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In this conversation, Casey Mulligan discusses economic predictions based on his model, focusing on wage growth, inflation, government spending, and the role of the Federal Reserve. He emphasizes the importance of reversing economically destructive policies to stimulate growth and addresses the challenges posed by inflation and government debt. Mulligan also highlights Milton Friedman's economic principles and the potential for regulatory reforms under the Trump administration, while acknowledging the complexities involved in implementing these changes. We want to hear from YOU! If you would like to submit a question or comment for further discussion, please email us at: questions@afjministry.com. economy, inflation, government spending, Federal Reserve, Milton Friedman, regulations, economic growth, predictions, Casey Mulligan, Trump administration
In this conversation, economist Casey Mulligan discusses his experiences at the University of Chicago, the importance of fostering curiosity among students, and his insights from meeting former President Trump. He shares his predictions for the economy following the recent elections, emphasizing the impact of regulatory policies and the challenges posed by the transition to electric vehicles. Mulligan also highlights the complexities of energy production and the potential for ambitious economic reforms in the future. We want to hear from YOU! If you would like to submit a question or comment for further discussion, please email us at: questions@afjministry.com.
In this conversation, economist Casey Mulligan discusses the current state of the U.S. economy, emphasizing the impact of regulations, inflation, and political leadership on economic growth and productivity. He highlights the challenges faced by different income groups and the potential outcomes of the upcoming elections based on differing economic philosophies. We want to hear from YOU! If you would like to submit a question or comment for further discussion, please email us at: questions@afjministry.com.
In this conversation, Richard Case interviews Casey Mulligan, a professor at the University of Chicago, discussing various economic insights and trends. They explore the evolving role of public sector unions, the impact of competition on public services, and the effects of COVID-19 on urban dynamics. Mulligan emphasizes the importance of human capital and the challenges posed by remote work, while also reflecting on historical patterns of urban decline and the potential for cities to recover. The discussion highlights the interconnectedness of economic policies, public services, and societal outcomes as they approach the upcoming election. We want to hear from YOU! If you would like to submit a question or comment for further discussion, please email us at: questions@afjministry.com.
In this episode of DCEKG, hosts Eric Ueland and Joe Grogan engage with economist Casey Mulligan to dissect the implications of the Inflation Reduction Act, the dynamics of Medicare Advantage, and the challenges posed by regulatory overreach. They explore the shortcomings of the Congressional Budget Office in accurately scoring healthcare legislation, the impact of environmental policies on market dynamics, and the need for reform in the FDA's drug approval process. The conversation highlights the tension between government regulation and market efficiency, emphasizing the importance of understanding economic principles in shaping effective policy.
This week on the show Casey Mulligan Management has put together a new product and they began testing the consumer response on air. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
As if keeping the ball out of the net as a goalie, Casey Mulligan works hard putting the ball in the net on the basketball court. This year she not only broke 1000 points for her career (one of those years being a shortened COVID year), she also racked up more points than any other athlete in Woodland history, outpacing a record originally set by Tanner Kingsley. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/morning-mayhem/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/morning-mayhem/support
In the second part of their three-part discussion, the discussion begins with what Art saw on his trip (August of 2022) to the southern border. Art shares how drug cartels monitor and control the border, use migrants who can't afford the $6000 fee coyotes charge to smuggle them across the US, and the sophisticated tactics the cartels use to evade US border patrol. Art also unmasks the fallacy of public distribution of “test strips” and buddy system use stating flatly that “there is no safe way to consume outside a hospital.” Because the euphoric effect of the drug diminishes before exiting the human body, users would be tempted to consume more while actual levels of the opioid are still in the system leading to tragic overdoses. He also confirms with previous podcast Casey Mulligan's data on the number of opioid overdose deaths in the US is 108,000 which is up from the approximate death toll under President Trump. For help with substance abuse call 800-662-4357 *Episode originally aired October 6, 2022*
