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Podcast Econ To Go

Econ To Go

Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research

Business
Business

Frequency: 1 episode/13d. Total Eps: 9

Hosting podcast Transistor
Econ To Go brings Stanford economics into your everyday life — served with a side of coffee. Hosted by Neale Mahoney, economics professor and director of the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), the show takes you on a walk across campus with leading thinkers as they unpack the ideas that shape the economy, business, and public policy. Each episode features researchers and practitioners whose insights will sharpen your perspective and shift the way you see the world. From AI and productivity to monetary policy and college sports, you’ll hear lively conversations on issues that matter. Smart, curious, and conversational — it’s Stanford economics, to go.
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Apple Podcasts

  • 🇺🇸 USA - nonProfit

    18/06/2026
    #67
  • 🇺🇸 USA - nonProfit

    17/06/2026
    #36
  • 🇺🇸 USA - nonProfit

    16/06/2026
    #25
  • 🇺🇸 USA - nonProfit

    15/06/2026
    #30
  • 🇺🇸 USA - nonProfit

    14/06/2026
    #15
  • 🇺🇸 USA - nonProfit

    13/06/2026
    #19
  • 🇺🇸 USA - nonProfit

    12/06/2026
    #27
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - nonProfit

    11/06/2026
    #63
  • 🇺🇸 USA - nonProfit

    11/06/2026
    #12
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - nonProfit

    10/06/2026
    #61

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RSS feed quality
Good

Score global : 84%


Publication history

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Myths and truths: How remote work is redefining our lives

Episode 1

mardi 24 février 2026Duration 24:34

How has remote work changed the way we live and work? And what’s here to stay? 

In the first episode of Econ To Go, Neale Mahoney sits down with Stanford economist Nick Bloom, one of the world’s leading experts on work-from-home, to unpack how the pandemic reshaped work almost overnight. From productivity and profitability to housing, health, and the future of cities, this conversation looks past the headlines to what the data actually tells us about the new world of work. Along the way, we explore several key themes, including:

  • (01:05) The Current State of Work From Home
  • (05:35) Work From Home: Businesses and Employees
  • (12:35) The Peripheral Effects of Remote Work (Golf anyone?)
  • (20:27) The Future of Work and Technology

Econ To Go brings Stanford economics into your everyday life — served with a side of coffee. Hosted by economist and director of the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), Neale Mahoney, the show takes you on a walk across campus with leading thinkers as they unpack the ideas shaping our economy, public policy, and daily lives. Smart, curious, and conversational — it’s Stanford economics, to go.

The Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research is a nonpartisan research center that brings together scholars, policymakers, and industry leaders to solve pressing economic challenges and inform better public policy.

Never miss an episode. Subscribe to Econ To Go on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Amazon, YouTube, or wherever you get your podcasts. Plus follow SIEPR on LinkedIn or X/Twitter for episode updates and research highlights, or explore more at siepr.stanford.edu.

Today’s guest, Nick Bloom, is the William D. Eberle Professor of Economics at Stanford and a senior fellow at the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research. To learn more about him, explore his bio and research on work-from-home, productivity, and organizational change. For additional context on remote work and its economic impacts, check out these links: 

Introducing Econ To Go

Episode 1

mardi 17 février 2026Duration 01:20

Welcome to Econ To Go, where Stanford economics meets your everyday life. Hosted by Neale Mahoney, director of the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), the show takes you on a walk across campus for smart, curious conversations about the forces shaping our economy. From AI and productivity to inflation and college sports, it’s Stanford economics, to go.

Subscribe on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Amazon, YouTube, or wherever you get your podcasts. Plus follow SIEPR on LinkedIn or X/Twitter for episode updates and research highlights, or explore more at siepr.stanford.edu.

Private money, public trust: The stablecoin battle

Episode 2

mardi 10 mars 2026Duration 28:55

What makes money… money? And who should we trust to issue it?

