Podcasts about good jobs gone

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Latest podcast episodes about good jobs gone

Lead-Lag Live
Where Have All The Good Jobs Gone With Danny Blanchflower

Lead-Lag Live

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2022 49:01


Remember high quality jobs?Yeah.Me neither.Check The Lead-Lag Report on your favorite social networks.Twitter: https://twitter.com/leadlagreport​​​​​YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/theleadlagreportFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/leadlagreport​​Instagram: https://instagram.com/leadlagreport​​​Sign up for The Lead-Lag Report at www.leadlagreport.com and use promo code PODCAST30 for 2 weeks free and 30% off.Nothing on this channel should be considered as personalized financial advice or a solicitation to buy or sell any securities.The content in this program is for informational purposes only. You should not construe any information or other material as investment, financial, tax, or other advice. The views expressed by the participants are solely their own. A participant may have taken or recommended any investment position discussed, but may close such position or alter its recommendation at any time without notice. Nothing contained in this program constitutes a solicitation, recommendation, endorsement, or offer to buy or sell any securities or other financial instruments in any jurisdiction. Please consult your own investment or financial advisor for advice related to all investment decisions.See disclosures for The Lead-Lag Report here: The Lead-Lag Report (leadlagreport.com)The Personal Finance PodcastSubscribe now and Master Your Money in Less than 30 Minutes Per Week! Listen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify

The Possibility Club
5 Big Questions: PROFESSOR DAVID G BLANCHFLOWER CBE

The Possibility Club

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2022 35:49


Why have economists got things so wrong? What is 'guessonomics'??  And what are the dangers of groupthink?   In this week's 5 Big Questions interview we talk to Ivy League professor, global economics expert and former Bank of England adviser PROFESSOR DAVID G "DANNY" BLANCHFLOWER CBE Twitter: @D_Blanchflower Known for: Bruce V Rauner Professor of Economics - Dartmouth College, New Hampshire (USA) Research Associate - National Bureau of Economic Research (USA) Contributing Editor - Bloomberg TV Former Member of the Monetary Policy Committee - Bank of England Author - The Wage Curve The Big 5 Questions: How do you measure the impact of what you do? How should people/businesses be preparing for the future? How do we build the workforce we need for that future? How do you use creativity to solve problems? How do you collaborate? Key quotes: “Try and think about the wellbeing of ordinary people. What would benefit ordinary people? And oftentimes that runs in contrast to what central bankers and others are doing. Very often they represent the interest of banks and hedge funds.”  “Great, I thought your job was to not cause recessions!” “Often all they're doing is just making it up. This is all about ‘guessonomics'. If you're going to forecast the weather, the reason you can do that is you've got past data on weather patterns that tell you what's coming. We're in a situation where we've got no data points. Basically we're running blind.”  "When ideas are complicated and the situation is uncertain, you probably should worry if you hear everyone at both the Bank of England and at the Fed in the United States saying the same thing, that sounds awfully like groupthink.” “Write papers that address real world practical problems. If you can't characterise that it's better off doing something else. In many cases the economist would've been better off delivering pizza than writing these silly papers. I said that once and somebody said to me, no that would be a really bad idea. If we gave economists the pizza delivery job, they'd just deliver it to the wrong house.”   Useful links: David Blanchflower bio (Wikipedia) // wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Blanchflower   website  // davidblanchflower.com/ Professor profile page at Dartmouth // economics.dartmouth.edu/people/david-graham-blanchflower Writing in The Guardian // theguardian.com/profile/davidblanchflower Bank of England Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) // bankofengland.co.uk/about/people/monetary-policy-committee The National Institute for Economic and Social Research (NIESR) // niesr.ac.uk/ David G. Blanchflower — Not Working - Where Have All The Good Jobs Gone? (via Hive) // hive.co.uk/Product/David-G-Blanchflower/Not-Working--Where-Have-All-the-Good-Jobs-Gone/25343911https://www.hive.co.uk/Product/David-G-Blanchflower/Not-Working--Where-Have-All-the-Good-Jobs-Gone/25343911 David G. Blanchflower — Not Working - Where Have All The Good Jobs Gone? (via Amazon) // amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B08KKZ4P6J/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_hsch_vapi_tkin_p1_i0   This episode was recorded in May 2022 Interviewer: Richard Freeman for always possible Editor: CJ Thorpe-Tracey for Lo Fi Arts  