Welcome to this week's episode of the Mixtape with Scott! Recently, the University of Chicago Press published a book entitled The Economic Approach: Unpublished Writings of Gary S. Becker. It was written obviously by Gary Becker who died almost 10 years ago at the age of 83 after an extremely long and fruitful career as an economist. Dr. Becker had many students — some like me were students from afar, but some, like our guest today, were his actual students. And today's guest is Casey Mulligan, one of the editors of that aforementioned book, and a professor of economics at the University of Chicago. This was a fun interview to do. Casey walked us through his time at Harvard as an undergrad to his unusually rapid progression through Chicago's economics PhD program where he stayed on and is now a professor. We discussed his own career but we also spent just a lot of time discussing what it was like with Becker, as well as his own later time at the Council of Economic Advisers. I hope you enjoy it!Scott's Substack is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. Get full access to Scott's Substack at causalinf.substack.com/subscribe
The Rich Zeoli Show- Hour 3: Dr. EJ Antoni—Economist & Research Fellow in The Heritage Foundation's Grover M. Hermann Center for the Federal Budget—joins The Rich Zeoli Show for The Drive at 5. Dr. Antoni reacts to Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen claiming that the U.S. can easily afford to fund wars in Ukraine and the Middle East. How is that possible when our country's annual budget remains imbalanced, and the current national debt exceeds $33 trillion? You can read Dr. Antoni's most recent commentary in the Telegraph Herald, “Worsening Economy Pushes Consumers Near the Breaking Point,” here: https://www.telegraphherald.com/news/opinion/article_49736bc5-9bd4-5b20-82b0-1cd8a5c2eeb0.html Rich has a highly respected economist in-studio and decides to ask him if Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen sounds like Buffalo Bill from Silence of the Lambs! In a House of Representatives Committee on Oversight and Accountability hearing, University of Chicago Professor, and Economist, Casey Mulligan revealed that government regulations are costing American households massive amounts of money. Mulligan explains: “The most notorious cost of regulation is the paperwork, sometimes known as ‘red tape.' The federal executive branch alone issues thousands of new regulations each year that add to the 200,000 pages of federal rules already in place. One finding is that the rules finalized by the Biden Administration through the end of 2022 impose costs of nearly $10,000 per household, which is $1,300 more than the burden of the Obama Administration rules during the comparable timeframe.” You can read more here: https://oversight.house.gov/release/hearing-wrap-up-the-biden-administrations-regulatory-blitz-jeopardizes-americas-economy%EF%BF%BC/
The Rich Zeoli Show- Full Episode (10/18/2023): 3:05pm- On Wednesday, the House of Representatives once again voted to fill the speakership position left vacant following the removal of Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-CA). The Republican nominee for speaker, Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH), received 199 votes—well short of the 217 votes he needed to win a majority of the House and one fewer vote than he received on Tuesday. It seems increasingly unlikely that House Republicans will be able to coalesce behind one candidate. Consequently, many House members are calling for a temporary expansion of powers granted to Speaker pro tempore Patrick McHenry (R-NC). According to Annie Karni of The New York Times, “Scott Perry, the chairman of the Freedom Caucus that Jordan helped establish, says he won't support any resolution to empower Patrick McHenry, the speaker pro tem. Perry says he hopes Jordan keeps fighting, adding that the race is simply about ‘stamina.'” You can read updates as they unfold here: https://www.nytimes.com/live/2023/10/18/us/house-speaker-vote-jim-jordan 3:15pm- On Wednesday, President Joe Biden delivered an address from Tel Aviv, Israel and met with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. While taking questions from the press, Biden discussed a deadly strike on a hospital in Gaza: "Based on what I've seen, it appears as though it was done by the other team, not you. But there's a lot of people who are not sure." 3:30pm- The Wall Street Journal reports, “Israel, the U.S. government and independent security experts cast doubt Wednesday on Palestinian claims that an Israeli airstrike was responsible for a deadly explosion at a Gaza hospital compound, saying the preliminary evidence pointed to a local militant group. Independent analysts poring over publicly available images of Tuesday's explosion at Al-Ahli Arab Hospital in Gaza and its aftermath say the blast site doesn't bear the hallmarks of a strike with a bomb or missile of the types usually used by Israel….The U.S. has collected ‘high confidence' signals intelligence indicating that the blast at the hospital in Gaza was caused by the militant group Palestinian Islamic Jihad, U.S. officials said, buttressing Israel's contention that it wasn't responsible for the blast.” You can read more from the report from journalists Margherita Stancati, Yaroslav Trofimov, Nancy A. Youssef, and Stephen Kalin here: https://www.wsj.com/world/middle-east/israel-tries-to-back-up-claims-it-didnt-attack-gaza-hospital-a8cc3405 3:40pm- Rich accuses Momma Zeoli of purchasing the worst frozen pizza he has ever tasted. 3:50pm- RNC Research on X notes that progressive representatives Ilhan Omar, Rashida Tlaib, and Summer Lee have not removed social media posts falsely blaming Israel for a missile strike on a hospital in Gaza—which has now been attributed to Palestinian terrorists accidentally misfiring a rocket. 