Planet Money



Inside a bank run

By NPR/Thu, 23 Mar 2023 01:33

Sometimes you hear these stories about an airplane that suddenly nosedives. Everyone onboard thinks this is it, and then the plane levels out and everything is fine. For about 72 hours, people and companies that had deposited millions of dollars at t

Listen/Read More

Planet Money Records Vol. 3: Making a hit

By NPR/Fri, 17 Mar 2023 21:04

Since we started Planet Money Records and released the 47-year-old song "Inflation," the song has taken off. It recently hit 1 million streams on Spotify. And we now have a full line of merch — including a l

Listen/Read More

How Silicon Valley Bank failed

By NPR/Wed, 15 Mar 2023 20:35

Silicon Valley Bank was the 16th largest bank in America, the bank of choice for tech startups and big-name venture capitalists. Then, in the span of just a few days, it collapsed. Whispers that SVB might be in trouble spread like wildfire through gr

Listen/Read More

Dude, where's my streaming TV show?

By NPR/Fri, 10 Mar 2023 20:08

Over the past year, dozens of shows have been disappearing from streaming platforms like HBO Max and Showtime. Shows like Minx, Made for Love, FBoy Island, and even big budget hits like Westworld have been removed entirely.So why did thes

Listen/Read More

Why platforms like HBO Max are removing streaming TV shows

By NPR/Fri, 10 Mar 2023 20:08

Over the past year, dozens of shows have been disappearing from streaming platforms like HBO Max and Showtime. Shows like Minx, Made for Love, FBoy Island, and even big budget hits like Westworld have been removed entirely.So why did thes

Listen/Read More

The value of good teeth

By NPR/Wed, 08 Mar 2023 19:23

As a kid, Ryanne Jones' friend accidentally hit her in the mouth with a hammer, knocking out her two front teeth. Her parents never had enough money for the dental care needed to fix them, so Ryanne lived much of her adult life with a chipped and cro

Listen/Read More

Seinfeld-onomics

By NPR/Fri, 03 Mar 2023 18:09

The 90s sit-com Seinfeld is often called "a show about nothing." Lauded for its observational humor, this quick-witted show focussed on four hapless New Yorkers navigating work, relationships...yada yada yada.Jerry, George, Elaine & Krame

Listen/Read More

CBOhhhh, that's what they do

By NPR/Wed, 01 Mar 2023 18:28

If you are a congressperson or a senator and you have an idea for a new piece of legislation, at some point someone will have to tell you how much it costs. But, how do you put a price on something that doesn't exist yet?Since 1974, that

Listen/Read More

Meow Money Meow Problems

By NPR/Fri, 24 Feb 2023 20:18

More than 20 years ago, something unusual happened in the small town of Dixfield, Maine. A lady named Barbara Thorpe had left almost all of her money—$200,000—to benefit the cats of her hometown. When Barbara died in 2002, those cats suddenly got ver

Listen/Read More

Hollywood's Black List (Classic)

By NPR/Wed, 22 Feb 2023 18:10

This episode originally ran in 2020.In 2005, Franklin Leonard was a junior executive at Leonardo DiCaprio's production company. A big

Listen/Read More

Jay & Shai's debt ceiling adventure

By NPR/Fri, 17 Feb 2023 19:09

Every year, the U.S. government spends more money than it takes in. In order to fund all that spending, the country takes on debt. Congress has the power to limit how much debt the U.S. takes on. Right now, the debt limit is $31.4 trillion dollars. O

Listen/Read More

Two Indicators: Inside the Fed, then and now

By NPR/Wed, 15 Feb 2023 19:35

A lot of the time, economic policy can seem pretty impersonal — cold, hard, data-driven. But at the heart of the Federal Reserve are people: fallible, complicated people who are just doing their best to steer the economy in the right direction.
Listen/Read More

Our 2023 valentines

By NPR/Fri, 10 Feb 2023 19:11

Every Valentine's Day, we at Planet Money consider the things that we love, the things that we can't stop talking about, the things that get our hearts racing...in a good way. And we give them valentines!This year our valentines go out to

Listen/Read More

The ice cream conspiracy

By NPR/Wed, 08 Feb 2023 18:14

Take a look in any supermarket ice cream freezer section and you may see a mystery. There are big containers of the typical ice cream brands: Breyers, Turkey Hill, and Edy's. And there are specialty brands that make gelato, low-fat and vegan ice crea

Listen/Read More

Baby's first market failure

By NPR/Fri, 03 Feb 2023 16:53

Anyone who has tried shopping for day care knows that it is tough out there.For one, it is hard even to get your hands on information about costs, either online or over the phone – day cares will often only share their prices after you ha

Listen/Read More

Groundhog Day 2023

By NPR/Wed, 01 Feb 2023 18:44

It's Groundhog Day, and once again, the eyes of the nation have turned to a small town in Western Pennsylvania. Every February 2nd, the only story anyone can talk about is whether or not Punxsutawney Phil will see his own shadow. If he does: six more

Listen/Read More

To all the econ papers I've loved before

By NPR/Fri, 27 Jan 2023 16:47

A great economics paper does two things. It takes on a big question, and it finds a smart way to answer that question.But some papers go even further. The very best papers have the power to change lives.That was the case for three economi

Listen/Read More

The story of "Monopoly" and American capitalism

By NPR/Wed, 25 Jan 2023 20:00

Monopoly is one of the best-selling board games in history. The game's staying power may in part be because of strong American lore — the idea that anyone, with just a little bit of cash, can rise from rags to riches. Mary Pilon, author o

Listen/Read More

Charles Ponzi's scheme

By NPR/Fri, 20 Jan 2023 19:03

Some of history's biggest financial scams owe their name to Charles Ponzi. Here's the story of the man behind the eponymous scheme. | Subscribe to Planet Money+ in Apple Podcasts or at Listen/Read More

Big Rigged (Classic)

By NPR/Wed, 18 Jan 2023 18:49

Driving a truck used to mean freedom. Now it means a mountain of debt.Subscribe to Planet Money+ in Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org/pla

Listen/Read More

Two Indicators: The 2% inflation target

By NPR/Fri, 13 Jan 2023 18:55

If the Fed had a mantra to go along with its mandate, it might well be "two percent." We look into how that became the target inflation rate, why some economists are calling for a change and how the inflation rate becomes unanchored.Subsc

Listen/Read More

Planet Money Movie Club: It's a Wonderful Life

By NPR/Wed, 11 Jan 2023 17:55

Welcome to the Planet Money Movie Club, a regular series from Planet Money+ in which we watch an economics-related movie and discuss! On today's episode, Kenny Malone, Wailin Wong, and Willa Rubin talk about Frank Capra's 1946 classic 'It's A Wonderf

Listen/Read More

The economics lessons in kids' books

By NPR/Fri, 06 Jan 2023 17:24

All sorts of lessons (even about economics) can be learned from kids' books. On today's show, we visit an elementary school to try to teach third graders econ using some beloved childrens' classics. And, along the way, we learn a few things ourselves

Listen/Read More

The Rest of the Story, 2022

By NPR/Fri, 30 Dec 2022 19:12

It's that time of year again! Our annual year-end tradition of checking in on previous stories to hear what happened after the microphones stopped running.We'll hear from a CEO who was trying to get her company out of Russia amidst the wa

Listen/Read More

Which economic indicator defined 2022?

By NPR/Wed, 28 Dec 2022 16:43

2022 was a year of big economic changes. But what economic story most defined the year? Our hosts from Planet Money and The Indicator battle it out over what should be crowned the indicator of the year. Subscribe to Planet Money+ in Listen/Read More

In defense of gift giving

By NPR/Fri, 23 Dec 2022 19:50

Cold economic reasoning says, supposedly, that gifts are inefficient transfers of wealth. But Planet Money host Jeff Guo believes in the economic virtues of gift giving. O

Listen/Read More

Two Indicators: The fight over ESG investing

By NPR/Wed, 21 Dec 2022 17:59

"ESG" investing – Environmental, Social, Governance – has attracted a lot of attention from investors, and from Republican politicians who call it "woke investing." On today's show, what the fight over ESG reveals about the potential and limitations

Listen/Read More

The sports ticket price enigma

By NPR/Fri, 16 Dec 2022 17:32

Inflation is making prices go up, except not for...sports tickets? So, we set out on a daylong sporting event marathon to learn why.Subscribe to Planet Money+ in Apple Podcasts or

Listen/Read More

Spam call bounty hunter

By NPR/Wed, 14 Dec 2022 18:43

Telemarketing calls are not only annoying; in some cases, they are illegal. Congress even gives you the right to sue scofflaw telemarketers for $500 a call. Today, the story of one man who collected a surprising amount of money bringing telemarketers

Listen/Read More

The case of the missing cheese racks

By NPR/Fri, 09 Dec 2022 18:45

Jelle Peterse's company ships cheese all over the world, but they don't always get their cheese racks back. In this episode, we try to fix a supply chain problem. Gouda grief!Subscribe to Planet Money+ in Listen/Read More

When women stopped coding (Classic)

By NPR/Wed, 07 Dec 2022 17:53

A lot of computing pioneers were women. For decades, the number of women in computer science was growing. But in 1984, something changed.Subscribe to Planet Money+ in Apple PodcastsListen/Read More

My Favorite Tax Loophole

By NPR/Fri, 02 Dec 2022 22:20

There's a big difference between tax avoidance and tax evasion. But sometimes even avoiding taxes (legally) can feel like you're getting away with something. Today, we share some of our — and your! — favorite loopholes in the U.S. tax code.Listen/Read More

Messi economics

By NPR/Wed, 30 Nov 2022 21:14

Soccer star Lionel Messi is currently hoping to lead Argentina to victory in the World Cup. His path to global fame was shaped by a crisis in Argentina's economy.This episode was made in collaboration with NPR and Futuro Studios's Listen/Read More

One economist's take on popular advice for saving, borrowing, and spending

By NPR/Wed, 23 Nov 2022 16:45

This episode was first released as a bonus episode for Planet Money+ listeners last month. We're sharing it today for all listeners. To hear more episodes like this one and support NPR in the process, sign up for Planet Money+ at Listen/Read More

How the cookie became a monster

By NPR/Fri, 18 Nov 2022 21:17

30 years ago, Lou Montulli set out to solve a fundamental problem with the internet, and accidentally created an entirely different one. On today's show, how the cookie went from an obscure piece of code designed to protect anonymity, to an online ad

Listen/Read More

Sam Bankman-Fried and the fall of a crypto empire

By NPR/Wed, 16 Nov 2022 20:03

Sam Bankman-Fried built a reputation as the one reliable crypto bro. But within the span of days, his empire came crashing down. What the rise and fall of crypto's 30-year-old elder statesman says about the story of crypto so far.Subscrib

Listen/Read More

The E-Book Wars

By NPR/Fri, 11 Nov 2022 18:23

In 2019, a group of librarians (quietly) stormed the offices of a major publisher, Macmillan, to protest a controversial policy on e-books. On this show, how a tiny change - a book on a screen - threw an industry into war with itself.Subs

Listen/Read More

Peak Sand (classic)

By NPR/Wed, 09 Nov 2022 18:26

Sand. It's in buildings, windows, your cell phone. But there isn't enough in the world for everyone. And that's created a dangerous black market.Subscribe to Planet Money+ in Apple Po

Listen/Read More

Planet Money tries election polling

By NPR/Fri, 04 Nov 2022 19:44

Polling is facing an existential crisis. Few people are answering the phone, and fewer people want to answer surveys. On today's show, we pick up the phones ourselves to find out how polling got to this place, and what the future of the poll looks li

