Podcast appearances and mentions of phil dobbie

  • 12PODCASTS
  • 881EPISODES
  • 18mAVG DURATION
  • ?INFREQUENT EPISODES
  • Feb 21, 2024LATEST

POPULARITY

20172018201920202021202220232024

Categories



Best podcasts about phil dobbie

Latest podcast episodes about phil dobbie

America Explained
How should Europe prepare for Trump 2.0?

America Explained

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2024 46:41


*** *** Receive 15% off the America Explained newsletter *** ***In this special episode, Andy is interviewed by Phil Dobbie and Roger Herring of The Why Curve podcast about how Europe should prepare for a second Trump presidency. We talked about trade, alliances and democracy, as well as how Trump's re-election might lead to an undignified scramble to get on his good side.CreditsHost - Andy Gawthorpe

Debunking Economics - the podcast
The Bank of England's totally wrong response

Debunking Economics - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 28, 2023 37:06


The UK economy is ready for a major downturn. In part it's down to supply chain difficulties, thanks to COVID, the war, the great resignation, sickness and, let's not forget, Brexit. Originally central banks recognised this and said the inflation was transitory and we just needed to ride it out. Since then, they've gone back to their conventional thinking that inflation can only be fought with interest rates. The higher the better it seems. But Prof Steve Keen tells Phil Dobbie that it is the worst response possible, causing unnecessary suffering and cutting back on the kind of investment that could fix the supply chain difficulties. So why are they doing what they are doing? Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Debunking Economics - the podcast
The generation game. Who wins?

Debunking Economics - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2023 34:27


Older Brits will be familiar with Bruce Forsythe's Generation. Today everyone is playing the Generation Game, but the young are the one's losing out. They are steeped in debt and faced with the prospect of progressively unaffordable housing. Many of the over 60s meanwhile, have accrued healthy amounts of assets. As Phil Dobbie discusses with Steve Keen much of this we4alth will be passed on, but not everyone will benefit. So intergenerational wealth is adding to the rich-poor gap. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Debunking Economics - the podcast
What if we paid a realistic price for energy?

Debunking Economics - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2023 33:02


We know we don't pay a fair price for energy. Energy companies are making a mint because they extract the energy without worrying about most of the externalities – like the impact they are having on the ecology of our planet. But what if they did pay a fair price? Could the economy survive? Phil Dobbie asks Steve Keen if we can fix our problems with the pricing mechanism if there was a way to accurately cost energy. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Debunking Economics - the podcast
Planning for retirement, who pays?

Debunking Economics - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2023 39:50


There is about £2.5 - 3 trillion of assets in UK private pension schemes. Through the tax system we are heavily incentivised to put money into our pension plans. So, what's wrong with that? That money is supposedly used to invest in businesses, so it helps the economy grow. If only. This week Steve Keen talks to Phil Dobbie about the orle pensions have had in the financialisaton of the economy. He believes a better state funded system would be a healthier approach, but don't count on it happening anytime soon. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Debunking Economics - the podcast
Immigration. Good or bad?

Debunking Economics - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2023 38:45


There is nothing or contentious that immigration, it seems. In the UK there's a swathe of the population that don't like foreigners very much, unless they are serving than fish and chips in Torremolinos. Others will deny being xenophobic but argue that Britain is full and there's no room for anybody else. A more rationale argument might be that too much immigration happening too quickly can have societal and economic impacts – but what is too much and too quickly? This week Phil Dobbie and Steve Keen wade into the immigration debate. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Debunking Economics - the podcast
What's the right wage?

Debunking Economics - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2023 36:49


The UK is gripped by strikes right now, but they are not the only ones. All over the world public and private sector workers are taking action as their salaries fail to keep up with inflation. Central banks are urging caution, fearing a wage spiral could push prices higher. This week Phil Dobbie and Steve Keen discuss the theory behind wage setting – a principle that someone sees chief executives earning a ridiculous multiple of the take-home pay of their workers. So, how are wages arrived at? One theory suggests it is the contribution they make to the profitability of a company, but Steve says its more to do with entrenched hierarchy. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Debunking Economics - the podcast

After a disastrous couple of years, can things get any worse in 2023? Steve Keen and Phil Dobbie look ahead and actually find some positive take-outs from the precarious situation we find ourselves in. Inflation will fall, that's taken as read. Politics will shift to the left, that's already happening. But our future is still left in the hands of politicians who have no idea how to steer us to a more positive future. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Debunking Economics - the podcast
What's the right level of inflation?

