1331 Results for “守护者们1-40集完整版免费看”
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Podcast
Dennis Kelleher
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Podcast
Martin Wolf, Pt 2
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Course
The I Theory of Money
This lecture series is based on Brunnermeier and Sannikov’s research papers “The I Theory of Money” and “Redistributive Monetary Policy”
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Article
Dirk Bezemer - Debt: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly
Jun 26, 2013
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Podcast
Jayati Ghosh
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Video
Inequality 101
Jan 29, 2020
Inequality, in many ways, may be the biggest question of our times. And yet it is a topic that is still underexplored in conventional economics curricula.
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Podcasts
John O'Neil
Jul 27, 2020
Author and psychologist John O’Neil talks to Rob Johnson about America’s moral and educational crisis.
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Podcast
John O'Neil
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Podcast
Robert Skidelsky
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Podcast
Sony Kapoor
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Podcast
John Kay and Mervyn King
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Podcast
Robert Borosage
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Podcast
James Boyce
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Podcast
Fred Ledley
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Podcast
Doug Carmichael
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Podcasts
David Sirota: Progressives Failed to Channel the Anger; Trump Did
Nov 4, 2020
Jacobin Magazine Editor-at-Large David Sirota discusses how Trump is a concentrated expression of the Republican Party. If Democrats hope to beat Republicans, they cannot afford to believe that a vote for them is a vote to return to the pre-Trump era.
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Podcasts
Jacqueline Novogratz: Why We Need a Moral Revolution
Nov 23, 2020
Social entrepreneur Jacqueline Novogratz discusses her book Manifesto for a Moral Revolution and the crisis facing a pandemic-riddled world.
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Podcasts
Justin Lin
Jul 22, 2020
Justin Lin, Director of the National School for Economic Development in Beijing, talks to Rob Johnson about how economists can work together internationally for shared prosperity.
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Podcasts
Christine Passarella
Jul 24, 2020
Rob Johnson talks to educator Christine Passarella about her program Kids for Coltrane, and the educational value of the jazz great.
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Podcast
Charles Goodhart & Manoj Pradhan
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Podcasts
Protecting People Against COVID-19 Protects the Economy
Nov 30, 2020
Phillip Alvelda, Thomas Ferguson, and John C. Mallery discuss their latest research into how the pandemic is related to the economy and how protecting against the virus also protects societies from economic disaster.
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Podcasts
Thomas Ferguson
Aug 5, 2020
INET’s Research Director Thomas Ferguson talks to Rob Johnson about the many ways in which money corrupts our politics, contributes to ever-greater inequality, and what can be done about it
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Podcasts
Margaret Heffernan
Jul 29, 2020
Margaret Heffernan, a writer and former CEO, talks to Rob about her latest book, Uncharted: How to Map the Future Together, on the art of thinking about the future in the context of uncertainty
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Podcasts
Sarah Chayes: How Corrupt Elites Extract Wealth From Ordinary Americans
Nov 17, 2020
National security expert Sarah Chayes discusses her new book, On Corruption in America: and What Is at Stake. Chayes explores how corruption in U.S. state and society furthers and deepens inequality.
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Podcasts
Pavlina Tcherneva: The Many Benefits of a Jobs Guarantee
Oct 29, 2020
Pavlina Tcherneva, Associate Professor of Economics at Bard College, discusses her new book, The Case for a Jobs Guarantee, outlining why society would benefit tremendously from such a program.
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Podcasts
Michael Sandel: The Tyranny of Merit
Sep 14, 2020
Renowned Harvard University professor of philosophy Michael Sandel talks about his new book and how centrist Democrat insensitivity to inequality and the ideology of meritocracy have contributed to right-wing populism, polarization, and distrust in government.
