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Category: Economy: Nation, Global

Dan  Eberhart
Dan Eberhart joins Jim Blasingame to report on how the Trump administration is trying to pressure OPEC to increase production, plus what it will take to help American manufacturers onshore more of their jobs.
Andrew J. Sherman
Andrew Sherman joins Jim Blasingame to discuss some of the energy and possible challenges to the continued economic expansion being experienced in the U.S., including from global influences, like possible trade deals.
Andrew J. Sherman
Andrew Sherman joins Jim Blasingame to discuss how to determine the real economic condition in your future from the negative tendencies of “click-bait” reporting you see from the media.
Jim Blasingame
Jim Blasingame discusses what the 12 Fed banks do, and what they will be doing in the future, plus the role of the Fed as the Central Bank of the planet, as it influences the U.S. dollar.
Craig Roach
Craig Roach joins Jim Blasingame to discuss how the U.S. education system is complicit in how poorly informed young people are about the value of capitalism and the failure of socialism.
Craig Roach
Craig Roach joins Jim Blasingame to discuss why, after decades of failed socialist experiments, including millions of people killed, starved and subject to other socialistic failed policies, it’s actually being promoted as an alternative to capitalism.
Craig Roach
Craig Roach joins Jim Blasingame to reveal that after all these years, the only changes to the importance of electricity is in how we’ll generate it.
Ted Fishman
Ted Fishman joins Jim Blasingame to reveal how the construction element concrete has perennially been found to be associated with political power, and how its use by China in the past decade has impacted construction prices globally.
Ted Fishman
Ted Fishman joins Jim Blasingame to report on why the newly elected president of Indonesia has a business and global trade friendly position, which is good for all businesses in the global economy.
Leo Haviland
Leo Haviland joins Jim Blasingame to reveal that while there are some elements of Wall Street that may be tenuous, such as corporate debt, conditions are not at the 2008 crisis levels.

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