4:05pm- Libby Emmons of The Post Millennial writes, “Twitter user Douglass Mackey [has been] sentenced to 7 months in prison after being found guilty of election interference for making memes disparaging Hillary Clinton.” She notes, “[t]here was no evidence to suggest that any voter attempted to cast their ballot via text in response to Mackey's meme.” How could any court criminally punish satirical speech on social media? Could the U.S. Supreme Court ultimately end up hearing this freedom of speech case? You can read more here: https://thepostmillennial.com/breaking-twitter-user-douglass-mackey-sentenced-to-7-months-in-prison-after-being-found-guilty-of-election-interference-for-making-memes-disparaging-hillary-clinton?utm_campaign=64483 4:40pm- David Averre of The Daily Mail writes: “Israel's Defence Forces have released a slew of evidence they claim proves an overnight explosion at a Gaza hospital that killed hundreds of people was caused by a misfiring rocket launched by Palestinian Islamic Jihad. In an audio clip procured by Israeli military intelligence, two alleged Hamas terrorists can be heard discussing the explosion and confirming the rocket came from Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ) - an independent jihadist group. 'They are saying (the rocket) belongs to Palestinian Islamic Jihad. It's from us?' one alleged Hamas member asks in the clip provided by Israel's military intelligence.” You can read Averre's article here: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-12643229/Israel-blast-Gaza-hospital-Palestine-video-rocket-misfire.html 5:05pm- Dr. EJ Antoni—Economist & Research Fellow in The Heritage Foundation's Grover M. Hermann Center for the Federal Budget—joins The Rich Zeoli Show for The Drive at 5. Dr. Antoni reacts to Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen claiming that the U.S. can easily afford to fund wars in Ukraine and the Middle East. How is that possible when our country's annual budget remains imbalanced, and the current national debt exceeds $33 trillion? You can read Dr. Antoni's most recent commentary in the Telegraph Herald, “Worsening Economy Pushes Consumers Near the Breaking Point,” here: https://www.telegraphherald.com/news/opinion/article_49736bc5-9bd4-5b20-82b0-1cd8a5c2eeb0.html 5:30pm- Rich has a highly respected economist in-studio and decides to ask him if Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen sounds like Buffalo Bill from Silence of the Lambs! 5:40pm- In a House of Representatives Committee on Oversight and Accountability hearing, University of Chicago Professor, and Economist, Casey Mulligan revealed that government regulations are costing American households massive amounts of money. Mulligan explains: “The most notorious cost of regulation is the paperwork, sometimes known as ‘red tape.' The federal executive branch alone issues thousands of new regulations each year that add to the 200,000 pages of federal rules already in place. One finding is that the rules finalized by the Biden Administration through the end of 2022 impose costs of nearly $10,000 per household, which is $1,300 more than the burden of the Obama Administration rules during the comparable timeframe.” You can read more here: https://oversight.house.gov/release/hearing-wrap-up-the-biden-administrations-regulatory-blitz-jeopardizes-americas-economy%EF%BF%BC/ 6:05pm- Michele Exner—Senior Advisor for Parents Defending Education—joins The Rich Zeoli Show to discuss her latest opinion piece in The Daily Caller, “The Real Reason Why Many Young Americans Side with Pure Evil.” You can read her editorial here: https://dailycaller.com/2023/10/17/opinion-the-real-reason-why-so-many-young-americans-are-siding-with-pure-evil-michele-exner/ 6:30pm- The Wall Street Journal reports, “Israel, the U.S. government and independent security experts cast doubt Wednesday on Palestinian claims that an Israeli airstrike was responsible for a deadly explosion at a Gaza hospital compound, saying the preliminary evidence pointed to a local militant group. Independent analysts poring over publicly available images of Tuesday's explosion at Al-Ahli Arab Hospital in Gaza and its aftermath say the blast site doesn't bear the hallmarks of a strike with a bomb or missile of the types usually used by Israel….The U.S. has collected ‘high confidence' signals intelligence indicating that the blast at the hospital in Gaza was caused by the militant group Palestinian Islamic Jihad, U.S. officials said, buttressing Israel's contention that it wasn't responsible for the blast.” You can read more from the report from journalists Margherita Stancati, Yaroslav Trofimov, Nancy A. Youssef, and Stephen Kalin here: https://www.wsj.com/world/middle-east/israel-tries-to-back-up-claims-it-didnt-attack-gaza-hospital-a8cc3405 6:40pm- On Wednesday, the House of Representatives once again voted to fill the speakership position left vacant following the removal of Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-CA). The Republican nominee for speaker, Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH), received 199 votes—well short of the 217 votes he needed to win a majority of the House and one fewer vote than he received on Tuesday. It seems increasingly unlikely that House Republicans will be able to coalesce behind one candidate. Consequently, many House members are calling for a temporary expansion of powers granted to Speaker pro tempore Patrick McHenry (R-NC). According to Annie Karni of The New York Times, “Scott Perry, the chairman of the Freedom Caucus that Jordan helped establish, says he won't support any resolution to empower Patrick McHenry, the speaker pro tem. Perry says he hopes Jordan keeps fighting, adding that the race is simply about ‘stamina.'” You can read updates as they unfold here: https://www.nytimes.com/live/2023/10/18/us/house-speaker-vote-jim-jordan 6:55pm- While appearing on the All In Podcast, billionaire venture capitalist and democrat donor Chamath Palihapitiya concedes that now, in hindsight, he realizes former President Donald Trump's policies were actually effective and good. He explained: “so much of the work that happened in [the Trump] administration turned out to be right” but no one wanted to acknowledge it at the time because of “Trump derangement syndrome.”