In this episode of Econ To Go, Neale Mahoney sits down with Stanford finance professor Amit Seru to explore the tug-of-war over the future of money. Stablecoins promise fast, low-cost digital payments, but Seru explains why they function much like narrow banks — vulnerable to runs if confidence erodes. The conversation examines the GENIUS Act’s attempt to add guardrails for this unique type of crypto, the risks of delegating core financial functions to private issuers, and why trust remains the foundation of any stable currency. We cover several key themes, including:

  • (01:10) What’s at stake: Stablecoins and the future of money
  • (05:35) The GENIUS Act: What it does, what it doesn’t
  • (09:44) Run risk, backstops and regulatory gaps
  • (14:34) Private innovation and public power
  • (20:40) American trust in digital money
  • (26:50) To buy or not to buy

Econ To Go brings Stanford economics into your everyday life — served with a side of coffee. Hosted by economist and director of the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), Neale Mahoney, the show takes you on a walk across campus with leading thinkers as they unpack the ideas shaping our economy, public policy, and daily lives. Smart, curious, and conversational — it’s Stanford economics, to go.

The Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research is a nonpartisan research center that brings together scholars, policymakers, and industry leaders to solve pressing economic challenges and inform better public policy.

Never miss an episode. Subscribe to Econ To Go on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Amazon, YouTube, or wherever you get your podcasts. Plus follow SIEPR on LinkedIn or X/Twitter for episode updates and research highlights, or explore more at siepr.stanford.edu.

Today’s guest, Amit Seru, is the Steven and Roberta Denning Professor of Finance at Stanford and a senior fellow at the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research. To learn more about him and his work on financial regulation and stablecoins, explore his bio and these recent pieces: 

The hidden backbone: The data behind the economy

Episode 3

mardi 24 mars 2026Duration 26:26

How do we know what’s really happening in the economy?

In this episode of Econ To Go, Neale Mahoney sits down with labor economist Erika McEntarfer, former head of the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, to explore the public data system behind the numbers we hear every day, like inflation, unemployment, and GDP. McEntarfer explains why America’s statistical system is widely considered the global gold standard, but also why it’s facing new pressures from rising survey costs, declining response rates, threats to independence, and limited budgets. We explore several key themes, including:

  • (01:14) Challenges and opportunities in the economic data system
  • (05:30) Public vs. private data
  • (09:14) Modernizing the data system
  • (18:03) Implications of firing your chief statistician
  • (23:53) Can we trust the data?

Econ To Go brings Stanford economics into your everyday life — served with a side of coffee. Hosted by economist and director of the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), Neale Mahoney, the show takes you on a walk across campus with leading thinkers as they unpack the ideas shaping our economy, public policy, and daily lives. Smart, curious, and conversational — it’s Stanford economics, to go.

The Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research is a nonpartisan research center that brings together scholars, policymakers, and industry leaders to solve pressing economic challenges and inform better public policy.

Never miss an episode. Subscribe to Econ To Go on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Amazon, YouTube, or wherever you get your podcasts. Plus follow SIEPR on LinkedIn or X/Twitter for episode updates and research highlights, or explore more at siepr.stanford.edu.

Today’s guest, Erika McEntarfer, is a labor economist and former Commissioner of the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. She is a research scholar and the Tad and Dianne Taube Policy Fellow at the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research. Her work focuses on economic measurement, labor markets, and the public statistical infrastructure that underpins economic policymaking. To learn more about her work and the U.S. economic data system, explore these links:

Medical mistrust: Why representation matters

Episode 4

mardi 7 avril 2026Duration 24:06

How does trust — or the lack of it — shape who gets care, and what outcomes they experience?

In this episode of Econ To Go, Neale Mahoney sits down with Stanford physician-economist and MacArthur Fellow Marcella Alsan to explore how trust and representation shape the U.S. health care system. Her research shows that historical events like the Tuskegee Syphilis Study continue to affect healthcare use and health outcomes today, and that trust isn’t abstract, it’s measurable. The conversation also highlights how trust can be built, how underrepresentation in clinical trials can influence both physician behavior and patient trust, and other key themes, including:

  • (01:33) The mistrust problem
  • (06:50) Representation as remedy 
  • (12:18) Clinical trials and trust in data 
  • (24:04) Eroding trust across the system

Econ To Go brings Stanford economics into your everyday life — served with a side of coffee. Hosted by economist and director of the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), Neale Mahoney, the show takes you on a walk across campus with leading thinkers as they unpack the ideas shaping our economy, public policy, and daily lives. Smart, curious, and conversational — it’s Stanford economics, to go.

The Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research is a nonpartisan research center that brings together scholars, policymakers, and industry leaders to solve pressing economic challenges and inform better public policy.

Never miss an episode. Subscribe to Econ To Go on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Amazon, YouTube, or wherever you get your podcasts. Plus follow SIEPR on LinkedIn or X/Twitter for episode updates and research highlights, or explore more at siepr.stanford.edu.

Today’s guest, Marcella Alsan, is a physician-economist at Stanford University, the Thomas J. Davis, Jr. Faculty Scholar at the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, and a MacArthur Fellow whose research focuses on health disparities, trust in medicine, and the role of institutions in shaping health outcomes. To learn more about her work, explore her bio and these links:

Tariffs and trade: A turning point for globalization

Episode 5

mardi 21 avril 2026Duration 30:13

Are we entering a new era of globalization?

In this episode of Econ To Go, Neale Mahoney sits down with Stanford trade economist Stephen Redding to unpack the sharp escalation of U.S. tariffs in 2025 and 2026, and what it signals for the global economy. Redding explains why the scale of recent changes stands out historically, and how trade policy is becoming more persistent and more weaponized, shaped by concerns around supply chains, geopolitical tensions and critical technologies.

The conversation also explores what tariffs are designed to do — and why economists often view them as a blunt tool, with costs that ripple through consumers, firms, and global trade flows. Along the way, we explore several key themes, including:

  • (01:24) The scale of recent tariff changes
  • (04:55) When tariffs are used, and why
  • (14:30) The economist’s view of tariffs
  • (19:58) The benefits of trade and who is left behind
  • (26:56) Rethinking policy and the path forward

Econ To Go brings Stanford economics into your everyday life — served with a side of coffee. Hosted by economist and director of the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), Neale Mahoney, the show takes you on a walk across campus with leading thinkers as they unpack the ideas shaping our economy, public policy, and daily lives. Smart, curious, and conversational — it’s Stanford economics, to go.

The Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research is a nonpartisan research center that brings together scholars, policymakers, and industry leaders to solve pressing economic challenges and inform better public policy.

Never miss an episode. Subscribe to Econ To Go on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Amazon, YouTube, or wherever you get your podcasts. Plus follow SIEPR on LinkedIn or X/Twitter for episode updates and research highlights, or explore more at siepr.stanford.edu.

Today’s guest, Stephen Redding, is the Kleinheinz Family Professor of International Studies and a professor of economics at Stanford University, as well as a senior fellow at the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research. His research focuses on international trade, economic geography, and the impact of globalization on local economies. To learn more about his work, explore these links:

Beyond rhetoric: Immigration in America

Episode 6

mardi 5 mai 2026Duration 24:45

What’s the untold story of immigration in the United States? Are our beliefs misconceptions or truths? 

In this episode of Econ To Go, Neale Mahoney sits down with Stanford economist Ran Abramitzky to unpack some of the most persistent myths about immigration — and what the evidence shows instead. Drawing on decades of data, Abramitzky breaks down how immigrants and their children fare over time, how assimilation works in practice, and why common narratives about crime and economic impact often miss the mark. Along the way, we explore several key themes, including:

  • (01:28) Debunking common myths about immigration
  • (03:11) Upward mobility and the children of immigrants
  • (08:11) What cultural assimilation looks like
  • (11:16) Immigration rhetoric and the facts on crime
  • (17:07) Rethinking immigration policy
  • (22:44) The joy of teaching immigration

Econ To Go brings Stanford economics into your everyday life — served with a side of coffee. Hosted by economist and director of the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), Neale Mahoney, the show takes you on a walk across campus with leading thinkers as they unpack the ideas shaping our economy, public policy, and daily lives. Smart, curious, and conversational — it’s Stanford economics, to go.

The Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research is a nonpartisan research center that brings together scholars, policymakers, and industry leaders to solve pressing economic challenges and inform better public policy.

Never miss an episode. Subscribe to Econ To Go on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Amazon, YouTube, or wherever you get your podcasts. Plus follow SIEPR on LinkedIn or X/Twitter for episode updates and research highlights, or explore more at siepr.stanford.edu.