Listen/Read More

Two Indicators shaking China's economy

By NPR/Wed, 02 Nov 2022 18:58

Xi Jinping recently secured his third term as China's president – so we're looking at two shocks to the world's second-largest economy. First: How China's housing boom turned into a real estate crisis. Second: How the recent U.S. ban on selling advan

Listen/Read More

Planet Money Records Vol. 2: The Negotiation

By NPR/Fri, 28 Oct 2022 23:20

We got our hands on the long-lost "Inflation" song, and now it's time to put it out into the world. So, we started a record label, and we're diving into the music business to try and make a hit.(This episode is part two of a series. L

Listen/Read More

Planet Money Records Vol. 1: Earnest Jackson

By NPR/Wed, 26 Oct 2022 20:15

We try to start a real record label. Just to put one song out there. It's a song about inflation, recorded in 1975... and never released. Until now.(This episode is part one of a two-part series)Subscribe to Planet Mo

Listen/Read More

The high cost of a strong dollar

By NPR/Fri, 21 Oct 2022 20:25

When it comes to international trade and finance, everyone pretty much speaks one language: the U.S. dollar. So when the Federal Reserve hikes interest rates and the dollar suddenly gets strong, it can cause huge headaches all over the world.Listen/Read More

The money fixers (classic)

By NPR/Wed, 19 Oct 2022 16:56

How do you mend a broken bill? On this classic episode, we visit the Mutilated Currency Division.Subscribe to Planet Money+ in Apple Podcasts or at Listen/Read More

You asked for coupons, Delaware, and the truth about goldfish

By NPR/Fri, 14 Oct 2022 20:42

On today's show, we're answering listener questions from the Planet Money inbox. Like, who really benefits from retail coupons? And why are goldfish so cheap?Subscribe to Planet Money+ in Listen/Read More

Two Indicators: back to school

By NPR/Wed, 12 Oct 2022 18:16

It's fall, so on this episode, we're taking you back to school. First, what sorority rush can teach us about a particular kind of market. Then, how two economists fixed the way macroeconomics was taught in high schools. It's econ, inside and outside

Listen/Read More

Forging Taiwan's Silicon Shield

By NPR/Fri, 07 Oct 2022 19:56

Taiwan is at the center of a global feud. Its main defense may be what some call its "Silicon Shield" — its powerful semiconductor industry. On today's show, the story of how one economic hero helped to transform Taiwan's economy and create the "Taiw

Listen/Read More

Economic anarchy in the UK

By NPR/Wed, 05 Oct 2022 19:00

Liz Truss, the new Prime Minister of the UK, was determined to change the British economy. Instead, her government's mini-budget helped kick off a mini-financial crisis.Subscribe to Planet Money+ in Listen/Read More

Would you like a side of offshoring with that?

By NPR/Fri, 30 Sep 2022 17:22

A lot of restaurants took a hit during the pandemic. And when they struggled to find workers, some found surprising solutions. On today's show, what happens when you offshore cashiers.Subscribe to Planet Money+ in Listen/Read More

The miracle apple (Classic)

By NPR/Wed, 28 Sep 2022 19:06

Today on the show, how we got from mealy, nasty apples to apples that taste delicious. The story starts with a breeder who discovered a miracle apple. But discovering that apple wasn't enough.

Listen/Read More

Econ's Brush with the Law

By NPR/Fri, 23 Sep 2022 18:44

What happens when you take some of the most powerful people in America — federal judges — and teach them economics? We look at the swanky econ retreats that may have changed American law forever.Subscribe to Planet Money+ in Listen/Read More

The Midnight Connection

By NPR/Wed, 21 Sep 2022 18:47

Texas's energy grid is largely disconnected from the rest of the U.S. That led to disastrous consequences last year when the state's grid was overloaded during a winter storm. Back in the 1970s, one company attempted to change the system in a secret,

Listen/Read More

Vibecession Vibes Session

By NPR/Fri, 16 Sep 2022 21:16

We're not in a recession, but why are the vibes feeling so off? We put the question to an economist and one expert on "vibes" and also hire a jazz band to take a pun way too far.Subscribe to Planet Money+ in Listen/Read More

The Good, the Bad, and the Uggly

By NPR/Wed, 14 Sep 2022 23:33

Eddie Oygur is an Australian businessman who's sold sheepskin ugg boots for years. But one day, he was hit with a lawsuit for breaking American trademark law. On today's show — what's in the name ugg? Subscribe to Planet Money+ in Listen/Read More

Two Indicators: unlikely economic relationships

By NPR/Fri, 09 Sep 2022 17:00

On today's show - how your social circle is one of the strongest predictors of economic mobility and how pop music reflects the economy.Subscribe to Planet Money+ in Apple PodcastsListen/Read More

The salvage car Silk Road

By NPR/Wed, 07 Sep 2022 20:15

A practically brand new Lexus with a New Jersey inspection sticker lands on an auto body lot in Turkmenistan. How did it get there? To find out, we journey into the bizarro economy for misfit cars. And we follow a very different kind of journey – of

Listen/Read More

Breaking down the price of gasoline

By NPR/Fri, 02 Sep 2022 20:15

High gas prices have fueled speculation and investigations — is anyone raising prices and keeping prices high for profit? To find out, we break down the price of gas, piece by piece, to show you how we get to the price we see at the pump and how much

Listen/Read More

SUMMER SCHOOL 8: Productivity & Getting Lit

By NPR/Wed, 31 Aug 2022 18:40

Productivity is our economic measure for how far our work goes, as individuals and as a society over all. It plays an important role in determining our quality of life, the prices of our goods and services, and, to some extent, the amount of free tim

Listen/Read More

Wake up and smell the fraud

By NPR/Fri, 26 Aug 2022 18:31

Sometimes online shopping can feel a little unsavory. There are the listings that make you question if you'll really be getting exactly what's advertised. And there's no worse feeling than paying for something and then not getting it. But when Nina K

Listen/Read More

SUMMER SCHOOL 7: The Fed & Volcker's Socks

By NPR/Wed, 24 Aug 2022 19:33

The Federal Reserve plays a very important role in the economy. When things start to look uncertain, the central bank is tasked with stepping in to restore people's confidence in the economy. But how do they do it? On today's episode we dive deep on

Listen/Read More

Inflation Reduction Actually

By NPR/Fri, 19 Aug 2022 19:48

Congress just passed the biggest, most ambitious climate bill in history. And it's called ... the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022. What's with that branding? And what can the bill teach us about actually fighting inflation? | Subscribe to Planet Mone

Listen/Read More

SUMMER SCHOOL 6: Trade & The Better Life

By NPR/Wed, 17 Aug 2022 18:46

International trade is the web of cross-border relationships that binds economies together. Because of trade we have access to cheaper, higher-quality goods, and we get to benefit from other countries' cultures. Economics tells us trade makes society

Listen/Read More

Carried interest wormhole

By NPR/Fri, 12 Aug 2022 20:56

The carried interest tax loophole is a way that wealthy Americans – often the people who manage hedge funds or private equity firms – avoid paying billions of dollars worth of taxes. It has been one of the most controversial yet durable features of t

Listen/Read More

SUMMER SCHOOL 5: Car Parts, Celery & The Labor Market

By NPR/Wed, 10 Aug 2022 20:38

You can learn a lot about a person from their job. The same can be said of an economy. The market for jobs can us a lot about how the economy is doing, but more importantly, it is where we look to see who the economy is working for, and who is left b

Listen/Read More

A new way to pay for college (Update)

By NPR/Fri, 05 Aug 2022 16:46

College has gotten incredibly expensive. And some colleges are offering students a new way to pay. It's not a scholarship. It's not quite a loan. It's more like the students are selling stock in themselves. We check in on how income share agreements

Listen/Read More

SUMMER SCHOOL 4: Inflation & Drinking Buddies

By NPR/Wed, 03 Aug 2022 20:37

Inflation can be one of the scariest forces in the economy. As prices rise and your dollar doesn't go as far, you feel poorer, and it's all out of your control. To better understand inflation, we turn to the story of Brazil, where, in the 90s, hyperi

Listen/Read More

BONUS: Micro-Face: The Musical

By NPR/Mon, 01 Aug 2022 05:00

This episode, Micro-Face: The Musical. A full concert recording of a one-of-a-kind Planet Money superhero musical, taped during our recent live show at the Roulette Theater in Brooklyn, New York. Listen/Read More

We Buy a Superhero 8: Micro-Face: The Musical

By NPR/Mon, 01 Aug 2022 05:00

This episode, Micro-Face: The Musical. A full concert recording of a one-of-a-kind Planet Money superhero musical, taped during our recent live show at the Roulette Theater in Brooklyn, New York. Listen/Read More

Two recession Indicators

By NPR/Fri, 29 Jul 2022 17:55

So are we in a recession or not? The jury is still out, but there are some warning signs. GDP is down and inflation is up. But how much do we know about the 'indicators' that tell us how the economy is doing? Today, the stories of two of our most imp

Listen/Read More

SUMMER SCHOOL 3: Booms, Busts & Us

By NPR/Wed, 27 Jul 2022 22:23

Life has its ups and downs. Same for the economy. Today we ask, can the business cycle be tamed? Two stories of recession and techniques for moderating the ferocity of booms and busts. Plus, how bankruptcy is a secret weapon of the American economy.

Listen/Read More

Little House on the Blockchain

By NPR/Fri, 22 Jul 2022 19:38

It has great bones, three bedrooms and one and half baths, and it comes with its own machine that mines cryptocurrency. But in a year of reckoning for crypto, how interested are potential buyers? | Subscribe to Planet Money+ in Apple Podcasts or at p

Listen/Read More

SUMMER SCHOOL 2: GDP & What Counts

By NPR/Wed, 20 Jul 2022 21:24

What even is "the economy"? And how do you measure it? Our path out of the economic darkness and into the light has been guided in large part by one single statistic: GDP. This week: the origins, history, and problems with the economic indicator to r

Listen/Read More

Best by, sell by, use by

By NPR/Fri, 15 Jul 2022 22:08

Wait, wait...don't throw that out! What if much of what you've been told about food expiration dates is... wrong? | Subscribe to Planet Money+ in Apple Podcasts or at Listen/Read More

SUMMER SCHOOL 1: Recessions & Rap Battles

By NPR/Wed, 13 Jul 2022 22:42

It's macro time! Today: Keynes vs. Hayek. Season 3 of summer school is here asking the biggest economic questions about what makes an entire economy grow or contract? Things like, is there a "right" level of unemployment? Who gains from t

Listen/Read More

A tale of two cityhoods

By NPR/Fri, 08 Jul 2022 19:22

There's a movement underway in Georgia. More and more communities around Atlanta are choosing to keep their tax dollars very local, and become their own cities. It's a story about equity and exclusion – and also potholes. | Subscribe to Planet Money+

Listen/Read More

Two crypto crash Indicators

By NPR/Wed, 06 Jul 2022 17:09

Two stories of consternation from inside the crypto world. Can a crypto crash spread to the wider economy? How does contagion work? And ... why has crypto had such appeal with Black investors? | Subscribe to Planet Money+ in Listen/Read More

Suitcases, secret lists, and Citizens United

By NPR/Fri, 01 Jul 2022 18:05

On today's show: the Watergate scandal you haven't heard about – that led directly to Citizens United and multi-billion dollar elections. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

When Subaru came out (Classic)

By NPR/Wed, 29 Jun 2022 18:40

In the early 90s, Subaru was struggling to stand out in a crowded automobile market. In their greatest time of need, they turned to an unlikely ally: lesbians | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Recession referees