Debunking Economics - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2022 39:51


The world is living in fear of rising inflation. Central banks are trying to combat it by pushing up interest rates, which means people also now fear how much their mortgage is going to cost. So, are they making matters better or just adding to the problem? This week Phil Dobbie asks Steve Keen if inflation is as big a problem as central banks make out, and whether hiking interest rates will fix the problem this time round. And why a 2% inflation target. It's the aim of most central banks to get inflation down to that level, but it sounds like it had a rather haphazard, unscientific origin. If they changed the target to, say, 4 percent, what would happen? More to the point, what would happen if these banks did nothing at all? Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Debunking Economics - the podcast
Changing the role of central banks

Debunking Economics - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 7, 2022 38:19


Liz Truss, the UK's latest Prime Minister, has vowed to review the mandate of the Bank of England (BoE). It's unclear what outcome she wants, although Kwasi Kwarteng, who is likely to be the new Chancellor of the Exchequer, has suggested the BoE didn't move fast enough to lift interest rates. Does that mean she wants more influence over the bank's decision making? On this week's podcast Phil Dobbie and Prof Steve Keen look at the approach taken by central banks this time round to reduce inflation and Phil asks Steve, if you were to change the function of central banks, what would you do? Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.

The Why? Curve
Net Zero Chance?

The Why? Curve

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2022 40:39


The world knows we've got to break our addiction to fossil fuels, and we need to move to a future where we no long pollute our atmosphere. But how quickly can we reach this utopian future? How far are current worries about being able to afford to heat our homes going to delay Net Zero? Can we still enjoy the benefits of a growing economy without destroying the planet? Can we reach it quickly enough? Will we ever reach it? Phil Dobbie and Roger Hearing put all that to Professor Richard Black from the Energy & Climate Intelligence Unit, and find a strange optimism - he says renewable energy is paving the way, not just because of our concern for the environment, but also because it's the most cost effective solution Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

energy acast net zero phil dobbie roger hearing
Debunking Economics - the podcast
Should we be bricking it over BRICS?

Debunking Economics - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 24, 2022 34:08


It seems the whole approach to global trade is being redrawn. Donald Trump wanted to do less trade with China before the pandemic, and now with the Ukraine invasion the west wants to do less – preferably nothing - with Russia. Hardly surprising then that the BRICs nations (Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa) are developing their own ecosystem that could see them trade less with the west, including developing their own trading currency to remove the reliance on the US dollar. Phil Dobbie talks to Steve Keen about the impact this would have on the West. Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.

Debunking Economics - the podcast
279. Electric cars – tinkering at the edge of a climate crisis (preview)

Debunking Economics - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2022 8:59


In the UK petrol cars emit 128g of CO2 per kilometre. In the US they drive bigger cars, for longer, so the carbon impact is that much greater. But cars, buses and motorcycles account for less than 10 percent of greenhouse gas emissions. Switching to electric could make a difference (unless of course the electricity is coal powered) but will it make a big enough difference, and are the objectives for Net Zero by 2050 really achievable? Phil Dobbie talks to Prof Steve Keen, and asks, are we lulling ourselves into a false sense of security when we think electric cars are a big part of the answer to climate change? Subscribe to hear the podcast in full.

NAB Morning Call
Fed hikes 75bp, no forward guidance

NAB Morning Call

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2022 17:20


Thursday 28th July 2022 The FOMC has met, they've pushed rates up 75 basis points and, whilst Jerome Powell said there would be no forward guidance, he has hinted at another big rise next time. Of course, it all depends on the data. Phil Dobbie talks to NAB's David de Garis about the take-outs from the press conference, which injected some animal spirits into the share market. They also look at yesterday's Australian inflation numbers, and whether they have cemented in a 50-basis point rate rise by the RBA, or could it be more? Plus the Meta earnings release, which brought mixed news after the US market close.

