很多来自观众的问题

,在我们

把最后的问题交给科里之前,还有一个问题。

这个来自 Anna

Tunkel,我认为,当我们
在这里采访即将结束时,

“你最看好什么,

以及你认为

‘重建得更好’的最大机会是什么? 冠状病毒病?”

DS:嗯,我的意思是,

我实际上对一件事感到乐观——

而且我一直
相信人类精神

和个人的力量
可以有所作为。

我知道这听起来很陈词滥调,
但我真的相信

,我认为我们每个人都
可以有所作为。

但这就是我所看到的。

我开始以

前所未有的规模看到这一点。

你知道,我们有不同的平台,

要么是 PayPal 平台,
要么是 Venmo 平台,

Venmo 在美国,
PayPal 在世界各地。 通过

这些平台进行的捐赠,

无论是对当地企业

、艺术家、音乐家

、调酒师

、礼拜场所、学校

、非政府组织、慈善机构,

都在平台上呈爆炸式增长。

自 COVID-19

为非政府组织和慈善机构带来

28 亿美元(28 亿美元)以来,我们帮助在 PayPal 平台上筹集资金。

令人难以置信


,全球社区为此倾注了大量的慷慨。

我们只是看到人们
随机支付它。

有人给调酒师 20 美元

,调酒师拿
10

美元给别人。

我们正在我们的平台上关注这一点

,这让我感到乐观。

我也觉得这段

时间暴露了一些
正在发生

但看不见的事情

,我认为当事情变得可见

时,你就可以开始解决它们

,我认为在一些问题上会引起很多关注

以前应该引起注意,

但弱势群体
的声音不像其他人那么响亮

,现在这种声音正在被听到,
因为你不能忽视它。

希望这将

在解决一些

长期存在的结构性不平等方面取得进展。

WPR:太好了。

网上有这么多的兴趣。

你还有一些其他问题
要问。

CH:所以我认为我们还有
来自 Jacqueline Ashby 的社区成员

安娜偷走了我的最后一个问题,

那就是恢复
我们对人性的信仰。

但是,人们对 NDI 非常感兴趣

有没有办法让人们了解更多,

让你分享你的研究
和方法?

DS:很高兴这样做。

它没有什么专有的。

我们希望这是 -

看,这
可能不是全部和最终的衡量标准。

这是我们能想到的最好的,

但如果在社区内工作,

我们可以改进它并思考
它可能遗漏的

事情或者可以做得更好的事情,

那将是非常棒的。

我不知道这样做的最佳方法。

我会把它留给 Corey 和 Whitney
来帮助我思考这个问题,

但我们当然愿意分享它。

没有什么
是我不想分享的。

CH:听起来像是一个很好的 TED 演讲。

非常感谢你,丹。 这是
一次超级有趣的对话。

我想我们可以再谈一个小时,

但非常感谢你能来。

DS:谢谢你,科里。 谢谢你,惠特尼。
谢谢大家。

WPR:谢谢你,丹。 谢谢你。