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Podcasts
Robert Dugger
Aug 7, 2020
Rob Johnson talks to Robert Dugger, former member of the INET Board and founder of Ready Nation, about how society can safeguard its accomplishments and rights for posterity
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Article
Nancy Folbre’s Feminist, Unorthodox Economics
Jan 4, 2018
The renowned feminist economist discusses the importance of heterodoxy, radicalism, and social justice to the discipline
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Podcasts
Peter Bofinger
May 7, 2020
Peter Bofinger, an economist and former member of Germany’s Council of Economic Experts, talks to Rob about the economic crisis now facing Europe, how Modern Monetary Theory could address it, and how it differs from the Great Recession of 2008. Mentioned in the interview: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bNgQRs8nY4chttps://www.socialeurope.eu/coronavirus-crisis-now-is-the-hour-of-modern-monetary-theory
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Podcasts
Matt Morrison: Rising Insecurity and Focus on Identity Politics Helped Propel Trump
Dec 3, 2020
Executive Director of Working America, Matt Morrison, talks about the political and economic factors that originally helped Trump succeed and how Democrats can build on their 2020 victory
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Podcasts
Chen Long: Information Technology for a More Inclusive Development Strategy
Oct 7, 2020
Chen Long, the director of China’s Luohan Academy, talks about the ways in which information technology can jump start economic development in the developing world.
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Podcasts
Paul Street: The Trump Presidency Was Decades in the Making
Oct 15, 2020
Historian Paul Street talks about how the roots of the Trump presidency lie in the continuous rightward drift in US politics since the 1970’s, to which the Democrats contributed as much as the Republicans
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Podcasts
Sony Kapoor
Jul 31, 2020
Sony Kapoor, Managing Director of the Nordic Institute for Finance, Technology, and Sustainability, talks to Rob Johnson about the real problems that the pandemic exposes and whether a Green New Deal is still achievable in this context
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Podcasts
Robert Skidelsky
Aug 3, 2020
Historian Lord Robert Skidelsky reads a letter that John Maynard Keynes wrote to Friedrich Hayek about “The Road to Serfdom,” and then discusses with Rob Johnson the tense relationship between the two famous economists.
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Podcasts
Fatima Denton
Jul 20, 2020
Dr. Fatima Denton, Director of the Institute for Natural Resources in Africa at the United Nations University, Ghana, talks to Rob Johnson about the need for global cooperation and coordination in the wake of the pandemic.
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Podcasts
How Local Projects Can Change People's Notion of What Is Possible
Dec 7, 2020
Hilary Doe, the founder and president of the Michigan-based organization Scout, talks about the ways in which successful local projects can have profound effects on people’s consciousness about what is politically possible
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Podcasts
Eugene McCarraher: The Religion of Capitalism
Oct 26, 2020
Eugene McCarraher, Associate Professor of Humanities at Villanova University and author of the book, The Enchantment of Mammon, talks about his book and how society has not really become more secular because it shifted its focus from the worship of God to the worship of markets.
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Podcasts
Martin Wolf: On Rebuilding Trust in Uncertain Times, Pt 2
Oct 23, 2020
Financial Times economics commentator Martin Wolf continues the conversation about how societal fragmentation benefits the well-off and that only greater equality can reestablish trust between social groups and the state
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Podcasts
Steve Clemons
Oct 1, 2020
Steve Clemons, Editor at Large at The Hill, talks about how the Democrats’ focus on neoliberal globalization opened the door for Trump’s election and that only bold new policies that address inequality and structural change can address.
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Podcasts
Peter Temin
Aug 10, 2020
MIT economic historian Peter Temin talks to Rob Johnson about his next book, which looks at the economic history of how Blacks have been systematically excluded from US society
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Podcasts
Dennis Kelleher: A Financial System That Extracts Wealth Instead of Creating It
Oct 13, 2020
Dennis Kelleher, President of the NGO Better Markets, outlines how the financial system is serving the wealthy, how it has been reformed in the past and how it can be reformed again to serve Main Street instead of Wall Street.