Debunking Economics - the podcast
27. Is the US dollar getting too big for its boots? (preview)

Debunking Economics - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2022 11:45


As inflation grows around the world the US dollar enjoying multi-decade highs. To an extent, that's helping mitigate the impact of inflation in the US by dampening the rising cost of imports. Most other places, though, are seeing the opposite happen. The rising dollar devalues local currencies making imports, including energy, more expensive, adding to inflation. This week Phil Dobbie talks to Prof Steve Keen about the impacts of exchange rates on international trade and how nations could be starting to challenge the US dominance in currency markets. As Pola, a Debunking Economics Podcast listener asks, what happens as BRICs nations (Brazil, Russia, India, China) move to payments in their own currencies instead of using the US dollar? Beyond that, what if they develop their own trading currency, similar to the Bancor proposed by Keynes back in the 1940s. Subscribe to hear the podcast in full.

Debunking Economics - the podcast
How fast can a magic money tree grow?

Debunking Economics - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 11, 2022 38:07


When British Prime Minister Theresa May said there was no magic money tree she was wrong. There is, but you still have to look after it. What happens if you take the money off the tree too quickly, and give it to the wrong people? Is that what's happened over the last two years? This week Phil Dobbie asks Steve Keen if there's an optimum level of expansion to the money supply (through government spending) and how do we claw back from it if we have overspent? This week the podcast is free for everyone. Subscribe to listen back to full episodes.

money trees steve keen magic money tree phil dobbie
Debunking Economics - the podcast
276. How long before central banks realise they are making a big mistake? (preview)

Debunking Economics - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 4, 2022 10:47


Inflation is rising everywhere as supply chains hit prices in the shops and at the fuel bowsers. Central banks are responding to this the only way they know how – by pushing up interest rates. Phil Dobbie asks Steve Keen what's their rationale, when higher interest rates won't fix the supply issues? Steve suggests there will be a rapid reversal in policy when the central banks realise the real damage they are doing to the economy. ‘There will be no soft landing', he says. ‘There never is'. But what about taxation, asks Phil. Could demand be softened by taxing the high earners? Subscribe to hear the podcast in full.

Debunking Economics - the podcast
274. Are there secret men running the world? (preview)

Debunking Economics - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2022 11:12


Conspiracy theorists are out there claiming that unelected representatives are holding power, using technology to control our behaviour. China has tried a bit of this social engineering, but there are those who believe its far broader than that. They also reckon the drive for us to not use cash is part of the agenda, so ‘they' can track our behaviour. That's why central banks (who are unelected representatives who control our behaviour) want to move to a digital currency and are against cryptocurrencies that they can't control. This week Phil Dobbie asks Prof Steve Keen if there is any potential for truth behind this fearmongering. Maybe we could all do with a bit of control! Subscribe to hear this podcast in full.

china secret running conspiracies phil dobbie prof steve keen
Debunking Economics - the podcast
273. Coming off the QE cool aid (preview)

Debunking Economics - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2022 10:10


Central banks the world over are busy lifting interest rates  and, at the same time, engaging in quantitative tightening. In other words, all those bonds they bought up, will progressively be sold back to the commercial banks they were bought from. As those central bank balance sheets start to fall, what impact does it have on the economy? Does it mean we'll see a shrinking of the money supply. That's the commonly held belief, but, in reality the shift will have little impact, except for making banks slightly better off. The bigger concern is when they sell off corporate bonds, as Prof Steve keen explains to Phil Dobbie in this week's podcast. Subscribe to hear this podcast in full.

NAB Morning Call
ECB set to turn up the dial

NAB Morning Call

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2022 17:43


Friday 10th June 2022 The ECB indicated overnight that they will lift rates at their July meeting, and if there's no sign of a fall in inflation then a bigger hike might be necessary in September. This is the most hawkish the ECB has sounded, but Phil Dobbie asks NAB's Gavin Friend if it is enough? The prospect of more rate rises has accentuated concerns about the impact of southern European economies and Christine Lagarde's proposals on how to deal with the problem failed to satisfy markets, with Italian and Greek bonds falling markedly again. Today's CPI number for the US will be watched keenly. Has inflation peaked?

