How To Take Advantage of Bridges To Save The Economy w/ Glenn Hubbard (Dean Emeritus & Professor at Columbia Business School)
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Today Shamus Madan sits down with Glenn Hubbard, a Professor and former Dean of Columbia Business School. Dean Hubbard is a specialist in public economics, managerial information, and incentive problems in corporate finance and financial markets and institutions. He has written over 100 articles and books on corporate finance, investment decisions, banking, energy economics, and public policy, including two textbooks, and has authored The Wall and the Bridge and coauthored Balance, The Aid Trap, and Healthy, Wealthy, and Wise. Hubbard has applied his research interests in business (as a corporate director consultant on taxation and corporate finance), in government (as a former Chair of the U.S. Council of Economic Advisers and the OECD Economic Policy Committee, as well as Deputy Assistant Secretary of the U.S. Treasury Department and as a consultant to the Federal Reserve Board, Federal Reserve Bank of New York, and many government agencies) and in academia (in faculty collaboration or visiting appointments at Columbia, University of Chicago and Harvard). He is co-chair of the Committee on Capital Markets and Regulation and past chair of the Economic Club of New York and the Study Group on Corporate Boards
On today's show, Dean Hubbard will be breaking down today's current economic landscape and digging deeper into his recent book on how countries can take advantage of bridges to solve economic issues.
Twitter of Host (Shamus Madan): @mbitpodcast
Purchase The Wall and The Bridge Here.
(0:00) Introduction of guest Glenn Hubbard (2:53) Adam Smith's relevance in economics and the concept of 'walls and bridges' (7:07) Suggestions for modern bridges for economic growth and reflection on 9/11's economic impact (12:59) Impact of steel tariffs under George W Bush's administration and the financial crisis (15:46) CEOs' views, political dislocations and inflation discussion (18:44) Current state of GDP, unemployment, and future economic landscape (21:05) The future of work, implications of remote and hybrid work, and 'quiet quitting' trend (22:23) The fiscal policy dilemma, need for budget reforms, and wrap-up133 episoder