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Podcasts
James Boyce
Aug 27, 2020
James Boyce, Senior fellow at the Political Economy Research Institute, talks about the many benefits that carbon dividends and carbon pricing would have for a transition towards a greener and more equitable economy
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Podcasts
John Kay and Mervyn King
Aug 13, 2020
John Kay, economist at Oxford University, and Mervyn King of the London School of Economics, discuss their recently published book, Radical Uncertainty: Decision-Making Beyond the Numbers
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Podcasts
Jeffrey Sachs
Sep 24, 2020
Jeffrey Sachs, Director of Columbia University’s Center for Sustainable Development and Chair of the Lancet’s COVID-19 commission, talks about the many challenges and shortcomings of US policy towards the pandemic, as well as his new book, The Ages of Globalization, and how we can get the ethical foundations of economic thinking back on track.
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Podcasts
Eileen Appelbaum & Rosemary Batt
Sep 1, 2020
Eileen Appelbaum, co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, and Rosemary Batt of Cornell University, talk about an INET-supported study on the dramatic impact that private equity funds are having on everyone’s medical bills and on the healthcare industry as a whole
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Podcasts
Fred Ledley
Sep 8, 2020
Fred Ledley, professor at Bentley University and co-author of an INET-funded research paper on pharma research funding, discusses the research and how US taxpayers might get more social benefit out of the initial investment they put into all new pharmaceuticals released over the past decade
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Podcasts
Richard Kozul-Wright and Orsola Costantini Discusses UNCTAD’s Trade and Development Report 2020
Nov 20, 2020
The United Nations Conference on Trade and Development’s Richard Kozul-Wright and Orsola Costantini say we can continue misguided policy choices or collectively chart a new path that leads from recovery to a more resilient, more equal and more environmentally sustainable world.
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Podcasts
Robert Borosage
Aug 24, 2020
Robert Borosage, co-founder of the Campaign for America’s Future, talks about the what went well and what did not go well at the Democratic Convention and the Democrats’ failure to recognize that their own economic policies helped bring about Trump
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Podcasts
Abigail Disney: We Need to Tell a Better Story of What America Could Be
Nov 12, 2020
Abigail Disney, filmmaker, founder of Peace, So Loud, and podcast host of All Ears, discusses how changes among the country’s elite, towards the “Greed is Good” ethic and a blind faith in markets have made inequality more extreme than ever and why we need a new discourse, even among progressives, that recognizes and respects the contributions of society’s poorest.
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Podcasts
Young Scholars Initiative: What Are the Most Important Economic Questions?
Nov 2, 2020
INET’s Young Scholar’s Initiative (YSI) is holding its third plenary conference this November, this time all online. However, unlike most online conferences, the 2020 YSI Plenary is a true workshop for young scholars to get to know each other and to identify the most important economic questions for the near future. Rob Johnson discusses the project with YSI’s coordinators Jay Pocklington, Heske van Doornen, and Thomas Vass.
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Podcasts
Charles Goodhart & Manoj Pradhan
Sep 11, 2020
Charles Goodhart, professor emeritus of the financial markets group at the London School of Economics, and Manoj Pradhan, founder of the research firm Talking Heads Macro, talk to Rob about their just released book, The Great Demographic Reversal: Ageing Societies, Waning Inequality, and an Inflation Revival
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Video
Venture Capital in the 21st Century
Jan 29, 2020
Explore economic growth and development through technological innovation with the renowned investor and scholar
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Article
Carbon Decoupling?
Jul 26, 2016
A comment on Goher-Ur-Rehman Mir and Servaas Storm’s Carbon Emissions and Economic Growth: Production Based vs Consumption-Based Evidence on Decoupling
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Article
Top incomes and the glass ceiling
Jul 17, 2014
The glass ceiling is typically examined in terms of the distribution of earnings. This column discusses the glass ceiling in the gender distribution of total incomes, including self-employment and capital income. Evidence from Canada and the UK shows we are still far from equality. Though the proportion of women in the top 1% has been rising, the progress is slower, almost non-existent, at the very top of the distribution.