Casey Mulligan, Professor in Economics and the College at the University of Chicago, joins the podcast to discuss how he got interested in becoming an economist from his days as an undergraduate at Harvard in Martin Feldstein's Ec10 class, being an economics graduate student and professor at the University of Chicago teaching the Chicago Price Theory approach, his experience working in the Trump Council of Economic Advisors (CEA), and the long-term influence of University of Chicago economics figures like Milton Friedman, Gary Becker, and George Stigler. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Casey Mulligan, Professor in Economics and the College at the University of Chicago, joins the podcast to discuss how he got interested in becoming an economist from his days as an undergraduate at Harvard in Martin Feldstein's Ec10 class, being an economics graduate student and professor at the University of Chicago teaching the Chicago Price Theory approach, his experience working in the Trump Council of Economic Advisors (CEA), and the long-term influence of University of Chicago economics figures like Milton Friedman, Gary Becker, and George Stigler. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/economics
Pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) are being called out for engaging in allegedly anticompetitive business practices that make prescription drugs less affordable. But do PBMs actually promote competition in the healthcare industry? In this episode, Professor Casey Mulligan, an economist and law professor at the University of Chicago, discusses what his research indicates could be the unintended adverse consequences of imposing transparency requirements and other regulatory burdens on PBMs. Listen to this episode to hear the arguments against targeting PBMs with restrictive legislation and enforcement proceedings as a means of reining in high drug prices. With special guest: Casey Mulligan, Professor of Economics, University of Chicago Related Links: Casey Mulligan, Ending Pay for PBM Performance: Consequences for Prescription Drug Prices, Utilization, and Government Spending (Sept. 2023) Casey Mulligan, Testimony before Senate Committee on Commerce, Science & Transportation (Feb. 16, 2023) Casey Mulligan, In Defense of Pharmacy Benefit Managers, Wall Street Journal Op-Ed (July 11, 2022) Hosted by: Alicia Downey and Jeny Maier
If there is one overriding theme of the Biden years, it is the systematic degradation of American freedom, pushing the lives and freedom of private citizens aside as government expands and takes over. This is done under the rubric of the left that “government knows best.” Day by day, we are becoming what the late Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia described as “a country I do not recognize.” In a new paper published by the Committee to Unleash Prosperity, Casey Mulligan, professor of economics at the University of Chicago and former chief economist of the president's Council of Economic Advisers,...Article Link
Casey, an expert on global economics and frequent presenter on Fox News, continues to share his insight regarding current economic conditions that will affect us all. We want to hear from YOU! If you would like to submit a question or comment for further discussion, please email us at: questions@afjministry.com.
Casey, an expert on global economics and frequent presenter on Fox News, shares his insight regarding current economic conditions that will affect us all. We want to hear from YOU! If you would like to submit a question or comment for further discussion, please email us at: questions@afjministry.com.
Grief and joy can and do co-exist. That's the powerful message that author Casey Mulligan Walsh shares in this episode. Her story, which includes being orphaned as a teenager and losing her son to a car accident, is heartbreaking and inspiring. Her essay, Still, about her son Eric's death, published in Split Lip Magazine, was nominated for Best of the Net. Her work has appeared in The New York Times, HuffPost, Modern Loss and many others. Casey explores how grief morphs through time, which will be highlighted in the forthcoming Daring to Breathe. Casey and her husband serve as advocates for The Family Heart Foundation, an organization dedicated to raising awareness around the genetic cardiovascular disorder that affects her family. Casey's memoir, The Full Catastrophe, is forthcoming from Motina Books in early 2025. Find Casey at www.caseymulliganwalsh.com and on FB, IG, Twitter/X and LinkedIn. Follow us at www.BuildUponTheGood.com and social media. *Special thanks to Sean Kelly and the band The Samples for continued permission to use their song "Streets in the Rain." Follow them at www.TheSamples.com
When there's no vaccine on the market, people will look for other ways to be safe, including school closures and the handwashing of groceries. Listen as economist Casey Mulligan of the University Chicago talks with EconTalk's Russ Roberts about the costs of delaying a vaccine, the hidden costs of FDA regulation, and what we learned and failed to learn about the Covid pandemic.
