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Explore every episode of the podcast All Else Equal

Dive into the complete episode list for All Else Equal. Each episode is cataloged with detailed descriptions, making it easy to find and explore specific topics. Keep track of all episodes from your favorite podcast and never miss a moment of insightful content.

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TitlePub. DateDuration
Episode 31: Sales & Trading, Info-tainment, and Roca News w/ Cole Folwell 02 May 202200:36:45

We sat down and talked with Cole Folwell a 2019 Notre Dame, Political Science graduate. Cole's path as a trader at Citi is far from traditional. He talks about his experiences at Citi and how that's helped him to transition into his new role at Roca news. As Head of Growth for Roca, Cole talks to us about the state of news today and why he felt compelled to right the ship with Roca. 

If you'd like to learn more about Roca news you can click the link to get started reading their newsletter. 

You can also follow them on their Instagram page


Music sampled from Jay-Z - Blueprint (Momma loves you)

Episode 30: Germany's Russian Gas Problem w/ Rudi Bachmann12 Apr 202200:39:19

Rudi Bachmann is the Stepan Family College Professor of Economics at Notre Dame.

Recently, he co-authored a paper, https://www.econtribute.de/RePEc/ajk/ajkpbs/ECONtribute_PB_028_2022.pdf, that gained a lot of traction on Twitter. We sat down with Rudi to discuss the paper and Germany's reliance on Russian energy. 

Rudi's Twitter

VoxEu Article regarding the paper

Music sampled from Big K.R.I.T. - King Pt. 4


Episode 21: To be (an economics major) or not to be w/Alison Levey23 Feb 202100:33:57

Alison is an alum of and former associate director of advising services in the Mendoza College of Business at Notre Dame. Currently, she splits her time authoring children's books, like "Ready Regan?", and hosting the podcast "The Open Book Test", where she talks to recent Notre Dame grads to discuss why they made the decisions they did as to major, career path etc. and together they reflect on how that all worked out. 


Music sampled from Nas - The World is Yours

Episode 20: GameStop, meme stocks, and wallstreetbets w/Tommy Pero and Spencer Koehl12 Feb 202100:39:57

Spencer and Tommy are Notre Dame undergrads studying economics and finance. Aside from their roles at the Idea Center, they are sometimes TAs, and all the time music connoisseurs. They produce a weekly roundup of bit size news pieces. If you're interested in signing up for Nuggies (which you should be!) you can follow the link below. 

Nuggies

Music sampled from Kanye West - Diamonds are Forever

Episode 19: Angrynomics part 4 w/ special guest John Winston02 Feb 202101:19:13

We dive into the fifth and final dialogue of Angrynomics and...alleviate our anger?

Thanks for listening everyone!!!

Music sampled from Kanye West and Kid Cudi - Reborn.

Episode 18: Angrynomics part 3 w/ special guest John Winston02 Feb 202101:01:20

We dive into the fourth dialogue of Angrynomics and....redistribute our anger amongst ourselves?

Music sampled from Kid Cudi - Just what I am.

Episode 16: Angrynomics part 1 w/ special guest John Winston20 Jan 202101:06:28

It's part 1 of our long-awaited inaugural book club. It's a long one, so buckle up settle in, and grab your book. We're talking about Angrynomics.

In the episode, we mention a few resources. You can find the links below

Episode 15: Wrapping up the election, the semester, and introducing the book club w/ Stephen Vukovits02 Dec 202000:29:45

Stephen Vukovits is a senior here at ND majoring in economics and is the co-president of the Federal Reserve and Fiscal Policy Challenge Club on campus.


Book Club Details

The first rule of Book Club is to TELL EVERYONE ABOUT BOOK CLUB

  • We're reading Angrynomics by Mark Blyth and Eric Lonergan
  • We will have on some special guests to dive into the book
  • Over the next 9-10 weeks we will be releasing episodes relating to the 5 parts of the book
  • Episode 1 will cover the first two parts of the book


Episode 14: A day in the life of a LEO research associate (including an existential crisis) w/ Emily Merola14 Nov 202000:34:41

Emily ensures research projects move forward successfully alongside the leadership of research faculty. She works with partners to initiate research designs, collects and analyzes data for each project, and prepares results for future audiences. Emily earned her BA in Economics from the University of Notre Dame. Before joining the LEO team full-time, she interned as one of LEO’s undergraduate research assistants.

