Economics for Inclusive Prosperity

Economics for Inclusive Prosperity

We need an alternative vision of economics to replace failed neoliberalism and rising economic nationalism. In a world facing record inequality, climate peril, and rising illiberalism, how do we build a more inclusive, more sustainable, more prosperous economy for everyone? This is the podcast of Economics for Inclusive Prosperity, a network of economists working to inspire new thinking in their field and highlight the transformative changes that are already happening.

Episodios

  1. Not Inevitable:  Democratizing power over AI for public good vs private gain

    HACE 2 DÍAS

    Not Inevitable: Democratizing power over AI for public good vs private gain

    University of Oxford economist Max Kasy is pushing back hard on the popular notion that artificial intelligence is an unstoppable technological tidal wave and we're all on the beach waiting powerlessly for it to crash over us. That view of AI is wrong — or at least, conveniently incomplete, says Kasy, who runs the Machine Learning and Economics Group at Oxford and who’s just written a new book called The Means of Prediction: How AI Really Works (and Who Benefits). The title is a play on words referencing what Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels called the means of production—the industrial assets that gave their capitalist owners the power to define social classes according to their interests. Pull aside the curtain on AI development, Kasy says, and you see something similar: AI is just a tool—yes, a powerful one—but nonetheless one being shaped, as we speak, by specific choices made by specific people with specific interests. And understanding that, he says, is the first step toward doing something about it. He joins me today to talk about ways to give users and the public a say in AI’s development and deployment, why strategies like protecting individual data privacy are unlikely to help, and what things like transparency requirements, basic income, and job guarantees have to do with making AI work for everyone rather than just a handful of tech giants. Maximilian Kasy is a professor of economics at the University of Oxford and coordinator of the Machine Learning and Economics Group in the Oxford Department of Economics. He is the author of the book The Means of Prediction: How AI Really Works (and Who Benefits). His research interests include machine learning theory, the social impact of algorithmic decision making, the political economy of AI, economic inequality, basic income and job guarantee programs, adaptive experimental design, and Statistical decision theory. He holds a Ph.D. in economics and an M.A. in statistics from the University of California at Berkeley and magister degrees in mathematics and economics from the University of Vienna. In addition to his teaching at Oxford, he has also been an assistant professor at Harvard and UCLA and a visiting professor at MIT. Among numerous other professional affiliations, he is a research fellow at the Centre for Economic Policy Research. Economics for Inclusive Prosperity (EfIP) is a network of academic economists from Harvard, Princeton, Columbia, and other leading universities who are committed to an inclusive economy and society. EfIP members are working to transform their field around a new vision of prosperity—a vision that includes traditional economic metrics, but also expanded measures of wellbeing including access to health, to democratic participation, and to a livable planet. They’re also highlighting the important changes in economics that are already underway.   Host Ralph Ranalli is a podcaster, entrepreneur, and former journalist, who has also hosted “HKS PolicyCast,” the award-winning flagship podcast of the Harvard Kennedy School. He holds a BA in political science from UCLA and a master’s in journalism from Columbia University.   The Economics for Inclusive Prosperity Podcast is recorded at the Malcolm Wiener Center for Social Policy at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. The show is co-produced by Ralph Ranalli and Tony Ditta.

