The Rhodes Center Podcast with Mark Blyth
En podcast af Rhodes Center

Kategorier:
67 Episoder
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The puzzling politics of inequality
Udgivet: 7.3.2025 -
Why capitalism can’t solve the climate crisis
Udgivet: 20.12.2024 -
Why we think what we think, when we think about inflation
Udgivet: 22.11.2024 -
Why we ran out of everything during the pandemic, and why it had less to do with the pandemic and more to do with the corporations that made us much more vulnerable to it
Udgivet: 4.10.2024 -
The expulsion of politics? What the UK’s Office of Budget Responsibility tells us about the limits of technocracy
Udgivet: 8.6.2024 -
Money can’t buy happiness, but it can buy citizenship abroad
Udgivet: 30.4.2024 -
How asset managers came to own everything and you failed to notice
Udgivet: 25.3.2024 -
The business side of fighting climate change
Udgivet: 8.12.2023 -
An Immigrant Economist in the Land of Inequality: A Conversation with Sir Angus Deaton
Udgivet: 21.11.2023 -
The new politics of growth and stagnation (part 3): houses, micro states, finance, carbon
Udgivet: 21.10.2023 -
The new politics of growth and stagnation (part 2): growth models at scale
Udgivet: 22.9.2023 -
The new politics of growth and stagnation (part 1)
Udgivet: 10.8.2023 -
Does economics do more harm than good? And if it does, how would we know harm when we see it?
Udgivet: 6.6.2023 -
Nazi billionaires, capitalist ethics, and other notable contradictions
Udgivet: 29.4.2023 -
A wee podcast on the last 50 - and next 50 - years of the global world order
Udgivet: 14.4.2023 -
The ‘free market’ is a fever dream and Adam Smith wasn’t in it
Udgivet: 31.3.2023 -
State power in China: more "Parks and Rec" than command and control?
Udgivet: 10.3.2023 -
What Mark Blyth Got Wrong About Bidenomics and Climate Change
Udgivet: 17.2.2023 -
Why Undoing Globalization is Going to Be a Painful Affair
Udgivet: 16.12.2022 -
This Week in ‘Ask a Philosopher’: Is the ‘American Dream' Dead?
Udgivet: 4.11.2022
A podcast from the Rhodes Center for International Finance and Economics at the Watson Institute at Brown University. Hosted by political economist and director of the Rhodes Center, Mark Blyth.