LEO's website

Emily's website

Emily's email

Understanding returns to GED: paper 1 and paper 2

Music sampled from Eminem - Loose Yourself

Episode 13: Signaling, Human Capital, and Innovation w/ Kirk Doran07 Nov 202000:23:16

Kirk Doran is the Henkels Family Collegiate Chair and Associate Professor of Economics at the University of Notre Dame. Doran's research focuses on issues in labor economics, innovation economics, and international migration, with a particular focus on human capital complementarities. His work has examined the implications of large migrations of top scientists on the productivity and knowledge generation of their peers. Recent work has focused on the role of externalities, collaboration, and geographic distance in knowledge production, the impact of top prizes on the intellectual content of their recipient's work, and the impact of highly skilled immigrants on firms which randomly receive them.

Kirk's webpage

Center for Undergraduate Scholarly Engagement (CUSE)

Episode 12: Discussing politics and religion in polite company w/ David Campbell30 Oct 202000:31:28

David Campbell is the Packey J. Dee Professor of American Democracy at the University of Notre Dame and the chairperson of the political science department. His most recent book is Seeking the Promised Land: Mormons and American Politics (with John Green and Quin Monson). He is also the co-author (with Robert Putnam) of American Grace: How Religion Divides and Unites Us, which has been described by the New York Times as intellectually powerful, by America as an instant classic and by the San Francisco Chronicle as the most successfully argued sociological study of American religion in more than half a century.  American Grace has also received both the 2011 Woodrow Wilson Award from the American Political Science Association for the best book on government, politics, or international affairs and the Wilbur Award from the Religious Communicators Council for the best non-fiction book of 2010.

American Grace: How Religion Divides and Unites Us 

David's website and his wiki

Music sampled from Spillage Village - End of Dayz

Episode 29: International Intervention in the Ukraine Crisis - Breaking Down Economic Sanctions w/Zach Stangebye04 Mar 202200:34:54

All Else Equal listeners.....we're back.


We thought it was appropriate to dust off the mic and dissect the Ukraine crisis and the economic sanctions levied on Russia. 


Zach Stangebye is the Quinn and Jean Stepan Assistant Professor of Economics at Notre Dame. He received his doctorate in economics from the University of Pennsylvania in 2015. He is a macroeconomist specializing in macroeconomic and international finance. The bulk of his research focuses on international financial crises originating in sovereign debt markets, with a particular emphasis on coordination failures across time.

Zach's google scholar page


Music sampled from UGK (Underground Kingz) - Int'l Players Anthem

Episode 11: Discussing MMT and the National Debt w/ Rudi Bachmann24 Oct 202000:34:52

Rüdiger Bachmann's academic career includes an assistant professorship at the University of Michigan, full professorships at the RWTH Aachen University and Frankfurt University, as well as visiting professorships at the University of Pennsylvania, Harvard University and Boston University. Bachmann’s research area is macroeconomics, where he specializes in the macroeconomics of heterogeneous agents. He is also interested in the implications of uncertainty and expectation formation on macroeconomic outcomes. His research has been published in the American Economic Review, the Journal of Monetary Economics, the American Economic Journal: Macroeconomics, the American Economic Journal: Economic Policy, the Review of Economic Dynamics, Quantitative Economics, Economics Letters, and Economic Theory. At Notre Dame he teaches undergraduate and graduate classes in macroeconomics.

Rudi's Homepage

Rudi's Twitter

Music sampled from Dr. Dre - Nuthin' but a g thang

Episode 10: Spilling the Tea on Fiscal Relief and Stimulus w/ Mitchell Larson and Michael McElroy17 Oct 202000:27:05

Mitchell Larson is a senior studying Economics and Applied & Computational Math & Statistics at the University of Notre Dame where he serves as co-President of the Federal Reserve and Fiscal Challenge Club. A lifelong interest in dysfunctional relationships led him to be interested in Congress, the most dysfunctional group of them all, and that dysfunction’s effect on fiscal policy.


Michael McElroy is a junior at the University of Notre Dame pursuing a degree in Economics, with a supplementary major in Applied and Computational Mathematics and Statistics and a minor in the College of Arts and Letters Honors Program. He is an active member of the Federal Reserve and Fiscal Challenge Club. 


Music sampled from D12 - American Psycho

Episode 9: Talking Shop - How Should We Teach Economics? w/ Mary Flannery10 Oct 202000:40:37

Prior to her appointment as Associate Dean for Undergraduate Studies, Mary served as the Associate Chair and Director of Undergraduate Studies in the Economics Department.  Her current research interests are economics pedagogy and the telecommunications industry.  Dean Flannery received her B.A. and M.A in Economics from the University of Notre Dame in 1978 and 1979 respectively and her Ph.D. from the University of Maryland in 1996.