    43 min
  2. Zero-sum thinking's profound effects on economic policy

    11 FEB

    Zero-sum thinking's profound effects on economic policy

    Optimists see the glass as half full. Pessimists see it as half empty. Zero-sum thinkers believe that if someone else’s glass is full, that water was more than likely taken from their glass. Zero-sum thinking is a primary field of study for our guest on this episode of the Economics for Inclusive Prosperity podcast: Economist Stefanie Stantcheva. She’s the Nathanial Ropes Professor of Political Economy at Harvard University and the 2025 recipient of the prestigious John Bates Clark Medal, which is awarded to a young economist who has made a significant contribution to the field. Through her groundbreaking survey research at Harvard's Social Economics Lab, Stantcheva has shown that the zero-sum mindset has profound implications for politics, policy, and polarization and that it’s deeply rooted in our lived experiences, our family histories, and even the struggles of ancestors we’ve never met. She and her research partners have also found that zero-sum thinking cuts across party lines in surprising ways, and that it has strong predictive power in policymaking. In this episode, she talks to EfIP Podcast host Ralph Ranalli about why understanding the implications of zero-sum thinking is crucial to economists trying to design policies that are politically viable.  Stefanie Stantcheva is the Nathaniel Ropes Professor of Political Economy at Harvard and founder and the director of the Social Economics Lab. She studies the taxation of firms and individuals, as well as how people understand, perceive, and form their attitudes towards economic issues and policies. Her recent work explores people’s attitudes towards taxation, trade, immigration, climate change, and social mobility using large-scale social economics surveys and experiments. Stantcheva was the recipient of the 2025 John Bates Clark Medal, awarded each year to an American economist under the age of forty who is judged to have made the most significant contribution to economic thought and knowledge, and the 2020 Elaine Bennett Research Prize. She has also been named a Sloan Foundation fellow, a Guggenheim fellow, and an Andrew Carnegie Fellow. She received her Ph.D. in Economics from MIT in 2014 and was a junior fellow at the Harvard Society of Fellows 2014-2016 before joining the Harvard Department of Economics in July 2016. She is currently co-editor of the Quarterly Journal of Economics. Follow Stefanie Stantcheva: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/stefanie-stantcheva-5543581a3/ Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/s-stantcheva.bsky.social X: https://x.com/S_Stantcheva Economics for Inclusive Prosperity (EfIP) is a network of academic economists from Harvard, Princeton, Columbia, and other leading universities who are committed to an inclusive economy and society. EfIP members are working to transform their field around a new vision of prosperity—a vision that includes traditional economic metrics, but also expanded measures of wellbeing including access to health, to democratic participation, and to a livable planet. They’re also highlighting the important changes in economics that are already underway.   Host Ralph Ranalli is a podcaster, entrepreneur, and former journalist, who has also hosted “HKS PolicyCast,” the award-winning flagship podcast of the Harvard Kennedy School. He holds a BA in political science from UCLA and a master’s in journalism from Columbia University.   The Economics for Inclusive Prosperity Podcast is recorded at the Malcolm Wiener Center for Social Policy at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. The show is co-produced by Ralph Ranalli and Tony Ditta.

    30 min
  3. Distribution matters: Why record inequality is a big macroeconomic problem

    28 ENE

    Distribution matters: Why record inequality is a big macroeconomic problem

    Princeton University economist Atif Mian says record wealth inequality has become a major macroeconomic problem. Born and raised in Pakistan, Mian came to the United States to study math and engineering at MIT, where he discovered economics and eventually earned his PhD. After the 2008 financial crisis, he rose to prominence with his groundbreaking research on the relationship between debt, the financial sector, wealth concentration, and the macroeconomy, which culminated in his influential book “House of Debt,” with colleague Amir Sufi. Mian says “distribution matters,” and that today’s record levels of economic inequality represent not just a moral issue, but a serious threat to the functioning and stability of the macroeconomy. Mian says the massive inequality at the top of the wealth pyramid—think of the top 1% of Americans, who now control as much wealth as the bottom 90% combined, for example—has created a system that is dangerously out of balance. His research has found that the savings rate among the bottom 50% is effectively zero, while the top 1% are able to bank 40% of their income.  All that money being removed from the economy, he says, “has to go somewhere.” So where is it going? Not where it’s needed, Mian says. Instead of channeling it into productive uses, like investments in businesses and factories, the financial sector is pushing it out as unproductive consumer debt at a rate that isn’t sustainable, he says. And in fact, U.S. consumer debt rose to a record $18.6 trillion dollars in the third quarter of last year. It’s a system that is dangerously out of balance, he says. To rebalance it will require looking at regulations, incentives, inherited wealth, and particularly taxation, especially on unproductive assets. Atif Mian joins Economics for Inclusive Prosperity Podcast host Ralph Ranalli to talk about how we got here economically, what it means if we do nothing, and ways we might be able to get to a better, more sustainable place.  Follow us on LinkedIn   Reading materials mentioned in this episode: Academic Papers: "The Goldilocks Fiscal Theory of Government Debt," Atif Mian, Ludwig Straub, Amir Sufi (Washington Center for Equitable Growth - June 2022) "The Saving Glut of the Rich," Atif Mian, Ludwig Straub, Amir Sufi (National Bureau of Economic Research - April 2022) "Indebted Demand," Atif Mian, Ludwig Straub, Amir Sufi (Bank for International Settlements, October 2021)  Books: "House of Debt," Atif Mian, Amir Sufi (University of Chicago Press, 2014)   Key Terms in this episode Digital Land Asset - Also known as digital real estate, such as a website or another type of online asset. Full market - A theoretical market with negligible transaction costs (and therefore also perfect information) and one where every asset in every possible state of the world has a price. In a full market, the complete set of possible bets on future states of the world can be constructed with existing assets without friction. Also known as a complete market. Time Series Data - Time series data consists of observations of economic variables (like GDP, inflation, or stock prices) collected at regular time intervals to identify trends, patterns, and relationships. VARs - Vector Autoregression (VAR) models how interconnected economic variables influence each other over time, explaining dynamic relationships and aiding policy analysis.   Atif Mian is the John H. Laporte, Jr. Class of 1967 Professor of Economics, Public Policy and Finance at Princeton University. He started my academic career in 2001 after completing his bachelor’s degree in Mathematics with Computer Science and Ph.D. in Economics from MIT. Prior to joining Princeton in 2012, He taught at the University of California, Berkeley and the University of Chicago Booth School of business. Mian’s research focuses on finance and macroeconomics, with a focus on understanding the human connections that help form the economy. “I see the goal of economics as helping society connect with itself in ways such that the sum is bigger than its parts,” he says. His current work focuses on the deeper implications of rising inequality for the macroeconomy—including growth, financial markets, monetary policy and fiscal policy. Mian co-founded the Center for Economic Research in Pakistan (CERP) in 2007, a non-profit research institute dedicated to economic research, teaching and innovation. He is also the director of the Julis-Rabinowitz Center for Public Policy and Finance at the Princeton School of Public and International Affairs. Mian co-authored the influential 2013 book, “House of Debt,” with Amir Sufi.   Economics for Inclusive Prosperity (EfIP) is a network of academic economists from Harvard, Princeton, Columbia, and other leading universities who are committed to an inclusive economy and society. EfIP members are working to transform their field around a new vision of prosperity—a vision that includes traditional economic metrics, but also expanded measures of wellbeing including access to health, to democratic participation, and to a livable planet. They’re also highlighting the important changes in economics that are already underway.   Host Ralph Ranalli is a podcaster, entrepreneur, and former journalist, who has also hosted “HKS PolicyCast,” the award-winning flagship podcast of the Harvard Kennedy School. He holds a BA in political science from UCLA and a master’s in journalism from Columbia University.   The Economics for Inclusive Prosperity Podcast is recorded at the Malcolm Wiener Center for Social Policy at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. The show is co-produced by Ralph Ranalli and Tony Ditta.

