Adam Tooze, economic historian and author of Crashed: How a Decade of Financial Crises Changed the World, joins the FT’s Brendan Greeley and Brown University’s Mark Blyth to discuss how our politics got us to where we are today, why our ideas about how the economy works may not be fit for purpose, and the key role that China played during the Great Recession and continues to play today. They also discuss the central importance of global capital flows for understanding our world and why global liquidity may be much more fragile than we like to think.
Peter Norton on the history of paying for big projects
Climate change is not a business cycle
The history of what we now call opportunity zones
Olivier Blanchard on debt: “Relax. Don’t relax too much, but relax”
Adam Posen on central banks, China and the enduring power of the dollar
Robert Shiller: market narratives are 'like diseases'
What exactly is 'slack'?
Mariana Mazzucato on who creates value
The math wizard who became a customer loyalty scheme guru
Bill Janeway revisits the 'three-player game'
David Autor on what we now know about trade
Introducing Behind The Money
Sir Paul Tucker on the legitimacy of the central bank
Dan Drezner on the economics of ideas
Jim Millstein on lessons from the financial crisis
An encore chat with Geoffrey West
Encore: Alice Rivlin on a career as an economic policymaker
Benn Steil on The Marshall Plan
ENCORE: Andrew Lo on adaptive markets
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