Janet Yellen on the Danger of a “Banana Republic” Economy. Plus, Susan B. Glasser on Why “We Are the Boiled Frog.”
Sobre este episódio
<p>In conservative economics, cuts to social services are often seen as necessary to shrink the expanding deficit. Donald Trump’s budget bill is something altogether different: it cuts Medicaid while slashing tax rates for the wealthiest Americans, adding $6 trillion to the national debt, according to the Cato Institute. Janet Yellen, a former Treasury Secretary and former chair of the Federal Reserve, sees severe impacts in store for average Americans: “What this is going to do is to raise interest rates even more. And so housing will become less affordable, car loans less affordable,” she tells David Remnick. “This bill also contains changes that raise the burdens of anyone who has already taken on student debt. And with higher interest rates, further education—college [and] professional school—becomes less affordable. It may also curtail investment spending, which has a negative impact on growth.” This, she believes, is why the President is desperate to lower interest rates; he has spoken of firing his appointed chair of the Federal Reserve, Jerome Powell, whom he has called a “numbskull” and a “stupid person,” and installing a more compliant chair. But lowering interest rates to further political goals, Yellen says, “are the words one expects from the head of a banana republic that is about to start printing money to fund fiscal deficits. … And then you get very high inflation or hyperinflation.”</p><p>Plus, “rarely have so many members of Congress voted for a measure they so actively disliked,” Susan B. Glasser noted in her latest <a href="https://www.newyorker.com/news/letter-from-trumps-washington/trumps-megabill-and-the-new-art-of-gop-capitulation">column</a> in <i>The New Yorker</i>, after the passage of a deficit-exploding Republican budget. Millions of people will lose access to Medicaid—a fact that the President lies about directly—and many trillions of dollars will be added to the deficit. Interest payments on the federal debt will skyrocket, and Trump is so desperate for lower interest rates that he seems poised to fire his own chair of the Federal Reserve and install a compliant partisan to head the heretofore independent central bank. “Anybody panicking about that in Washington?” David Remnick asks Glasser. “I think we are the boiled frog,” she replies. “We are almost panic-immune at this point, in the same way that Donald Trump has, I think, inoculated much of America against facts in our political debate. Even inside of Washington, there's so many individual crises at one time it’s very very hard in Trump 2.0 to focus on any one of them.”</p><br/> <p>Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See <a href="https://pcm.adswizz.com">pcm.adswizz.com</a> for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.</p>
Ouve este episódio em inglês para aprender inglês
Os episódios de podcast são uma das formas mais densas de absorver inglês ao ritmo nativo. Janet Yellen on the Danger of a “Banana Republic” Economy. Plus, Susan B. Glasser on Why “We Are the Boiled Frog.” de The New Yorker Radio Hour dá-te diálogo natural, fala sem guião e vocabulário que aparece mesmo em conversas reais.
No Clue, cada palavra da transcrição é tocável. Toca numa palavra desconhecida, vê a tradução na tua língua ao instante e continua a ouvir sem perder o ritmo.
Episódios para aprender inglês
- The Sounds of Summer, with Fred Armisen 7 de jul. de 2026
- Alicia Keys’s New York Musical Goes on National Tour 3 de jul. de 2026
- From The Political Scene: Donald Trump’s Dangerous Politicization of America’s Spy Agencies 30 de jun. de 2026
- America at 250: A View from Britain, with “The Rest Is History” 26 de jun. de 2026
- From Critics at Large: Steve Spielberg's Blockbusters 23 de jun. de 2026
- Hillary Clinton on How Donald Trump Lost the Iran War 18 de jun. de 2026
- The Sports Journalist Pablo Torre Has a Pulitzer, but Still Feels Like the “Turd” in the Pool 16 de jun. de 2026
- Rachel Goldberg-Polin on Losing a Son in Gaza 12 de jun. de 2026
- Seeing the Dark Side of the Moon on NASA’s Artemis II Mission 9 de jun. de 2026
- Jack Schlossberg, the Kennedy Running for Congress in New York 5 de jun. de 2026
- Bonus: David Remnick Takes Calls on the Midterms and the Media 4 de jun. de 2026
- Colson Whitehead on His Harlem Trilogy 2 de jun. de 2026
- Dan Osborn, the Independent Senate Candidate Who Could Tip Nebraska 29 de mai. de 2026
- A FEMA Insider Says Morale Has Never Been Lower at the Embattled Agency 26 de mai. de 2026
- The U.F.C. President, Dana White, on Donald Trump: “He’s Not a Racist” 22 de mai. de 2026
- America at 250: A View from the Streets 19 de mai. de 2026
- The History Wars and America at 250, with the Historian Jill Lepore 15 de mai. de 2026
- Growing Up with a Mother in Prison 12 de mai. de 2026
- Barack Obama in the Trump Era 8 de mai. de 2026
- The N.B.A. Legend Steve Kerr 5 de mai. de 2026
- How a Trump-Endorsed Republican Could Become California’s Next Governor 1 de mai. de 2026
- “Fat Swim” and Literature’s Fatphobia Problem 28 de abr. de 2026
- Why Senator Rand Paul Voted to Limit Donald Trump’s War Powers 24 de abr. de 2026
- Patrick Radden Keefe on “London Falling,” His Book About a Teen-Ager’s Mysterious Life and Death 21 de abr. de 2026
- A Genocide Scholar Asks “What Went Wrong” in Israel 17 de abr. de 2026
- Anna Wintour as Vogue Icon 14 de abr. de 2026
- Sam Altman’s Trust Issues at OpenAI 10 de abr. de 2026
- Pick Three: Spring Sports News 7 de abr. de 2026
- How Donald Trump’s War on Iran Helps Vladimir Putin’s War on Ukraine 3 de abr. de 2026
- A Former Federal Prosecutor on Why He Quit Donald Trump’s Department of Justice 31 de mar. de 2026