    48 min
  4. 14 ENE

    Welcome to Economics for Inclusive Prosperity

    Neoliberalism and economic nationalism are the two dominant meta-models for the global economy today. Proponents call them pathways to prosperity, but both have been blamed for exacerbating ongoing climate degradation, record levels of inequality, and political instability.  Is there a way to build a more inclusive, more sustainable, and more prosperous economy for everyone? Economists Dani Rodrik and Suresh Naidu say their profession needs to adopt a more holistic view of prosperity, one that includes traditional metrics but also expanded measures of wellbeing like the ability to live a healthy life, to participate in democracy, and to inhabit a liveable planet. They’re two of the founding members of Economics for Inclusive Prosperity, a network of academic economists from Harvard, Princeton, Columbia, and other leading universities working to transform their field around this more expansive vision. In the inaugural episode of the Economics for Inclusive Prosperity Podcast, Rodrik, a professor of political economy at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government, and Naidu, a professor of economics and international and public affairs at Columbia University, join host Ralph Ranalli to talk about the groups’ efforts to foster new thinking and policy ideas among their peers. They also highlight significant changes in approaches and research that are already underway, particularly among a new generation of economists using big data and empirical tools to challenge old orthodoxies. Economics for Inclusive Prosperity (EfIP) is a network of academic economists from Harvard, Princeton, Columbia, and other leading universities who are committed to an inclusive economy and society. EfIP members are working to transform their field around a new vision of prosperity—a vision that includes traditional economic metrics, but also expanded measures of wellbeing including access to health, to democratic participation, and to a livable planet. They’re also highlighting the important changes in economics that are already underway.   Host Ralph Ranalli is a podcaster, entrepreneur, and former journalist, who has also hosted “HKS PolicyCast,” the award-winning flagship podcast of the Harvard Kennedy School. He holds a BA in political science from UCLA and a master’s in journalism from Columbia University.   The Economics for Inclusive Prosperity Podcast is recorded at the Malcolm Wiener Center for Social Policy at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. The show is co-produced by Ralph Ranalli and Tony Ditta.

    42 min

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We need an alternative vision of economics to replace failed neoliberalism and rising economic nationalism. In a world facing record inequality, climate peril, and rising illiberalism, how do we build a more inclusive, more sustainable, more prosperous economy for everyone? This is the podcast of Economics for Inclusive Prosperity, a network of economists working to inspire new thinking in their field and highlight the transformative changes that are already happening.

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