Mary's faculty page

Raj Chetty's “Using Big Data to Solve Economic and Social Problems Course”

Vox's article on changing the way we teach undergrad economics

Music sampled from Mos Def - Mathematics


Episode 8: How LEO and Notre Dame are Eliminating Poverty in America w/ Heather Reynolds03 Oct 202000:36:23

Heather Reynolds is the Managing Director for the Wilson Sheehan Lab for Economic Opportunities (LEO) at the University of Notre Dame. LEO aims to identify the innovative, effective and scalable programs that help people move out of poverty. Reynolds drives LEO's strategic plan, which seeks to influence poverty policy and support the culture of evaluation among service providers to the poor nationwide.

Reynolds has extensive experience in strategic planning, fundraising, and social enterprise. She’s an expert speaker on poverty - both the modern issues and the new solutions - as well as nonprofit strategy. And as a woman who never stops seeking fresh solutions, Reynolds pioneered Catholic Charities Fort Worth’s research initiatives.

Through top-tier impact evaluations, LEO aims to identify the innovative, effective and scalable programs that help people move out of poverty. LEO’s research is conducted by faculty from the University of Notre Dame as well as scholars from across the country with expertise in designing and evaluating the impact of domestic anti-poverty programs. Their research initiatives span a wide range of poverty focus areas.

If you'd like to reach out about undergraduate opportunities with LEO, please contact Brady Ruffing at Brady.C.Ruffing.5@nd.edu.

Heather's LEO page

LEO's undergraduate research assistants

Music sampled from Outkast - Aquemini

Episode 7: Understanding the Ideas Behind the 2019 Nobel Prize in Economics w/ Lakshmi Iyer26 Sep 202000:41:22

Lakshmi Iyer is an Associate Professor of Economics at the University of Notre Dame. Her primary research fields are development economics and political economy, with a special emphasis on property rights and the distribution of political power within societies. Her research has examined many dimensions of the distribution of political power within emerging market countries, including the legacy of colonial rule, the division of authority between politicians and bureaucrats, and the determinants of conflict. She is currently working on several projects related to the determinants and consequences of women’s political participation.

At Notre Dame, Lakshmi Iyer teaches an undergraduate course on “Political Economy of Development.”

Lakshmi's Website

Keough School of Global Affairs

International Development Studies Minor

Papers and resources mentioned in the episode

Blattman (2020)

Banerjee and Iyer (2013)

Nunn (2008)

BRAC

Music sampled from DTP re-mixed by Jhonny Charles - Growing Pains

Episode 6: What the Heck is Average Inflation Targeting? w/ Eric Sims18 Sep 202000:34:21

Eric Sims is a professor of economics at Notre Dame, where he has taught since 2009. He is a macroeconomist whose research focuses on business cycles and monetary and fiscal policies. His research has been published in the American Economic Review, the American Economic Journal: Macroeconomics, the Journal of Monetary Economics, the Review of Economics and Statistics, and several other scholarly journals. He is a research associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research and also serves as a research consultant to the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland.

At Notre Dame he teaches classes in macroeconomics and monetary policy at both the undergraduate and graduate levels and is a past recipient of the Rev. Edmund P. Joyce, C.S.C. Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching. He has also co-authored an online textbook for use in intermediate macroeconomics courses.

Eric's Website

Eric talking Fed Policy @ the FedListens sessions

Episode 5: The Ethics of College Football and Amateurism w/ Brian Levey11 Sep 202000:32:45

Brian Levey joined the Mendoza faculty in 2007 after a twenty-year legal career, most recently focused on building corporate ethics and compliance programs. He currently teaches the introductory undergraduate business law course, as well as several ethics classes in the undergraduate, graduate and executive programs. Levey is a recipient of the Rev. Edmund P. Joyce, C.S.C., Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching, as well as the Master of Science in Accountancy Dincolo Outstanding Professor Award. In 2016, he was named a faculty fellow at Notre Dame's Kaneb Center for Teaching and Learning.

Prior to joining the college of business, Brian was Fannie Mae's vice president for ethics and was the director of compliance and business ethics with Smiths Group plc. Previously, Levey was a deputy ethics officer and associate counsel with MCI (formerly WorldCom and now Verizon Business)

Brian's twitter

Alison Levey's amazing children's book: Ready Regan

Watch Brian motivate our students (and us) during the Pandemic (oh and he shows you his favorite beer cans)

Music sampled from 2 Chainz - NCAA

Episode 4: Consumer Behavior in the time of COVID-19 w/ Emily Garbinsky and Mitch Olsen 03 Sep 202000:25:49

Emily N. Garbinsky is an Assistant Professor of Marketing at the University of Notre Dame's Mendoza College of Business. As a consumer psychologist, she studies how and when money can increase happiness - finding that money can positively impact happiness, consumption enjoyment, and relationship satisfaction depending on how it is managed, saved, and spent. Her empirical approach includes primary data collection, such as lab and field experiments, as well as secondary data analysis of bank transaction records and publicly available longitudinal surveys. Her research highlights how various consumer financial decisions can impact happiness by focusing on three streams of research: 1) understanding financial decision-making within romantic couples, 2) motivating individual consumers to make wiser choices with their money, and 3) helping consumers to spend money in ways that will increase their enjoyment of consumption experiences.