The Art of Manliness
The U-Shaped Curve of Happiness

The Art of Manliness

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2022 32:21 Very Popular


If you're someone who's a decade or two out from your high school graduation, do you ever find yourself thinking that you're just not as happy as you were back then? Of course all the positive-thinking self-talk then kicks in and you think, "Well, maybe I actually wasn't that happy before. I do like my life better now. I like the independence I have. Yeah, yeah, I really like being an adult." Yet, no matter the glass-half-full glow you try to put on things, you can't shake the feeling that your happiness has declined over the years, that at 30, you weren't as happy as you were at 20, and that at 40, you weren't as happy as you were when you were 30.Well, that feeling is more than a nostalgic hunch, and it's not unique to you. It's actually been born out by hundreds of research papers and studies and shown to be a near-universal experience. My guest today has authored many of those papers. His name is Dr. David Branchflower and he's a labor economist who not only studies the data around money and jobs, but also around human happiness. Today on the show David explains how happiness follows a U-shaped curve, and starts declining around age 18, and continues to fall into midlife, before picking back up again, and David shares the average age at which happiness hits its very lowest point. While it's not entirely clear why the U-shape of happiness occurs, we talk about some possible reasons behind it. And while the U-shape is consistent across the world, it can be lower or higher, and so we discuss how factors like gender, socio-economic and martial status, and having children affect happiness, and whether it's possible to mitigate the dip.While the fact that it won't be until your mid-60s that you feel as happy as you were at age 18 might seem depressing, David argues that it's comforting to know that the feelings of declining happiness you experience at you approach midlife are normal, and will not only pass one day, but start moving in the other direction.Resources Related to the Podcast"Is Happiness U-Shaped Everywhere?" — one of the main research papers on the happiness curve that David has authoredDavid's book Not Working: Where Have All the Good Jobs Gone?Deaths of Despair and the Future of Capitalism by Anne Case and Angus DeatonStudy on great apes having a midlife crisisAoM Series: The Seasons of a Man's LifeAoM Podcast #776: How to Shift Out of the Midlife MalaiseAoM Article: The Economics of HappinessConnect With David BranchflowerDavid's Faculty Page at Dartmouth (includes links to his research)

The Jason Stapleton Program
Where Have All the Good Jobs Gone, and Where Do We Go from Here?

The Jason Stapleton Program

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2021 67:43


For those of you who like deep technical dives into economics, finance, and global markets, this is the episode for you. Even if you don't, though, this is an incredibly important message that you need to hear. And someone you know needs to hear it too. Please share it and make sure that the people you care about are aware of just how serious of a crisis we're facing now.Last week, Congress (unsurprisingly) raised the debt ceiling yet again, exactly as this show predicted.The crooks on the hill are nothing if not predictable. Over the past ~20 months, they've forced trillions of new dollars down the collective American throat, and now every single one of us must grapple with the prospect of ever-increasing inflation. Wholesale inflation has spiked 9.6% over the past 12 months, while food prices are up 6.1%, used car and truck prices have jumped 31.4%, and gasoline prices have skyrocketed 58.1%. Meanwhile, the official unemployment numbers are at pre-pandemic levels, yet record numbers of people are leaving the workforce. How can this be?These are all signals of a deeply, terribly sick economy. And we're just barely getting started. Economies don't just bounce back from decades of sustained, compounded mismanagement and malinvestment to this degree.You can't stick your head in the sand and wish it all away. You *MUST* take drastic steps to shield yourself and your family from the effects of the collapse to come. Don't wait any longer. Get to work.******If you're ready to take control of your life, income, and future, go to www.nomadnetwork.app and join the Nomad Network to get started. Brand new app in app stores now!Give your business an unfair advantage in less than 3 minutes a day. Get the daily newsletter that delivers the most actionable and tactical growth strategies available today, straight from the mind of a marketing genius: http://dailyalchemy.me.Learn the blueprint for generating predictable and sustainable income from anywhere on earth: http://www.nomadicwealthoffer.com.Jason on Twitter: https://twitter.com/jason_stapletonJason on IG: https://www.instagram.com/thejasonstapletonJason's website: https://jasonstapleton.comMatt on Twitter: https://twitter.com/realkingpilledDon't forget to like and subscribe, and please share the show!

