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May 05, 2008, Featuring John NyeJohn Nye of George Mason University talks with EconTalk host Russ Roberts about his book, War, Wine, and Taxes. The conversation covers the history of Britain and France's trade policy, why the British drink beer and why Ricardo's example of Britain trading wool for Portuguese wine is bizarre. Nye turns the traditional story on its head--he argues that France was more of a free trader than Britain and that the repeal of the Corn Laws was not the dividing line between Britain's protectionist past and free trade future. At the end of the discussion, Nye emphasizes the importance of domestic free trade for economic growth. Time: 1:04:21
Size: 29.5 MB
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MORE: Posted by Russ Roberts. Permanent Link | Comments (4) April 28, 2008, Featuring William BernsteinWilliam Bernstein talks with EconTalk host Russ Roberts about the history of trade. Drawing on the insights from his recent book, A Splendid Exchange: How Trade Shaped the World, Bernstein talks about the magic of spices, how trade in sugar explain why Jews ended up in Manhattan, the real political economy of the Boston Tea Party and the demise of the Corn Laws in England. The discussion closes with the political economy of trade today and the interaction between trade and income inequality. Time: 1:10:26
Size: 32.3 MB
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MORE: Posted by Russ Roberts. Permanent Link | Comments (23) April 21, 2008, Featuring Russ RobertsEconTalk host Russ Roberts talks about the claim that for capitalism to succeed there have to be people at the bottom to do the unpleasant tasks and that the rich thrive because of the suffering of those at the bottom. He critiques the idea that capitalism is a zero sum game where to get ahead, someone has to fall back. He also looks at the evolution of the least pleasant jobs over time and how technology interacts with rising productivity to make the least pleasant jobs more pleasant. Time: 1:03:39
Size: 29.2 MB
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MORE: Posted by Russ Roberts. Permanent Link | Comments (68) April 14, 2008, Featuring Diane CoyleDiane Coyle talks with EconTalk host Russ Roberts about the ideas in her new book, The Soulful Science: What Economists Really Do and Why it Matters. The discussions starts with the issue of growth--measurement issues and what economists have learned and have yet to learn about why some nations grow faster than others and some don't grow at all. Subsequent topics include happiness research, the politics and economics of inequality, the role of math in economics, and policy areas where economics has made the greatest contribution. Time: 1:04:15
Size: 29.5 MB
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MORE: Posted by Russ Roberts. Permanent Link | Comments (10) April 07, 2008, Featuring Christopher CoyneChristopher Coyne of West Virginia University and George Mason University's Mercatus Center talks with EconTalk host Russ Roberts about his book, After War: The Political Economy of Exporting Democracy. They talk about the successes and failures of America's attempts to export democracy after a war. In some cases, Japan and Germany, for example, after World War II, American efforts have led to stability and democratic institutions. In many other cases, Cuba, Somalia, and Haiti, for example, and so far, Iraq, American efforts have failed, often repeatedly and have sometimes made things worse. Coyne tries to identify factors that lead to an improved likelihood of success or failure. Ultimately, he concludes that a non-interventionist posture accompanied by unilateral free trade is more likely to benefit citizens under repressive governments. Time: 1:19:44
Size: 36.5 MB
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MORE: Posted by Russ Roberts. Permanent Link | Comments (26) March 31, 2008, Featuring Deirdre McCloskeyDeirdre McCloskey of the University of Illinois at Chicago and the author of The Bourgeois Virtues talks with EconTalk host Russ Roberts about capitalism and whether markets make people more ethical or less. They also discuss Adam Smith's world view, whether people were nicer in the Middle Ages, and the role of prudence and love. [Note: We apologize for the poor sound quality of the phone connection in this podcast.] Time: 59:59
Size: 27.5 MB
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MORE: Posted by Russ Roberts. Permanent Link | Comments (23) March 24, 2008, Featuring Mike Munger
Time: 1:02:18
Size: 28.6 MB
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MORE: Posted by Russ Roberts. Permanent Link | Comments (30) March 17, 2008, Featuring Tyler Cowen
Time: 1:08:50
Size: 31.6 MB
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MORE: Posted by Russ Roberts. Permanent Link | Comments (69) March 10, 2008, Featuring Stephen MarglinStephen Marglin of Harvard University and author of The Dismal Science: How Thinking Like an Economist Undermines Community talks with EconTalk host Russ Roberts about the markets and community. Marglin argues that markets and commercial transactions undermine the connections between us. He wants people to pay more attention to what is lost and not just what is gained by the pursuit of material well-being. Topics discussed include the nature of community, the role that voluntary associations play in our lives, the costs and benefits of mobility, the role of insurance in reducing our dependence on each other, and the nature of knowledge. Time: 1:05:27
Size: 30.0 MB
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MORE: Posted by Russ Roberts. Permanent Link | Comments (43) March 03, 2008, Featuring Vernon SmithNobel Laureate Vernon Smith of Chapman University and George Mason University talks with EconTalk host Russ Roberts about the ideas in his new book, Rationality in Economics: Constructivist and Ecological Forms. They discuss the social and human sides of exchange, the robust nature of equilibrium in experiments and the real world, the seeming contradiction between Adam Smith's two great works, the unpredictability of how innovation emerges and its rationality, what neuroscience might tell us about economic decision-making, and the challenges of small-group intimate exchange and our interactions with strangers in the extended order of the marketplace. Time: 1:01:03
Size: 28.0 MB
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MORE: Posted by Russ Roberts. Permanent Link | Comments (13) |