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    decoupling

    Explore "decoupling" with insightful episodes like "Are real estate agent fees a racket?", "The Four Big Structural Forces Holding Back China's Economy", "Richard Koo on China's Risk of 'Japanification'", "Yellen in China: Decoding the Complexities of Decoupling | Saturday Extra" and "How saving water costs utilities" from podcasts like ""The Indicator from Planet Money", "Odd Lots", "Odd Lots", "Morning Wire" and "The Indicator from Planet Money"" and more!

    Episodes (8)

    Are real estate agent fees a racket?

    Are real estate agent fees a racket?
    In the typical home sale, the home seller pays a commission, not just to their agent, but also to the buyer's agent. This fee-sharing arrangement is part of a decades-old practice involving what real estate agents call an "offer of compensation."

    Others call it a conflict of interest.

    That's the dispute at the center of a class action lawsuit that has the potential to upend the real estate business. Today on the show, we'll explain how real estate agents and the National Association of Realtors allegedly conspired to inflate home prices by pushing agents to share fees. And why the industry says the plaintiffs should be careful what they ask for.

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    The Four Big Structural Forces Holding Back China's Economy

    The Four Big Structural Forces Holding Back China's Economy

    The Chinese economy is in a slump. Industrial production is down. Retail sales are down. The property industry continues to struggle. The People's Bank of China just did a surprise rate cut. So what's driving the decline and what can the government do about it? On this episode of the podcast we speak with Zongyuan Zoe Liu, the Maurice R. Greenberg Fellow for China Studies at the Council on Foreign Relations and the author of the new book Sovereign Funds: How the Communist Party of China Finances Its Global Ambitions. She explains how the "four Ds" — demand, debt, demographics and decoupling — are acting as a persistent drag on the Chinese economy right now. We discuss possible policy responses and how China's war chest of financial assets plays into the government's strategy.

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    Richard Koo on China's Risk of 'Japanification'

    Richard Koo on China's Risk of 'Japanification'

    Richard Koo literally wrote the book on balance sheet recessions, or the idea that large levels of debt can weigh on future growth for years and even decades to come. Now, the Nomura Research Institute chief economist sees a similar risk emerging in China. The country has been struggling with vast levels of debt and slowing economic growth in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic. In this episode, Koo discusses the signs he sees that a balance sheet recession is already underway as China's companies shy away from borrowing more money for future investment. He also suggests some ideas for just what China's authorities should do about it.

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    Yellen in China: Decoding the Complexities of Decoupling | Saturday Extra

    Yellen in China: Decoding the Complexities of Decoupling | Saturday Extra

    Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen is in China for four days of meetings on issues including trade, human rights, and threats toward Taiwan. We discuss the secretary’s trip, the global power struggle, and how the U.S. would respond to Chinese military aggression. Get the facts first on Morning Wire.

     

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    How saving water costs utilities

    How saving water costs utilities
    Across the U.S. each month, utilities send meter readers out to record how much water their customers are using. Smart readers can do this virtually, and detect leaks, but many utilities have been slow to adopt the technology. On today's show, we dig into utilities' disincentives to save water.

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    Why the Desire to Move Away From the Dollar Is Getting Real

    Why the Desire to Move Away From the Dollar Is Getting Real

    There's been a lot of discussion about the possibility of "de-dollarization," or the idea that the world could move away from using the dollar as the de facto global reserve currency. Some of this desire makes sense. Not only has the Federal Reserve been hiking rates at the fastest pace in decades, which puts economic pressure on other countries through links to the dollar and US trade, but sanctions imposed on Russia have also made some nations more wary of relying on US financial assets and infrastructure. And in BRICS countries (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa), there seems to be growing appetite to usurp the dollar’s hegemony. Of course, we've seen this kind of talk before, yet there has been little change to the dollar's special role. So is it different this time? On this episode, we speak with Paul McNamara, an investment director at GAM and a veteran of emerging markets, about what's driving this renewed clamor for de-dollarization.

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    The Economy in 2023 -- with Mohamed El-Erian

    The Economy in 2023 -- with Mohamed El-Erian
    Is there any precedent for combating inflation that doesn’t end in recession or depression? This is one of many questions we have for Dr. Mohamed El-Erian as we look ahead to 2023. What should we expect this year in the markets and the economy? Mohamed El-Erian is President of Queens' College at Cambridge University. He serves as part-time Chief Economic Advisor at Allianz and Chair of Gramercy Fund Management. He’s a Professor at The Wharton School, he is a Financial Times contributing editor, Bloomberg Opinion columnist, and the author of two New York Times best sellers. He serves on the board of the National Bureau of Economic Research, and of Barclays and Under Armour. From 2007-2014, Mohammed was CEO/co-CIO of PIMCO and was chair of President Obama's Global Development Council. He also served two years as president and CEO of Harvard Management Company, the entity that manages Harvard’s endowment. He has been chair of the Microsoft Investment Advisory Board since 2007. Essay discussed in this episode: "Not Just Another Recession: Why the Global Economy May Never Be the Same" https://www.foreignaffairs.com/world/not-just-another-recession-global-economy