The CGAI Podcast Network
The Global Exchange: Canada loses the UNSC seat bid

The CGAI Podcast Network

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2020 32:30


On today's Global Exchange Podcast, we are joined by Meredith Lilly, Ian Brodie, Jeffrey Simpson, and Peter Donolo to discuss Canada losing its bid for the election of a United Nations Security Council seat last week and what it means for Mr. Trudeau, the Government and Canada in the world, especially our commitment to multilateralism. The Global Exchange is part of the CGAI Podcast Network. Subscribe to the CGAI Podcast Network on SoundCloud, iTunes, or wherever else you can find Podcasts! Participant Bios:

 - Meredith Lilly: CGAI Advisory Council. Associate Professor at the Norman Paterson School of International Affairs at Carleton University. Simon Reisman Chair in International Affairs. - Ian Brodie: CGAI fellow. - Jeffrey Simpson: Senior fellow at the University of Ottawa's Graduate School of Public and International Affairs. Member of the CGAI Advisory Council. - Peter Donolo: CGAI fellow, Vice Chair at Hill+Knowlton Canada. Host Bio: - Colin Robertson (host): Vice President of the Canadian Global Affairs Institute. Recommended Readings/Media: - "Not Working: Where Have All the Good Jobs Gone?" by David G. Blanchflower (https://www.amazon.ca/Not-Working-Where-Have-Good-ebook/dp/B07M5HVPYZ) - "Black Wave: Saudi Arabia, Iran, and the Forty-Year Rivalry That Unraveled Culture, Religion, and Collective Memory in the Middle East" by Kim Ghattas (https://www.amazon.ca/Black-Wave-Saudi-Iran-Religion-Destroyed-ebook/dp/B07MMLTR7J) - "At the Heart of a Tiger: Clemenceau and His World 1841-1929" by Gregor Dallas (https://www.amazon.ca/At-Heart-Tiger-Clemenceau-1841-1929/dp/0786700009) - "Daniel Patrick Moynihan: A Portrait in Letters of an American Visionary" by Daniel Patrick Moynihan (https://www.amazon.ca/Daniel-Patrick-Moynihan-Portrait-Visionary-ebook/dp/B0046A8SFY) Recommended Links: - "Canada and the United Nations" [Global Exchange Podcast with Allan Rock] (https://www.cgai.ca/canada_and_the_united_nations) - "Canada and the UN Security Council seat" [Global Exchange Podcast with Adam Chapnick] (https://www.cgai.ca/canada_and_the_un_security_council_seat) Recording Date: 19 June 2020 Give 'The Global Exchange' a review on iTunes! Follow the Canadian Global Affairs Institute on Facebook, Twitter (@CAGlobalAffairs), or on Linkedin. Head over to our website www.cgai.ca for more commentary. Produced by Jay Rankin. Music credits to Drew Phillips.

Exponential with Amanda Lang Podcast
Exponential: David Blanchflower

Exponential with Amanda Lang Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 2, 2020 41:03


This week on Exponential, Amanda talks with David Blanchflower, British-American Labour Economist and author of the book, "Not Working: Where Have all The Good Jobs Gone?"

exponential david blanchflower good jobs gone
America Trends
EP 274 Where Have All the Good Jobs Gone?

America Trends

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2019 41:21


  If you listen to President Trump this is the best economy in years, perhaps, ever. We have low unemployment numbers and a great uptick on Wall Street.  If that's the case, why does he keep pressuring the Federal Reserve to lower interest rates in what the Fed Chairman, Jerome Powell, says is not such a … Continue reading EP 274 Where Have All the Good Jobs Gone?