The Why? Curve
Three Big Questions on the Rwanda Solution

The Why? Curve

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2022 33:00


The first batch of asylum seekers to be sent to Rwanda are due to fly out next Tuesday. There are likely to be delays, possibly indefinitely, as lawyers challenge the legality of the government's plans to send those who arrive by boat offshore to Rwanda, with no right to claim asylum in the UK. In this first edition of ‘The Why? Curve' Roger Hearing says the question of legality is one issue – there's also the question of whether it's ethical, and whether it'll work. Phil Dobbie says the Australian experience of offshoring hasn't been the success many are suggesting, whilst Mr Alp Mehmet, chair of Migration Watch UK, says something has to be done and it's one part of a larger package of measures needed to dissuade people from risking their lives crossing the channel from France. Perhaps the ultimate question is, if it isn't going to work, if if it isn't going to stop people smugglers ferrying asylum seekers across the Channel, why do it? Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Debunking Economics - the podcast
272. The Tragedy of Misunderstanding the Commons (preview)

Debunking Economics - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2022 7:56


The Tragedy of the Commons is a concept developed by William Forster Lloyd one hundred and fifty years ago. The argument is that if you allowed everybody to graze their cattle on common ground, with nobody in charge, the land would be overgrazed and the individual pursuits of many will result in destruction for all. So, do you put someone in charge, who imposes regulations on everyone. Or do you go the way of the free marketeers, who would argue that someone owns the land and rent sit out, with a vested interest in maintaining the long-term viability. Is there a definitive answer and how can we apply the Tragedy of the Commons to capitalism today? Phil Dobbie talks to Prof Steve Keen. Become a subscriber to listen to the full version of this podcast.

tragedy commons misunderstanding phil dobbie prof steve keen
Debunking Economics - the podcast
271. Is the Phillips Curve dead? (preview)

Debunking Economics - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2022 10:30


Central bankers and economists have often used the Phillips curve to determine the path of inflation. The problem is, they often get it wrong. No wonder then, that they question its validity when it doesn't work the way it should. Call it operator error. On today's podcast with Phil Dobbie, Steve Keen explains how most miss the dynamic aspects of Phillips' observations – it's the speed of change that counts, not a snapshot of employment levels at any particular time. Her also considered the changes in the price of inputs. On that basis, with unemployment rapidly falling and the price of imports rapidly rising, the Phillip's curve has never been more relevant. So, does it tell us what happens next? Become a subscriber to listen to the full version of this podcast.  

NAB Morning Call
A piggy bank backed recovery

NAB Morning Call

Play Episode Listen Later May 29, 2022 16:43


Monday 30th May 2022 Markets seem to be optimistic that the inflation wave can be ridden without us all crashing down on a rocky outcrop somewhere. So, are they right? NAB's Ray Attrill joins Phil Dobbie this morning to discover the positive mood in the markets – particularly equities – driven by an absence of bad data and a hope perhaps that inflation will be tamed before central banks have to go the full way on interest rate rises. To what extent is demand holding up because people can dip into the extraordinary level of extra savings accumulated since the start of the pandemic. The non-farm payrolls data at the end of the week will be of interest, particularly in relation to wages. Locally, GDP numbers are out middle of the week. There are only three days this week when the US and UK markets are open, with month-end in-between. It could be a choppy week.

Debunking Economics - the podcast
269. Should oil companies pay a windfall tax? (preview)

Debunking Economics - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2022 10:34


BP made $12.8 billion profit last year, $4.1 billion on that in the fourth quarter. In the first three months of this year Shell's profits reached $9.1 billion. Meanwhile pensioners and low-income families are struggling to keep their houses warm, as high energy prices add to the inflation squeeze being felt with food and other household essentials. Phil Dobbie asks Prof Steve Keen whether this all points to the need for a windfall tax on energy companies who are enjoying massive profits through no-action on their part. And should it be a one-off initiative, or is this time to rethink how we tax these companies in a way that will engender investment in renewables? Subscribe to hear this podcast in full.

bp windfall oil companies phil dobbie prof steve keen
Debunking Economics - the podcast
268. Can developed nations reindustrialize? (preview)

Debunking Economics - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2022 10:50


The supply chain disruption from COVID, and the imperialist ambitions of Vladimir Putin have demonstrated, more than ever, the need for nations – or at least neighbouring groups of friendly nations – to be self sufficient in food and energy. Will we find the world returning to a spit between the West, autocracies and developing nations? Can each group survive without the others? Prof Steve Keen tells Phil Dobbie that we will still be reliant on autocratic regimes for mineral resources, and the world really needs to come together to tackle climate change. Even if that's a pipedream we at last need a plan for how we manage the world's resources and ensure we have a reliable source of food and energy, without kowtowing to despotic regimes. Become a subscriber to hear this podcast in full.