Today’s guest, Ran Abramitzky, is the Stanford Federal Credit Union Professor of Economics and senior associate dean of social sciences at Stanford University and a senior fellow at the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research. His research focuses on immigration, economic mobility, and economic history. To learn more about his work, visit his Stanford profile or explore these links:

Morality, money and markets

Episode 7

mardi 19 mai 2026Duration 26:22

What should — and shouldn’t — be for sale?

In this episode of Econ To Go, Neale Mahoney sits down with Stanford economist and Nobel laureate Alvin Roth to explore “moral economics,” the subject of his new book and the idea that markets are not just driven by prices, but shaped by human values. From debates over “repugnant transactions” like surrogacy and prostitution to the real-world design of kidney exchange systems, Roth unpacks how markets evolve, where they break down, and why thoughtful design and social support are essential to making them work. Along the way, we cover several key topics, including:

  • (01:33) Markets as human artifacts
  • (03:25) The moral boundaries of markets and trade
  • (08:14) The economics of kidney exchange
  • (19:03) Why markets need social support (and thoughtful regulation)
  • (22:40) Designing markets — from prostitution to Uber

Econ To Go brings Stanford economics into your everyday life — served with a side of coffee. Hosted by economist and director of the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), Neale Mahoney, the show takes you on a walk across campus with leading thinkers as they unpack the ideas shaping our economy, public policy, and daily lives. Smart, curious, and conversational — it’s Stanford economics, to go.

The Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research is a nonpartisan research center that brings together scholars, policymakers, and industry leaders to solve pressing economic challenges and inform better public policy.

Never miss an episode. Subscribe to Econ To Go on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Amazon, YouTube, or wherever you get your podcasts. Plus follow SIEPR on LinkedIn or X/Twitter for episode updates and research highlights, or explore more at siepr.stanford.edu.

Today’s guest, Alvin Roth, a Nobel laureate, is the Craig and Susan McCaw Professor of Economics at Stanford University and a senior fellow at the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR). A pioneer in market design, his work has helped shape systems like kidney exchange, improving how scarce resources are allocated in practice. His research focuses on how markets can be designed to function more effectively, especially in areas where traditional markets fall short. To learn more about his work and these ideas, explore the following:

Financial Literacy: Get ahead or fall behind

Episode 8

mardi 2 juin 2026Duration 27:41

Why do people with similar incomes and education levels end up with vastly different financial outcomes? 

In this episode of Econ To Go, Neale Mahoney sits down with Stanford economist Annamaria Lusardi to explore what people actually understand about money, and why financial literacy has become an essential skill in today’s increasingly complex economy. A pioneer in the field, Lusardi explains how gaps in financial knowledge shape everything from day-to-day decisions to long-term wealth and how early exposure, education and regulation make a difference. Along the way, we explore several key themes, including: 

  • (01:27) Why financial literacy is a must-have in today’s economy
  • (04:09) Education vs. regulation: who is responsible for protecting consumers
  • (08:45) Why personal finance is deeply personal
  • (12:04) A 7-step financial health checkup
  • (21:13) Where consumers are most at risk 

Econ To Go brings Stanford economics into your everyday life — served with a side of coffee. Hosted by economist and Director of the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), Neale Mahoney, the show takes you on a walk across campus with leading thinkers as they unpack the ideas shaping our economy, public policy, and daily lives. Smart, curious, and conversational — it’s Stanford economics, to go.

The Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research is a nonpartisan research center that brings together scholars, policymakers, and industry leaders to solve pressing economic challenges and inform better public policy.

Never miss an episode. Subscribe to Econ To Go on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Amazon, YouTube, or wherever you get your podcasts. Plus follow SIEPR on LinkedIn or X/Twitter for episode updates and research highlights, or explore more at siepr.stanford.edu.

Today’s guest, Annamaria Lusardi, is a leading expert on financial literacy. She is the Director of the Initiative for Financial Decision-Making at Stanford and a senior fellow at the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research. Her work — in both the academic and global policy arena — focuses on how financial education can improve economic outcomes. To learn more about Lusardi and her research, visit the IFDM website or explore these links:

We want to hear from you!
This episode wraps up season 1 of Econ To Go. As we prepare for season 2, we would love your feedback to help us create episodes you want to watch, hear, talk about, and share. Three survey participants will be randomly selected on June 26, 2026 to win SIEPR merch.
👉 Fill out this short survey.


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