Beating Sisyphus: How Emerging Markets Overcome the Impossible

Will the US Dollar Survive? Lord Jim O'Neill on BRICS and the Global Economy

51 min · I går
episode Will the US Dollar Survive? Lord Jim O'Neill on BRICS and the Global Economy cover

Beskrivelse

In 2001, he coined the term "BRIC" to predict the massive economic shift toward Brazil, Russia, India, and China. 25 years later, Lord Jim O'Neill sits down with Thomas Riveros and Lourdes Casanova to grade his predictions and explore what's next for the global economy.In this episode of Beating Sisyphus, Lord Jim O'Neill (former Head of Global Economics Research at Goldman Sachs) shares the defining moments of his career—from discovering the social unifying power of football in Manchester to fundamentally reshaping how the world views emerging markets. The conversation dives deep into the "commodity curse" holding back Brazil and Russia, why the US Dollar might finally face real challengers in the Euro and Digital Yuan, and why the IMF must fundamentally change how it views spending on healthcare and education. Plus, hear why Lord O'Neill believes Nigeria could be the most important emerging market of the next 50 years.Lord Jim O'Neill earned his PhD in economics from the University of Surrey before becoming the Head of Global Economics Research at Goldman Sachs, where he published his renowned 2001 paper identifying the BRIC nations. Since 2015, he has served in the House of Lords and is a founding trustee of Shine, an educational charity, as well as co-president of the Northern Powerhouse Initiative.Timestamps:00:00 – Intro: Predicting China's Growth 25 Years Ago01:28 – Upbringing, Social Divides, and the Power of Football07:18 – PhD Research, OPEC Cartels, & the Limits of Forecasting12:04 – The Origin of the "BRIC" Acronym Post-9/1116:15 – Grading the BRICs: China's Trajectory & the Commodity Curse19:45 – Floating Currencies vs. Inflation Targeting in Latin America25:29 – Will the US Dollar Lose its Dominance?41:49 – Reforming the IMF: Why Healthcare & Education are Investments, Not Deficits46:22 – The Next 50 Years: Why Nigeria is the Ultimate Emerging MarketMusic from #Uppbeat (free for Creators!):https://uppbeat.io/t/neozoic/cold-fireLicense code: JLFLDLRHZHS6YJ7C

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18 Episoder

episode Will the US Dollar Survive? Lord Jim O'Neill on BRICS and the Global Economy cover

Will the US Dollar Survive? Lord Jim O'Neill on BRICS and the Global Economy

In 2001, he coined the term "BRIC" to predict the massive economic shift toward Brazil, Russia, India, and China. 25 years later, Lord Jim O'Neill sits down with Thomas Riveros and Lourdes Casanova to grade his predictions and explore what's next for the global economy.In this episode of Beating Sisyphus, Lord Jim O'Neill (former Head of Global Economics Research at Goldman Sachs) shares the defining moments of his career—from discovering the social unifying power of football in Manchester to fundamentally reshaping how the world views emerging markets. The conversation dives deep into the "commodity curse" holding back Brazil and Russia, why the US Dollar might finally face real challengers in the Euro and Digital Yuan, and why the IMF must fundamentally change how it views spending on healthcare and education. Plus, hear why Lord O'Neill believes Nigeria could be the most important emerging market of the next 50 years.Lord Jim O'Neill earned his PhD in economics from the University of Surrey before becoming the Head of Global Economics Research at Goldman Sachs, where he published his renowned 2001 paper identifying the BRIC nations. Since 2015, he has served in the House of Lords and is a founding trustee of Shine, an educational charity, as well as co-president of the Northern Powerhouse Initiative.Timestamps:00:00 – Intro: Predicting China's Growth 25 Years Ago01:28 – Upbringing, Social Divides, and the Power of Football07:18 – PhD Research, OPEC Cartels, & the Limits of Forecasting12:04 – The Origin of the "BRIC" Acronym Post-9/1116:15 – Grading the BRICs: China's Trajectory & the Commodity Curse19:45 – Floating Currencies vs. Inflation Targeting in Latin America25:29 – Will the US Dollar Lose its Dominance?41:49 – Reforming the IMF: Why Healthcare & Education are Investments, Not Deficits46:22 – The Next 50 Years: Why Nigeria is the Ultimate Emerging MarketMusic from #Uppbeat (free for Creators!):https://uppbeat.io/t/neozoic/cold-fireLicense code: JLFLDLRHZHS6YJ7C

