Episodes

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Inflation. Is it a good or bad thing?
October 21, 2016x
1
16:087.41 MB

Inflation. Is it a good or bad thing?

This week the inflation rate in the UK hit one percent. It’s a long way from the high teens of the late seventies and early eighties. In this inaugural episode of The Debunking Economics Podcast, Phil Dobbie suggests that low inflation is a good thing. It means prices aren’t going up. But, Prof. Steve Keen sugg...

The crazy (and not so crazy) ideas of Donald Trump
October 25, 2016x
2
27:2312.56 MB

The crazy (and not so crazy) ideas of Donald Trump

Donald Trump has some weird ideas. Building a wall along the southern US border and getting Mexico to pay for it, for example. But, as Steve Keen explains, on other matters Trump’s intuition is right, he just loses the argument with some of the detail. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information...

Interest rates - do they really control inflation?
November 01, 2016x
3
20:289.39 MB

Interest rates - do they really control inflation?

Reserve banks spend a lot of time discussing the interplay between inflation and interest rates. In this third episode of the Debunking Economics podcast we look at how the two are inter-related and whether the bond is as tight as Central Banks seem to believe. How does it relate to the interest rate your own b...

Brexit is Needed to Bring Down the EU
November 04, 2016x
4
19:008.73 MB

Brexit is Needed to Bring Down the EU

In this edition of the Debunking Economics podcast Steve Keen explains why he is an ardent supporter of Brexit. Phil Dobbie, who believes Britain should stay in as long as the EU exists, asks whether a more moderated approach to the original idea of a European Union would have been a better outcome. But it’s cl...

Trump won because trickle-down economics doesn’t work
November 11, 2016x
5
18:338.51 MB

Trump won because trickle-down economics doesn’t work

Trump’s unexpected win reflects the dissatisfaction of huge swathes of disenfranchised voters across America. They are upset because they are not seeing their lifestyle improve, yet the rich elite seem to be accumulating the wealth with little or none of it trickling down to the rest of the population. In this ...

Monopolies – a Necessary Evil?
November 12, 2016x
6
31:2614.41 MB

Monopolies – a Necessary Evil?

In this episode Steve Keen argues that monopolies commissions have got it wrong, believing the consumer wins when all firms in an industry are of similar size. He argues that the best outcomes occur when businesses form a "power law" structure. And control of monopolies, he reckons, should be handed over to evo...

Austerity is Chipmunk Thinking
November 16, 2016x
7
21:119.72 MB

Austerity is Chipmunk Thinking

In this podcast Phil Dobbie talks with Steve Keen about the rationale behind government austerity measures, the thinking being that government debt is holding back the prospects for economic growth. Steve argues that this assumes the economy behaves like chipmunks, hording nuts for the winter. In effect, the ap...

Influencing the Speed of Money
November 18, 2016x
8
20:509.55 MB

Influencing the Speed of Money

Milton Friedman had a theory that the wealth of a nation was determined by the amount of money and the velocity of that money. In other words, if we exchanged money more quickly we’d all be better off. Phil Dobbie asks Professor Steve Keen if Friedman’s theory is correct and, if so, why doesn’t government polic...

How Much is Free Trade Costing Us?
November 26, 2016x
9
29:4413.63 MB

How Much is Free Trade Costing Us?

Back in 1817, in his catchy titled book ‘On the principle of political economy and taxation’, David Ricardo gave the mathematical argument for free trade based on comparative advantage. The argument goes that we’d all be better off if countries focused on what they’re best at producing, even if someone else mig...

Fool’s Gold
April 24, 2024x
354
38:3453.08 MB

Fool’s Gold

There are two types of people who buy gold. Speculators who see it as a risk-adverse asset class to buy when other investments look a little shaky. There are also those who hold onto gold because they believe paper money has no intrinsic value and is therefore susceptible to collapse. Zimbabwe, who’s paper curr...

Will America ever be great again?
April 17, 2024x
353
45:5063.06 MB

Will America ever be great again?

Sadly for Donald Trump, America seems to have been doing quite well in his absence. It has weathered the pandemic and inflation better than most. GDP pr capita is rising faster than most places and consumer spending is on the up. In fact, the main reason the Federal Reserve isn’t cutting rates is because the ec...

Feige’s automated transaction tax – the simple answer?
April 10, 2024x
352
41:3857.29 MB

Feige’s automated transaction tax – the simple answer?

For a while now Dr Edgar Feige has been a proponent of an automated transactional tax. The idea is that we get rid of all taxes – income tax, sales tax, corporate tax, excise, capital gains, import and export duties, inheritance – and replace it all with a tax on all transactions Every transaction, which can be...

Does immigration slow inflation?
April 03, 2024x
351
40:1655.42 MB

Does immigration slow inflation?

There’s been a lot of speculation lately about the role of immigration and its impact on inflation. Does a flood of foreign workers push down wages, which contains cost and keeps prices down? Conversely, did the low immigration levels post-COVID add to the wage pressures because, combined with sickness from CO...

End of the Rising Sun
March 27, 2024x
350
39:4854.77 MB

End of the Rising Sun

The Bank of Japan has just lifted interest rates for the first time in 17 tears. The central bank has kept rates in negative territory in the mistaken belief that it would encourage banks to lend an people to borrow, helping to boost their flagging economy. Steve Keen says it’s based on the mistaken belief that...

The economics of babysitting
March 20, 2024x
349
31:3043.38 MB

The economics of babysitting

One analogy that economists like to use is that of the Capitol Hill Babysitting cooperative in Washington DC in the 1970s. Government workers set-up a babysitting group, where they to it in turns to babysit each other’s children, so they could enjoy nights out without paying for childcare. There were quite a fe...

Hunt’s Budget Fantasyland
March 13, 2024x
348
44:5961.89 MB

Hunt’s Budget Fantasyland

The UK Chancellor Jeremy Hunt delivered what is almost certainly his last budget, promising the usual stuff – more investment, more jobs, better public services and lower taxes. And, miraculously, all of this will be achieved by lowering government spending. Despite the rubbery figures, Steve Keen argues that t...

Selling bonds to punters shrinks the economy
March 06, 2024x
347
40:4656.1 MB

Selling bonds to punters shrinks the economy

The UK Debt Office has started selling bonds to retail investors through the primary market Previously the only way you could buy government bonds was through financial institutions, through ETFs, for example. The reason giving for opening it up to consumers is that it will allow them to “contribute more signif...

Steve Keen, the Musketeer
February 28, 2024x
346
41:3857.28 MB

Steve Keen, the Musketeer

Elon Musk has his fingers in many pies. Social media, space travel, internet access, AI. Even tunnel drilling. He’s grown from developing a modest series of online city guides, to being one of the richest men on the planet. Is he a genius, or simply a Trumpesque style wheeler and dealer? This week phil – not a ...