193 episodes

Money on the Left is a monthly, interdisciplinary podcast that reclaims money’s public powers for intersectional politics. Staging critical conversations with leading historians, theorists, organizers, and activists, the show draws upon Modern Monetary Theory and constitutional approaches to money to advance new forms of left critique and practice. It is hosted by William Saas and Scott Ferguson and presented in partnership with Monthly Review magazine. Check out our website: https://moneyontheleft.org Follow us on Twitter & Facebook at @moneyontheleft

Money on the Left Money on the Left

    • Society & Culture
    • 3.6 • 63 Ratings

Money on the Left is a monthly, interdisciplinary podcast that reclaims money’s public powers for intersectional politics. Staging critical conversations with leading historians, theorists, organizers, and activists, the show draws upon Modern Monetary Theory and constitutional approaches to money to advance new forms of left critique and practice. It is hosted by William Saas and Scott Ferguson and presented in partnership with Monthly Review magazine. Check out our website: https://moneyontheleft.org Follow us on Twitter & Facebook at @moneyontheleft

    The Black University Concept with Andrew J. Douglas

    The Black University Concept with Andrew J. Douglas

    Andrew J. Douglas, political theorist and professor of political science at Morehouse College, joins Money on the Left to discuss his latest article, “Modern Money and the Black University Concept,” published April 19, 2024, in Money on the Left: History, Theory, Practice. In the article as in the interview, Andrew stages critical encounters between the little-studied but tremendously potent concept of the Black University–an alternative vision for higher education oriented to Pan-Africa...

    • 1 hr 13 min
    Aesthetics after Autonomy with Grant Kester

    Aesthetics after Autonomy with Grant Kester

    Money on the Left is joined by Grant Kester, professor of Art History at University of California, San Diego. We speak with Kester about his multi-decade career, researching and teaching the history of socially engaged art. Kester’s scholarship underscores the limits and contradictions of the dominant modern Western tradition of aesthetics. Such aesthetics value “autonomy,” insisting that the artist, the artistic medium, or art as an institution ought to stand alone and outside of societ...

    • 1 hr 42 min
    Economic Democracy with Pavlina Tcherneva

    Economic Democracy with Pavlina Tcherneva

    Money on the Left speaks with Pavlina Tcherneva, Professor of Economics at Bard College and leading scholar of–-and advocate for—Modern Monetary Theory (MMT). Many of our listeners will be familiar with Dr. Tcherneva's contributions to MMT, especially her book, The Case for a Job Guarantee (Polity Press, 2020). She is also Director of Open Society University Network’s Economic Democracy Initiative, instrumental to the publication of a United Nations report on the job guarantee, titled “The Em...

    • 1 hr 11 min
    The Alternative with Nick Romeo

    The Alternative with Nick Romeo

    Scott Ferguson and Billy Saas speak with New Yorker writer Nick Romeo about his exciting new book, The Alternative: How to Build a Just Economy, released in January 2024 with Public Affairs. Romeo’s The Alternative rebukes Margaret Thatcher’s infamous axiom that “there is no alternative” to neoliberal capitalism. In doing so, the book inventories the most promising experiments in radical economic democracy underway across the world today. Such experiments include, but are not limited to: a pu...

    • 1 hr 24 min
    How can novels help us think about money ... and maybe even save the planet? (Guest Lecture)

    How can novels help us think about money ... and maybe even save the planet? (Guest Lecture)

    Can novels and, by extension, other works of art help us to think about money and trust in new ways? Could embracing alternative perspectives on trust and money help us to avoid climate catastrophe? Rob Hawkes shares a new version of a talk previously presented at the Middlesbrough Institute of Modern Art as part of the One Fifteen at MIMA series of public talks. Highlighting the financial barriers often assumed to stand in the way of local, national, and global efforts to advance ecological ...

    • 32 min
    Resisting Predatory Finance w/ Raúl Carrillo (Recovered Audio!)

    Resisting Predatory Finance w/ Raúl Carrillo (Recovered Audio!)

    Money on the Left is proud to present recovered and remastered audio from our interview with Raúl Carrillo, published previously solely as a written transcript. The recording also includes a new audio introduction in which Billy Saas reflects on the significance of our dialog with Carrillo for contemporary politics. In our discussion, we explore the promise of the public money framework for advancing antiracist, anti-imperialist, and democratic politics across the world. We discus...

    • 1 hr 22 min

Customer Reviews

3.6 out of 5
63 Ratings

63 Ratings

inanekev ,

Trying to follow

Some bits are quite cool but after listening to 4 episodes I still mostly don’t know what the hosts are talking about. Just when I think I’m starting to grasp it, there’s a digression into Hegel jokes that I don’t follow... I wanted to get a handle on how Left MMT works and thinks, but I’m not really grasping more than the outlines of its critique of Marxism. Everything else is conveyed in a difficult mixture of grad school lingo, high context humor, and What’s New in Vulgar Marxist Media. Going to keep listening but it would be helpful if there was a bit more focus in the non-interview episodes. When there isn’t a guest to interrogate, i feel like I’m outside the podcast trying to overhear what’s happening. I keep seeing this podcast described as an urgent project and so I’m trying to keep up, but I feel like I’m missing out on something. At the very least, it would be great if there was like a background prerequisite reading list for engaging with the podcast!

MatyBram ,

Quantumland episode is exciting

Such an inspiring discussion! Imagining the possibilities and creating the future. Relationality that is quantitatively describable. One interesting point: UMKC, where much of MMT was developed, had interdisciplinary social science seminars where the strengths and weaknesses of critical realism, pragmatism, hermeneutics were debated. I think it is significant.

J.P. McD ,

A Cherished Hate-Listen

Worst podcast I’ve ever listened to, but it does bring me back once in a while for my Ninety Minutes of Hate. Despite hating most other people on the left and most movies (because the Jedi don’t use MMT or whatever), they bizarrely seem to adore the awful Disney+ Marvel shows. It’s been a few months so I wonder if that host who laughs obnoxiously at everything she says is still on…

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