Futures of Work
David Blanchflower - Futures Of Jobs

Futures of Work

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2019 57:56


Harry Pitts speaks to David (Danny) Blanchflower to discuss his new book, Not Working: Where Have All the Good Jobs Gone. This episode was recorded live at the Bristol Festival of Ideas.

ideas jobs futures david blanchflower bristol festival good jobs gone
Money Life with Chuck Jaffe
The top 9 money mistakes people make

Money Life with Chuck Jaffe

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 26, 2019 61:39


Chuck chats with Jim Garnett of the Institute of Consumer Financial Education about the biggest money mistakes ordinary consumer routinely make, covering credit, savings and other issues. Also on the show, Les Masterson, managing editor of Insurance.com discusses how consumers could save money -- or see insurance premiums rise -- based on some common and also some unusual behaviors, and David Blanchflower of Dartmouth College discusses his book 'Not Working: Where Have All the Good Jobs Gone," plus we revisit a recent interview with Martin Pring of Pring Research discussing the market's technical outlook.  

The Prospect Interview
#91: Confronting inequality, with David Blanchflower and Angus Deaton

The Prospect Interview

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 24, 2019 37:14


Has inequality gotten worse? And where have all the good jobs gone? In this special bumper edition of the Prospect podcast, we talk to economist David Blanchflower at our inequality crisis, and why tackling the unemployment rate may not be the best way to improve things.Plus, we present clips from Nobel prize winner Angus Deaton's event with Prospect and the British Academy, where the ‘deaths of despair' economist talks about the difference between inequality and unfairness, and which presidential candidate he thinks will measure up to Trump in 2020. Blanchflower's new book, Not Working: Where Have All the Good Jobs Gone is now out with Princeton University Press: https://press.princeton.edu/titles/13485.html See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Social Europe Podcast
Danny Blanchflower: How we missed the last economic crisis ...and why we are ill prepared for the next one

Social Europe Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 11, 2019 51:23


Listen to Social Europe Editor-in-Chief Henning Meyer in conversation with Danny Blanchflower, the Bruce V. Rauner Professor of Economics at Dartmouth College. They talk about how the last economic and financial crisis was not spotted and why we are ill prepared for the next one. The conversation is based on Danny's new book "Not Working. Where Have All the Good Jobs Gone" published by Princeton University Press (https://press.princeton.edu/titles/13485.html). You might also find our regular articles, blogs and other written publications of interest. Just visit our website www.socialeurope.eu to read our latest output. If you want to stay up-to-date with all things Social Europe just sign up to our regular newsletter. You can do so on our website.

Bloomberg Surveillance
Surveillance: The State of Employment with Blanchflower

Bloomberg Surveillance

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2019 30:07


David Blanchflower, Former BOE Monetary Policy Committee Member and Dartmouth Professor, answers the question he asks in his new book: "Not Working: Where Have All the Good Jobs Gone?" Priya Misra, TD Securities Managing Director and Global Head of Rates Strategy, expects the Fed to signal readiness to ease policy in their next meeting, but that they will stop short of committing to a near-term cut. Bloomberg's Stephen Engle, reports live from Hong Kong, where protests continue. Meredith Sumpter, Eurasia Group Head Of Research Strategy and Operations, expects Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam to continue to fight to hold on to her job. Elisa Martinuzzi, Bloomberg Opinion Columnist, says investors are disappointed in the vision that Deutsche Bank has given for its future since they walked away from merger discussions with Commerzbank.  Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com

Iain Dale’s Book Club
BONUS : David Blanchflower

Iain Dale’s Book Club

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2019 47:37


Welcome to this special edition of the Book Club, today's guest is David Blanchflower former member of the Bank of England's interest rate-setting Monetary Policy Committee and currently is economics professor at Dartmouth College, New Hampshire. His book is called 'Not Working: Where Have All the Good Jobs Gone?' The interview with David was first broadcast on LBC 4/6/19. If you enjoyed this podcast, make sure you check through the archive for one you may have missed or why not listen to For The Many, Iain's Political (and funny) podcast with Jacqui Smith or Cross Question! Iain Dale Monday - Thursday, 7-10pm on LBC. https://www.iaindale.com/