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Post Crisis Economics

by Post Crisis Economics

Will Thomas and Dr Tim Jackson of The University of Liverpool sit down to talk and develop a better understanding of economics, what it is, how it shapes our everyday lives, and with any luck how we can participate in directing it towards a common good.

Copyright: © 2023 Post Crisis Economics

Episodes

The Yardstick

27m · Published 01 Jun 09:00

So often politicians talk about how important the economy is, this issue is so huge it often eclipses other issues that emerge in society. Even when things like coronavirus happen, everyone asks “how do we pay for this?”. It always seems like Money is the biggest concern. Money and wealth has become the default measure for success, it’s the one thing nobody wants to spoil. How did wealth become our measure of success? 

The Yardstick

27m · Published 01 Jun 09:00

So often politicians talk about how important the economy is, this issue is so huge it often eclipses other issues that emerge in society. Even when things like coronavirus happen, everyone asks “how do we pay for this?”. It always seems like Money is the biggest concern. Money and wealth has become the default measure for success, it’s the one thing nobody wants to spoil. How did wealth become our measure of success? 

Regulation

33m · Published 25 May 06:00

We've previously discussed how climate change is an example of a market failure, where the free market doesn't deliver the best outcomes. This week we learn how governments use regulation to intervene in these situations to try and improve things.

Regulation

33m · Published 25 May 06:00

We've previously discussed how climate change is an example of a market failure, where the free market doesn't deliver the best outcomes. This week we learn how governments use regulation to intervene in these situations to try and improve things.

Climate Change

36m · Published 18 May 06:00

Doesn’t the growing climate emergency show that capitalism doesn’t work for the benefit of mankind? Yes and no..! In this episode we show that climate change is brought about by capitalism being too good at its job, and also utterly failing to be sustainable. It is the ultimate market failure – the kind of problem that capitalism, and democracy, is just not good at tackling.

Climate Change

36m · Published 18 May 06:00

Doesn’t the growing climate emergency show that capitalism doesn’t work for the benefit of mankind? Yes and no..! In this episode we show that climate change is brought about by capitalism being too good at its job, and also utterly failing to be sustainable. It is the ultimate market failure – the kind of problem that capitalism, and democracy, is just not good at tackling.

The Free Market

30m · Published 11 May 08:00

In 2012 Starbucks launched an open letter ad campaign in Uk newspapers apologising for not paying enough tax. As a society we can regulate the market and in effect ask corporations to pay their share, but it’s all too easy for these corporations to break the rules. Star bucks had been able to pay just £8.6m in corporation tax over 14 years. only after the pressure of public opinion did they volunteer to pay what they believed to be their fair share, 10 million a year for two years. 

The father of macro economics John Maynard Keynes once stated

“Capitalism is the extraordinary belief that the nastiest of men, for the nastiest of reasons, will somehow work for the benefit of us all.”

It appears we must be constantly vigilant to hold corporations that often control capital in excess of small nations accountable to the societies in which they operate. We have been told that free markets invariably trend towards the best outcome but it’s undeniable that corporations are only working for themselves.

The Free Market

30m · Published 11 May 08:00

In 2012 Starbucks launched an open letter ad campaign in Uk newspapers apologising for not paying enough tax. As a society we can regulate the market and in effect ask corporations to pay their share, but it’s all too easy for these corporations to break the rules. Star bucks had been able to pay just £8.6m in corporation tax over 14 years. only after the pressure of public opinion did they volunteer to pay what they believed to be their fair share, 10 million a year for two years. 

The father of macro economics John Maynard Keynes once stated

“Capitalism is the extraordinary belief that the nastiest of men, for the nastiest of reasons, will somehow work for the benefit of us all.”

It appears we must be constantly vigilant to hold corporations that often control capital in excess of small nations accountable to the societies in which they operate. We have been told that free markets invariably trend towards the best outcome but it’s undeniable that corporations are only working for themselves.

Post Crisis

34m · Published 04 May 13:00

We all seem to implicitly understand that a strong economy is vital for us to live well and leverage our abilities as a society, but we feel powerless to influence it and direct its potential towards a common good. It’s not surprising then that many of us shy away from economics, its tectonic forces seems unstoppable, obtuse, and cruel. 

Will Thomas and Dr Tim Jackson of The University of Liverpool sit down to talk and develop a better understanding of economics, what it is, how it shapes our everyday lives, and with any luck how we can participate in directing it towards a common good.

Post Crisis

34m · Published 04 May 13:00

We all seem to implicitly understand that a strong economy is vital for us to live well and leverage our abilities as a society, but we feel powerless to influence it and direct its potential towards a common good. It’s not surprising then that many of us shy away from economics, its tectonic forces seems unstoppable, obtuse, and cruel. 

Will Thomas and Dr Tim Jackson of The University of Liverpool sit down to talk and develop a better understanding of economics, what it is, how it shapes our everyday lives, and with any luck how we can participate in directing it towards a common good.

Post Crisis Economics has 20 episodes in total of non- explicit content. Total playtime is 10:08:38. The language of the podcast is English. This podcast has been added on October 26th 2022. It might contain more episodes than the ones shown here. It was last updated on February 20th, 2024 10:13.

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