EconTalk
A podcast by Russ Roberts - Mondays
Categories:
965 Episodes
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Vinay Prasad on Cancer Drugs, Medical Ethics, and Malignant
Published: 20/04/2020 -
Ed Leamer on Manufacturing, Effort, and Inequality
Published: 13/04/2020 -
Arnold Kling on the Three Languages of Politics, Revisited
Published: 06/04/2020 -
Jenny Schuetz on Land Regulation and the Housing Market
Published: 30/03/2020 -
Azra Raza on The First Cell
Published: 23/03/2020 -
Tyler Cowen on the COVID-19 Pandemic
Published: 19/03/2020 -
Isabella Tree on Wilding
Published: 16/03/2020 -
Richard Davies on Extreme Economies
Published: 09/03/2020 -
Yuval Levin on A Time to Build
Published: 02/03/2020 -
Richard Robb on Willful
Published: 24/02/2020 -
Peter Singer on The Life You Can Save
Published: 17/02/2020 -
Marty Makary on the Price We Pay
Published: 10/02/2020 -
Robert Shiller on Narrative Economics
Published: 03/02/2020 -
Daniel Klein on Honest Income
Published: 27/01/2020 -
Janine Barchas on the Lost Books of Jane Austen
Published: 20/01/2020 -
Adam Minter on Secondhand
Published: 13/01/2020 -
Melanie Mitchell on Artificial Intelligence
Published: 06/01/2020 -
Kimberly Clausing on Open and the Progressive Case for Free Trade
Published: 30/12/2019 -
Joe Posnanski on the Life and Afterlife of Harry Houdini
Published: 23/12/2019 -
Binyamin Appelbaum on the Economists' Hour
Published: 16/12/2019
EconTalk: Conversations for the Curious is an award-winning weekly podcast hosted by Russ Roberts of Shalem College in Jerusalem and Stanford's Hoover Institution. The eclectic guest list includes authors, doctors, psychologists, historians, philosophers, economists, and more. Learn how the health care system really works, the serenity that comes from humility, the challenge of interpreting data, how potato chips are made, what it's like to run an upscale Manhattan restaurant, what caused the 2008 financial crisis, the nature of consciousness, and more. EconTalk has been taking the Monday out of Mondays since 2006. All 900+ episodes are available in the archive. Go to EconTalk.org for transcripts, related resources, and comments.