
Amanda Aronczyk
Reporter and Host, Planet Money at NPR
Co-host @NPR's @planetmoney / Prof @newmarkjschool at CUNY / email me - [email protected] / Signal: aronczyk.01
Articles
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1 week ago |
wrvo.org | Amanda Aronczyk |Jess Jiang |Sam Kesler
Note: A version of this episode first ran in 2023. Every year, the U.S. government spends more money than it takes in. In order to fund all that spending, the country takes on debt. Congress has the power to limit how much debt the U.S. takes on. Once we reach that limit, Congress has a few options so that the government keeps paying its bills: Raise the debt limit, suspend it, or eliminate it entirely.
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4 weeks ago |
flipboard.com | Keith Romer |Jess Jiang |Sam Kesler |Amanda Aronczyk
The U.S.-China trade war, according to game theory : Planet MoneyOver the last few months U.S.-China trade relations have been pretty hard to make sense of – unless you look at what's happening through the lens of game theory. Game theory is all about how decisions are made, based not just on one side's options and payoffs, but on the choices and incentives of …
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1 month ago |
wrvo.org | Amanda Aronczyk |Jeff Guo |Jess Jiang |Sylvie Douglis
The U.S. exports billions of dollars worth of agricultural products each year — things like soybeans, corn and pork. And over the last month, these exports have been caught up in a trade war and subject to enormous retaliatory tariffs. U.S. farmers have been collateral damage in a trade war before. In 2018, President Trump put tariffs on a bunch of Chinese products including flatscreen TVs, medical devices and batteries.
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1 month ago |
businessandamerica.com | Amanda Aronczyk
The U.S. exports billions of dollars worth of agricultural products each year — things like soybeans, corn and pork. And over the last month, these exports have been caught up in a trade war and subject to enormous retaliatory tariffs. U.S. farmers have been collateral damage in a trade war before. In 2018, President Trump put tariffs on a bunch of Chinese products including flatscreen TVs, medical devices and batteries.
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1 month ago |
npr.org | Amanda Aronczyk |Jeff Guo |Jess Jiang |Sylvie Douglis
What happened to U.S. farmers during the last trade war Download Embed <iframe src="https://www.npr.org/player/embed/1251284848/1269313365" width="100%" height="290" frameborder="0" scrolling="no" title="NPR embedded audio player"> LaVon and Craig Griffieon on their farm near Ankeny, Iowa. Grant Gerlock/for NPR hide caption toggle caption Grant Gerlock/for NPR LaVon and Craig Griffieon on their farm near Ankeny, Iowa.
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From the "Buy Canadian" movement, to not traveling south of the border, to removing interprovincial trade barriers, Canadians are unifying behind a massive boycott of the U.S. https://t.co/Mkmf8A5usv

RT @iHeartRadio: Congratulations to the 2025 winner of Best Business + Finance Podcast: @planetmoney! 🎙️🏆 Watch the 2025 #iHeartPodcastAwa…

RT @lordlogre: From my (high school senior) daughter to "the boys @planetmoney" #Valentinesday2025 https://t.co/94XB3vj3o7