
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Send us a text
Daniel Di Martino is a PhD candidate in Economics at Columbia University and a graduate fellow at the Manhattan Institute—where he focuses on high-skill immigration policy. He also founded the Dissident Project to teach high school students about the evils of socialist regimes.
Today we talk about his life in Venezuela and the economic realities he faced growing up, particularly inflation and shortages. He explains how poor institutions, even democratically elected ones, can turn a trusting and prosperous society into a mistrusting and thieving one. (Watch out ladies, they’ll even steal the hair from your head). We talk about the incentives involved in immigration policy and the immigration situation in places like New York City and Miami today.
Want to explore more?
Support the show
Never miss another AdamSmithWorks update.
Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.
4.6
3838 ratings
Send us a text
Daniel Di Martino is a PhD candidate in Economics at Columbia University and a graduate fellow at the Manhattan Institute—where he focuses on high-skill immigration policy. He also founded the Dissident Project to teach high school students about the evils of socialist regimes.
Today we talk about his life in Venezuela and the economic realities he faced growing up, particularly inflation and shortages. He explains how poor institutions, even democratically elected ones, can turn a trusting and prosperous society into a mistrusting and thieving one. (Watch out ladies, they’ll even steal the hair from your head). We talk about the incentives involved in immigration policy and the immigration situation in places like New York City and Miami today.
Want to explore more?
Support the show
Never miss another AdamSmithWorks update.
Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.
4,201 Listeners
964 Listeners
599 Listeners
2,249 Listeners
70 Listeners
1,498 Listeners
1,991 Listeners
806 Listeners
19 Listeners
718 Listeners
3,729 Listeners
667 Listeners
421 Listeners
91 Listeners
11 Listeners