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Podcasts
A Moonshot Guide to Changing Capitalism
Mar 11, 2021
Mariana Mazzucato talks with Rob Johnson about her new book, The Mission Economy, and what we need to do to make innovation work for global shared prosperity.
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Article
Brexit's Impact on the World Economy
Jun 21, 2016
Why a British vote to leave the European Union would have consequences far larger than the UK’s proportional share of the global economy might suggest
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Podcasts
Alan Light: Looking Back and Looking Ahead in the World of Music
Jan 7, 2021
Alan Light, veteran music journalist and host of “In The Light” on SiriusXM, discusses how the pandemic affected the world of music, what we gained and what we lost, and what we might look forward to for 2021
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Podcasts
Michael Hirsh: Multinationals Exploited the Community of Nations and Both Parties Enabled Them
Dec 30, 2020
Foreign Policy editor Michael Hirsh talks about how both Republicans and democrats allowed multinational corporations to exploit international trade while allowing local communities to be devastated, which brought about Trump
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Video
Polanyi on Polanyi
Feb 26, 2020
In this series Polanyi reflects on an extraordinary life, and the extraordinary legacy of her family.
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Video
Two Hundred Years of Politics and High Finance
Oct 16, 2014
These videos cover not only Dr. de Cecco’s seminal research on the international gold standard, but his views on the international monetary system between the wars, the formation of the Bretton Woods system, and its breakdown – all topics on which Dr. de Cecco has written copiously.
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Webinars and Events
Liberté, Égalité, Fragilité
PlenaryApr 8–11, 2015
The Institute for New Economic Thinking held its sixth Annual Conference from April 8 to April 11, 2015, in collaboration with the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) in Paris.
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YSI Event
YSI Africa Convening
YSI
Regional ConveningAug 16–18, 2018
Young Scholars based in Africa are invited to convene in Harare, Zimbabwe. The event serves to strengthen the African network of new economic thinkers pursuing a new economic paradigm. Attendees will be able to attend the annual conference of the Zimbabwe Historical Association in the same trip.
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Podcasts
William Janeway: Government's Role in R&D and in Addressing Climate Change
Jan 11, 2021
University of Cambridge professor and INET co-founder William Janeway discusses the crucial role that government has always played in generating technological innovation, how this role has been diminished in recent years, and the problems this lack of attention will cause for the US in the near future
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Podcasts
Trita Parsi: How US Foreign Policy Makes Everyone, Including the US, Less Safe
Jan 5, 2021
Quincy Institute Vice President Trita Parsi talks about the incredible amount of destruction that US foreign policy has wrought in Iran and in many other places, and how it has actually made the US less safe and less able to address the challenges ahead
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Podcasts
Jayati Ghosh: Rescue Packages for Wealthy Corporations, not for Developing Countries
Dec 21, 2020
UMass Amherst Economics professor Jayati Ghosh talks about the massive unjustness of the so-called pandemic economic rescue packages, which continue to favor the world’s wealthiest while ignoring the dramatic plight of the developing world.
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Podcasts
Seth Klein: How WWII Preparation Sets an Example for Confronting Climate Change
Dec 23, 2020
Public policy researcher and writer Seth Klein discusses his new book, A Good War: Mobilizing Canada for the Climate Emergency, which looks at the example that the mobilization for World War II sets in terms of mobilizing society and resources for coping with an emergency.
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Video
Feminist Economics
Sep 15, 2021
The economy is not gender neutral, but actually relies on gender imbalances to function and grow.
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Podcasts
Rise Up and Stop the Doomsday Machine!
Dec 17, 2020
In the final part of his conversation with Rob Johnson, Daniel Ellsberg talks about his hopes for this generation and why he wrote The Doomsday Machine. Part 3 of 3
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Course
Monetary Macroeconomics
Some years ago, in the aftermath of the “great financial crisis” (GFC) of the first decade of the twentieth century, Paul Krugman famously remarked that “most macroeconomics of the last thirty years was spectacularly useless at best and positively harmful at worst”. It is the premise of this set of lectures that it is possible to do better, much better.
