093: The Present and the Future - Digital Dominance, Crypto, AI, and Beyond

093: The Present and the Future - Digital Dom...

Up next

094: Tulip Mania – The World's First Bubble? (1636–1637)

In this episode we turn our full attention to one single, legendary event that has haunted financial history for nearly four centuries: Tulip Mania, or Tulpenmanie, in the Dutch Republic during the winter of 1636–1637. 

092: The Reshoring Revolution: Lessons from Frozen Assets

In this episode we will focus on a massive push to bring manufacturing back to the U.S., creating jobs, securing supply chains, and rebuilding our industrial base. It's not hype, the Reshoring Initiative's latest data shows trends holding strong into late 2025, with high-tech sec ...  Show more

Recommended Episodes

Monetary economics, the Taylor Rule, fiscal policy, and economic growth
New Books in Economics

John Taylor, the Mary and Robert Raymond Professor of Economics at Stanford University and Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution, joins the podcast to discuss how he initial got interested in economics, his initial training in econometrics as a PhD student at Stanford which led ...  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

The Theory of the Leisure Class
In Our Time

Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the most influential work of Thorstein Veblen (1857-1929). In 1899, during America’s Gilded Age, Veblen wrote The Theory of the Leisure Class as a reminder that all that glisters is not gold. He picked on traits of the waning landed class of Americ ...  Show more

The Wealth of Nations
In Our Time

Melvyn Bragg and his guests discuss Adam Smith's celebrated economic treatise The Wealth of Nations. Smith was one of Scotland's greatest thinkers, a moral philosopher and pioneer of economic theory whose 1776 masterpiece has come to define classical economics. Based on his caref ...  Show more