In a wide-ranging discussion, the boys explore the cause-and-effect of both the legal and illegal opioid epidemic. The role of an unsecured southern border has on the drug trade, the long-lasting impact of covid shutdowns on children and American health productivity, and current threats from inflation and possibility of recession. *Episode originally aired July 21, 2022*
The boys discuss the work and background of PhD economist, and University of Chicago's own, Casey Mulligan. Part one looks into how as a member of President Trump Counsel of Economic Advisors (CEA) informed and updated the president on socialism, wages, and the historic deregulatory effort his administration was undertaking. *Episode originally aired July 21, 2022
0:00 - Jonathan Turley on FBI handling of Biden classified docs 12:22 - Dan & Amy head to Davos with JB Pritzker 32:37 - Alicyn Simpson, Community Navigator, Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh, on live transplants 51:02 - CAMPUS BEAT: Unions 01:09:41 - THE GREAT DISINTEGRATION: DC 01:23:45 - President of the Crime Prevention Research Center, former senior advisor for research and statistics at the U.S. Department of Justice's Office of Legal Policy, John Lott, shares his report showing Murders are becoming even more concentrated in a handful of urban counties. Be sure to check out John's books including Gun Control Myths and More Guns, Less Crime 01:38:16 - Neil deGrasse Tyson, astrophysicist and author, discusses COVID and his new documentary Shot in the Arm. For more from Neil deGrasse Tyson @neiltyson 01:59:59 - Casey Mulligan, professor of economics at the University of Chicago who served as the chief economist of the White House Council of Economic Advisers in 2018–19, runs the numbers to answer How Deadly Were the Covid Lockdowns? Check out Casey's book You're Hired! Untold Successes and Failures of a Populist PresidentSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The Capitalism and Freedom in the Twenty-First Century Podcast
Casey Mulligan, Professor in Economics and the College at the University of Chicago, joins the podcast to discuss how he got interested in becoming an economist from his days as an undergraduate at Harvard in Martin Feldstein's Ec10 class, being an economics graduate student and professor at the University of Chicago teaching the Chicago Price Theory approach, his experience working in the Trump Council of Economic Advisors (CEA), and the long-term influence of University of Chicago economics figures like Milton Friedman, Gary Becker, and George Stigler. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
According to a study done by the Committee to Unleash Prosperity, in 24 states, unemployment benefits and Affordable Care Act subsidies for a family of four with both parents not working are the annualized equivalent of at least the national median household income. MA is one of the highest benefit states for not working! Prof. of Economics at the Univ. of Chicago, Casey Mulligan joined Dan to discuss.
In the second part of their three-part discussion, the discussion begins with what Art saw on his trip (August of 2022) to the southern border. Art shares how drug cartels monitor and control the border, use migrants who can't afford the $6000 fee coyotes charge to smuggle them across the US, and the sophisticated tactics the cartels use to evade US border patrol. Art also unmasks the fallacy of public distribution of “test strips” and buddy system use stating flatly that “there is no safe way to consume outside a hospital.” Because the euphoric effect of the drug diminishes before exiting the human body, users would be tempted to consume more while actual levels of the opioid are still in the system leading to tragic overdoses. He also confirms with previous podcast Casey Mulligan's data on the number of opioid overdose deaths in the US is 108,000 which is up from the approximate death toll under President Trump. For help with substance abuse call 800-662-4357 *Episode originally aired October 6, 2022*
This interview with Former White House CEA Chief Economist Casey Mulligan explores a number of problems created by poorly designed government policy, ranging from publicly-subsidized prescription opioids worsening narcotic addictions and death, to regulation that helps powerful special interests squeeze out competition. The conversation touches on perverse incentives affecting our trade, energy, immigration, and welfare policy, leading to dysfunctional outcomes for the American people. This is the second in a series of interviews that Paige will conduct with policy experts who break from the traditional Washington orthodoxy and who offer a variety of solutions that we can consider to revive our country's prosperity and promise. SHOW NOTES https://trumpwhitehouse.archives.gov/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/The-Role-of-Opioid-Prices-in-the-Evolving-Opioid-Crisis.pdf https://oig.justice.gov/reports/2019/e1905.pdf https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/2017/investigations/dea-drug-industry-congress/ https://www.nytimes.com/2019/05/02/business/economy/wage-growth-economy.html
In this episode, I speak with University of Chicago economist Dr. Casey B. Mulligan about: 1. The state of the current economy; 2. The Redistribution Recession and government's influence on people choosing not to work; and 3. Trump's White House in his book "You're Hired" You can read more on Dr. Mulligan here: http://yourehiredtrump.com/ For thoughtful economic commentary and show notes, check out my weekly newsletter: https://vanceginn.com/ Please rate with 5 stars and subscribe to the Let People Prosper Show if you enjoyed this episode. And be sure to check out the other episodes.
