The Sound of Economics
A podcast by Bruegel
405 Episodes
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War in Ukraine: A conversation with Oleg Ustenko
Published: 3/9/2022 -
War in Ukraine: China-Russia relations
Published: 3/3/2022 -
War in Ukraine: Macroeconomic implications for the EU
Published: 3/2/2022 -
War in Ukraine: implications for the global financial system and central banks
Published: 3/2/2022 -
The Kremlin's gas wars
Published: 2/28/2022 -
Europe's recovery budget
Published: 2/23/2022 -
Europe’s energy crisis
Published: 2/16/2022 -
China's human capital problem
Published: 2/9/2022 -
Maastricht at 30
Published: 2/2/2022 -
Turkey’s economic struggles
Published: 1/26/2022 -
Make AI boring again
Published: 1/19/2022 -
Understanding Japan’s economic relations with China
Published: 1/12/2022 -
The European economy in 2022
Published: 1/5/2022 -
Last but not the least
Published: 12/22/2021 -
The Age of Unpeace: How connectivity causes conflict
Published: 12/15/2021 -
What to watch in 2022: China's economic outlook
Published: 12/8/2021 -
A new consensus for economic resilience
Published: 12/1/2021 -
COP26: global stocktake and what’s next
Published: 11/25/2021 -
Technology: a product of unequal power?
Published: 11/24/2021 -
Pandemonium
Published: 11/17/2021
The Sound of Economics brings you insights, debates, and research-based discussions on economic policy in Europe and beyond. The podcast is produced by Bruegel, an independent and non-doctrinal think tank based in Brussels. It seeks to contribute to European and global economic policy-making through open, fact-based, and policy-relevant research, analysis, and debate.