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Article
How GM’s $10-Billion Buyback May Ice Its EV Transition
Dec 18, 2023
Reindustrialization vs Financialization
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Article
The Private Debt Crisis
Sep 21, 2016
China is drowning in it. The whole world has too much of it. History suggests: This won’t end well.
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Article
Fatal Combination: Bailouts and Bank Rescues in Money-Driven Political Systems
Apr 13, 2020
Financial industry donations to members of Congress lead to the adoption of pro-bank policies
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Article
Lehman Was Not Alone – Measuring System Risk in the 2008 Crisis
Sep 21, 2013
what would measures of systematic risk have indicated to Treasury Secretary Paulsen if they had been available at that time?
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Article
Electricity Markets, Climate Change, and the European Energy Crisis
Sep 5, 2022
Price inflation, marginal cost pricing, and principles for electricity market redesign in an era of low-carbon transition
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Video
The Laws of Capitalism
Oct 26, 2022
All things can be coded as capital, with the right legal coding.
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Podcasts
The Unfathomable Willingness to Destroy the World
Dec 15, 2020
Whistleblower Daniel Ellsberg continues the conversation about his book, The Doomsday Machine, talking about the changes in military strategy that allowed the targeting of civilians and how the arms industry pushed military expansion, which he goes on to relate to climate change. Part 2 of 3
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Podcasts
A History of the Nuclear Danger that the Military Industrial Complex Engineered
Dec 14, 2020
Famous whistleblower Daniel Ellsberg discusses his book, The Doomsday Machine, which chronicles the tremendous threat to humanity that US nuclear war planners deliberately considered and whose plans he was going to leak instead of the Pentagon Papers, had it not been for the Vietnam War. Part 1 of 3.
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Podcasts
For Benjamin: Songs of Power, Innocence and Experience
Mar 15, 2021
Influential music and film producer Shep Gordon (named among the 100 most influential people by Rolling Stone) discusses how he helped bring the art of cooking to public awareness, what makes for true happiness, becoming a father to Benjamin at over 70, and the importance of power and innocence. Subscribe and Listen on: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Stitcher | Google Podcasts | YouTube
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Podcasts
The Pandemic Has Masked as Much as it Unmasked
Mar 3, 2021
Canadian investment manager and Levy Institute fellow Marshall Auerback surveys the current political and economic landscape, from the pandemic bailouts to climate change and the changing role of politicians
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Article
Spain: The politics of austerity and deflation
Jul 4, 2016
An election has failed to resolve a political deadlock that coincides with long-term economic stagnation
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Video
How to Unf★ck America
May 18, 2022
Over the last four decades, the US economy has done quite well for the top 1%, but it has been stagnant for most Americans. This was not an accident, nor the natural workings of the market and certainly not an inevitability. US policies have been deliberately structured since 1980 to redistribute income upwards. In other words, the system has been rigged.
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Video
[ECO]NOMICS
May 18, 2022
Climate change is already here, and we are on a path towards catastrophic global warming. Governments have failed to curb carbon emissions, and fossil fuel production continues to increase. This is not merely a political failure; it is also a failure of economic analysis.
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Article
Macroeconomics and the Italian Vote
Aug 6, 2018
To understand the rise of the League and 5 Star Movement, look at economic indicators
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Podcasts
The Return of the State
May 27, 2021
Tito Boeri, professor of economics at Bocconi University, Milan, and Scientific Director of the Trento Economics Festival (June 3-6), talks about the meaning behind this year’s festival topic, The Return of the State. INET is organizing several panels at the festival this year featuring Mark Carney, Joe Stiglitz, Mike Spence, and Jayati Ghosh.
