Macro Musings with David Beckworth
A podcast by Mercatus Center at George Mason University - Mondays
480 Episodes
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98 - Noah Smith on Immigration Economics
Published: 3/12/2018 -
97 - Kevin Hassett on Growth, Technological Change, and the Trump Administration’s Economic Policies
Published: 3/5/2018 -
96 – Brink Lindsey and Steven Teles on Rent-Seeking and the Twin Melees Afflicting the U.S. Economy
Published: 2/26/2018 -
95 – George Selgin on Fed Floors, Corridors, and Interest on Excess Reserves
Published: 2/19/2018 -
94 - Mike Konczal on Expanding the Fed’s Monetary Toolkit
Published: 2/12/2018 -
93 – Neel Kashkari and Ron Feldman on the Minneapolis Plan and Monetary Policy Reform
Published: 2/5/2018 -
92 - Ángel Ubide on Getting Central Banks Out of Their Comfort Zones
Published: 1/29/2018 -
91 - Jesse Eisinger on the Financial Crisis and the Department of Justice
Published: 1/22/2018 -
90 – Sarah Binder and Mark Spindel on Fed History and the Myth of Its Independence
Published: 1/15/2018 -
89 – Mike Bird on the Eurozone, Abenomics, and the Fed Balance Sheet
Published: 1/8/2018 -
BONUS: The Macroeconomics of Star Wars and Star Trek
Published: 1/1/2018 -
BONUS: Laura Birg and Anna Goeddeke on Christmas Economics
Published: 12/25/2017 -
88 – Ricardo Caballero on the Safe Asset Conundrum
Published: 12/18/2017 -
87 - Stephen Williamson on New Monetarism and Neo-Fisherism
Published: 12/11/2017 -
86 - William A. Barnett on Divisia Aggregates and Measuring Money in the Economy
Published: 12/4/2017 -
85 – Caroline Baum on Treasury Yield Curves and the Debt Ceiling
Published: 11/27/2017 -
84 - Nick Bloom on Economic Uncertainty and the Productivity Slowdown
Published: 11/20/2017 -
83 - Jeffrey Rogers Hummel on Myths about the Fed and Interest Rates
Published: 11/13/2017 -
82 - Doug Irwin on the History of US Trade Policy
Published: 11/6/2017 -
81 – Norbert Michel on Smarter Financial Regulation
Published: 10/30/2017
Hosted by David Beckworth of the Mercatus Center, Macro Musings pulls back the curtain on the important macroeconomic issues of the past, present, and future.