Debunking Economics - the podcast
266. What's wrong with the rentiers? (preview)

Debunking Economics - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2022 10:38


The UK the Chancellor's wife Akshata Murty was in the news a couple of weeks ago when it was revealed that she was claiming non-domicile status in the UK, so most of her income from her shareholding in dad's company in India could be taxed over there at a much lower rate. The issue for many was that she wasn't paying her fair share of tax. But does her wealth present a bigger problem. This week Phil Dobbie asks Prof Steve Keen whether Akshata Murty is an example of the rentier class, who make money from having money. And does that necessarily mean the money is used less well than if it was in the hands of good old-fashioned capitalists? Or is it all just a bit of jealousy, because we don't have wealthy parents? Subscribe to hear this podcast in full.

uk chancellor phil dobbie prof steve keen
Debunking Economics - the podcast
265. Feedback loops kill the equilibrium fantasy (preview)

Debunking Economics - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2022 11:00


Economists like to think that there's an equilibrium that the economy is either briefly moving away from or heading back to, and it's all explained in those simple models we did at school. Those were mostly microeconomic models, of course, that are somehow magically interpreted at the mac level. Or there are more complex mathematical models that reflect only a tiny slice of the bigger picture. But didn't Sonnenschein–Mantel–Debreu theorem debunk that? This week Prof Steve Keen tells Phil Dobbie that even their work ignored a fundamental feedback loop which clearly demonstrates that equilibrium is fantasy land.  Subscribe to hear this podcast in full.

Debunking Economics - the podcast
264. The inflation genie, can we bottle it? (preview)

Debunking Economics - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2022 9:34


The inflation genie is out of the bottle. Can we get it back in there before it does too much damage? Central banks are trying to tackle it by racing each other to put up interest rates, possibly to levels we haven't seen in years, despite the fact we're all leveraged to the hilt with our mortgages. Can that be done without causing a recession? More to the point, does monetary policy actually do what central bankers think it will? On this week's Debunking Economics podcast Steve Keen tells Phil Dobbie that its up to governments, not banks, to bring inflation down. Instead, it seems, everyone is doing exactly the wrong thing! Subscribe to hear this podcast in full.

NAB Morning Call
Fed to slash balance sheet sooner rather than later

NAB Morning Call

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2022 15:02


Thursday 7th April 2022 Bond markets have reacted sharply and briefly to the FOMC minutes this morning, which suggested the Fed might start slashing its balance sheet sooner rather than later. This added to the sentiment expressed by Lael Brainard earlier in the week, which saw the yield curve steepening a little. Phil Dobbie asks NAB's Gavin Friend what these moves are telling us, and why the impact has cut short the strengthening of the Aussie dollar. Maybe strong trade numbers today will turn it around again. There's also discussion about German factory orders and tonight's ECB minutes.

Debunking Economics - the podcast
263. Is it possible to avoid another fuel crisis? (preview)

Debunking Economics - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 29, 2022 11:52


Energy prices are going through the roof. They were before Ukraine erupted, but with Russia the world's second biggest producer of natural gas, and Iran in third place, it seems we are destined to get our gas from trouble spots, and pay for the price for it. But Steve Keen says we have to get used to the idea that resources are no longer plentiful and rising prices from scarcity are becoming a fact of life. Phil Dobbie asks if there is anything that can be done to prevent an energy crisis akin to what we experienced in the seventies. The difference then, of course, that the issue was relatively short term. Now, its part of a major transition, escalated by COVID and geopolitics. Become a subscriber to hear this podcast in full.

