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Kick the Dogma

John Emrich
Kick the Dogma
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  • Busting the Bankers’ Club
    New Ep is Up! Bankers brought the global economic system to its knees in 2007 and nearly did the same in 2020. Both times, the US government bailed out the banks and left them in control. How can we end this cycle of trillion-dollar bailouts and make finance work for the rest of us? Busting the Bankers' Club confronts the powerful people and institutions that benefit from our broken financial system—and the struggle to create an alternative.Today we have Professor Gerald Epstein, author of Busting the Bankers’ Club: Finance for the Rest of Us. It was a great talk, about the history of banking regulation, the revolving door between government and industry that poisons our financial system, central bank independence, a fascinating concept called public banking, and my favorite topic, bailouts, what does that word even mean, who is getting bailed out, and WHY. Listen up, Jon Stewart and the Daily Show, you should have Professor Epstein on, because that last question boils down to privatization of profits and socialization of losses, a favorite topic of Mr. Stewart’s. Follow Professor Epstein on LinkedIn or at UMass Amherst. Buy the book here or wherever books are sold.
    2024/3/11  
  • The Ownership Dividend…
    Today we talk to historian, fund manager, and author Daniel Peris. In his fourth book, The Ownership Dividend, Daniel makes the persuasive case that we are on the verge of a major paradigm shift for investors in the U.S. stock market. Dividend-focused stock investing, he explains, has been receding in popularity for more than three decades in the U.S.; once the dominant investment style, it is now a boutique approach. That, argues Peris, is about to change.Daniel Peris is a fund manager at Federated Hermes, but leans heavily on his academic and professional past as a historian to allocate capital. You can follow Daniel here on LinkedIn, and here on X. Buy The Ownership Dividend wherever books are sold, including here.(New intro music by Gregor Quendel sourced at Pixabay)
    2024/2/01  
  • The Abundant University
    New Ep is up!Today we have Michael D Smith, Professor of Information Technology and Marketing at Carnegie Mellon, and the author of the new book, The Abundant University: Remaking Higher Education for a Digital World.College has been in the news a lot the last few years, mostly due to the skyrocketing cost and the student loan debt crisis. Also, the Varsity Blues admissions scandal and some recent chaos in college rankings by publishers trying to stay relevant in the space. It just reeks of an institution ripe for disruption.As you’ll hear, the Internet is something that has been expected to transform higher education for a long time. I think this is a when not an if, and the when might be right now. Follow Michael on the Carnegie Mellon website here, and LinkedIn here. Buy the book where ever books are sold, including here on Amazon.
    2023/10/05  
  • We’ve Got You Covered
    New Ep is up! Today we have our first returning guest, Dr. Amy Finkelstein, economics professor at MIT, co-author (with Liran Einav) of today’s subject, the book We’ve Got You Covered: Rebooting American Health Care, but also co-author of Risky Business: Why Insurance Markets Fail and What to Do About It, the subject of an interview from earlier this year.Amy and her co-authors are experts in insurance generally, and health insurance specifically. I mention that because in the interview I rave about this being a textbook example of Edward De Bono’s lateral thinking and blank page creativity, which seem to come most often from “outside the box.” What I meant by that was as much as she’s studied health insurance, Amy hasn’t worked in the health care industry for 20 years or worked in public policy in Washington. So, from that perspective, I suggest she lacks institutional bias and has an outsider’s advantage.The title undersells what the book is offering, which is a blueprint for, I believe, the best way to run health care in America, which is universal coverage with free, basic coverage for all. That’s a tease, there’s so much more to it, and the book provides evidence from around the world including not just countries from Europe to the UK and Norway to Singapore and Australia, but also states like Massachusetts and Oregon, to support the authors’ research. And, I know I always say this, but in this case it’s especially true because of the enormity of the subject matter, but you do really have to read the book. With that said, the most elegant solutions are often the simplest, and by that measure, Amy and Liran have crushed it again. The solution, the final product if we could start from scratch, is amazingly straight forward. One more thing to entice you into reading the book. If you start from first principles as the authors did, you find that there is actually a lot more consensus on the building blocks of this recommended framework from the right, left, and middle, than there is disagreement. Other than me screwing up the term “supplemental” insurance and instead saying “premium” a couple of times, it’s a clean interview, thanks to Amy’s mastery of the subject. If you can overlook that error, and apologies for any confusion that causes, you’re going to leave the interview miles ahead of your friends, family, and work associates on the subject. But don’t be greedy. Share it with all of them! And send it to you representatives in Washington.Read more about Amy here, and coauthor Iran Einav on X. Buy the book here or at your favorite bookstore.
    2023/8/21  
  • Four Ways to Beat the Market
    Welcome to Kick the Dogma, the podcast where we interview authors of books on investing, economics, behavioral finance, and business more generally.Today’s episode is an interview with Algy Hall, author of Four Ways to Beat the Market: A practical guide to stock-screening strategies to help you pick winning shares.Algy is a journalist, and just over ten years ago he started tracking the performance of his own stock picks generated by his four screens, which are similar to the “factors” used by quants, but it’s not a black box. Algy uses them as an idea generator, from which he does deeper financial and qualitative analysis. Which, is what I think any financial advisors still trying to pick stocks should be doing, basically to improve their chances of success, and for that matter, active fund managers that aren’t finding success. Investors are, after all, odds makers, and this is a practical guide to improving your odds. You can follow Algy at Citywide Elite Companies, Twitter, and LinkedIn, and buy his book anywhere books are sold, including here. Enjoy my talk with Algy Hall!
    2023/7/27  

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About Kick the Dogma

Discussions about global asset allocation with authors, investors, and economists.
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