I går51 min
episode The Global Economy's "Doom Loop": Eswar Prasad on Dollar Dominance & Globalization cover

The Global Economy's "Doom Loop": Eswar Prasad on Dollar Dominance & Globalization

Has the global economy entered a destructive feedback loop? In this episode of Beating Sisyphus, we sit down with Eswar Prasad, Tolani Senior Professor of International Trade Policy at  @Cornell  [https://studio.youtube.com/channel/UCfTfuTTALrsxUWjisrdOWtA] and Senior Fellow at the  @BrookingsInstitution  [https://studio.youtube.com/channel/UCi7jxgIOxcRaF4Q54U7lF3g].We dive into his latest book, Doom Loop, to explore how the forces once thought to bring global stability—globalization, international organizations, and the rise of middle powers—are now clashing with domestic politics and geopolitics. Eswar breaks down why the US dollar remains dominant despite domestic instability, the barriers holding back the Chinese Renminbi, and the urgent need to rebuild global institutions like the IMF and WTO.https://www.amazon.com/Doom-Loop-Economic-Spiraling-Disorder/dp/1541705939 [https://www.amazon.com/Doom-Loop-Economic-Spiraling-Disorder/dp/1541705939]Produced in collaboration with the Cornell Emerging Markets Institute, join hosts Thomas Riveros and Lourdes Casanova as they explore how innovation emerges under pressure and what it takes to build a more stable global economic future. Topics Covered: - Eswar Prasad’s unexpected journey into economics - The evolution from The Dollar Trap to the Doom Loop - Why central banks can't escape the US Dollar - The future of the Chinese Renminbi and capital controls - How globalization impacts domestic inequality and political polarization - The role of "Middle Powers" like India in a fractured world Timestamps 00:00 - Introduction to Beating Sisyphus 00:29 - Introducing Eswar Prasad and his new book, Doom Loop 02:05 - Eswar’s journey into the field of economics 03:55 - The shift from "The Dollar Trap" to a more pessimistic outlook 06:18 - Is globalization a zero-sum game? 08:35 - Why the US Dollar maintains global dominance despite instability 14:39 - The barriers holding back the Chinese Renminbi 19:48 - Does globalization directly cause domestic inequality? 24:24 - "Unfair" trade practices and China's manufacturing power 27:59 - The crisis of credibility for global institutions (IMF, WTO)31:34 - The dilemma of "Middle Powers" in global geopolitics 35:51 - A call to action for the future of democratic institutions 38:45 - Why India holds immense potential as an emerging market

31. mai 202640 min
episode Can We End Extreme Poverty? Food, Aid & Innovation in the Global South | Prof. Christopher Barrett cover

Can We End Extreme Poverty? Food, Aid & Innovation in the Global South | Prof. Christopher Barrett

What does it really take to break a poverty trap? In this episode of Beating Sisyphus, Cornell development economist Professor Christopher Barrett joins Thomas Riveros and Lourdes Casanova to explore one of the world's most pressing challenges: why extreme poverty persists in some places even as others — like China and Vietnam — have achieved miraculous growth. We go deep on the economics of poverty traps, why satellite-indexed livestock insurance is changing lives in East Africa, how mobile money is shifting power to women, and why cutting agricultural R&D budgets is a bet against the future. Topics covered:→ Why poverty is increasingly concentrated in conflict, climate, and disease-prone regions→ How poverty traps work — and what actually breaks them→ The satellite-based livestock insurance product now covering 4M+ policy holders→ Mobile money as a game-changer for rural Africa→ The case for redirecting foreign aid toward high-return global public goods→ Why Brazil and China are lapping the US in agricultural R&D→ Kenya and Vietnam as emerging markets to watch Guest: Prof. Christopher Barrett — Stefan B. and Janice G. Ashley Professor of Applied Economics and Management, Cornell University; affiliate of the Atkinson Center for Sustainability. https://www.atkinson.cornell.edu/profile/christopher-b-barrett/ Timestamps: 00:00 - Intro 01:33 - Conquering Extreme Poverty: The China & Vietnam Miracles 05:41 - The "New" Poverty Trap: Climate, Conflict & Disease 12:59 - Why Banks Won't Lend to the Global South 15:24 - Transferring African Drought Risk to Swiss Capital Markets 19:15 - How Mobile Money is Empowering Women in Rural Markets 23:50 - The Foreign Aid Crisis & Reprioritizing Global Public Goods 30:05 - The 75% Food Inflation Problem & The R&D Deficit 35:10 - US Farm Subsidies vs. China & Brazil's Ag-Tech Dominance 46:15 - Emerging Markets to Watch: Kenya & Vietnam#EmergingMarkets #DevelopmentEconomics #PovertyTrap #FoodSecurity #Africa #Kenya #Vietnam #ForeignAid #AgricultureInnovation #MobileMoney #Cornell #BeatingSisyphus Music from #Uppbeat (free for Creators!):https://uppbeat.io/t/paul-yudin/elapseLicense code: 32BX47P4GTHR7XRE