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Podcasts
The Bonds of Inequality
May 24, 2021
Destin Jenkins, Assistant Professor of History at the University of Chicago, discusses his book on municipal debt and its role in fostering racial capitalism in American cities.
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Article
Economics in Uncertain Times
Nov 2, 2011
My first TV chat show performance:
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Article
Trump and the Republican Base: A Machine Learning Approach (Revisited)
Nov 7, 2022
Economic issues are a primary part of Trump’s appeal to his base
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Article
America at the End of Its Tether
Nov 4, 2024
Many voters, feeling disillusioned, are searching in vain for narratives that resonate with their experiences.
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Podcasts
America's Burning
Aug 6, 2024
What happened to the dream? Rob talks with David Smick about his new film and the inspiration for the project.
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Article
The Black Woman Economist Who Pioneered a Federal Jobs Guarantee
Feb 22, 2019
Decades before it caught on with other economists, Sadie Alexander was the first economist to recommend a government jobs guarantee in the US
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Article
African Americans in Tech: What the EEO-1 Numbers Reveal
Feb 22, 2022
EEO-1 employment data document the vast over-representation of Asian Americans and vast under-representation of African Americans at tech companies in recent years. How did this happen?
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Podcasts
Challenging the Conventional Development Wisdom of Both the Left and the Right
Dec 10, 2020
Christopher Cramer and John Sender, authors of the book, African Economic Development: Evidence, Theory, and Policy, discuss their book (co-written with Arkebe Oqubay) and how economic policy needs to be rooted in flexibly responding to changing circumstances and consequences, instead of dogma. Link to a PDF version of the book: http://fdslive.oup.com/www.oup.com/academic/pdf/openaccess/9780198832331.pdf
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Podcasts
New Ground Rules for Digital Markets
Jun 10, 2021
FT columnist and associate editor Rana Foroohar discusses how the disruptions and excessive complexity of digital markets are benefitting the powerful and why we need clear new values and ground rules for these markets as we enter the post-pandemic landscape.
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Article
Lecture: Making India a Prosperous and Happy Nation at 100
Mar 30, 2022
Distinguished Public Lecture on “Making India a Prosperous and Happy Nation @100”, by Dr. Ajay Chhibber, Distinguished Visiting Scholar, Institute for International Economic Policy, Elliott School of International Affairs, George Washington University on Tuesday, 22 March 2022.
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Podcasts
Our Own Worst Enemy
Nov 24, 2021
Tom Nichols, Professor of National Security Affairs, US Naval War College, columnist for USA Today, and contributing writer at The Atlantic, discusses his new book, Our Own Worst Enemy: The Assault from within on Modern Democracy, and how a decline in civic virtue has generated a dangerous illiberalism.
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Article
The COVID-19 Recession: Unprecedented Collapse and the Need for Macro Policy
Mar 26, 2020
Effective and quick federal policy response is critical to create conditions for a quick recovery.
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Article
Why “Green Growth” Is an Illusion
Dec 5, 2018
Wishful thinking and tinkering won’t cut it. Nothing short of a mass mobilization for deep de-carbonization across the global economy can avert the looming climate catastrophe.
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Article
The AI Bubble and the U.S. Economy: How Long Do “Hallucinations” Last?
Oct 2, 2025
This paper argues that (i) we have reached “peak GenAI” in terms of current Large Language Models (LLMs); scaling (building more data centers and using more chips) will not take us further to the goal of “Artificial General Intelligence” (AGI); returns are diminishing rapidly; (ii) the AI-LLM industry and the larger U.S. economy are experiencing a speculative bubble, which is about to burst.
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Podcasts
Doug Carmichael
Sep 21, 2020
INET’s Strategy Consultant Doug Carmichael talks about how many of our institutions, such as the economics profession, our political system, and our education system, are inadequate for dealing with the multiple crises we face.
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Article
Standard Inflation Theory Leaves Out Social Conflict and Costs
Jun 10, 2021
What That Means For Biden’s Inflation Policy Trilemma