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In this episode, Monika responds to the atmosphere of fear and panic spreading through everyday financial conversations — from rumours about banks collapsing to people withdrawing savings based on WhatsApp forwards and social media anxiety. Using history as her anchor, she makes a powerful argument that nations do not simply “roll over and die.” Companies fail, markets crash, governments stumble — but nations survive, adapt, reform, and rebuild. She walks listeners through some of the most severe economic crises faced by countries around the world, from Argentina’s repeated debt defaults to Germany’s hyperinflation and South Korea’s gold donation campaign during the Asian Financial Crisis, showing how recovery eventually followed even the darkest moments.
She then turns to India’s own history of economic survival and reinvention. From the humiliating 1966 rupee devaluation and food shortages, to the 1991 balance of payments crisis when India pledged gold for emergency loans, to the 2008 Global Financial Crisis and the economic devastation of COVID-19, Monika traces a recurring pattern: every crisis initially feels catastrophic, but India repeatedly emerges transformed rather than broken. She argues that while growth may slow and reforms may become unavoidable, today’s India is fundamentally stronger than in earlier crises — with healthier banks, stronger foreign exchange reserves, a large digital economy, and growing geopolitical relevance. Her central message is one of practical resilience: prepare for turbulence, not collapse. Build emergency buffers, diversify wisely, avoid panic, and resist fear-driven rumours. The episode ultimately becomes a reminder that survival and recovery are deeply embedded in both economic systems and human behaviour.
In listener questions, Jennifer asks how to structure a retirement corpus while preparing for the steep maintenance costs of a redeveloped Mumbai home, leading to a discussion on safe investing, inflation-adjusted retirement planning, and avoiding unnecessary risk later in life; Shantanu Bopardikar shares thoughtful feedback on wanting more advanced guidance around evaluating underperforming mutual funds, portfolio diversification, and passive-income planning, prompting Monika to explain her philosophy around “forever funds,” long-term consistency, and allocation-based investing; and an anonymous Bengaluru-based listener seeks advice on balancing his own financial growth with concern for his ageing parents’ retirement security, health insurance, and inherited assets.
Chapters:
(00:00 – 00:00) Why Nations Don’t Collapse the Way We Fear They Will
(00:00 – 00:00) India’s Darkest Economic Crises — And How It Recovered Every Time
(00:00 – 00:00) What Today’s Slowdown Really Means for Your Money and Investments
(00:00 – 00:00) Managing Retirement, Redevelopment and Financial Safety in Your 60s
If you have financial questions that you’d like answers for, please email us at [email protected]
Monika’s book on basic money management
https://www.monikahalan.com/lets-talk-money-english/
Monika’s book on mutual funds
https://www.monikahalan.com/lets-talk-mutual-funds/
Monika’s workbook on recording your financial life
https://www.monikahalan.com/lets-talk-legacy/
Calculators
https://investor.sebi.gov.in/calculators/index.html
You can find Monika on her social media @monikahalan.
Twitter @MonikaHalan
Instagram @MonikaHalan
Facebook @MonikaHalan
LinkedIn @MonikaHalan
Production House: www.inoutcreatives.com
Production Assistant: Anshika Gogoi
By Monika Halan5
44 ratings
In this episode, Monika responds to the atmosphere of fear and panic spreading through everyday financial conversations — from rumours about banks collapsing to people withdrawing savings based on WhatsApp forwards and social media anxiety. Using history as her anchor, she makes a powerful argument that nations do not simply “roll over and die.” Companies fail, markets crash, governments stumble — but nations survive, adapt, reform, and rebuild. She walks listeners through some of the most severe economic crises faced by countries around the world, from Argentina’s repeated debt defaults to Germany’s hyperinflation and South Korea’s gold donation campaign during the Asian Financial Crisis, showing how recovery eventually followed even the darkest moments.
She then turns to India’s own history of economic survival and reinvention. From the humiliating 1966 rupee devaluation and food shortages, to the 1991 balance of payments crisis when India pledged gold for emergency loans, to the 2008 Global Financial Crisis and the economic devastation of COVID-19, Monika traces a recurring pattern: every crisis initially feels catastrophic, but India repeatedly emerges transformed rather than broken. She argues that while growth may slow and reforms may become unavoidable, today’s India is fundamentally stronger than in earlier crises — with healthier banks, stronger foreign exchange reserves, a large digital economy, and growing geopolitical relevance. Her central message is one of practical resilience: prepare for turbulence, not collapse. Build emergency buffers, diversify wisely, avoid panic, and resist fear-driven rumours. The episode ultimately becomes a reminder that survival and recovery are deeply embedded in both economic systems and human behaviour.
In listener questions, Jennifer asks how to structure a retirement corpus while preparing for the steep maintenance costs of a redeveloped Mumbai home, leading to a discussion on safe investing, inflation-adjusted retirement planning, and avoiding unnecessary risk later in life; Shantanu Bopardikar shares thoughtful feedback on wanting more advanced guidance around evaluating underperforming mutual funds, portfolio diversification, and passive-income planning, prompting Monika to explain her philosophy around “forever funds,” long-term consistency, and allocation-based investing; and an anonymous Bengaluru-based listener seeks advice on balancing his own financial growth with concern for his ageing parents’ retirement security, health insurance, and inherited assets.
Chapters:
(00:00 – 00:00) Why Nations Don’t Collapse the Way We Fear They Will
(00:00 – 00:00) India’s Darkest Economic Crises — And How It Recovered Every Time
(00:00 – 00:00) What Today’s Slowdown Really Means for Your Money and Investments
(00:00 – 00:00) Managing Retirement, Redevelopment and Financial Safety in Your 60s
If you have financial questions that you’d like answers for, please email us at [email protected]
Monika’s book on basic money management
https://www.monikahalan.com/lets-talk-money-english/
Monika’s book on mutual funds
https://www.monikahalan.com/lets-talk-mutual-funds/
Monika’s workbook on recording your financial life
https://www.monikahalan.com/lets-talk-legacy/
Calculators
https://investor.sebi.gov.in/calculators/index.html
You can find Monika on her social media @monikahalan.
Twitter @MonikaHalan
Instagram @MonikaHalan
Facebook @MonikaHalan
LinkedIn @MonikaHalan
Production House: www.inoutcreatives.com
Production Assistant: Anshika Gogoi

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