New York Times Article featuring Emily on Income Infidelity

Emily getting pied.

Mitchell Olsen is an Assistant Professor of Marketing at the University of Notre Dame's Mendoza College of Business. His research interests are in marketing strategy, with a specific focus on substantive issues that occur at the intersection of any, and all, of the following sub-areas: (1) Brands, (2) Innovation, and (3) ‘Green’ (i.e., environmentally sustainable) marketing strategies. Across these areas, his research program primarily focuses on how managers’ new product-related actions impact the brand, itself. For instance, an article he published in the Journal of Marketing demonstrates how “green” new product introductions impact consumers’ attitudes toward the brand.

Music sampled from Raekwon (and Method Man) - Ice Cream

Episode 3: Grading Notre Dame's Reopening w/ Chris Cronin26 Aug 202000:29:11

Christopher C.W. Cronin is an applied microeconomist with research interests in health economics. His current projects focus on the impact of stay-at-home mandates during the covid-19 crisis, the relationship between health insurance and medical care demand, the determinants of health facility choice, and individuals' choices relating to obesity. He specializes in the estimation of dynamic microeconometric models.

NBER Covid-19 Working Papers

Chris' website

Recent research on NPR

Recent research in the NY Times

During this episode Forrest referred to Erin Hoffman-Harding - ND Vice President of Student Affairs - as Erin Hoffmore-Harding.  This was mainly Jason's fault because he was making funny faces across the desk at Forrest at the time.  Our bad Erin.

Music sampled from Dreamville - Sacrifices

Episode 2: Is the Stock Market Really that Different from the Main Street Economy w/ Colin Jones22 Aug 202000:24:33

Colin Jones is an Associate Teaching Professor of Finance, specializing in applied investments. Prior to joining Mendoza, he was a Clinical Associate Professor of Finance at the University of South Carolina, where he served as director of the Carolina Finance Scholars Program, director of the Student Managed Investment Fund, and director of the Carolina Finance & Investment Association. He received the Alfred G. Smith Jr. Award for Excellence in Teaching in 2016, and was named the Michael A. Hill Professor of the Year in 2018. He is co-author of the digital introductory textbook A Living Introduction to Finance, a real-time learning platform that has saved students over a million dollars on textbooks while improving the efficacy of introductory courses across the country.

Memos from Howard Marks 

Wall Street Journal article exploring this phenomenon (more) (more x2)

ND Investment Club

ND Wall Street Club

ND Economics Club

ND SIBC

Music sampled from J Cole - The Climb Back


Episode 28: Accompaniment and learning to walk together w/Steve Reifenberg30 Jun 202100:29:20

Steve Reifenberg is an associate professor of the practice of international development and co-director of the Integration Lab (i-Lab). He also is senior strategic advisor and faculty fellow of the Kellogg Institute for International Studies at the University of Notre Dame.

Reifenberg’s current research project, “From Aid to Accompaniment,” explores international development as a process of accompaniment. In his teaching about development, he is interested in interactive pedagogical approaches such as engaging students with international development “clients.”

Before coming to Notre Dame in February 2010, Reifenberg worked for nearly two decades on international education, negotiation and development issues at Harvard University.

From 1996 to 2002, Reifenberg served as the Executive Director of Harvard’s David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies. In 2002, he established Harvard’s first-ever university-wide office overseas in Santiago, Chile, an office that he directed for seven years.

--------------------------------------

As Forrest announced, our summer book club will be Jim Otteson's "Seven Deadly Economic Sins". Be prepared for some special guests joining us over the summer to talk!


