
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Live from a packed GAA hall at the Dalkey Book Festival, this episode tackles one of the wildest questions in economics: how did humans, flimsy, anxious apes, end up running the world, and why did we invent money to do it? We dig into the evolution of money as a collective hallucination hardwired into our psychology. Along the way, we unpack how 90% of dollars exist only digitally, how the pandemic rewired our sense of value, and why the dollar’s global dominance might be nearing its final act. From Mesopotamian beer tabs to the Fed’s modern firepower, we trace the story of money as a force that built empires and could just as easily unmake them.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By David McWilliams & John Davis4.6
217217 ratings
Live from a packed GAA hall at the Dalkey Book Festival, this episode tackles one of the wildest questions in economics: how did humans, flimsy, anxious apes, end up running the world, and why did we invent money to do it? We dig into the evolution of money as a collective hallucination hardwired into our psychology. Along the way, we unpack how 90% of dollars exist only digitally, how the pandemic rewired our sense of value, and why the dollar’s global dominance might be nearing its final act. From Mesopotamian beer tabs to the Fed’s modern firepower, we trace the story of money as a force that built empires and could just as easily unmake them.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

173 Listeners

16 Listeners

62 Listeners

64 Listeners

148 Listeners

55 Listeners

81 Listeners

263 Listeners

42 Listeners

32 Listeners

45 Listeners

113 Listeners

66 Listeners

31 Listeners

55 Listeners