By NPR/Fri, 24 Jun 2022 21:38

Whenever the economic data start to look rough, we're forced to confront a familiar question: Are we in a recession, or about to be? But there are actually only eight opinions in the country that officially matter. Today on the show, we meet the comm

Listen/Read More

The tale of the Onion King (Update)

By NPR/Wed, 22 Jun 2022 19:50

How one man's quest to dominate the onion market changed commodities trading, and potentially how much you pay at the grocery store, forever. | Subscribe to Planet Money+ in Apple Podcasts or

Listen/Read More

The debate over what's causing inflation

By NPR/Fri, 17 Jun 2022 18:57

The last few months have made us acutely aware of inflation. We all agree that it's making our lives harder, but economists disagree about what's causing it. | Fill out our listener survey: npr.org/podcastsurvey

Listen/Read More

Let them eat lunch

By NPR/Wed, 15 Jun 2022 20:23

For many Americans, desk lunches are the norm. You might even be having one right now. But what if it didn't have to be this way? | Fill out our listener survey here

Listen/Read More

The Gecko Effect

By NPR/Fri, 10 Jun 2022 20:10

Years ago advertising was dominated by cars and beer. Today on the show, how a simple slogan and a talking gecko helped the insurance industry become one of the most dominant forces in advertising. Now, we're all living with the consequences. | Fill

Listen/Read More

On the case: Recession, formula, and greenbacks

By NPR/Wed, 08 Jun 2022 20:25

It was just another day at the office. Then the phone started ringing and the caseload kept growing...on today's show, your favorite Planet Money gumshoes investigate your listener questions. | Fill out our listener survey Listen/Read More

Homer Simpson vs. the economy

By NPR/Fri, 03 Jun 2022 18:28

When the beloved Simpsons family made its TV debut in 1989, it squarely represented middle-class America. Today ... not so much. That house, those two cars, those three kids all on one salary doesn't seem so believable anymore. Today we examine the c

Listen/Read More

The bank war (Classic)

By NPR/Wed, 01 Jun 2022 18:20

In the 1800s, populist president Andrew Jackson went head-to-head with the most powerful banker in America over who should control the country's money. This clash ended in disastrous results.

Listen/Read More

PM Live: The Most Collectible Comic Book Ever?

By NPR/Fri, 27 May 2022 20:49

What transforms a regular object into a collectible? At our live show earlier this month, we went on a journey through collectibles history. And we had a goal: to turn our Mic

Listen/Read More

We Buy a Superhero 7: Collectibles (Live Show!)

By NPR/Fri, 27 May 2022 20:49

What transforms a regular object into a collectible? At our live show earlier this month, we went on a journey through collectibles history. And we had a goal: to turn our Mic

Listen/Read More

The NRA's Secret Tapes

By NPR/Wed, 25 May 2022 22:53

Soon after the mass shooting at Columbine High School in 1999, leaders of the National Rifle Association held a conference call to craft their response. Secret tapes from this call obtained by NPR's Investigations team reveal how the NRA developed wh

Listen/Read More

Investing in mediocrity

By NPR/Fri, 20 May 2022 19:09

Is the key to success in financial markets a matter of luck or skill? One former bond manager shares his strategy: Win big by avoiding winning. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

How the burrito became a sandwich (Classic)

By NPR/Wed, 18 May 2022 18:03

A sandwich is generally defined as something delicious slapped between two slices of bread. New York tax code would beg to differ. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Buy now, pay dearly?

By NPR/Fri, 13 May 2022 20:45

A wave of companies that allow customers to pay for items from their favorite stores in four interest-free installments has taken over the country. But is "buy now, pay later" lending too good to be true? | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

A 12-year-old girl takes on the video game industry (UPDATE)

By NPR/Wed, 11 May 2022 17:19

When Maddie Messer was 12 years old, she noticed an unfair dynamic in the video games she loved: playing as a man was often free, but she had to pay to play as a woman. So ... she decided to take on the video game industry. | Subscribe to our weekly

Listen/Read More

The day Russia adopted the free market

By NPR/Fri, 06 May 2022 20:24

In the early 90s, American economist Jeffrey Sachs was a part of a team that tried to transform Russia's economy. It did not go as planned. He tells us what he thinks went so wrong. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Escheat show (Classic)

By NPR/Wed, 04 May 2022 19:20

If you're looking for money you've forgotten about, there's a chance the government might have it. The good news is that you can get it back. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Planet Money book club

By NPR/Fri, 29 Apr 2022 17:25

Behind every Planet Money episode is a ton of reading. Today, we share some of our favorite books from along the way. Here are our picks:From Mary, Listen/Read More

Risky business

By NPR/Wed, 27 Apr 2022 18:49

Two stories on how businesses are using insurance to navigate new kinds of risks. First, how music venues are handling pandemic-related risks. And how Russia's invasion of Ukraine is affecting cyber insurance. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Finally, our comic book

By NPR/Fri, 22 Apr 2022 19:34

After many, many delays, the Micro-Face comic book is here! And we answer the burning question: Why did it take so long to make a comic book? | Come see Planet Money Live in NYC on May 10th! One night only. Tickets on sale Listen/Read More

We Buy a Superhero 6: The Comic Book

By NPR/Fri, 22 Apr 2022 19:34

After many, many delays, the Micro-Face comic book is here! And we answer the burning question: Why did it take so long to make a comic book? | Come see Planet Money Live in NYC on May 10th! One night only. Tickets on sale Listen/Read More

TikTok to the top

By NPR/Wed, 20 Apr 2022 21:01

Thanks to TikTok, Tai Verdes went from struggling musician to Top 40 hitmaker. But first, he had to crack the algorithm of how to go viral. | Come see Planet Money Live in NYC on May 10th! One night only. Tickets on sale Listen/Read More

The student loan paaaaauuuuuse

By NPR/Fri, 15 Apr 2022 16:47

The pause on federal student loan payments was just extended for the sixth time in two years. So...what's that been like for the borrowers, and what's in store for them when the system eventually restarts? | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Peanuts and Cracker Jack (Classic)

By NPR/Wed, 13 Apr 2022 17:48

Ballpark vendors share their strategies and other secrets to selling the most hot dogs at baseball games. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

How manatees got into hot water

By NPR/Fri, 08 Apr 2022 19:41

While on the brink of extinction in the 1970s, manatees found sanctuary in the warm waters of Florida power plants. Now, they're hooked on fossil fuels. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Turkey's runaway inflation problem

By NPR/Wed, 06 Apr 2022 18:08

Turkey is facing really high inflation, over 60 percent. Its president is taking an unorthodox approach to dealing with it. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

When bricks were rubles

By NPR/Fri, 01 Apr 2022 19:48

For a brief, strange period after the U.S.S.R. collapsed, "real" money was less valuable than tradeable objects like bricks or towels. We look back at the Russian barter economy and we see the nature of money and value underneath all currency. | Sub

Listen/Read More

The Bond King

By NPR/Wed, 30 Mar 2022 18:07

Investing legend Bill Gross revolutionized the bond market, built an empire, and lost it all. Our very own Mary Childs talks about her new book, The Bond King. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Fashion Fair's makeover

By NPR/Fri, 25 Mar 2022 19:28

Fashion Fair was the first big national brand to make makeup for Black women, but it slowly faded into obscurity. Now that it's relaunched, can it compete in an industry it helped create? | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Two inflation Indicators: Corporate greed and mortgage rates

By NPR/Wed, 23 Mar 2022 20:21

Corporate profits are soaring. So are prices. Can corporations just not raise prices? Would that fight inflation? We examine this theory making the rounds. Then, we go inside the pipes of the economy to see how mortgage rates connect to that recent r

Listen/Read More

Tech giants and tiny dogs

By NPR/Fri, 18 Mar 2022 19:44

What a business that makes ramps for wiener dogs teaches us about the massive power of tech giants. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Escape from Russia

By NPR/Wed, 16 Mar 2022 19:13

An American business owner with employees in Russia extracts her colleagues from the country. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Grocery delivery wars

By NPR/Fri, 11 Mar 2022 17:38

Behind the scenes at a new kind of grocery store that promises delivery in minutes. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here

Listen/Read More

The dollar at the center of the world (Classic)

By NPR/Wed, 09 Mar 2022 19:32

After World War II devastated the global economy, there was a push for a new universal currency. This is the story of how the U.S. dollar won. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Of oligarchs, oil and rubles

By NPR/Fri, 04 Mar 2022 21:32

Three stories about how the sanctions imposed on Russia are playing out – for regular Russian people, for Russia's super-rich, and for Russia's energy exports. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

'Fortress' Russia put to the test

By NPR/Wed, 02 Mar 2022 18:37

The U.S. is putting Russia's defense plan against sanctions to the test. Meanwhile, Russia's role as a huge exporter of oil and natural gas could cause ripple effects throughout the global economy. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Putin's big bet: Sanction-proofing Russia

By NPR/Fri, 25 Feb 2022 15:14

The U.S. is imposing economic sanctions on Russia to punish it for invading Ukraine. But Russia has spent years trying to make its economy immune to sanctions. So, will these new sanctions be enough? | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

How bad is inflation?

By NPR/Wed, 23 Feb 2022 19:33

Two stories about the effects of inflation on the economy. We meet a gig worker who's seen an increase in wages, but because of inflation, how much of that increase in earnings is an illusion? Then, we break down how the Federal Reserve is planning t

Listen/Read More

Predictions: Inflation!

By NPR/Fri, 18 Feb 2022 18:50

It's time for another round of "Planet Money Predictions!" Economic forecasters square off to predict the future of inflation and explain what's going on in the economy.| Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

SPAM strikes back

By NPR/Wed, 16 Feb 2022 19:29

Hormel Foods makes SPAM, and for generations, the company also created jobs for families in Austin, Minnesota. Today, the story of a labor strike that threatened to tear one small town apart. (This episode was made in collaboration with Listen/Read More

Waste land (Bonus)

By NPR/Mon, 14 Feb 2022 18:03

Recycling most plastic doesn't work. It never has. In 2020, we ran an episode showing how big oil companies misled the public into thinking plastic would be recycled. That episode just won a Listen/Read More

Our Valentines 2022

By NPR/Fri, 11 Feb 2022 18:03

We profess our love for our curiosities, obsessions, and the things we wish we'd thought of first. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

A SWIFT getaway

By NPR/Wed, 09 Feb 2022 19:29

In 2016, thieves tried to steal nearly a billion dollars from the Bank of Bangladesh's reserves without ever entering the building. And six years later, justice hasn't been so SWIFT. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Uncle Sam wants YOU to fight inflation

By NPR/Fri, 04 Feb 2022 19:07

How war bonds, controlled prices, and a national network of nosy neighbors helped beat inflation during WWII. Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

The M&M anomaly (Classic)

By NPR/Wed, 02 Feb 2022 14:59

Despite costing the same price, a pack of peanut butter MM's weighs 0.06 ounces less than a pack of milk chocolate MM's. A trade secret explains why. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

The Spider-Man Problem

By NPR/Fri, 28 Jan 2022 20:06

Spider-Man isn't the first film franchise to be rebooted over and over again. But the infamous off-screen drama between Marvel Studios and Sony Pictures explains why it happens so frequently. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

Two indicators: supply chain solutions

By NPR/Wed, 26 Jan 2022 17:27

Two stories about people trying to overcome supply chain challenges. We follow a ship that is forced to get creative to bypass clogged ports, and we visit a warehouse that is running out of space. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

'Soul Train' and the business of Black joy

By NPR/Fri, 21 Jan 2022 17:35

When Soul Train first launched in 1970, Black audiences weren't understood as a viable target market. Don Cornelius changed that forever with his weekly TV dance show. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

Patent racism (classic)

By NPR/Wed, 19 Jan 2022 17:08

Economist Lisa Cook has been nominated to serve on the Federal Reserve board. In 2020, she talked to us about proving that racism stifles innovation. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

The rapid testing show

By NPR/Fri, 14 Jan 2022 21:38

The Planet Money team fans out across the nation with one goal: to get a Covid test in 24 hours. It is easier said than done. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

No such thing as a free return

By NPR/Wed, 12 Jan 2022 19:29

Lenient policies have shoppers making more returns than ever — around half a trillion dollars worth of products. Today, we find out the fate of some of those returned goods.

