Economics podcasts for daily life. Hosted by
Russ Roberts. 
SEPTEMBER 7, 2009
Tyler Cowen
Hosted by Russ Roberts
Tyler Cowen of George Mason University and author of Create Your Own Economy talks with EconTalk host Russ Roberts about the ideas in his recent book. The conversation ranges across a wide array of topics related to information, the arts, and the culture of the internet. Topics include how autistics perceive information and what non-autistics can learn from them, what Buddhism might teach us about our digital lives, the pace of change in the use of technology, Nozick's experience machine and the relative importance of authenticity and what the Alchian and Allen theorem has to do with the internet and culture.
Right-click or Option-click, and select "Save Link/Target As MP3.
MORE:
|
|
Posted by Russ Roberts
AUGUST 31, 2009
Mike Munger
Hosted by Russ Roberts
Michael Munger of Duke University talks with EconTalk host Russ Roberts about cultural norms--the subtle signals we send to each other in our daily interactions. Mike, having returned from a four-month stint as a visiting professor in Germany, talks about the challenges of being an American in a different culture with very different expectations on how people will interact. Our speech patterns, how we wait in line, how we treat each other at the grocery, the interaction between a teacher and a student, how we drive, how we tip for services rendered, even how we listen to music all emerge from our culture and are often different in different countries. The listener will learn what Ted Williams and Joe Dimaggio have to do with the Book of Judges along with the relative merits of Williams and Dimaggio performances in 1941.
Right-click or Option-click, and select "Save Link/Target As MP3.
MORE:
|
|
Posted by Russ Roberts
AUGUST 24, 2009
David Brady
Hosted by Russ Roberts
David Brady of Stanford University talks with EconTalk host Russ Roberts about American public opinion on changing the health care system. Brady discusses the impact of taxation on public opinion toward health care reform--if the poll includes a measure of the likely increase in taxes necessary to pay for expanding coverage, support for expanding coverage drops dramatically compared to generic polls that ignore costs. He also discusses the role of the party system and partisanship for the health care issue and more generally, how partisanship has changed over time. The conversation concludes with Brady's views on how much science there is in political science.
Right-click or Option-click, and select "Save Link/Target As MP3.
MORE:
|
|
Posted by Russ Roberts
AUGUST 17, 2009
Christopher Hitchens
Hosted by Russ Roberts
Christopher Hitchens talks with EconTalk host Russ Roberts about George Orwell. Drawing on his book Why Orwell Matters, Hitchens talks about Orwell's opposition to imperialism, fascism, and Stalinism, his moral courage, and his devotion to language. Along the way, Hitchens makes the case for why Orwell matters.
Right-click or Option-click, and select "Save Link/Target As MP3.
MORE:
|
|
Posted by Russ Roberts
AUGUST 10, 2009
Eric Hanushek
Hosted by Russ Roberts
Eric Hanushek of Stanford University's Hoover Institution talks with EconTalk host Russ Roberts about the current state of education and education policy. Hanushek summarizes the impact of No Child Left Behind and the current state of the charter school movement. Along the way, he and Roberts discuss the role of testing as a way of measuring achievement. The conversation concludes with a discussion of school finance, the role of the court system, and suggestions for improving finance to create better incentives.
Right-click or Option-click, and select "Save Link/Target As MP3.
MORE:
|
|
Posted by Russ Roberts
AUGUST 3, 2009
Paul Graham
Hosted by Russ Roberts
Paul Graham, essayist, programmer and partner in the y-combinator talks with EconTalk host Russ Roberts about start-ups, innovation, and creativity. Graham draws on his experience as entrepreneur and investor to discuss the current state of the start-up world and how that world has changed due to improved technology that makes it easier to start a software company. Graham talks about his unusual venture firm, the y-combinator, and how he and his partners work with start-ups to get them ready for more advanced funding. Along the way, Graham discusses why hackers are like painters and how to survive high school.
Right-click or Option-click, and select "Save Link/Target As MP3.
MORE:
JULY 27, 2009
Peter Henry
Hosted by Russ Roberts
Peter Blair Henry of Stanford University talks with EconTalk host Russ Roberts about economic development. Henry compares and contrasts the policy and growth experience of Barbados and Jamaica. Both became independent of England in the 1960s, so both inherited similar institutions. But each pursued different policies with very different results. Henry discusses the implications of this near-natural experiment for growth generally and the importance of macroeconomic policy for achieving prosperity. The conversation closes with a discussion of Henry's research on stock market reactions as a measure of policy's effectiveness.
Right-click or Option-click, and select "Save Link/Target As MP3.
MORE:
JULY 20, 2009
John Taylor
Hosted by Russ Roberts
John Taylor of Stanford University talks with EconTalk host Russ Roberts about the fundamental causes of the financial crisis of 2008. Taylor argues that the housing bubble of the early 2000s was caused by excessively loose monetary policy, in particular, a sustained period of excessively low interest rates pursued by the Federal Reserve. Other topics covered include rules vs. discretion in monetary policy and the risks of inflation in the coming months. The conversation concludes with a discussion of the impact of the current crisis on future monetary policy and the field of macroeconomics.
Right-click or Option-click, and select "Save Link/Target As MP3.
MORE:
JULY 13, 2009
Justin Fox
Hosted by Russ Roberts
Justin Fox, author of The Myth of the Rational Market, talks about the ideas in his book with EconTalk host Russ Roberts. Fox traces the history of the application of math and economics to finance, particularly to the question of how markets and prices process information, the so-called efficient markets hypothesis in its various forms. The conversation includes discussions of systemic risk, the current financial crisis and the lessons for policy reform.
Right-click or Option-click, and select "Save Link/Target As MP3.
MORE:
JULY 6, 2009
Paul Collier
Hosted by Russ Roberts
Paul Collier of Oxford University talks with EconTalk host Russ Roberts about the ideas in his new book, Wars, Guns, and Votes, a study of democracy and violence. Collier lays out the incentives facing a dictator who is considering the seductive appeal of holding an election. He defends his empirical work that forms the basis for many of the policy ideas in the book. Collier then makes the case for international military intervention to support democracies in poor countries.
Right-click or Option-click, and select "Save Link/Target As MP3.
MORE:
ARCHIVES.
More podcasts (over 125, all free)
Return to top
|