Housing Crisis: Supply, Demand, or Both? w/ John Humphreys and Tom Switzer
What happens when geopolitical tensions collide with domestic economic pressures? In this episode, Gene Tunny is joined by John Humphreys and Tom Switzer to unpack the economic fallout from escalating tensions with Iran. The conversation then turns to Australia’s housing affordability crisis—examining whether government policies, population growth, or supply constraints are to blame. Gene would love to hear your thoughts on this episode. You can email him via contact@economicsexplored.com. Takeaways Housing affordability remains a major challenge in many advanced economies, with strong demand outpacing limited supply. Policies like Australia's 5% deposit scheme can boost prices by increasing demand in an already constrained market. Both supply and demand matter—increasing construction and managing population growth are key levers. International examples (such as Canada) suggest that policy changes can influence housing outcomes. Timestamps Iran Nuclear Tensions and Market Reactions (0:00) Impact of the 5% Deposit Scheme on Housing Affordability (6:02) Supply and Demand Dynamics in Housing (7:51) Proposed Solutions and Policy Reforms (14:50) Long-term Factors Contributing to Housing Affordability (18:55) Final Thoughts and Call to Action (24:08) Links relevant to the conversation Australian Taxpayers’ Alliance livestream, Thursday 9 April: https://www.youtube.com/live/hoRKqJhBhUQ?si=_1uHKUG6zCO7vBP1 Tom Switzer’s show, Switzerland: https://www.youtube.com/@TomSwitzerMedia Lumo Coffee promotion 10% of Lumo Coffee’s Seriously Healthy Organic Coffee. Website: https://www.lumocoffee.com/10EXPLORED Promo code: 10EXPLORED
Fuel, Fertiliser, and Fear Down Under - ep314
Are fears of fuel shortages in Australia overblown—or are we underestimating the risks? Gene Tunny is joined by Dr John Humphreys and farmer Peter Rothwell to explore how rising diesel prices, fertiliser shortages, and supply chain stress could ripple through the economy. From supermarket prices to farm viability, this episode breaks down how a global energy shock could hit households and businesses—and whether markets can cope. Gene would love to hear your thoughts on this episode. You can email him via contact@economicsexplored.com. About the Guests Dr John Humphreys is Chief Economist at the Australian Taxpayers’ Alliance and an experienced economist with a background spanning academia, government, consulting and think tanks, including roles at the Australian Treasury, the Centre for International Economics and the Centre for Independent Studies. He holds a PhD in economics from the University of Queensland, where he has lectured in advanced microeconomics, and has also taught in Cambodia, where he founded an education charity and research institute. John is the founder of the Australian Libertarian Society and the Liberal Democrats (Libertarian Party), and has published widely on tax, welfare, public finance and international trade. He was awarded a knighthood in the Cambodian Royal Order of Moniseraphon for his contributions to education. Peter Rothwell is a farmer and former Liberal Democrats candidate based in regional New South Wales. He has contested the federal seat of Parkes, covering much of western NSW including Dubbo and surrounding areas. Peter describes himself as having grown up on the land and as an “old school Liberal,” entering politics out of concern about national economic challenges including high government debt, inflation and rising interest rates. Takeaways Markets help—but aren’t perfect: Prices usually allocate scarce fuel efficiently, but panic buying and logistics can still create short-term shortages. Diesel is critical infrastructure: It powers transport, farming, mining, and supply chains—making it far more economically important than petrol. Energy shocks are stagflationary: Higher fuel prices raise costs and reduce economic activity at the same time. Agriculture is highly exposed: Fertiliser shortages and higher diesel costs could reduce yields and farm profitability. Policy trade-offs are tough: Governments face difficult choices on fuel taxes, spending, and how to respond to a supply-side shock. Timestamps 0:00 – Intro: fuel shock fears and “Mad Max” scenarios 2:40 – Oil prices surge and diesel costs spike 9:00 – Are we underestimating the risks? 12:50 – Fertiliser shortages and farming realities 25:00 – Food supply vs distribution challenges 29:00 – Why diesel is the critical constraint 41:50 – Fuel excise debate and policy responses 52:50 – Final reflections and listener call-out Links relevant to the conversation ATA livestream “Real situation in rural Australia”: https://www.youtube.com/live/MczcHEBXXIY?si=cLVJ3EWjserUeXNU Charts that Gene talks about: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1siZwkNV7QLF1PXdeg6mZJt_uomZuRpZN/view?usp=sharing Lumo Coffee promotion 10% of Lumo Coffee’s Seriously Healthy Organic Coffee. Website: https://www.lumocoffee.com/10EXPLORED Promo code: 10EXPLORED
AI, Jobs, and the Value of Ideas w/ Benjamin Shiller, Brandeis University
AI can write essays, generate code, and assist with research, but does that mean it will replace human workers? Economist Benjamin Shiller, author of AI Economics, joins show host Gene to discuss how AI may instead make human creativity and ideas even more valuable. In this conversation with Gene Tunny, they explore AI’s potential impact on jobs, productivity growth, education, and inequality, as well as the risks the technology could pose. Gene would love to hear your thoughts on this episode. You can email him via contact@economicsexplored.com. About this episode’s guest: Benjamin Shiller Benjamin Shiller is an Associate Professor of Economics at Brandeis University. His research on personalized pricing, ad-blocking, and technological change has been published in leading journals and covered in The Atlantic, The Economist, Forbes, Fortune, The Guardian, and The Washington Post. Takeaways AI may increase the value of human ideas. Benjamin Shiller argues that while AI is excellent at turning ideas into polished text or code, it still struggles to generate genuinely original ideas. That means creativity, judgment, and insight may become more valuable in the AI age. Workers who know how to use AI will have an advantage. Rather than fully replacing professionals, AI may function as a “co-pilot.” Graduates who can effectively use AI tools — prompting them, checking outputs, and integrating them into workflows — could be in strong demand. AI could dramatically improve education through personalised tutoring. Shiller highlights Bloom’s two-sigma problem, which shows that personalised tutoring can dramatically improve student outcomes. AI tutors could provide personalised learning at scale, potentially transforming education systems. Productivity gains from AI may take time to appear. Like earlier technologies such as electricity or computers, AI may require years before its benefits show up in productivity statistics as businesses learn how to integrate it effectively. 