In a wide-ranging discussion, the boys explore the cause-and-effect of both the legal and illegal opioid epidemic. The role of an unsecured southern border has on the drug trade, the long-lasting impact of covid shutdowns on children and American health productivity, and current threats from inflation and possibility of recession. *Episode originally aired July 21, 2022*
The boys discuss the work and background of PhD economist, and University of Chicago's own, Casey Mulligan. Part one looks into how as a member of President Trump Counsel of Economic Advisors (CEA) informed and updated the president on socialism, wages, and the historic deregulatory effort his administration was undertaking. *Episode originally aired July 21, 2022
Host: Larry Bernstein. Guests are John Taylor, Casey Mulligan, and Alan Auerbach.
Our first speaker is John Taylor who is the Mary and Robert Raymond Professor of Economics at Stanford. John is famous for developing the Taylor Rule. John will explain his Taylor rule for setting the optimal short-term interest rate and why interest rates need to rise to quell rising inflation.Our second speaker is Casey Mulligan who is the Ken Griffin Professor of Economics at University of Chicago's Booth School and the Former Chief Economist for the Council of Economic Advisors in the Trump Administration. Casey will explain how government stimulus increased inflation and discouraged employment. He will also discuss his recent work in the pharmaceutical industry that shows how middlemen helped lower prices for consumers.Our final speaker is Alan Auerbach who was my economics professor when I was a student at Penn. Alan is currently the Robert D. Burch Professor of Economics and Law at UC Berkeley. Alan will discuss the dynamics between current inflation and employment. Get full access to What Happens Next in 6 Minutes with Larry Bernstein at www.whathappensnextin6minutes.com/subscribe
0:00 -Jeanne Ives fills in for the vacationing Amy Jacobson 14:35 - Can Bailey beat JB? 31:31 - Dan & Jeanne don't believe Hutchinson's testimony and neither should you 49:26 - Republican candidate for Illinois congressional 6, Keith Pekau: “you couldn't get two people with more polar opposite views than myself and Sean Casten.” For more on Keith's campaign for congress visit keithpekau.com 01:13:42 - Governor of South Dakota, Kristi Noem, shares her new book Not My First Rodeo: Lessons from the Heartland 01:24:31 - Casey Mulligan, professor of economics at the University of Chicago and former chief economist of the White House Council of Economic Advisers: Biden Is Practically Engineering a Recession. Check out Casey's book You're Hired! Untold Successes and Failures of a Populist President 01:34:31 -Elmo propagandizing to toddlers 01:37:03 - Bjorn Lomborg, president of the Copenhagen Consensus think tank, points out The Rich World's Climate Hypocrisy. Check out Bjorn's most recent book False Alarm: How Climate Change Panic Costs Us Trillions, Hurts the Poor, and Fails to Fix the Planet 01:54:17 - Republican candidate for Illinois congressional 11, Catalina Lauf, shows she's ready for the attacks from her opponent Bill Foster. For more on Catalina's congressional candidacy visit catalinaforcongress.com See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
0:00 - Dan & Amy analyze Uvalde Chief Pete Arredondo's decision 4:52 - Dan & Amy take a listen to Trump at NRA convention 25:21 - Dan & Amy react to the new grading system at OPRF 45:12 - Kevin R. Brock, former assistant director of intelligence for the FBI and former principal deputy director of the National Counterterrorism Center, breaks down the Uvalde Police response 01:01:42 - Richard A. Epstein, James Parker Hall Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus of Law, Senior Lecturer at the University of Chicago: The Futility of Gun Control 01:21:09 - President at Wirepoints, Ted Dabrowksi, with his weekly discussion on Illinois' High taxes, bad policy. Check out Ted's latest wirepoints.org 01:32:25 - Professor of economics at the University of Chicago who served as the chief economist of the White House Council of Economic Advisers in 2018–19, Casey Mulligan, takes notice that Fentanyl Overdose Rates Are Rising Fast. Check out Casey's most recent book You're Hired! Untold Successes and Failures of a Populist President 01:46:51 - Top Gun explained See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
