In this episode, Xiang Biao, Andrew Haxby, and Xenia Cherkaev examine "suspicion" as a Common Concern in Nepal's land market, where people are deeply suspicious of brokers who facilitate land transactions, even though these brokers operate "legitimately."
The conversation reveals how Kathmandu's land market has become a 30-year investment bubble that "never pops," fueled by remittances and complex family land ownership structures. Land prices have outpaced income by 4-5 times, creating a situation where land is both a family bond and a financial asset. Haxby connects Nepal's situation to other protests worldwide, framing suspicion as an emotional response to an economic system where "the money disappears" and everyone is skimming.