Listen/Read More

HBO 2.0

By NPR/Fri, 07 Jan 2022 19:29

What happens when the iconic symbol of your brand no longer makes sense? Today, HBO tries to evolve their sonic brand. This episode was adapted from the podcast Twenty Thousand Hertz. | Subscribe to ou

Listen/Read More

The rest of the story, 2021

By NPR/Wed, 05 Jan 2022 17:46

On protests, pasta and forgiven payments. Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

The holiday industrial complex (Classic)

By NPR/Fri, 31 Dec 2021 00:10

Where do holidays like National Potato Chip Day and Argyle Day come from? We trace the roots of one made-up holiday until we find out who is running the global holiday machine. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

The economic indicator of the year

By NPR/Wed, 29 Dec 2021 20:14

Will it be inflation? Striketober? The supply chain? Our hosts make their case, and the choice is up to you.

Listen/Read More

Bell wars (Classic)

By NPR/Fri, 24 Dec 2021 16:30

The two biggest handbell companies in the world have been locked in a feud for decades. Why? | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Planet Money's Supply Chain Holiday Extravaganza

By NPR/Thu, 23 Dec 2021 00:29

Planet Money's Supply Chain Holiday Extravaganza Did the supply chain wreck your holiday shopping? Planet Money comes to the rescue. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

No shortages of labor stories

By NPR/Fri, 17 Dec 2021 19:47

We asked for your dispatches from the labor market, and boy did we hear back. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

We buy a lot of Christmas trees (Classic)

By NPR/Wed, 15 Dec 2021 17:40

Nick and Robert head to the world's largest Christmas tree auction with $1,000 and a truck. And get schooled in the tree market. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Two music indicators

By NPR/Fri, 10 Dec 2021 20:06

Ticket scalping frustrates fans, but it fascinates economists. It's been a favorite topic of ours in the past. This time, Darian turns to friends and experts to navigate the world of concert tickets like an economist who is also a music fan. Then we

Listen/Read More

Is a Stradivarius just a violin? (Classic)

By NPR/Wed, 08 Dec 2021 18:17

Many music aficionados will tell you that violins and violas made by legendary craftsman Antonio Stradivari represent the pinnacle of the instruments. But what if it's all just an example of really good branding? | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter

Listen/Read More

Consider the lobstermen

By NPR/Fri, 03 Dec 2021 22:01

A tense conflict between Indigenous fishermen and commercial lobstermen flared up in Nova Scotia in the fall of 2020. Today, how it all got started and how the Canadian government added fuel to the fire. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

A locked door, a secret meeting and the birth of the Fed (Classic)

By NPR/Wed, 01 Dec 2021 19:35

The story of the back-room dealings that created America's central bank. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

Day of the Debt

By NPR/Fri, 26 Nov 2021 00:10

We make a loan to the U.S. government, and it does not go the way we thought it would. Plus: the story of that one time the U.S. defaulted. Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

You asked for real raises, free shipping, and a special delivery

By NPR/Wed, 24 Nov 2021 20:13

It's listener question time. We've got answers about "free" shipping, full employment, when a raise isn't a raise, Taylor Swift, crypto seizures and our very own Micro-Face Listen/Read More

A trunk full of truffles (Update)

By NPR/Fri, 19 Nov 2021 23:58

Truffles are one of the most expensive and sought after ingredients in the world. Today, we look back at our NYC adventure with a truffle smuggler and how the market has changed since we last talked to him. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Of boats and boxes

By NPR/Wed, 17 Nov 2021 16:19

We take a trip to ports on the east and west coasts to ask what's on everyone's mind: why are they so clogged? And how can we fix it? | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Auction fever (Classic)

By NPR/Fri, 12 Nov 2021 18:44

Today, we go on a Planet Money roadtrip to learn the secrets of the auction world. We find some amazing bargains, some shady strategies and a giant big digger. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Planes, trains and bad bridges

By NPR/Wed, 10 Nov 2021 20:49

The $1.2 trillion infrastructure bill has passed Congress, but what exactly is in it? Today, the important, surprising, delightful line items. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Moonshot in the arm

By NPR/Fri, 05 Nov 2021 19:39

COVID-19 prompted the quickest vaccine development in history. An inside look at how the government and pharmaceutical companies joined forces to make it happen.

Listen/Read More

The Wheat Whisperer

By NPR/Wed, 03 Nov 2021 19:40

Southeast Asia is one of the biggest growth markets for American wheat. Where did this taste for wheat come from and who is responsible?

Listen/Read More

Night of the living inflation

By NPR/Fri, 29 Oct 2021 18:42

We look at a hidden form of inflation affecting our economy — we're calling it "skimpflation." The Indicator tells a spooky tale about the inflation demon. | Subscribe

Listen/Read More

Nice work week, if you can get it

By NPR/Wed, 27 Oct 2021 20:32

The 40 hour work week has been the standard for 80 years. What will it take to lower that? | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter h

Listen/Read More

Two indicators: Congressional Game Theory and the Debt Ceiling

By NPR/Fri, 22 Oct 2021 19:50

We bring you two stories from The Indicator on the recent battles being fought in Congress. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Burnout (Classic)

By NPR/Wed, 20 Oct 2021 20:08

All types of companies are struggling with burnout. Many try to fix it. Most of them fail. One exception: A 26-year-old call center manager, with stress balls and costumes in her arsenal. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Bonus: Janet Jackson's 'Control'

By NPR/Mon, 18 Oct 2021 18:44

On the 35th anniversary of Janet Jackson's first No. 1 Billboard Hot 100 hit, our friends at It's Been A Minute look back at Control, her career-defining album that changed the trajectory of pop music in the late '80s and '90s.

Listen/Read More

Hire power

By NPR/Fri, 15 Oct 2021 17:49

Noncompete agreements have become an integral part of job contracts. A show about what they are and how we got here. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

How Do You Feel? (Classic)

By NPR/Wed, 13 Oct 2021 19:47

We tend to think of economists as cold, unfeeling, attempting to be as rational as possible. But once a month, economists pick up the phone to just... check in with us. How are we feeling? Good, bad, worse than a year ago? It's a very specific phone

Listen/Read More

LIBOR pains

By NPR/Fri, 08 Oct 2021 21:27

For decades, banks used one rate to help set all other rates: LIBOR. After it came out that it'd been rigged, regulators said: no more. Now it's a race — and a road trip — to find an alternative. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

We set up an offshore company in a tax haven (Classic)

By NPR/Wed, 06 Oct 2021 19:24

The Pandora Papers released this week reveal how many world leaders allegedly hold wealth through the use of shell companies. We listen back to when we set up our very own Planet Money shell companies.

Listen/Read More

The Rent Help Is Too Damn Slow

By NPR/Fri, 01 Oct 2021 20:37

Congress created a massive pile of money to help people pay rent during the pandemic. Why have so few people gotten help? We follow the money. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

When The U.S. Paid Off The Entire National Debt (Classic)

By NPR/Wed, 29 Sep 2021 19:01

There was one time the U.S. federal government stopped borrowing and paid off every penny of national debt. It did not end well. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

When Luddites Attack (Classic)

By NPR/Fri, 24 Sep 2021 19:12

A couple centuries ago, a group of English clothworkers set out to destroy the machines that had been taking their jobs. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Original Sign

By NPR/Wed, 22 Sep 2021 21:45

A request for dozens of stop signs flummoxes a town and angers a resident. A show about infrastructure, decision making and stop signs. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Two Indicators: Women And Work

By NPR/Fri, 17 Sep 2021 20:35

Women start a lot of businesses, but when it comes time for them to grow, many hit a wall, or the women founders end up losing control. Why? We bring you two indicators on women and work from our daily podcast The Indicator. Also, Amanda and Stacey g

Listen/Read More

Afghanistan's Money Problem

By NPR/Wed, 15 Sep 2021 19:57

Afghanistan's economy changed — almost overnight — after the Taliban retook control of the country | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Flood Money (Classic)

By NPR/Fri, 10 Sep 2021 18:23

Bill Pennington's house floods a lot: Three times over the course of three years. And every time his house floods, the government pays to help him repair the damage. Is something wrong here? | Subscribe to our weekly newsletterListen/Read More

This Is Your Brain On Drug Ads

By NPR/Wed, 08 Sep 2021 20:14

Apologies to listeners who received two episodes in their feed today. The U.S. is one of two countries in the world that allows pharmaceutical companies to advertise prescription drugs directly to consumers. Why? And what does that do to us Subscribe

Listen/Read More

Two Indicators: Water Pressure

By NPR/Fri, 03 Sep 2021 19:15

It's another extremely dry, hot summer for the American West. Our daily podcast, The Indicator from Planet Money, brings us two stories about the water shortage in the West with economic ideas that may help. | Subscribe to our weekly newslet

Listen/Read More

SUMMER SCHOOL 6: Crypto & Commencement

By NPR/Wed, 01 Sep 2021 20:00

In the last class of Planet Money Summer School Season 2, we cover one more important market — cryptocurrency. If you're thinking about investing in crypto, do you know exactly what it is that you're buying? Or how it should (if at all) fit alongside

Listen/Read More

The Lost Archives of Sadie Alexander

By NPR/Fri, 27 Aug 2021 17:28

The work of our first Black economist was lost to history. Professor Nina Banks set out on a quest to find it. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

SUMMER SCHOOL 5: Bubbles, Bikes, & Biases

By NPR/Wed, 25 Aug 2021 19:50

Investing during a bubble can leave you bust. But how to tell the difference between a bubble before it bursts and an investing rocket ship taking off? We'll run through a historical example and look inside our own thinking to find the mental biases

Listen/Read More

Two Indicators: Will Remote Work Kill The Office?