Debunking Economics - the podcast
262. EU talks bonds. And this time it's different (preview)

Debunking Economics - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2022 10:15


The EU has talked about issuing new bonds to protect its eastern borders against Russia and to prepare Europe for a future without reliance on Russian oil and gas. Normally bonds are issued by individual countries. If the ECB felt the need to intervene it would buy up those bonds, normally proportional to the size of the member countries. Even during the pandemic, their pandemic emergency purchase program saw them buying up sovereign bonds from member countries. Could this time be different? Is there a Europe wide need that could see the EU operating a centralised budget to, for example, fund a European army? Well, they have already started down that track with the issuance of green bonds this year. How does it work? How does it create a budget through debt issuance, and see that money move to suppliers in individual European nations? The answer is, its complicated but not insurmountable. The question is, is a centralised EU budget, supplementing each countries own budgets, a good thing or a bad thing? Phil Dobbie talks to Prof Steve Keen about what could be a new direction for the EU, where it wields money for pan-European spending projects. Become a subscriber to hear this podcast in full.

Debunking Economics - the podcast
261. Does Economic Isolationism Work?

Debunking Economics - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 10, 2022 29:55


The war in Ukraine looks set to continue for a long time. A 90 minute high-level meeting between the two parties, mediated in Turkey, got nowhere today.  Meanwhile, the west is imposing more and more sanctions on Russia. Putin spoke calmy at a press conference today about how they will manage these increasing constraints on trade and finance, making out it wasn't really a big deal. So will they make their way through it, or will these sanctions be the nail in the coffin for Putin's plan? Or will they just make him more resolute? Will he start to attract the support from his people that Hitler gathered between the two world wars? Phil Dobbie talks to Prof Steve Keen, asking whether we are taking the right approach on this. Whatever the outcome, Steve reckons we should prepare for more unrest in the future, as demand for minerals heightens and the world is split between those with them, and those without them. Could this resource split and an increasing sense of protectionism become a deadly combination?

Debunking Economics - the podcast
260. Crazy Taxes (preview)

Debunking Economics - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2022 11:10


Most people agree that Rishi Sunak is crazy to introduce new taxes on the British public when inflation is compromising living standards and the Bank of England is lifting rates and pushing up the cost of mortgages. Now a war in Europe is pushing the cost of fuel ever higher. But the Chancellors argument is that the government has to pay back the money it borrowed during the pandemic. If it did, it would take decades. But, as Steve Keen explains in this week's podcast, Modern Monetary Theory suggests the money doesn't need to be paid back, and tax is really on a mechanism for controlling the money supply. Phil Dobbie looks at some of the crazy taxes that have been introduced, many to do with changing behaviour or distributing wealth. Both noble aims, but the execution might have left something to be desired.   Subscribe to hear this podcast in full

Debunking Economics - the podcast
Does protectionism kill growth?

Debunking Economics - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 23, 2020 35:34


Donald Trump is pushing ahead with his protectionist agenda, and possibly with good reason. There were over 17 million manufacturing jobs in the US in 2000, in the 10 years that followed, China joined the WTO and the US lost about a third of those jobs. In this edition of the Debunking Economics podcast Phil Dobbie asks Steve Keen whether protectionism is valid in this day and age. What of the conventional philosophy that trying to do everything locally avoids economies of scale and pushes prices up for everyone? Steve's argument, you need a complex economy to produce efficiency and innovation. It's the lack of protectionism that has stymied growth in many economies. But there are exceptions, especially for an Elon Musk fan boy like Steve! Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.

Debunking Economics - the podcast
Who's got the right idea on COVID-19 stimulus?

Debunking Economics - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2020 39:22


Furloughed workers, self-employed grant schemes, increased unemployment benefits, low interest loans, quantitative easing – governments and central banks are pulling out all the stops to try and offset the economic consequences of COVID-19. So who is doing it well? Phil Dobbie asks Prof Steve Keen to evaluate some of the programs implemented around the world – which ones are effective, which help the finance sector but do little for the broader population, and is there enough of it given the size of the impact? Governments are now trying to pull back on stimulus programs, even though infections continue and unemployment is in danger of rising still higher? Will we have learnt anything at the end of this experience about how the economy really works? Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.

