24 episodes

A podcast about economic thought from the mid-20th Century, and why it matters for us today.

Reviving Growth Keynesianism Robert Manduca and Nic Johnson

    • Science
    • 4.8 • 12 Ratings

A podcast about economic thought from the mid-20th Century, and why it matters for us today.

    Herman Mark Schwartz on Corporate Strategy

    Herman Mark Schwartz on Corporate Strategy

    For this episode we talk to Herman Mark Schwartz on a wide range of issues - from biopolitics, industrial policy, and the New Cold War political economy to why "financialization" is a limited analytical frame for recent history. Mark argues that conflict between firms over profits is just as important - if not moreso - than conflict between capital and labor over the consumption share. The shift from midcentury "Fordism" to today's three-tiered economic structure happened as the result of a "...

    • 1 hr 53 min
    Jamie Martin on *The Meddlers* and Legitimation Machines

    Jamie Martin on *The Meddlers* and Legitimation Machines

    Jamie Martin joins us to discuss his new book *The Meddlers: Sovereignty, Empire, and the Birth of Global Economic Governance.* After the first World War, the tools that European empires had used to govern their colonies' economies were applied to Europe itself. To stabilize that respatialization politically, the victorious powers had to invent new institutions - what Martin calls "legitimation machines" - to justify treating European countries like colonies. The new institutions were s...

    • 1 hr 11 min
    Eric Monnet on *Controlling Credit*

    Eric Monnet on *Controlling Credit*

    Eric Monnet joins us to discuss his book *Controlling Credit: Central Banking and the Planned Economy in Postwar France, 1948-1973.* Prior to the neoliberalizations of the late 20th century, most central banks in Europe worked very differently than they do today. Interest rates played less of a role than credit controls in a more concentrated, segmented, and statist banking system. Representatives from all across the economy - farmers, workers, industrialists - sat on important decision...

    • 1 hr 11 min
    Nina Eichacker on Solyndra, Socialism, and Fiscal Space

    Nina Eichacker on Solyndra, Socialism, and Fiscal Space

    For this episode, we talk with Nina Eichacker, Assistant Professor of Economics at the University of Rhode Island. We discuss her wide ranging work on green industrial policy, the politics of Eurozone monetary policy, and two pre-pandemic books about American socialism.*** LINKS ***Read more of Nina Eichacker's work on her web page: https://ninaephd.org/Follow her on twitter: @nina_econ"The Case for More Solyndras" https://www.technologyreview.com/2020/11/19/1012302/solyndra-climate-change-in...

    • 1 hr 49 min
    Christy Thornton on *Revolution in Development: Mexico and the Governance of the Global Economy*

    Christy Thornton on *Revolution in Development: Mexico and the Governance of the Global Economy*

    For this episode, Christy Thornton joins us to talk about her book *Revolution in Development.* It tells the story of the revolutionary Mexican state's exclusion from the international financial system in the early 20th century, its new conception of credit and push for multilateral development lending in the interwar period, and its ultimately tragic defense of the Bretton Wood institutions in the postwar period. Along the way she asks us to think about hegemony in the world-system, agency i...

    • 1 hr 2 min
    Expecting Skanda Amarnath

    Expecting Skanda Amarnath

    For this episode, we talk with Skanda Amarnath, executive director of Employ America. We discuss some of the myths about inflation in the 1970s, the forgotten inflation of early 1950s, how monetary policy really works, and Paul Volcker's stolen valor.Follow Skanda on twitter @IrvingSwisher and Employ America @employamericaRead more about Skanda and EA's work here: https://www.employamerica.org/For more on what we talk about in the show specifically, see:https://www.employamerica.org/researchr...

    • 1 hr 19 min

Customer Reviews

4.8 out of 5
12 Ratings

12 Ratings

26382629462 ,

Engaging Podcasts with a Fascinating Central Theme

Episodes span a wide variety of topics in economics/history, all of which are laced with Keynesian threads. The hosts ask good question, the guests are diverse, and the conversations are engaging and easy to follow. Episodes don’t post as often as other podcasts, but each one is an absolute gift.

stanfordsoc ,

Awesome idea, change the title

Seems really promising, despite the title! The interview with M Prasad is excellent!

Kalebbn ,

Important

A podcast that manages to be interesting and engaging for both experts and novices in history and economics!

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