
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In the 1630s, the Netherlands experienced 'tulip mania' - a surge in demand for tulips from wealthy buyers, with some individual bulbs costing twenty times more than a carpenter's annual salary. Then, in February 1637, the price suddenly crashed. It's often cited as the first great financial bubble, but is that really the case? Tim Harford tries to sort fact from fiction.
By BBC World Service4.8
14371,437 ratings
In the 1630s, the Netherlands experienced 'tulip mania' - a surge in demand for tulips from wealthy buyers, with some individual bulbs costing twenty times more than a carpenter's annual salary. Then, in February 1637, the price suddenly crashed. It's often cited as the first great financial bubble, but is that really the case? Tim Harford tries to sort fact from fiction.

7,700 Listeners

368 Listeners

530 Listeners

887 Listeners

1,044 Listeners

290 Listeners

5,436 Listeners

1,794 Listeners

2,114 Listeners

1,926 Listeners

960 Listeners

432 Listeners

825 Listeners

736 Listeners

246 Listeners

354 Listeners

481 Listeners

647 Listeners

356 Listeners

319 Listeners

3,191 Listeners

5,159 Listeners

64 Listeners

818 Listeners

998 Listeners

496 Listeners

614 Listeners

262 Listeners

287 Listeners

264 Listeners

64 Listeners

80 Listeners

3 Listeners