How to measure the true cost of war: Justin Wolfers shows you the math | Diving In

How to measure the true cost of war: Justin W...

Up next

Justin Wolfers Answers Your Questions on the National Debt | The Professor Is In

In this follow-up to an episode diving in to the federal deficit, Justin Wolfers responds to audience comments and questions including: where are interest payments going? Why can’t the government just print more money? And how do changes in immigration impact our ability to pay b ...  Show more

Are Met Gala Tickets Too Cheap? | Diving In

In this episode of Diving In, Justin Wolfers breaks down the economics of the Met Gala using two big ideas from economics: signaling and non-price competition. The basic point is simple: the high price of luxury goods isn't a bug in the system, it's the whole point. So instead of ...  Show more

Recommended Episodes

The economics of irresponsibility
Debunking Economics - the podcast

The classical economic assumption, from the days of Adam Smith, is that we all have free will and this freedom ensures the best possible outcomes for the economy, provided those decisions are based on greed and self-interest. This week’s episode opens with a student questioning M ...  Show more

Do price controls really help with inflation? With Isabella Weber
The Economics Show

When presidential candidate Kamala Harris proposed legislation to ban price gouging, we naturally thought to interview Isabella Weber, an associate professor at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. Weber’s paper on the subject lit up economic discussion in the wake of gas ...

  Show more

MI376: Why Do Great Companies Fail? The Innovator’s Dilemma w/ Shawn O’Malley
The Intrinsic Value Podcast - The Investor’s Podcast Network

In today’s episode, Shawn O’Malley (@shawn_OMalley_) discusses why great companies fail, as outlined by Clayton Christensen in his timeless book, The Innovator’s Dilemma, which was first published in 1997. The Economist actually named it one of the six most important business boo ...  Show more

Should we listen to the Austrian School?
Debunking Economics - the podcast

The Austrian School of Economics has been around since the 1870s, when Carl Menger wrote the Principles of Economics. They were a response to the conventional economic thought that prevails today. Phil Dobbie asks Professor Steve Keen whether there are elements of the Austrian sc ...  Show more