By NPR/Fri, 20 Aug 2021 19:10

It's Stacey vs Greg in a face off on the future of the office. Each takes a side, armed with studies, historical examples, theories on efficiency and happiness and from their closet studios, they bring their indicators for the future of the office. |

Listen/Read More

SUMMER SCHOOL 4: Bonds & Becky With The Good Yield

By NPR/Wed, 18 Aug 2021 19:44

A few years back, Cardiff asked for an unusual Christmas present: a junk bond... Parallel to the stock market, the bond market offers different levels of risk and reward. In this class, what is a bond, how do they differ from stocks, and how do they

Listen/Read More

Big Little Ideas

By NPR/Fri, 13 Aug 2021 20:40

There are a lot of fancy terms for the things we experience — but are they really useful? Yes! We explain four social-science terms that can help us understand our world. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

SUMMER SCHOOL 3: Smooth Spending & The 401K

By NPR/Wed, 11 Aug 2021 18:58

Even if you don't own stocks, there are a lot of reasons to care about investing. We meet some of the folks left out of the stock market who deploy sophisticated economic thinking, even creating their own alternate financial systems. Our professors h

Listen/Read More

Mobile Home Parked

By NPR/Fri, 06 Aug 2021 18:46

We find out what happens when big investors spend billions of dollars buying mobile home parks and make them less affordable for the people who live there. Then we learn how the government helps them do it, with super low-cost loans that were meant t

Listen/Read More

SUMMER SCHOOL 2: Index Funds & The Bet

By NPR/Wed, 04 Aug 2021 17:08

In 2006, Warren Buffett bet a million dollars that the most brainless, boring investment around would do better than the researched, handpicked investments of some of the smartest hedge fund managers in the world. The second class of Summer School lo

Listen/Read More

Three Reasons for the Housing Shortage

By NPR/Fri, 30 Jul 2021 18:26

America's housing shortage has been decades in the making. A lot of people blame Baby Boomers — but is it really their fault? We unpack three big reasons for the shortage. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

SUMMER SCHOOL 1: The Stock Market & Penelope The Cow

By NPR/Wed, 28 Jul 2021 19:11

The first class of Planet Money Summer School starts off with a field trip. With the help of a cow, two economists, and three cute animals, we learn what a stock is and how stocks are priced, and we begin to see the psychological forces that make pri

Listen/Read More

Banque Worms

By NPR/Fri, 23 Jul 2021 21:44

Last year, one of the biggest banks accidentally paid off a client's loan to its lenders — a $900 million mistake. Some of the recipients wouldn't give the money back. And then a surprising court ruling affirmed their no give-back. | Subscribe to our

Listen/Read More

Video Gaming The System

By NPR/Wed, 21 Jul 2021 19:54

Two groups of people who would never meet in real life collide in a world of wizards and dragons. They battle it out in a low-tech video game, and it shakes the lives of a lot of real people living in a collapsing economy. | Subscribe to our weekly n

Listen/Read More

The Great Inflation (Classic)

By NPR/Sat, 17 Jul 2021 02:31

For much of the 1970s inflation was bad. Prices rose at over 10 percent a year. Nothing could stop it — until one powerful person did something very unpopular. Today's show: How we beat inflation. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

100 Years Since Sadie Alexander

By NPR/Wed, 14 Jul 2021 18:48

In 1921, Sadie Alexander became the first Black person in America to receive a PhD in economics. Then, she was functionally shut out of economics jobs, got a law degree, and became an attorney instead. A century later, economics has made notably litt

Listen/Read More

Of Memestocks and Milk Bags

By NPR/Fri, 09 Jul 2021 23:18

We answer your questions about memestocks, milk in bags, the size of cereal boxes, and products exclusive to the rich, but not for long? | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Two Indicators: Clogged Ports And Corporate Vets

By NPR/Wed, 07 Jul 2021 19:51

We bring you two stories from The Indicator on two industries that are undergoing rapid change: vets and container shipping. | Subscribe to our weekly ne

Listen/Read More

The Rest Of The Story, Summer 2021

By NPR/Fri, 02 Jul 2021 17:31

We follow up on takeout cocktails, college athletes at the Listen/Read More

What's A Bubble? (Classic)

By NPR/Wed, 30 Jun 2021 20:42

Can you tell if the economy is in a bubble? How? And why do bubbles happen? Robert Shiller and Eugene Fama shared the economics Nobel back in 2013 despite fundamentally disagreeing over the meaning of a bubble. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Bobby Bonilla Day

By NPR/Fri, 25 Jun 2021 20:38

How the worst deal in baseball explains one of the most important concepts in economics. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter her

Listen/Read More

Corporate Fugitive: Carlos Ghosn

By NPR/Wed, 23 Jun 2021 17:09

Japan once served sushi in the shape of Carlos Ghosn's face. Then Japanese authorities arrested the celebrity CEO who remade Nissan. We bring you first hand accounts of his spectacular rise, sudden fall and dramatic escape. | This episode is a collab

Listen/Read More

Predictions!

By NPR/Fri, 18 Jun 2021 17:30

Two forecasters predict the future of the U.S. economy — and promise to come back on the show to see who was right, and who was wrong. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

How Uncle Jamie Broke Jeopardy (Update)

By NPR/Wed, 16 Jun 2021 17:01

James Holzhauer took a math degree, a gambling career, and a buzzer, and turned it into a fortune on a game show. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

Used Car Talk

By NPR/Fri, 11 Jun 2021 16:30

How supply and demand stalled out the used car industry. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

How Stuff Gets Cheaper (Classic)

By NPR/Wed, 09 Jun 2021 17:59

In the world of consumer electronics, it pays to be cheap. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

Amateur Hour at the Supreme Court

By NPR/Fri, 04 Jun 2021 18:50

College athletes are considered amateur players. And amateurs don't make any money. But can they get more education paid for at least? | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Black Wall Street

By NPR/Wed, 02 Jun 2021 16:25

100 years ago, Black Wall Street was destroyed. But how was it built? And what does it take to get restitution? | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

One Hack to Fool Them All

By NPR/Fri, 28 May 2021 19:00

How a single hack pried open the networks of giant corporations and the U.S. government itself. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Runaway Recommendation Engine

By NPR/Wed, 26 May 2021 19:08

Recommendation systems have changed how we choose what we want. But are they choosing what we want? | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Big Government Cheese (CLASSIC)

By NPR/Fri, 21 May 2021 17:10

That time the U.S. government accidentally created a cheese surplus so large it had to be stored in a ginormous cave. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Get The Vaccine, Lose The Skinny Jeans

By NPR/Wed, 19 May 2021 19:04

Two stories from our Indicator team about the sometimes-unlikely people who shape what we buy and what we do. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Blood Money

By NPR/Fri, 14 May 2021 16:32

The United States is one of the few countries that lets companies pay people for their blood plasma. Why? | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Hot Cheetos

By NPR/Wed, 12 May 2021 23:18

A janitor walks out of a chip factory with a bag of dustless Cheetos and changes the global snack game forever. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Emission Impossible

By NPR/Fri, 07 May 2021 18:09

Carbon offsets have become a popular tool to combat climate change. But how effective are they? | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

DIY Reparations

By NPR/Wed, 05 May 2021 17:10

Some Vermonters were tired of waiting around for reparations. So they decided to take matters into their own hands. | This episode was produced with our friends at Invisibilia. Check out their new season Listen/Read More

We Buy A Superhero 5: Hollywood

By NPR/Fri, 30 Apr 2021 21:06

In the last and greatest chapter to our superhero saga, Micro-Face tries to make the jump from comic books to movies. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

The $100 Million Deli

By NPR/Wed, 28 Apr 2021 18:04

Why is a single New Jersey deli worth so much? And what does it tell us about how the stock market works? | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

We Buy A Superhero 4: Sellout

By NPR/Fri, 23 Apr 2021 18:59

Two months ago, Planet Money got its own superhero. Today, we sell him out. | Find the full Planet Money Superhero series here.

Listen/Read More

The Writers Revolt (UPDATE)

By NPR/Wed, 21 Apr 2021 18:34

We have a winner in an epic Hollywood story. A couple years back, 7,000 TV writers across the U.S. fired their agents. All on the same day. It was part of a battle over how creative work gets valued and compensated in TV and film. Now, we have the dr

Listen/Read More

India, Farming, and the Free Market

By NPR/Fri, 16 Apr 2021 19:26

For decades, India has shielded its agricultural sector from the free market. Now, the government wants to let it in. Millions and millions of farmers are not happy about it. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Workin' 9 To 5

By NPR/Wed, 14 Apr 2021 14:16

The movie "9 to 5" used humor to highlight the struggles of women in the workplace 40 years ago. Where are we now? | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

About Your Extended Warranty

By NPR/Fri, 09 Apr 2021 18:37

Calls about "extended auto warranties" blow up our phones over and over. But what are these robocalls actually offering? | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

How Jacob Loud's Land Was Lost

By NPR/Wed, 07 Apr 2021 17:25

Today's show: the arcane laws that have cost Black landowners their property, and the lawyer who is trying to fix those laws. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Two Indicators: Boomtown & Bye Bye

By NPR/Fri, 02 Apr 2021 17:18

We look at housing prices in Montana, an oil market milestone, and give a fond farewell. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter her

Listen/Read More

The Curse Of The Black Lotus (Update)

By NPR/Wed, 31 Mar 2021 15:40

When the popular card game Magic: The Gathering entered a speculative bubble, its creators found a way to keep it from bursting. We check in to see if their strategy is still working. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Socialism 101

By NPR/Fri, 26 Mar 2021 14:53

Today on the show: The critics of capitalism. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

You Asked For Shots, Tuna, Metal, and Money

By NPR/Wed, 24 Mar 2021 17:56

Listeners send us questions every day. It's about time we answer a few of them. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

The New Shape Of Pasta

By NPR/Fri, 19 Mar 2021 18:18

What do you do when you can't find the perfect pasta shape? You invent a new shape. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here

Listen/Read More

The Even More Minimum Wage

By NPR/Wed, 17 Mar 2021 14:55

The tipped minimum wage hasn't changed for decades. Is now finally the time? | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

The $69 Million JPEG

By NPR/Fri, 12 Mar 2021 23:28

An artist called Beeple just sold a piece at Christie's for millions. But it wasn't a painting... it was a kind of crypto. We speak with him and the others behind the first NFT auction. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Nigeria, You Win! (Update)

By NPR/Wed, 10 Mar 2021 17:41

Nigerians heard a radio ad offering millions of dollars for people with business proposals. They thought it was a scam. It wasn't. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

The Marriage Pact

By NPR/Fri, 05 Mar 2021 19:12

They say true love is hard to find. Whoever says that isn't an economist. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

Happy Fed Independence Day (Update)

By NPR/Wed, 03 Mar 2021 17:36

The story of the day the Federal Reserve got its independence and the fight — an actual physical fight — to keep it. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

We Buy A Superhero 3: Resurrection

By NPR/Fri, 26 Feb 2021 20:07

We have found the perfect superhero. Now we just have to make him our own. | Find the full Planet Money Superhero series here.

Listen/Read More

Bond Voyage

By NPR/Wed, 24 Feb 2021 15:22

The government used to be afraid to borrow too much money. Today, it borrows hand over fist. And it's ... fine? | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

We Buy A Superhero 2: Loophole

By NPR/Fri, 19 Feb 2021 18:56

Marvel was not interested in selling us Doorman. But there is another way to jumpstart our superhero empire. | Find the full Planet Money Superhero series here.

Listen/Read More

Why Printers Are The Worst

By NPR/Wed, 17 Feb 2021 13:33

The real money is in the ink. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

We Buy A Superhero 1: Origins

By NPR/Fri, 12 Feb 2021 19:11

Marvel has 7,000 characters, many of them forgotten. We want to buy one from their vault and launch our own little Planet Money franchise. | Find the full Planet Money Superhero series here.

Listen/Read More

Can't Let It Go

By NPR/Wed, 10 Feb 2021 15:39

Irrational decisions. Things we can't let go. Friend of the show Sam Sanders comes by to talk obsessions. We turn to economics for advice, clarity and comfort. | Subscribe to Sam's podcast, Listen/Read More

Fine and Punishment

By NPR/Fri, 05 Feb 2021 15:02

When you get out of prison, you have to start paying off fees. Some are related to committing a crime. Others are not. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Robinhood's Very Bad Day

By NPR/Wed, 03 Feb 2021 18:16

How the stock trading app works. And why it almost broke last week. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

Can't Stop GameStop

By NPR/Fri, 29 Jan 2021 21:26

Video game stores. Hedge Funds. Reddit forums. How this mad lib resulted in the biggest short squeeze in years. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

The World's Biggest Battery (Classic)

By NPR/Wed, 27 Jan 2021 15:19

California has a ton of solar power. But as soon as night falls, it's gone. Today on the show: how to bottle the sun

Listen/Read More

How Desi Invented Television

By NPR/Fri, 22 Jan 2021 19:55

The television was invented by Philo Farnsworth in 1927. TV was invented by Desi Arnaz in 1951.

