Macroeconomics 2: GDP & What Counts

Macroeconomics 2: GDP & What Counts

Suivant

Govt 8: Graduation LIVE!

Get your own personalized summer school diploma here.Today on our final episode of Summer School 2025, we will test your knowledge. We will salute the unsung heroes of government service. And we will pick our valedictorian from among you of the class of 2025.Editorial Note:Presid ...  Afficher plus

Govt 7: Trade blocks and blockages (Trade Policy)

Find all episodes of Planet Money Summer School here. Tariffs are the favorite tool of our current president, but there are lots of other ways that governments insert themselves into the free exchange of goods and services. Some of these trade barriers are so insidious and have b ...  Afficher plus

Épisodes Recommandés

Summer School 2: How taxes change behavior and the economy
Planet Money

We all know the government uses taxes to pay for things. But what about using taxes to control behavior? This week on Summer School, Professor Darrick Hamilton of The New School, helps us explore the true power of the tax code. Can taxes help lift people out of poverty? What abou ...  Afficher plus

Summer School 1: A government's role in the economy is to make us all richer
Planet Money

Government. The Big G. We like to imagine the free market and the invisible hand as being independent from political influence. But Nobel laureate, Simon Johnson, says that influence has been there since the birth of economics. Call it political economy. Call it government and bu ...  Afficher plus

Summer School 3: How government decides what to spend our money on
Planet Money

Although it seems like the government can spend an endless amount of money, it cannot actually do all the things it wants to do. So the big question in this week's lesson is: How do we decide? Why does the government spend so much money on some things and not on others? And hones ...  Afficher plus

Summer School 5: The many ways governments influence industry
Planet Money

LIVE SHOW: August 18th in Brooklyn. Tickets here. Traditional economics says the market is guided by the forces of supply and demand. Customers decide what they want to buy, and private enterprise responds to that need. So what makes government think that it's smarter than capita ...  Afficher plus