Debunking Economics - the podcast

The world is facing the greatest economic downturn of our time. In the US at least 15 million more people are unemployed than just a few months ago. There are fears of a second wave and, even if it is contained and a cure is found, the chief scientist at the World Health Organisation is now saying it could take up to five years to get the virus under control. Meanwhile, as governments inject trillions of dollars of stimulus into the economy, share prices are reaching all-time highs. How can that be? How can the markets behave as though we were in the midst of the best of times? Phil Dobbie talks to Prof Steve Keen about what's really driving share prices ever upwards. Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.

world health organization phil dobbie prof steve keen
Debunking Economics - the podcast
The economics of mental health

Debunking Economics - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2020 28:19


Mental health is an issue that impacts a growing number of people, not helped by the COVID 19 lockdown. Divya Dhami, an undergraduate student from the University of British Columbia, says the economy is paying for it in terms of reduced productivity. Money investied in fixing the problem would be recovered through increased GDP. But isn't GDP part of the problem? Phil Dobbie asks whether the wellbeing index is a better measure of government success? Steve Keen suggests debt is a significant part of the problem – in the good old days students went to university to learn and it was a relaxing experience. But there are behavioural issues too – like addiction. Just how far do we want the state to intervene? Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.

Debunking Economics - the podcast
Paying for a pandemic

Debunking Economics - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 27, 2020 39:03


Governments everywhere have been pledging billions of dollars – in some cases, trillions – to help their economies navigate through the COVID-19 pandemic. Much of it has been spent supporting businesses and helping to sustain people's income. But what happens when we come out the other side. Quantitative easing is now widespread, but there's still an expectation those central ban purchases will be wound back. So what does that mean for the post-pandemic economy? A question Phil Dobbie puts to Prof Steve Keen in this edition of the Debunking Economics podcast. And are there countries who can't run up debts? Or companies or industries that can't operate effectively with the potential debt they have been forced to build up. Just how long will we be paying for the last few months? Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.

Debunking Economics - the podcast
Inequality – are we stuck with it?

Debunking Economics - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2020 31:29


Economists tend to see income as related to the value labour adds to a product or service. By that rationale, during this crisis, nurses helping save lives contribute only a fraction of the CEOs who are watching their companies fall apart. Or is something else driving inequality? It's largely the growth of the rentier class, says Steve Keen. Phil Dobbie asks whether technology could also be making thinks worse, not better. Is a skilled carpenter forced to charge less because of the availability of mass produced pre-packed furniture? And how can lots of office jobs, which create nothing, pay more than jobs that add directly to the value of something? Even if we fully understand the causes of inequality, will we ever rid ourselves of it? Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.

Debunking Economics - the podcast
After Corona, the new normal

Debunking Economics - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2020 33:34


In some parts of the world politicians, investors, business leaders and economists are behaving as though the Corona virus is almost eradicated. There are talks of easing up on restrictions, even though it's only through the lockdown that infection rates have been held back. If, instead, we believe epidemiologists, who tell us this thing is with us for some time, what will life be like on the other side. Phil Dobbie asks Prof Steve Keen for his views on how our lifestyle and ways of business will change. Steve says it's the beginning of a fundamental change in the way we interact with our planet. Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.

corona new normal phil dobbie prof steve keen
Debunking Economics - the podcast
Understanding the real Adam Smith

Debunking Economics - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2020 32:23


He has been called the ‘Father of Economics', but how much of what he talked about and wrote about has stood the test of time? Have we fully understood his ideas of free trade and the invisible hand? And why is a man, who cared so much about the plight of the poor, now seen as the poster boy for the right and those with money to protect? Phil Dobbie talks to Prof Steve Keen about the work of Adam Smith – the good and bad – on this episode of the Debunking Economics Podcast. Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.

father economics adam smith phil dobbie prof steve keen
Debunking Economics - the podcast
Corona bailouts – for main street or Wall Street?

Debunking Economics - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2020 30:56


Billions of dollars are being pumped into economies the world over to protect economies from COVID-19. Much of it comes in the form of government fiscal stimulus, funded through bond issuance. Some of it involves businesses taking up further debt themselves, through low interest loans. Nobody seems to be pursuing helicopter money and while there's some dabbling on the idea of universal basic income in the US, the money is peanuts compared to average expenditure. In this special free podcast, Phil Dobbie asks Steve Keen whether enough is being done to facilitate a rapid economic recovery, and who will be the beneficiaries – the business sector or the finance sector? Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.