We're more than two years into the Covid-19 pandemic. So by now, we should know enough to assess what we've learned about the measures our governments took to mitigate the virus? What worked? What didn't? Fortunately, we now have a comprehensive comparative study, published as a working paper by the National Bureau of Economic Research, authored by University of Chicago economist Casey Mulligan - and Steve Moore and Phil Kerpen of the Committee to Unleash Prosperity. They compared Covid outcomes in the 50 states and the District of Columbia based on three variables: the economy, education and mortality. Their conclusion? “The correlation between health and economy scores is essentially zero,” say the authors, “which suggests that the severe lockdown states that withdrew the most from economic activity did not significantly improve health by doing so.” The bottom 10 are dominated by the states and D.C. that had the most stringent lockdowns and were among the last to reopen schools We can't let this conclusion go. We must absorb now what we've learned from what worked - and what didn't work. We can't mindlessly respond to the next pandemic - and we know there will be a next one - with failed policies. To dig into this, Phil Kerpen, President on American Commitment, an author of the Study, and a deep subject matter expert on Covid policies, joins me for a thorough look at how to avoid repeating the policy blunders of the past two+ years.
University of Chicago economist Casey Mulligan joins Clay and Buck to discuss new study he co-authored: A Final Report Card on the States' Response to Covid-19. New York Times' David Leonhardt on Real Time with Bill Maher, says masks are "performative for liberals" and blames conservatives for covid deaths. Psaki blames Bidenflation on "Putin's price hike." Philadelphia reinstates indoor mask mandate. How many other liberal cities will follow? Psaki defends maskless Kamala at White House super spreader event. Six states will decide the 2024 election. Welcome new affiliate, 1090 The Patriot in Seattle. Buck says: "The best talk radio lineup all day long in radio, baby. That's what I like to see." See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
April 11, 2022 ~ Full Show. Casey Mulligan, Professor of Economics at the University of Chicago discusses COVID outcomes between various states. Senior News Analyst Lloyd Jackson reports on Detroit Police and the Wayne County Sheriff's department sending surplus flak jackets to Ukraine. Senior News Analyst Chris Renwick updates us on the state GOP conventions. Steve Mitchell, CEO of Mitchell Research and Communications previews Democrats' strategy of making abortion and voters rights key issues this election year. Paul Ajeba, Director of the Michigan Department of Transportation discusses the rising price tag of fixing the roads and Oakland County Sheriff Michael Bouchard with a warning to people who phone in threats, fake or real, to schools.
April 11, 2022 ~ Casey Mulligan, Professor of Economics at the University of Chicago, talks with Guy Gordon about his research comparing COVID outcomes based on the economy, education, and mortality.
Host: Larry Bernstein. Guests are Casey Mulligan, Dr. Ari Ciment and Kyle Kondik
Welcome to Episode 5 of the Economic Forces Podcast! We interview Casey Mulligan on applying basic economic tools like excess burden (deadweight loss) and Marshall’s Law to policy work, especially surrounding pandemics, and the importance of understanding the economics of innovation.Check out Casey’s books:You’re Hired!: Untold Successes and Failures of a Populist PresidentChicago Price TheoryThe Redistribution Recession: How Labor Market Distortions Contracted the EconomySide Effects and Complications: The Economic Consequences of Health-Care ReformYou can listen above or on your favorite podcast app. If you don’t see Economic Forces on your podcast app, try adding the following RSS feed directly: https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/86578.rss.Below you’ll find a teaser clip and the full interview. Enjoy! Get full access to Economic Forces at pricetheory.substack.com/subscribe
In this episode of the podcast, Casey Mulligan reads her heartbreaking and poignant essay, A How To for Desperate Times which was first published in Barren Magazine. Its subjects are parenting, adolescence and young adulthood, decision making, and all you can't protect your children from. Trigger warning: this essay deals (beautifully) with the subject of a young adult's death.
