30 min

The power of college endowments Make Me Smart

    • Business

College endowment funds are at the center of student protester’s calls for their schools to divest from Israel. Charlie Eaton, a sociology professor at the University of California, Merced, and author of “Bankers in the Ivory Tower,” said the size of these funds have created a moral dilemma for the wealthiest universities. On the show today, Eaton explains how college endowments work, why most universities don’t disclose how those funds are invested, and how colleges could manage their endowments to better align with their values.



Then, we’ll check-in on the youths. And, Mallory Lewis and Lamb Chop, the puppet, answer the Make Me Smart question. Plus, a tribute to Jasper.





Here’s everything we talked about today:







“University endowments show few signs of direct Israel, defense holdings” from The Washington Post








“If the divestment movement succeeds, will it have an economic impact?” from Marketplace








“Gaza protests: Divestment from Israel becomes focus of student demands” from The Washington Post








“Students protest Gaza war: The history of divestment protests” from Marketplace








“Top companies are on students’ divest list. But does it really work?” from NPR








“Gen Z Sinks Deeper Into Debt” from The Wall Street Journal








“Abortion bans drive away up to half of young talent, new CNBC/Generation Lab youth survey finds” from CNBC








“Businesses are speaking out against anti-LGBTQ laws” from Marketplace





Want more “Make Me Smart” in your life? Sign up for our newsletter at marketplace.org/smarter.

College endowment funds are at the center of student protester’s calls for their schools to divest from Israel. Charlie Eaton, a sociology professor at the University of California, Merced, and author of “Bankers in the Ivory Tower,” said the size of these funds have created a moral dilemma for the wealthiest universities. On the show today, Eaton explains how college endowments work, why most universities don’t disclose how those funds are invested, and how colleges could manage their endowments to better align with their values.



Then, we’ll check-in on the youths. And, Mallory Lewis and Lamb Chop, the puppet, answer the Make Me Smart question. Plus, a tribute to Jasper.





Here’s everything we talked about today:







“University endowments show few signs of direct Israel, defense holdings” from The Washington Post








“If the divestment movement succeeds, will it have an economic impact?” from Marketplace








“Gaza protests: Divestment from Israel becomes focus of student demands” from The Washington Post








“Students protest Gaza war: The history of divestment protests” from Marketplace








“Top companies are on students’ divest list. But does it really work?” from NPR








“Gen Z Sinks Deeper Into Debt” from The Wall Street Journal








“Abortion bans drive away up to half of young talent, new CNBC/Generation Lab youth survey finds” from CNBC








“Businesses are speaking out against anti-LGBTQ laws” from Marketplace





Want more “Make Me Smart” in your life? Sign up for our newsletter at marketplace.org/smarter.

30 min

Top Podcasts In Business

بزنس بالعربي (Business بالعربى )
Ahmed Rashad
النشرة المالية
Digital Ma'arefa
The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett
DOAC
مدرسة الاستثمار
تريندز بودكاست
Think Fast, Talk Smart: Communication Techniques
Stanford GSB
My First Million
Hubspot Media

More by American Public Media

Brains On! Science podcast for kids
American Public Media
Smash Boom Best: A funny, smart debate show for kids and family
American Public Media
In The Dark
The New Yorker
Forever Ago
American Public Media
Terrible, Thanks For Asking
Feelings & Co.
Marketplace
Marketplace