Listen/Read More

Modern Monetary Theory (Classic)

By NPR/Wed, 20 Jan 2021 13:21

We rethink everything we know about government spending, taxes, and the nature of money.

Listen/Read More

The Great Gatsby

By NPR/Fri, 15 Jan 2021 19:08

All of it. Read by the staff of Planet Money.

Listen/Read More

Nervous TikTok

By NPR/Wed, 13 Jan 2021 22:00

The U.S. was going to ban TikTok... and then it didn't. We break down the beef with TikTok, and see what life would have been like without it. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Planet Monet (Classic)

By NPR/Mon, 11 Jan 2021 17:19

Investors are pouring money into art, but a lot of it is disappearing into storage. We find out why. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

The Bees Go To California (Classic)

By NPR/Fri, 08 Jan 2021 18:23

Almonds taste great. And the logistics behind pollinating almond trees are un-bee-lievable. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter

Listen/Read More

Chaos At The Capitol

By NPR/Wed, 06 Jan 2021 21:22

With an insurrection at the Capitol, we interrupt Planet Money and turn the feed over to tonight's episode of the NPR Politics podcast. | Subscribe to Planet Money's weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Bitcoin Losers (Classic)

By NPR/Fri, 01 Jan 2021 17:57

The Bitcoin market is still crazy, but a lot of people can't even find their Bitcoins. We go looking for lost billions. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

The Rest Of The Story, 2020

By NPR/Wed, 30 Dec 2020 17:49

We check in on The Fed, a vaccine scientist, and the mixed martial arts. Oh, and a bunch of escheaters. So long, 2020! | Support our show here.

Listen/Read More

How To Stop An Asteroid (UPDATE)

By NPR/Fri, 25 Dec 2020 17:00

Some smart people say we should be doing more to protect the Earth from asteroids. The technical issues are relatively easy. The economics — figuring out who's going to pay — are much harder. | Support our show Listen/Read More

Fork The Government

By NPR/Wed, 23 Dec 2020 22:36

A global pandemic might not be the best time to try something new with technology. But Taiwan decided to do it anyway. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

The Mixtape Drama

By NPR/Fri, 18 Dec 2020 19:40

Mixtapes were the heart of hip-hop culture in the 90s. Until an arrest in 2007 brought it all down. | Today's episode is from our friends at Louder Than a Riot.

Listen/Read More

The Case Against Facebook

By NPR/Wed, 16 Dec 2020 20:21

The government just filed one of the largest antitrust cases in history against Facebook. Why now? And what will it mean? | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

We Buy A Lot Of Christmas Trees

By NPR/Fri, 11 Dec 2020 17:39

Nick and Robert head to the world's largest Christmas tree auction with $1,000 and a truck. And get schooled in the tree market. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

The Stolen Company (Classic)

By NPR/Wed, 09 Dec 2020 19:28

When an American company named ABRO learns their goods are being counterfeited in China, they start their own trade war. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

How The Rat Blew Up

By NPR/Fri, 04 Dec 2020 19:36

Unions have been putting giant inflatable rats in front of businesses for years. Now businesses are trying to deflate them, in court. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Before The Shot In The Arm

By NPR/Wed, 02 Dec 2020 21:45

Inventing a vaccine for COVID-19 was hard, but getting billions of doses to billions of people is going to be even harder. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Hot Dog Hail Mary (Classic)

By NPR/Fri, 27 Nov 2020 17:00

The Falcons are trying something radical: Making their food cheaper. It could break stadium economics.

Listen/Read More

Swamp Gravy (UPDATE)

By NPR/Wed, 25 Nov 2020 18:47

Colquitt, Georgia, was struggling. And then musical theater came along. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

All Your Genes Are Belong To Us

By NPR/Fri, 20 Nov 2020 20:37

Who owns your genes, anyway? For a while, Big Biotech patented 20% of the human genome. Then a lawyer took them to the Supreme Court. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Trade Show (UPDATE)

By NPR/Wed, 18 Nov 2020 18:56

It's been a rough four years for free trade. Today on the show, we present 244 years of trade in 22 minutes. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Biden Time

By NPR/Fri, 13 Nov 2020 17:24

Four things Joe Biden can do as president — even if the Democrats don't control Congress. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter he

Listen/Read More

Worst. Tariffs. Ever. (Classic)

By NPR/Wed, 11 Nov 2020 16:55

One of the few things a new president has a lot of control over is tariff policies. But it wasn't always that way. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Hacking The Perfect Auction

By NPR/Fri, 06 Nov 2020 17:57

A Nobel-Prize winner spent years designing an auction to sell off the airwaves, which are owned by the public. But Wall Street found a tiny flaw. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

What's Next for the Economy?

By NPR/Wed, 04 Nov 2020 16:10

A research group at Harvard came up with a faster way to check the economy's pulse. It may change how we fight recessions. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

What Economy Are You Voting For?

By NPR/Fri, 30 Oct 2020 17:25

Two candidates. Two very different ways of thinking about the economy. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

Who Gets To Vote In Florida?

By NPR/Wed, 28 Oct 2020 19:30

Angel Sanchez was 17 and in prison when he learned felons couldn't vote in Florida. When he got out, he tried to change that. It was working – until money got involved.| Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Frame Canada

By NPR/Fri, 23 Oct 2020 17:01

For years, Wendell Potter ran a campaign to terrify Americans... about health care in Canada. Now he explains how he did it, and why. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Hey Google, Are You Too Big?

By NPR/Wed, 21 Oct 2020 20:23

The government just filed an antitrust lawsuit against Google. In this episode, we talk about why, and why it matters. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Opening Schools And Other Hard Decisions

By NPR/Fri, 16 Oct 2020 19:47

Emily Oster wanted to understand the risks of opening schools. So she started a massive data collection campaign. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Caste Arrives In Silicon Valley

By NPR/Wed, 14 Oct 2020 16:22

For some Indian employees of big U.S. tech companies, caste discrimination is real. To combat it, first people have to talk about it. That's hard. | Today's episode is from our friends at Listen/Read More

Political Ad Nauseam

By NPR/Fri, 09 Oct 2020 18:27

It's presidential election season, and that means it's political ad season. But who do ads target, anyway? | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Rethinking Black Wealth

By NPR/Wed, 07 Oct 2020 17:36

Homes in Black neighborhoods are valued lower than homes in white neighborhoods. Why? This episode, Dr. Andre Perry flips the narrative of the racial wealth gap. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

Call Center Call Out

By NPR/Fri, 02 Oct 2020 19:17

We visit life on the other side of your customer service call and get a glimpse into the troubling future of work in America. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Trump's Tiny Taxes

By NPR/Wed, 30 Sep 2020 21:05

A totally refreshing 20 minutes or so of infotainment related to Trump, taxes and toy wooden arrows. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Sell Me Your Climate Bombs

By NPR/Fri, 25 Sep 2020 18:41

There are tanks all over the U.S. that are like little climate change time bombs, ticking away. Today on the show, getting to them before they go off. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

REDMAP (Update)

By NPR/Wed, 23 Sep 2020 17:53

The result of national elections is shaped in a big and underappreciated way by very local elections. This is the story of the man who shaped many, many local elections to tip the national scales. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Apple v Everybody

By NPR/Fri, 18 Sep 2020 18:01

When Epic Games CEO Tim Sweeney sued Apple over its App Store, it started a war about antitrust and the internet.

Listen/Read More

After The Plague

By NPR/Wed, 16 Sep 2020 17:21

The Black Death was one of the worst catastrophes to ever hit humanity. But it also helped upend feudal hierarchies, redistribute wealth, and make daily life better for a lot of medieval Europeans.

Listen/Read More

Waste Land

By NPR/Fri, 11 Sep 2020 19:33

Recycling plastic has never worked very well. So who convinced us this was a good idea? In this episode, we might have the answer. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

We Buy A Junk Bond

By NPR/Wed, 09 Sep 2020 16:07

Team Indicator buys Cardiff a surprise present. A terrible, extremely risky, but wildly interesting investment. Then it gets interesting. The company that issued the junk bond declared bankruptcy. But that wasn't the end of the story. | Subscribe to

Listen/Read More

The Murderer, The Boy King, And The Invention Of Modern Finance

By NPR/Fri, 04 Sep 2020 20:08

John Law killed a man in a duel, brought the first paper money to France, and became one of the richest people in the world. Then it all collapsed.

Listen/Read More

SUMMER SCHOOL: Graduation!

By NPR/Wed, 02 Sep 2020 18:27

Summer School graduates take the stage to show us how we can all see our everyday world through the beautiful lens of economics. | Listen/Read More

The Old Rules Were Dumb Anyway

By NPR/Fri, 28 Aug 2020 18:49

When the pandemic hit, the old rules went out the window. What rules will stay broken when things go back to normal?Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

SUMMER SCHOOL 8: Risk & Disaster

By NPR/Wed, 26 Aug 2020 17:39

Inside one insurance policy is a world of incentives and bad behaviors. Take the final exam and get your diploma hereListen/Read More

Crisis At The Post Office

By NPR/Fri, 21 Aug 2020 22:05

The United States Postal Service is in the middle of a political firestorm. What happened, and can it be fixed? Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

SUMMER SCHOOL 7: Advertising & Race

By NPR/Wed, 19 Aug 2020 14:03

A Black ad executive figures out how to reach diverse audiences.

Listen/Read More

Big Rigged

By NPR/Fri, 14 Aug 2020 15:31

Driving a truck used to mean freedom. Now it means a mountain of debt. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

SUMMER SCHOOL 6: Taxes & Donald Duck

By NPR/Wed, 12 Aug 2020 16:21

The surprisingly entertaining history of the income tax. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

Mask Communication

By NPR/Fri, 07 Aug 2020 16:58

Why won't some people wear masks? Is there anything we can do to convince them? We look to behavioral economics for help. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

SUMMER SCHOOL 5: Trade & Santa

By NPR/Wed, 05 Aug 2020 16:27

The economics of free trade and what happens when governments get involved. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

College Fails

By NPR/Fri, 31 Jul 2020 19:32

The pandemic is transforming college from a can't-miss into a can't-attend experience. Can colleges survive? | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

SUMMER SCHOOL 4: Scarcity & Pistachios

By NPR/Wed, 29 Jul 2020 18:14

Class 4 brings us an economic conundrum: how do you efficiently share a scarce resource? | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

Rest of the Story, Pandemic Edition

By NPR/Fri, 24 Jul 2020 16:48

Rest of the Story, Pandemic Edition We check in on the people we've met and stories we've covered since this whole thing started. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

SUMMER SCHOOL 3: Profit & Cocaine

By NPR/Wed, 22 Jul 2020 20:00

In our third class, we take all that we've learned about decisions and markets and bring it to a former drug kingpin. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

BONUS: The Kerner Commission

By NPR/Mon, 20 Jul 2020 16:44

In 1967, President Johnson created a commission to investigate racial unrest in America. But, the answer they came up with was not the answer he was hoping for. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Getting Out Of Prison Sooner

By NPR/Fri, 17 Jul 2020 20:15

Shortening prison sentences might be about morals, but it's definitely about money. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here