Music sampled from J. Cole - Let go my hand


Episode 1: Reopening Schools in the Time of COVID-19 w/ Chloe Gibbs12 Aug 202000:34:32

Chloe Gibbs joined Notre Dame's economics department in 2015, where she is also a faculty affiliate of the Wilson Sheehan Lab for Economic Opportunities. Professor Gibbs is interested in measuring the effects, both intended and unintended, of policies and programs targeted at disadvantaged children and families. Her recent research includes analyzing the impact of full-day kindergarten on cognitive and non-cognitive outcomes using experimental and quasi-experimental methods, investigating the intergenerational transmission of Head Start effects, and exploring whether fade out of early childhood effects varies with preschool and early school experiences.

http://www.chloegibbs.com/

Chloe's Twitter

Chloe on Probable Causation podcast

Music sampled from Kanye West - School Spirit

Episode 27: The economics of evictions and the effects of housing policy w/ Rob Collinson24 May 202100:32:52

Rob Collinson is the Wilson Family LEO Assistant Professor in the Economics Department at the University of Notre Dame and the Wilson Sheehan Lab for Economic Opportunities (LEO).

He is an applied microeconomist with research interests in housing policy, urban policy, and the design of anti-poverty programs. He completed his Ph.D. from New York University.

Matt Desmond's book Evicted


Music sampled from Outkast - Elevators

Episode 26: We feel the need, the need for speed. High frequency trading w/ John Shim30 Apr 202100:45:04

John Shim is an Assistant Professor of Finance at the University of Notre Dame. His research focuses on empirical asset pricing, market microstructure, and financial market design. His work on high-frequency trading and the design of stock exchanges has been featured in Bloomberg, the Financial Times, the Economist, and has been discussed by the SEC Chair and the New York Attorney General. He received his B.S. from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and his MBA and PhD from the University of Chicago Booth School of Business.


John's paper on the High-Frequency Arm's Race was published in one of the best economics journals in the world. 


Music sampled from Mos Def - Speed Law

Episode 25: The Federal Reserve's dual mandate and their impacts on wealth inequality w/Jeff Campbell21 Apr 202100:30:21

Jeff Campbell is the Frances D. Rasmus and Jerome A. Castellini Professor of Economics. Before coming to Notre Dame, he served as Senior Economist and Research Advisor at the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago. His research covers macroeconomics, industrial organization, and econometrics. Much of Jeff's research applies dynamic game theory to create tractable econometric models of strategic interactions between "large players," such as central banks and dominant firms in concentrated industries 


Here is the NY Fed paper which prompted this discussion with Jeff.

If you want to learn more about Hugo van Buggenum


Music sampled from MF DOOM - Beef Rap



Episode 24: GameStop, order flow, and Bernie Madoff w/ Robert Battalio09 Apr 202100:30:20

Robert Battalio is currently a professor of Finance at the University of Notre Dame. Robert has also served on the faculty of Georgia State University, as a visiting academic at the Atlanta Federal Reserve Bank, and as the first NASD visiting academic fellow.

Robert has consulted for Fidelity, the New York Stock Exchange, LaBranche, Goldman Sachs, NYFIX, NASDR, the Nasdaq Intermarket, Archipelago, Susquehanna, and Knight Securities. His primary area of interest involves the relationship between financial market design and trading costs. He is currently studying whether the post-earnings announcement drift survives transactions costs, who trades on accruals information, trading costs in the equity option market, and price discovery in option markets. Robert’s work has appeared in the Journal of Finance, the Journal of Financial Economics, and the Review of Financial Studies, among others. Robert has been quoted in the Wall Street Journal, the Dallas Morning News, the Newark Star Ledger, Inc Magazine, Business Week On-Line, the New York Times, the Boston Globe, the Wall Street Letter, Christian Science Monitor, CNNfn, USA Today, Barrons, and Securities Week.


GameStop's Shift to Dark Trading

Jim Angel's paper Gamestonk: What happened and what to do about it

Netflix's Challenger and the very awesome academic paper discussing the Challenger explosion and market efficiency


Music sampled from Saweetie - Tap In

Episode 23: The good, the bad, and the ugly of economics w/ Jim Sullivan28 Mar 202100:39:53

On this week's episode, we talk to Jim Sullivan. Professor Sullivan is the Gilbert F. Schaefer College Professor of Economics at Notre Dame.  He has been a visiting scholar at the National Poverty Center and a visiting professor at the University of Chicago, Harris School. His research examines the consumption, saving, and borrowing behavior of poor households, and how welfare and tax policy affects the well-being of the poor. In 2012, with fellow Notre Dame Professor William Evans, Professor Sullivan founded the Wilson Sheehan Lab for Economic Opportunities (LEO). LEO is a research center that works with service providers to identify effective and replicable solutions to reduce poverty in America.

Our conversation discusses economics as a social engineering tool and we try to understand where does economics go right, where is it doing okay, and where can economics do better. 

For more on Jim's work visit his Google Scholar Page

For more information about LEO 


Music sampled from Outkast- SpottieOttieDopaliscious

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