19. mai 202650 min
episode The Political Economy of Populism: Corruption, Institutions, and the Argentine Experiment cover

The Political Economy of Populism: Corruption, Institutions, and the Argentine Experiment

How does extortionate corruption fundamentally restructure an economy? Why do voters frequently tolerate "rational hypocrisy" from their political leaders?In this episode of Beating Sisyphus, co-hosts Thomas Riveros and Lourdes Casanova sit down with Nicolás Cachanosky (UTEP) and J.P. Bastos (University of Austin) to dissect the institutional and economic challenges facing Latin America.Bridging the gap between micro-level incentives and macro-level governance, the conversation explores why certain emerging markets break the cycle of populism while others remain trapped. The guests analyze the misallocation of resources caused by political enrichment, the erosion of republican checks and balances, and the high-stakes gamble of the Milei administration in Argentina.Key Topics Discussed:- The Micro-Impact of Corruption: How institutional quality in Brazil dictates the private gains of political office, and why corruption pushes formal employment into agriculture and informality.- Defining Populism: Moving beyond left vs. right economic policies to understand populism as a political strategy reliant on social fracture and the erosion of institutions.- Rational Hypocrisy: The incentive structures that lead voters to apply double standards and turn a blind eye to corruption to protect broader ideological goals.- The Dollarization Debate: An analysis of Argentina's "institutional anomy" and whether tying the hands of the central bank is the only credible bridge to long-term stability.- Time Horizons and Inflation: Examining the "stationary bandit" framework, including how longer populist regimes (like those seen in Bolivia and Nicaragua) impact monetary policy and inflation tracking over time.Timestamps:00:00 Intro: How innovation emerges under pressure01:18 Backgrounds: Why Nicolás and J.P. chose to study economics07:04 The Brazilian Mayoral Data: Private gains from political office10:43 Deadweight Loss vs. Misallocation: How corruption shifts business activity15:11 The Populist Playbook: Defining populism and institutional erosion27:03 Rational Hypocrisy: Why democratic accountability fails36:15 Currency Pegs and Dollarization: Argentina's 80-year struggle with inflation44:47 Roving vs. Stationary Bandits: The expected length of a populist regime50:25 Looking Forward: Institutional success stories in Costa Rica, Uruguay, and Peru

8. mai 202655 min
episode The Next Leap: AI, Access, and Innovation in Emerging Market Healthcare | Beating Sisyphus cover

The Next Leap: AI, Access, and Innovation in Emerging Market Healthcare | Beating Sisyphus

When we talk about Artificial Intelligence in healthcare, the conversation in the U.S. often revolves around optimizing administrative tasks and shaving seconds off billing processes. But in emerging markets, AI isn’t just an efficiency play—it’s a critical force multiplier for human capital and a bridge to life-saving access.Live from Ithaca, NY, Beating Sisyphus host Melissa Linares sits down with an extraordinary panel of clinical, legal, and engineering experts to discuss the future of AI in global healthcare. They explore how developing nations are leapfrogging legacy IT systems, why retrofitting U.S. health-tech for rural environments is a recipe for failure, and the urgent need for regulatory guardrails that allow systems to "fail safely while learning fast."(00:00) Introduction and Meet the Panel(03:46) The AI Divide: Efficiency in the US vs. Access in Emerging Markets(10:13) Overcoming Physical and Digital Infrastructure Gaps(13:06) Designing for Safe Speed: Compliance and Patient Guardrails(17:12) The Data Foundation: Building Reliable Healthcare Ecosystems(22:05) Clinical Operations: What US Frameworks Actually Transfer?(25:43) Regulation, Ethics, and the Role of Government(33:37) Value-Based Care: Can AI Shift the Cost Paradigm?(38:28) Health-Tech Entrepreneurship: Designing for Local Constraints(47:32) Capital and Scalability: Attracting Investment Beyond Pilot Phases(53:20) Looking Ahead: The 5-Year Vision for Global Healthcare AI(57:31) Final Thoughts and Conclusion

22. april 202659 min