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The Boiling Frog
Seth Rosenblatt and Mark Olbert
29 episodes
1 month ago
Reflections on the intersection of economics, history, politics, psychology, and science
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Government
History
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All content for The Boiling Frog is the property of Seth Rosenblatt and Mark Olbert and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Reflections on the intersection of economics, history, politics, psychology, and science
Show more...
Government
History
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Jimmy Hoppa
The Boiling Frog
37 minutes
2 years ago
Jimmy Hoppa

This podcast is all about labor unions – why they exist, their history in the U.S., a brief comparison with unions in other countries, the pros and cons of unions, and the larger political implications of their existence.


This is a controversial topic in U.S. politics, with many voters (and most elected officials) falling squarely into the “pro-union” or “anti-union” camp. But as with most issues, the truth is much more nuanced and complicated. Labor unions in the U.S. formed – and largely still exist – because of failures in market capitalism. As discussed in our very first podcast, capitalism is based on a number of principles to ensure resources are most efficiently allocated, but in real life those principles are rarely met. This is particularly pronounced in the labor market, which is fraught with friction and often monopsony employers.

The Boiling Frog
Reflections on the intersection of economics, history, politics, psychology, and science