5. AI brings serious risks alongside its benefits. While AI could boost productivity and living standards, Shiller warns about potential downsides — including labour market disruption, social isolation from AI companionship, and the possibility of automated AI-driven warfare. Timestamps 00:00 – Introduction 03:08 – Using AI to write a book 06:11 – The explosion of AI-generated content 15:11 – AI, jobs, and the labour market 21:23 – Can AI automate research? 25:57 – AI blind spots and the “kangaroo problem” 31:29 – Bloom’s two-sigma problem and AI tutors 37:42 – Will AI boost productivity? 42:30 – Inequality, regulation, and AI risks 49:19 – AI and the dangers of automated warfare 53:34 – Key takeaways and closing Links relevant to the conversation Benjamin Shiller’s website: https://benjaminshiller.com/ AI Economics: How Technology Transforms Jobs, Markets, Life, & Our Future: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0G45MKBZT Lumo Coffee promotion 10% of Lumo Coffee’s Seriously Healthy Organic Coffee. Website: https://www.lumocoffee.com/10EXPLORED Promo code: 10EXPLORED
Why Productivity Matters for Living Standards | Australia’s Productivity Problem
Australia’s productivity growth has slowed to its weakest rate in decades — and that matters because productivity ultimately drives rising living standards. In this episode, Gene Tunny explores why productivity is so central to higher wages, economic growth, and sustainable prosperity. The episode features insights from Danielle Wood, Chair of the Productivity Commission, on why policymakers need a “growth mindset,” followed by highlights from a lively roundtable discussion on the policies shaping productivity in Australia — including energy costs, taxation, regulation, and government spending. Gene would love to hear your thoughts on this episode. You can email him via contact@economicsexplored.com. What You’ll Learn Why productivity growth drives living standards over the long run. How productivity sets the economy’s “speed limit” for non-inflationary growth. Why wages growing faster than productivity can lead to inflation and unemployment. How policy settings — including taxes, regulation, and energy costs — influence productivity. Why innovation, investment, and entrepreneurship are essential to productivity growth. Timestamps Australia's Productivity Growth and Its Impact on Living Standards (0:00) Introduction of Danielle Wood and Her Views on Productivity (3:02) Discussion on Productivity and Its Practical Implications (9:15) Energy Costs and Their Impact on Productivity (17:27) Tax Reforms and Their Potential to Boost Productivity (24:34) Conclusion and Key Takeaways (35:24) Links relevant to the conversation Markets & Motives Ep. 1 – Dr Danielle Wood with Isabella Sciacca: https://youtu.be/L0BP_pGbHuQ?si=aA914CAhw4iZ8_to Beyond the Roundtable: Real Solutions for Australia’s Productivity Plunge - ep295: https://economics-explained.simplecast.com/episodes/beyond-the-roundtable-real-solutions-for-australias-productivity-plunge-ep295 Damian Coory’s The Other Side: https://www.youtube.com/@OtherSideAus The Whitlam Era book, published by Connor Court: https://www.amazon.com.au/WHITLAM-ERA-REAPPRAISAL-GOVERNMENT-POLITICS/dp/1925826945 Lumo Coffee promotion 10% of Lumo Coffee’s Seriously Healthy Organic Coffee. Website: https://www.lumocoffee.com/10EXPLORED Promo code: 10EXPLORED
Argentina’s Radical Economic Turnaround
Argentina was on the brink: inflation near 300% a year, real wages collapsing, poverty rising, and a large fiscal deficit. Voters elected libertarian economist Javier Milei, who promised deep spending cuts and radical reform. Many predicted a disaster. Two years on, inflation has fallen sharply, and real wages are projected to rise. In this episode, show host Gene Tunny chats with John Humphreys (Australian Taxpayers’ Alliance Chief Economist) and Michael Arbon (adviser to Senator Ralph Babet) on how disinflation works, why fiscal credibility matters, and what Argentina’s experience could mean for Australia — particularly on energy policy and political risk. Gene also briefly touches on developments in the Iran war and their potential global economic implications. Gene would love to hear your thoughts on this episode. You can email him via contact@economicsexplored.com. What You’ll Learn How credible fiscal and monetary reform can rapidly reduce inflation. Why cutting government spending doesn’t automatically cause a recession. What economists mean by a “political risk premium.” How uncertainty about future policy affects investment decisions. Why major reform often involves short-term pain — and political risk. Timestamps Global Economic Uncertainty and Iran Conflict (0:00) Economic Implications of Higher Energy Prices (2:06) Argentina's Economic Crisis and Reforms (3:56) John Humphreys on Argentina's Economic Reforms (6:33) Lessons from Argentina's Reforms (7:40) Political Risk and Investment in Argentina (22:11) Potential Application of Argentina's Reforms in Australia (28:10) Conclusion and Future Prospects (29:31) Links relevant to the conversation John’s Substack post, “What can we learn from Milei's Argentina?”: https://austaxpayers.substack.com/p/what-can-we-learn-from-mileis-argentina Lumo Coffee promotion 10% of Lumo Coffee’s Seriously Healthy Organic Coffee Website: https://www.lumocoffee.com/10EXPLORED Promo code: 10EXPLORED