


Thoughts? Guest suggestions? Email us at can find transcripts (posted midday) and more episodes of “The Ezra Klein Show” at /ezra-klein-podcast, and you can find Ezra on Twitter Book recommendations from all our guests are listed at. The Rise and Fall of American Growth by Robert J. Power and Progress by Daron Acemoglu and Simon Johnson The Narrow Corridor by Daron Acemoglu and James A. “Climate Progress and the 117th Congress: The Impacts of the Inflation Reduction Act and Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act” by REPEAT Project “Is the Global Economy Deglobalizing?” by Pinelopi Goldberg and Tristan Reed “The China Shock: Learning from Labor Market Adjustment to Large Changes in Trade” by David H. Here’s a Progress Check” by The Ezra Klein Show, with Robinson Meyer National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan’s speech At Vox, he also wrote and conducted interviews on topics ranging from policing and racial justice to democracy reform and the coronavirus pandemic. He works closely with Ezra on everything related to the show, from editing to interview prep to guest selection. This episode is guest-hosted by Rogé Karma, the senior editor for “The Ezra Klein Show.” Rogé has been with the show since July 2019, when it was based at Vox. economy has remained so much more stronger than most economists anticipated, and more. We discuss how China’s meteoric economic rise has shaken the foundations of the global economy, why globalization has remained far more resilient than so many predicted, why Wolf is skeptical that President Biden’s industrial policy agenda will succeed, the debate between “onshoring” and “friendshoring” that is dividing the Democratic Party, why a recession in the United States is looking far less likely than it did six months ago, the virtues and vices of Biden’s “foreign policy for the middle class,” why China’s recent economic troubles could signal a more foundational decline, why the U.S. Across his writings, Wolf has developed some of the clearest frameworks for thinking about how the global economy is changing and some of the sharpest critiques of how policymakers are responding to those changes. Martin Wolf is the chief economics commentator at The Financial Times, a former senior economist at the World Bank and the author, most recently, of “The Crisis of Democratic Capitalism. These are the stories that have dominated headlines - and for good reason.īut they’ve also overshadowed a set of deeper, more fundamental shifts - the rise of China as an economic superpower, the fracturing of trade relations, the realities of the climate crisis - that are transforming the global economic order and prompting ambitious policy responses from leaders across the world. The world economy has experienced many shocks over the past few years: A pandemic.
