logo
episode-header-image
Jul 2024
32m 49s

Summer School 2: The golden ages of labo...

NPR
About this episode
tail spinning
Up next
Apr 4
Reese’s heir vs. chocolate skimpflation
Live event info and tickets here. When ingredient costs skyrocket, companies have three basic options: They can raise their prices (a sort of product-specific inflation), shrink the size of the products (often called “shrinkflation”), or, sometimes, find more creative ways to red ... Show More
33m 42s
Apr 2
Dark times for Cuba’s economic experiment
Live event info and tickets here. For more than 60 years, Cuba has survived on two seemingly contradictory economic strategies: leaning on friendly communist and socialist countries, and flirting with capitalism. And right now it seems the US is making both strategies impossible. ... Show More
27m 41s
Mar 28
The skyscrapers that NIMBYs and zoning couldn't stop
LIVE SHOW TOUR INFO HERE. New stories, live tapings, special guests, book signings and more. What would you build on a piece of land when all the normal rules go out the window?On today’s show, how the Squamish Nation reclaimed a sliver of prime urban real estate and were liberat ... Show More
22m 24s
Recommended Episodes
Jul 2023
Juliet Schor, "After the Gig: How the Sharing Economy Got Hijacked and How to Win It Back" (U California Press, 2021)
When the "sharing economy" launched a decade ago, proponents claimed that it would transform the experience of work--giving earners flexibility, autonomy, and a decent income. It was touted as a cure for social isolation and rampant ecological degradation. But this novel form of ... Show More
54m 49s
Mar 2025
Why do companies make terrible decisions? With Dan Davies
Modern industrial economies were made possible by automation and mass production, but also by something similar going on inside the world of management. Where once all the decisions were made by an identifiable boss, now they are farmed out to rule books, bureaucracies and comput ... Show More
32m 29s
Jul 2024
The Industrial Revolution: The Birth Of Modern London
<p>The Industrial Revolution began in Britain in the late 18th century, giving birth to an era that has changed world history. The period was characterised by rapid economic, social and technological growth. Marked by innovation and inventions like the steam engine, spinning jenn ... Show More
54m 37s
Aug 2024
300 Episodes of 'Working People'! Announcements, reflections, & what comes next...
<p>In 2024, <em>Working People </em>officially crossed the 300 episode mark! Since we published our first episode back in 2018, the show has grown in ways we never could have imagined, and the world itself has changed in radical, hopeful, terrifying ways, the labor movement has u ... Show More
55m 36s
Jan 2025
The Big 2025 Economy Forecast: AI and Big Tech, Nuclear’s Renaissance, Trump vs. China, and What’s Eating Europe?
Happy new year! And what better way to celebrate the freshly torn calendar page than by welcoming one of Derek's favorite writers to the show to tell us what's in store for the 2025 economy. Michael Cembalest is the chairman of market and investment strategy for JPMorgan Asset Ma ... Show More
1h 10m
May 2025
[BEST OF] "The 18th Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte" by Karl Marx
tail spinning
1h 37m
Jan 2025
The Epiphany: What Joyce, the Dead, Musk and Twitter Teach Us About Economic Power
We explore today's seismic changes in media and society, by tracing historical parallels between James Joyce’s&nbsp;<em>The Dead</em>&nbsp;(1907)&nbsp;and today’s digital age. Joyce’s observations on in The Dead about generational divides, the rise of newspapers, and societal shi ... Show More
33m 46s
Sep 2025
After globalisation: What's next for a fractured world? With Neil Shearing
It’s a widely held assumption that US President Donald Trump has put globalisation into reverse. But Neil Shearing, group chief economist at Capital Economics and author of The Fractured Age: How the Return of Geopolitics Will Splinter the Global Economy, tells the FT’s world tra ... Show More
31m 36s
Jul 2024
What happens when manufacturing goes away? With Amy Goldstein
<p>The GM plant in Janesville, Wisconsin, closed during the financial crisis in 2008, ending decades of production – and 3,000 steady, highly paid jobs. Journalist Amy Goldstein wrote about the town as the plant’s workers hurried to make new lives. Her book, ‘Janesville: An Ameri ... Show More
30m 7s
Sep 2024
Rethinking the AI boom, with Daron Acemoğlu
<p>Daron Acemoğlu is an economics professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the author of <em>Power and Progress: Our Thousand-Year Struggle Over Technology and Prosperity</em>. Today on the show, he and Soumaya discuss artificial intelligence and productivity gr ... Show More
30m 42s