Listen/Read More

SUMMER SCHOOL 2: Markets & Pickles

By NPR/Wed, 15 Jul 2020 22:01

In our second class, we meet our old friends supply and demand and do graphs using only the power of the human voice. Then, we show you how markets can be created anywhere by telling the story of a food bank that had too many pickles and not enough p

Listen/Read More

Hollywood's Black List

By NPR/Fri, 10 Jul 2020 17:48

In 2005, an anonymous list of the best unmade scripts in Hollywood shook up the movie biz. This episode: how a math-loving, movie nerd solved Hollywood's script problem. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

SUMMER SCHOOL 1: Choices & Dating

By NPR/Wed, 08 Jul 2020 17:37

First lesson: Economics is not about money. It's a lens of great power and beauty. In this episode, we meet our teachers and learn the first four fundamental concepts of economic thinking, and watch them applied to things like dating and hailing a ca

Listen/Read More

Planet Money Summer School

By NPR/Mon, 06 Jul 2020 13:44

Introducing an economics education for your ears! We're calling it Planet Money Summer School. It's all the economics you meant to learn, but didn't get around to. Each

Listen/Read More

Reparations For Police Brutality (UPDATE)

By NPR/Fri, 03 Jul 2020 18:30

For years, some Chicago police officers tortured suspects. Survivors fought for reparations — and got them. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Inflation, Deflation

By NPR/Wed, 01 Jul 2020 19:16

After decades of relative stability, prices in the US may be about to go through the roof — or the floor. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Seed Spy

By NPR/Fri, 26 Jun 2020 20:02

Espionage. Deceit. Theft. In this episode we follow the case of a global effort to steal top secret high technology: seeds. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Owner Of A Broken Hertz

By NPR/Wed, 24 Jun 2020 15:05

Rental car giant Hertz declared bankruptcy last month, which should have made their stock worthless. So how come people keep buying it? | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Money And Justice

By NPR/Fri, 19 Jun 2020 19:40

Money and social change. We talk policing, nonprofits, reparations, and the awkwardness of brands getting woke. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

The Problem Of The Root (2018)

By NPR/Wed, 17 Jun 2020 13:28

Wild ginseng sells for thousands. We go to a farm hidden in the Appalachian mountains to find out why. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Patent Racism

By NPR/Fri, 12 Jun 2020 18:38

Violence, including racist attacks, stifles innovation and the economy. Dr. Lisa Cook proved how. It took 10 years to be heard. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

The Very First Vaccine

By NPR/Wed, 10 Jun 2020 17:30

We've only made vaccines for so many diseases. Let's look at the history. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

Police Unions And Police Violence

By NPR/Fri, 05 Jun 2020 18:45

We look at the data connecting police unions and police violence. Today's episode comes from our daily podcast, The Indicator. Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Where'd The Money Go, And Other Questions

By NPR/Wed, 03 Jun 2020 20:43

When the economy tanks, does money just vanish? Why are home prices still so high? You asked these and other questions. We try to answer. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

Small America Vs. Big Internet

By NPR/Fri, 29 May 2020 21:34

Small towns need fast internet. One town tried to solve the problem itself, but ran into a legal firewall. What gives? | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Three Big Ideas

By NPR/Wed, 27 May 2020 17:28

On today's show, ideas to fight the virus, get people money, and revive a multibillion-dollar corner of the economy. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

J. Screwed

By NPR/Fri, 22 May 2020 21:10

This month, J.Crew went bankrupt. But not before inventing a whole new way of playing hardball with lenders. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

How To Get Trillions To Millions

By NPR/Wed, 20 May 2020 16:50

Unemployment offices and small banks are getting money from the government to the people who need it. But it's like trying to smoosh a fifty foot pile of money through a ten foot hole. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Episode 1,000

By NPR/Fri, 15 May 2020 20:37

It's here! We did it! 1,000 episodes! And, to thank all our listeners for riding shotgun the whole way — we're gonna let you in on our secrets... | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

The Restaurant From The Future

By NPR/Wed, 13 May 2020 18:37

With over 5.5 million workers unemployed or furloughed, no other industry has been hit harder than restaurants. Yet one guy is thinking about expanding. Huh? | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Journey To The Center Of The Fed

By NPR/Fri, 08 May 2020 16:48

We get on a boat and go to the Federal Reserve to talk about why it may be the most important institution in the world right now. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Georgia's Open Question

By NPR/Wed, 06 May 2020 23:48

Can you safely reopen a business right now — and should you? | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

About That Hazard Pay

By NPR/Fri, 01 May 2020 17:54

We spend a morning at a grocery store and we ask: How much is essential work worth? | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here

Listen/Read More

Buybacks And Bailouts

By NPR/Wed, 29 Apr 2020 22:43

Over the past decade, American companies spent billions buying back their own shares. Now they need a taxpayer rescue. Do they deserve it? | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Making It Work

By NPR/Fri, 24 Apr 2020 16:36

Since lockdown began, some companies are doing unexpectedly well. This episode: Farm animals, a crafty comeback, Clint Eastwood, and a story with a twist. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Negative Oil

By NPR/Wed, 22 Apr 2020 20:39

On Monday, the price of a barrel of oil in the United States fell to negative $37. That's never happened before. What's going on with the price of oil? | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

The Mask Mover

By NPR/Fri, 17 Apr 2020 19:55

States are scrambling to find any way to get more masks, gloves, anything. Including mass emailing people who have nothing to do with it. Enter, a man with a van. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Lives Vs. The Economy

By NPR/Wed, 15 Apr 2020 16:21

Is it worth it to shut down the economy to save lives? How do you know when to reopen it? Should we let people die to save the economy? Economists say each human life is worth about $10 million dollars. How did they get that number? | Subscribe to ou

Listen/Read More

The Big Small Business Rescue

By NPR/Fri, 10 Apr 2020 20:02

There's a brand new government program with $349 billion in aid for small businesses. The problem? It was thrown together in a week. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

What If No One Pays Rent?

By NPR/Wed, 08 Apr 2020 21:01

We follow the distress from a laid-off worker, to her landlord, to the multi-trillion-dollar mortgage market. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

The Economics Of Hospital Beds

By NPR/Fri, 03 Apr 2020 22:26

Bellevue, the oldest public hospital in the nation, has seen everything and survived everything. But even they might not have enough beds. Here's why. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

The Race To Make Ventilators

By NPR/Tue, 31 Mar 2020 19:17

Ventilators are the supply and demand problem of the COVID pandemic. We go inside the scramble to build more, fast. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

America Unemployed

By NPR/Sat, 28 Mar 2020 06:00

A record number of Americans filed for unemployment this week. The system isn't designed for this. What's next? | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Where Do We Get $2,000,000,000,000?

By NPR/Thu, 26 Mar 2020 09:49

The COVID-19 rescue bill is the largest ever. Where will that money come from? | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

Food And Farmworkers

By NPR/Wed, 25 Mar 2020 19:14

To find out what's happening with our food, we talk to an economist, a farmer, and, of course, farmworkers. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

You Asked About The Virus Economy

By NPR/Mon, 23 Mar 2020 20:55

Some answers: The deal with toilet paper; stock market circuit breakers; coronabucks; corporate paper & how to help. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

How To Save The Economy Now

By NPR/Fri, 20 Mar 2020 06:00

Neel Kashkari is the President of the Minneapolis Fed. And he's run a bailout of an economy already. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

How To Test A Country

By NPR/Wed, 18 Mar 2020 21:16

Making a test for a pandemic — which rules should you keep, and which to bend? | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

The Fed Fights The Virus

By NPR/Mon, 16 Mar 2020 17:50

The central bank is trying to prevent a health crisis from becoming a financial crisis. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here

Listen/Read More

Medicine For The Economy

By NPR/Fri, 13 Mar 2020 21:50

COVID-19 is hammering our economy. We ask three super smart economists what we should do about it. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Coronavirus, Oil, and Kansas

By NPR/Wed, 11 Mar 2020 19:26

Oil prices are way down. We follow the story from an outbreak in China, to a meeting in Vienna, to a small-time oilman in Kansas. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Where's The Vaccine?

By NPR/Fri, 06 Mar 2020 21:32

Coronaviruses didn't come out of nowhere. They've actually been around for years. But economics makes it hard to find a vaccine. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Terms Of Service

By NPR/Wed, 04 Mar 2020 19:11

An online review turns into a fine-print nightmare — until the victims fight back. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

Reparations In New Zealand

By NPR/Fri, 28 Feb 2020 17:01

A wool magnate gets pulled into a fight with the government over reparations. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

Vodka Proof

By NPR/Wed, 26 Feb 2020 14:22

Vodka is the best-selling spirit in the United States, and there are zillions of brands. But is there any difference between them? | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Michael Milken

By NPR/Fri, 21 Feb 2020 17:42

Michael Milken once made $550 million in one year. Then, he went to prison. This week, the President pardoned him. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Indicate This

By NPR/Wed, 19 Feb 2020 17:50

From our daily podcast The Indicator: How Amazon Prime packages reach you so damn fast? And why Lancaster, PA became the refugee capital of America?

Listen/Read More

The CryptoQueen

By NPR/Fri, 14 Feb 2020 23:27

A mysterious woman promises a financial revolution. That promise leads to greed, corruption and... a beauty pageant. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Our Valentines 2020

By NPR/Wed, 12 Feb 2020 17:42

We're sending valentines to books, ideas, and other stuff we love. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

Raw Milk Deal

By NPR/Fri, 07 Feb 2020 13:21

A farmer in California built an empire dealing raw milk. And then the Feds showed up. Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here

Listen/Read More

Small Change

By NPR/Wed, 05 Feb 2020 17:35

How fast is the world really changing? The answer affects everything from how we live, to whether robots really will take all our jobs. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

The Island No One Owns

By NPR/Fri, 31 Jan 2020 19:49

In Barbuda, land isn't a thing you buy. It's something you just... have. Put up a fence and it's yours. But all that might change. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

The Trouble With Table 101

By NPR/Wed, 29 Jan 2020 20:58

We re-engineer a restaurant with a consultant so good, she can move a table a few inches, and make thousands of dollars. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Escheat Show

By NPR/Fri, 24 Jan 2020 17:48

You may be owed money. The government may decide to just use it. So we go looking for it inside a little-known "lost and found" of forgotten fortunes. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

The Rise Of Putin

By NPR/Wed, 22 Jan 2020 19:04

Our friends at Throughline dive into the life of Vladimir Putin and try to understand how he became Russia's new "tsar." | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Das Green Old Deal

By NPR/Fri, 17 Jan 2020 16:18

We team up with Vox's The Impact, to tell the story of how one man changed the way Germany – and arguably the world – uses energy. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

BILLBOARDS

By NPR/Wed, 15 Jan 2020 21:12

We are dedicating an entire show to billboards: good and old-fashioned, or fancy and high-tech. And we put up our own. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

13,000 Economists. 1 Question.

