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.
Stephen Kotkin on Stalin's economics
ENCORE: Why economic populists always disappoint
Richard Florida on geographic inequality
Hirschmania Part 2
Dan Drezner on the economics of ideas
The science behind our addictions to social media and tech
The economics of immigration
Bonus: Life beyond the pit
The making of the crisis in Venezuela
Should Amazon be broken up?
How well do immigrants integrate into American society?
Buchheit and Gulati on restructuring Venezuela's debt
"Don Draper has been drawn and quartered"
The cost of dodging the tax man
Michael Pettis on the Chinese economy
Michael Pettis on the mechanics and politics of trade
Encore episode: Angus Deaton on his Nobel Prize-winning career
50 things that shaped the modern economy
Encore episode: Heidi Williams on the economics of medical innovation
Sizing up US retail
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