Aaron interviews Dr. Casey Mulligan, Professor of Economics at the University of Chicago, about the destructiveness of regulation, how regulation disproportionately hurts the poor, and why politicians continue to advocate for more of it. Subscribe in Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever platform you prefer. If you'd like to suggest a guest for the show or if you'd like to be on the show, email Aaron at Aaron@ObjectiveStandard.org Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/objectivestandard Twitter: https://twitter.com/ObjStdInstitute LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/objectivestandardinstitute/ Show notes: Dr. Mulligan's article: https://www.city-journal.org/costs-of-revival-of-regulatory-state
4 in 10 Americans want to buy a house because of the pandemic. Jason Hartman talks about what corporations are relocating their headquarters to places in which you have already invested. Vote with your feet. Jason Hartman talks to Casey Mulligan, a professor of economics at the University of Chicago, former chief economist for the Council of Economic Advisers in the Trump administration. He is also the author of the best-selling book The Redistribution Recession: How Labor Market Distortions Contracted the Economy and the new book You're Hired!: Untold Successes and Failures of a Populist President. Key Takeaways: [3:00] The advantage of Twitter for Presidents is that they can bypass the press and speak directly to the people. [7:45] Discussing the individual mandate. [9:45] Can we classify Trump as a conservative? [11:15] Let's discuss trade. [15:35] Regulatory budget, something most countries have not done before. [21:00] The polls aren't the same as voting. [22:00] America will never be a socialist country. Websites: http://yourehiredtrump.com/ JasonHartman.com JasonHartman.com/properties Jason Hartman Quick Start Jason Hartman PropertyCast (Libsyn) Jason Hartman PropertyCast (iTunes) 1-800-HARTMAN
Casey Mulligan and Michael Strain explore the extent to which President Trump's policies can be considered "populist" and whether populism deserves credit for the administration's successes. The post https://www.aei.org/multimedia/casey-mulligan-michael-strain-has-trumpian-populism-succeeded/ (Casey Mulligan & Michael Strain: Has Trumpian populism succeeded?) appeared first on https://www.aei.org (American Enterprise Institute - AEI).
Casey Mulligan served as the chief of Trump's Council of Economic Advisers from July 2018 to June 2019. During that time, he experienced a different version of the events that have made recent headlines (i.e., Ukrainegate) in other White House "tell-alls."Mulligan's new book, You're Hired! Untold Successes and Failures of a Populist President, has much the same cast of characters as Bolton's recent memoir, but it follows a very different script. Mulligan is an economics professor at University of Chicago and, as such, the focus of his book is on ideas – not attitude. However, we do learn a great deal about the personalities working behind the scenes, including that of the "Tariff Man" himself.Professor Mulligan joins me this Sunday to tell the story of his time crafting analysis and advice on regulations, international trade, immigration and prescription drug policy for the President. A picture emerges of a politically incorrect president who has a hard time admitting he is wrong, but who also listens to his economic advisers (in most situations).Hear from the man who has been called “the smartest man in the White House” how he used supply and demand to advance one of the biggest deregulatory pushes in recent history. Is Trump genuinely opposed to Washington insiders and special interests, or is it a self-serving act to appeal to his populist base?We will compare the legacies of Reagan and Trump on the vital issue of international trade and will also discuss how the continuation of generous unemployment benefits is adding to the costs of pandemic and delaying economic recovery.
Join Jimmy Sengenberger at the Crossroads with Nihal Krishan and Nathan Matoush. Jimmy (@SengCenter) begins by lambasting the double standards that the Left seems to be getting away with to benefit *their* chosen causes and groups, including the face mask requirement in Washington state that is being waved for "people of color" in Lincoln County, the protests and statues, and more. Then, Nihal Krishan (@NihalKrishan), economic policy reporter at the Washington Examiner, returns to talk with Jimmy about two interesting stories from interviews with, and the new book by, former Trump economic advisor Casey Mulligan about President Trump. They also discuss a bipartisan economic recovery plan put forward by four economists, including past presidential officials in both Democratic and Republican administrations. Finally, producer Nathan Matoush (@MatoushMagic) returns on-screen to break down plans for the return of professional sports, discuss the economic and social impact of sports, and explore how political sports could get later this year even as people are looking for a respite from politics.
Today on the show - Research Ryan sleeping positions, where were you born, BK's 14 year wedding anniversary, Mel & Mel does height matter, Casey Mulligan managements big Metallica announcement, Michael Coppel from Live Nation, Win it or Wing it, April Fools re-capSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Today on the show - what animal have you had on you, mispelt tattoos, Bryce stuck in the toilets at Wellington Airport, Rock Island announcement, Chris Harris, Rog intervention, Casey & Mulligan management water giveawaySee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Today on the show - Josh Roberts caught 466kg Marlin, alone at sea, where were you burried alive, Rog's next dancing song, worst proffessions, Farrelly Finger parade, Casey & Mulligan management, best bits of the weekSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.