By NPR/Fri, 10 Jan 2020 12:39

We went to the American Economic Association's annual conference and asked: What's the most useful idea in economics? | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

The Cost Of Free Doughnuts

By NPR/Wed, 08 Jan 2020 13:42

Free is cool, but it can backfire. On today's show, what happens when you take something that's free and give it a price. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Advanced Fairness At The Marathon

By NPR/Fri, 03 Jan 2020 21:55

Four lessons for creating fairness from a big race in New York. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

How Four Drinking Buddies Saved Brazil

By NPR/Wed, 01 Jan 2020 16:00

Inflation in Brazil was out of control for a decade. Four former drinking buddies from grad school fixed it. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

The Rest Of The Story, 2019

By NPR/Fri, 27 Dec 2019 16:00

A lot can happen after we put an episode out into the world. In The Rest Of The Story, we check-in on stories we've reported. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

The Writers Revolt

By NPR/Wed, 25 Dec 2019 12:00

In April, 7,000 TV writers across the U.S. fired their agents. All on the same day. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

Things We Learned in 2019

By NPR/Fri, 20 Dec 2019 20:47

Tom Whitwell made an amazing list of 52 things he learned this year. We dig into our favorite items. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

When Reagan Broke the Unions

By NPR/Wed, 18 Dec 2019 20:17

When air traffic controllers went on strike in 1981, Reagan gave them 48 hours to return. Labor would never be the same. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

You're Giving Your Boss A Loan

By NPR/Fri, 13 Dec 2019 20:24

Getting paid twice a month is like loaning money to your boss. What if you got paid every day? | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

The Bell Wars

By NPR/Wed, 11 Dec 2019 16:17

The two biggest handbell companies in the world have been locked in a feud for decades. Why? | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

The Carriage Tax

By NPR/Fri, 06 Dec 2019 20:52

People have been arguing over the constitutionality of wealth taxes since 1794, when Washington put a tax on carriages.| Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Slot Flaw Scofflaws

By NPR/Wed, 04 Dec 2019 14:54

Where there are casinos, there are people trying to cheat. And now, they're using iPhones. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter h

Listen/Read More

Pirate Videos

By NPR/Fri, 29 Nov 2019 12:40

Blackbeard, a filmmaker, and a fight between two powerful forces in American law. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

We Cooked A Peacock

By NPR/Wed, 27 Nov 2019 14:00

In the 1600s, a good spice rub was the ultimate display of wealth. People would risk their lives for a sack of cloves. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

What Is Foreign Interference, Anyway?

By NPR/Fri, 22 Nov 2019 18:33

We've heard a lot about illegal foreign meddling in the United States elections. But what about legal foreign participation? | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Three Sides Of A Car Loan

By NPR/Wed, 20 Nov 2019 18:50

7 million Americans are at least 3 months behind on car payments. It's a record but is it a crisis? | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Sperm Banks

By NPR/Fri, 15 Nov 2019 21:33

Denmark is a big exporter of human sperm. And mad cow disease may have helped. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

Snakebite

By NPR/Wed, 13 Nov 2019 18:48

Snakebites are common but antivenom is expensive to develop. So a doctor goes to extreme lengths to find a solution. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Overrated Or Underrated?

By NPR/Fri, 08 Nov 2019 17:25

Today on the show, economist Tyler Cowen rates the NBA, Karl Marx, Adam Smith, the humanities, your neighbors, and more. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Free Love, Free Market

By NPR/Wed, 06 Nov 2019 16:25

A free-love commune of perfectionists in upstate New York embraced the free market, and became a blockbuster brand. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

The Pigou Club

By NPR/Fri, 01 Nov 2019 20:55

A hundred years ago, economist Arthur Cecil Pigou explained how to tax things like pollution. Countries are starting to do it. Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

A Series Of Unfortunate Recessions

By NPR/Wed, 30 Oct 2019 21:12

A Halloween journey into the economists' worst nightmare, an endless time loop of recession after recession after... | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Some-of-the-Money Ball

By NPR/Fri, 25 Oct 2019 16:54

Income pools could change the way baseball players, and maybe the rest of us, think about how we get paid. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Fries Of The Future

By NPR/Wed, 23 Oct 2019 17:16

Fast food delivery is threatening the french fry. So a band of potato scientists go to work. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

The Liberty City

By NPR/Fri, 18 Oct 2019 20:11

A man in Texas had a dream: To build a whole new kind of city, with no property tax, no debt, and a whole lot of freedom. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Blockchain Gang

By NPR/Wed, 16 Oct 2019 16:23

Charlie Shrem went from living in his parents' basement, to bitcoin millionaire, to federal prison in just a few years. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

We Should Have Mentioned That

By NPR/Fri, 11 Oct 2019 19:51

Sometimes we forget to mention something. And our listeners always let us know. Today on the show, we make good. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

BOTUS

By NPR/Wed, 09 Oct 2019 16:19

Two years ago, we built a machine that bought and sold stocks automatically based on President Trump's tweets. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Unicorn Cowboy

By NPR/Fri, 04 Oct 2019 18:42

The risk-addicted investor who made WeWork possible and changed the way startups work. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here<

Listen/Read More

Capitalism In The Courtroom

By NPR/Wed, 02 Oct 2019 17:36

Investors can fund lawsuits for profit, which gives more people access to the courts. But some worry it will warp the justice system. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Three Bets

By NPR/Fri, 27 Sep 2019 20:51

We jog to New Jersey to bet on tennis, we solve a mystery in Las Vegas, and we venture into the world of video game loot. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

When India's Cash Disappeared

By NPR/Wed, 25 Sep 2019 17:56

When India suddenly got rid of most of its cash, in an effort to end corruption and modernize its economy, chaos ensued. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Interest Rates... Why So Negative?

By NPR/Fri, 20 Sep 2019 17:29

All over the world, interest rates are very, very low. In some places, they're negative: you lend out money, and get less back. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Strike One

By NPR/Wed, 18 Sep 2019 18:12

Strikes these days are pretty boring. But they weren't always like this. In the past, strikers risked their lives. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

The Working Tapes Of Studs Terkel

By NPR/Fri, 13 Sep 2019 17:38

Hear what ordinary people told Studs Terkel about their jobs in the 70s — and what they have to say now. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

How To Make It In The Music Business

By NPR/Wed, 11 Sep 2019 15:39

The hidden economy of producers buying and selling sonic snippets, texting each other beats, and angling for royalties. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

The Marshall Plan

By NPR/Fri, 06 Sep 2019 20:57

Sometimes the way to help yourself is to help your enemy. After WWII, the U.S. launched what might be the most successful intervention in history, rebuilding Germany and also the rest of Western Europe. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.

Listen/Read More

Where Dollar Bills Come From

By NPR/Wed, 04 Sep 2019 19:15

Every dollar bill in the world comes from the same paper mill in Massachusetts. Today on the show, we get a front-row seat to the dollar-making process. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Moving To Opportunity?

By NPR/Fri, 30 Aug 2019 19:01

In the 90s, the government ran an experiment: What happens if we move people out of high-poverty neighborhoods and into low-poverty ones? Housing policy as hope? The results surprised them. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

The Modal American

By NPR/Wed, 28 Aug 2019 21:00

Kenny takes Jacob on a nerdy quest to find the "typical American." Naturally, it ends up harder⁠—and nerdier⁠—than we planned, and the answer is more subtle than we expected. | Subscribe to our newsletter Listen/Read More

You Asked For A Food Show

By NPR/Fri, 23 Aug 2019 17:39

The top producer of Top Chef helps us spice up this food edition of listener questions. How do you master the salad bar? Why do Americans refrigerate eggs? The story of Choco Pies and more. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Listen/Read More

Two Yield Curve Indicators

By NPR/Wed, 21 Aug 2019 19:43

An inverted yield curve has predicted recessions for the past six decades. The curve is inverted right now. What does that tell us? | Subscribe to our newsletter Listen/Read More

Find The Helium

By NPR/Fri, 16 Aug 2019 19:08

Helium is so special, and so rare, that the U.S. government once tried to buy it all up. And hide it. But the government's helium stockpile is running low. And we need it for MRI machines and NASA rockets.

Listen/Read More

How Solar Got Cheap

By NPR/Wed, 14 Aug 2019 19:29

For a long time, only rich people could afford to put solar panels on the roof. Not anymore. Here's what changed.

Listen/Read More

Deep Learning With The Elephants

By NPR/Fri, 09 Aug 2019 17:24

Elephants are in danger. Counting them is crucial to saving them. But they're hard to see in the rainforest. So scientists are enlisting the help of AI technology.

Listen/Read More

The IT Guy Vs. The Con Artist

By NPR/Wed, 07 Aug 2019 19:16

A notorious con artist offered Felipe an IT job. He took the job —and tried to con the con man. | Plus, listen to a full double feature all about cons here.

Listen/Read More

Twins

By NPR/Fri, 02 Aug 2019 20:59

Scientists have studied twins for years, hoping to figure out how big a role genes play in human behavior. Our very own pair of twin reporters are on the case.

Listen/Read More

That Time We Shorted America, Part Two

By NPR/Wed, 31 Jul 2019 17:44

Everyone said betting against the entire stock market was a terrible idea. We did it anyway. Today, we find out the results, and revisit the first short ever done in the 17th century.

Listen/Read More

That Time We Shorted America, Part One

By NPR/Fri, 26 Jul 2019 16:32

Today on the show, we ignore the advice of some very smart people and bet against something people love.

Listen/Read More

Could A Wealth Tax Work?

By NPR/Wed, 24 Jul 2019 17:45

Elizabeth Warren wants to tax the wealth of the mega-rich to help fix inequality. Europe tried this, and failed. Can it work in the U.S.?

Listen/Read More

Hong Kong

By NPR/Fri, 19 Jul 2019 18:46

In 1960, a 12-year-old boy left mainland China, hidden in the bottom of a fishing boat. He later became one of Hong Kong's richest people. His story is the story of Hong Kong.

Listen/Read More

The Indicator In The House

By NPR/Wed, 17 Jul 2019 22:23

Two highlights from our daily podcast, The Indicator, about houses. A plan to lower rents pits state against city, and a private firefighter breaks down his business fo

Listen/Read More

So, Should We Recycle?

By NPR/Fri, 12 Jul 2019 23:50

Cities might be picking up your recyclables, but there is a very good chance they aren't being recycled. And that might be a good thing...if you really care about the planet. Part two of a two-part series. ⎸Subscribe to our newsletter Listen/Read More

A Mob Boss, A Garbage Boat and Why We Recycle

By NPR/Wed, 10 Jul 2019 19:28

In 1987, an Alabama man had an idea. So he made a deal with the mob. And ended up with 3,186 tons of trash no landfill would take. This is the accidental birth of recycling in the U.S. ⎸Subscribe to our newsletter Listen/Read More

Stuck In China's Panopticon

By NPR/Fri, 05 Jul 2019 16:09

China is building a high-tech surveillance state to capture minorities' every move and word. We go inside it and find that some Americans are involved. Subscribe to our weekly newsletter npr.org/planetmoneynewsletter

Listen/Read More

Eagles vs. Chickens

By NPR/Wed, 03 Jul 2019 14:43

A farmer in Georgia became more in tune with nature. Then eagles started killing his chickens. Subscribe to our weekly newsletter: npr.org/planetmoneynewsletter

Listen/Read More

Good Teachers, Bad Deal

By NPR/Fri, 28 Jun 2019 17:48

Teachers made a deal with the Department of Education. They kept their end of the bargain. Why didn't the government?

Listen/Read More

The Cost of Getting Your Money Back

By NPR/Wed, 26 Jun 2019 21:04

Accidentally sending $1,500 to a stranger on Venmo reveals just how hard it is to get your money back in the new economy.

Listen/Read More

Tales From The Parking Lot

By NPR/Fri, 21 Jun 2019 15:32

Three stories: A tire-booting vigilante, a surge price conspiracy, and the civil rights fight over parking tickets.

Listen/Read More

What Should We Be Worried About?

By NPR/Wed, 19 Jun 2019 17:42

The economic recovery turns 10 this month. Don't get too comfortable. There's plenty to be worried about.

Listen/Read More