Debunking Economics - the podcast
Private energy, shared planet

Debunking Economics - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 17, 2020 31:54


Putting the Corona virus aside for a moment, on this week's Debunking Economics podcast Phil Dobbie talks to Steve Keen about our use of energy. He raises the dilemma of energy prices – if they are too low, usage goes up, expanding our ecological footprint. If you try to counter that by artificially inflating prices, it's the poor who suffer – as evidenced by the riots in Paris. So, how do we limit our appetite for energy, and can we do it without destroying the world economy? And, importantly, can we do it when power creation and distribution is largely in the hands of private companies? Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.

Debunking Economics - the podcast
Who is handling this virus the best?

Debunking Economics - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2020 32:19


Italy is getting swamped in corona virus cases, whilst China claims the only new infections now come from visitors from overseas. Donald Trump has gone from calling it a hoax to warning that 200 thousand Americans dying will be the best possible scenario. The UK has seen its death rate step up again today, whilst Germany has seen relatively few deaths and in Sweden folks are still eating out at restaurants. In this FREE edition of the Debunking Economics podcast, Phil Dobbie asks Prof Steve Keen which countries are handling the crisis the best, not just to contain the spread, but also to prepare their economy for the recovery. Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.

Debunking Economics - the podcast
How did we get here?

Debunking Economics - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2020 41:53


How did we allow the spread of the Caronavirus happen? Why were governments and health services so unprepared? In this week's Debunking Economics podcast entrepreneur and venture capitalist Nick Hanauer joins Phil Dobbie and Steve Keen to look at the inevitability of this crisis. Nick says it's all down to the preoccupation with small government. How do we solve it? Massive government spending and the creation of new money. What have we learnt? Steve hopes it'll enable us to focus on the bigger issue, what we're doing to the planet. Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.

Debunking Economics - the podcast
Next, a repair based economy?

Debunking Economics - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2020 24:53


One of the questions we might be left with after the virus has left us, will be have we become too reliant on international supply chains. Another might be, are we just too reliant on stuff? If we are to look after the planet do we need to lose our appetite for goods that we keep for a short while then throw away. Why not fix them? Is it time for a repair-based economy? And if so, how do you implement it? Phil Dobbie talks to Prof Steve Keen about the circular economy, hours before he fled Europe to escape the worst of the Corona virus. Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.

europe corona economy repair phil dobbie prof steve keen
Debunking Economics - the podcast
Is technology the only real driver of growth?

Debunking Economics - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2020 30:09


We know what makes up the measure of gross domestic product – it is increases in private or government spending, increases in investment or an improvement in your balance of trade. But are those factors all driven by improvements in productivity driven by technology gains? This week on the Debunking Economics podcast Phil Dobbie asks Prof Steve Keen whether technology improvements are the only real driver of economic growth? Can the economy continually grow without it? Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.

Debunking Economics - the podcast
The multiplier effect and who stops it working

Debunking Economics - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2020 30:26


The multiplier is a basic concept of economics. If you come across some money and spend it, the person you spend it with then spends a proportion of it again, the recipient of which also spends some of it. In this week's podcast Phil Dobbie talks to Prof Steve Keen about how savings and taxation influence the multiplier, including how different sectors influence the speed of the multiplier. Plus, the commonly held assumption that if money starts circulating too quickly then it'll assume less value. And what about those who want to accumulate wealth – do they stop the multiplier working? Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.

stops multipliers phil dobbie prof steve keen
Debunking Economics - the podcast
Should Central Banks do all the work, or none of it?

Debunking Economics - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2020 33:27


Central banks started life as clearing houses and have evolved into instruments to, supposedly, protect the economy. But with interest rates at all time lows, often in the negative, have they gone as far as they can go? And how can they control the economy when governments can implement a fiscal approach at odds with monetary policy. Is it time to consider that Central Banks have a fuller role in the management of the economy, leaving governments to consider ow best to spend the money allocated to them? Or is that a breach of democracy? Phil Dobbie discusses the idea with Prof Steve Keen. Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.

central banks phil dobbie prof steve keen