Author Archive

Is price gouging a problem?

2/28/23, The Indicator (9:13)

Link: https://www.npr.org/2023/02/28/1160197163/is-price-gouging-a-problem

Teaching Ideas

Summary: Recent surges in prices for important commodities like eggs and oil have led to a flurry of politicians and advocacy groups decrying “price-gouging.” But what exactly is price-gouging? As the podcast highlights, most economists would argue that it is a highly subjective concept, rather than a technical economic term.

Posted March 6, 2023 by ishanitewari in Utility

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Want a balanced federal budget? It’ll cost you.   Leave a comment

1/25/23, The Indicator (9:05)

Link:https://www.npr.org/2023/01/25/1151551484/want-a-balanced-federal-budget-itll-cost-you

Teaching Ideas

Summary:  As policy makers grapple with the debt ceiling, the podcast digs into the notion of a balanced budget. While tying the debt ceiling limit to a balanced is an appealing to some fiscal conservatives, in reality “extreme” fiscal responsibility is likely impractical, and getting to balanced budget will require deeper structural changes to the government budget.

Also: The episode “What is the Deal with the Platinum Coin” from 1/26/23 looks into an interesting solution to circumvent the debt ceiling kerfuffle  #minthecoin

Posted February 28, 2023 by ishanitewari in Utility

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The ice cream conspiracy   Leave a comment

2/28/03, Planet Money (24:41)

Link: https://www.npr.org/2023/02/06/1154775118/ice-cream-ben-jerrys-haagen-daz

Summary: Ben & Jerry’s and Haagen-Dazs are the two top brands in the super-premium ice cream market. Curiously, the brands do not offer similar flavors. Ben & Jerry’s makes “chunky” type ice-cream while Haagen-Dazs only offers creamy, smooth ice cream on super market shelves. What is going on? Planet Money looks at a possible explanation– collusive behavior.

Link to teaching ideas

Posted February 27, 2023 by ishanitewari in Market structure, Oligopoly, Strategy

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Jobs vs prices: the Fed’s dueling mandates   Leave a comment

1/12/23, The Indicator (9:29)

Link: https://www.npr.org/2023/01/12/1148895861/jobs-vs-prices-the-feds-dueling-mandates

Summary: As the Federal Reserve targets higher interest rates to stabilize prices, they also want to keep unemployment low. The Indicator speaks with a Fed President about this dual mandate– its history, the trade-offs it involves and how it makes sense.

Link to teaching ideas

Posted February 27, 2023 by ishanitewari in Utility

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Unwinding the wage-price spiral   Leave a comment

2/14/23, The Indicator (9:04)

Link: https://www.npr.org/2023/02/14/1156876594/unwinding-the-wage-price-spiral

Summary: New inflation numbers are out.  Inflation is not increasing steadily like it was a few months ago, but it still remains stubbornly high, much higher that Fed’s ideal 2% rate.   Today’s show examines whether the “wage-price spiral”–a feedback loop between rapidly increasing prices and wages like we saw in the 1970s- is still a threat in the macroeconomy. Or are they days of the “doom loop” past us and we are in a wage-price paradigm? 

Link to worksheet

Posted February 27, 2023 by ishanitewari in Utility

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Artists vs. AI   Leave a comment

1/30/23, The Indicator (9:00)

Link: https://www.npr.org/2023/01/30/1152653269/artists-vs-ai

Teaching Ideas

Summary:  AI systems like “DALL E 2” can create images based on a description.  Like other types machine learning algorithms, the systems are trained on existing art.  The adoption of this technology to generate and sell art has irked artists who claim that their intellectual property rights are being violated. The podcasts delves into one particular story like this.

Posted February 3, 2023 by ishanitewari in Government

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