Plus: The United States is having a massive teacher shortage.
Hosts Adam Tooze and Cameron Abadi look at the Jackson Hole Economic Symposium taking place this week and talk about its history and significance in influencing world economics. And in the second segment, the two discuss the massive teacher shortage occurring in the United States this year and how teacher salaries have failed to keep pace with the salaries of similarly educated professionals.
About Ones and Tooze: Foreign Policy economics columnist Adam Tooze, a history professor and a popular author, is encyclopedic about basically everything: from the COVID shutdown, to climate change, to pasta sauce. On our new podcast, Tooze and FP deputy editor Cameron Abadi will look at two data points each week that explain the world: one drawn from the week’s headlines and the other from just about anywhere else Tooze takes us. Check out Adam Tooze’s column here. See All Episodes
More Ones and Tooze episodes:
Live From Berlin
Adam and Cameron talk the U.S. debt ceiling and German economics with a live audience.
How Turkey’s Economy Explains Its Election Results (or Doesn’t)
Plus: The economics of olive oil.
Could Green Hydrogen Revolutionize the Energy Sector?
Plus: Looking to travel this summer? Adam and Cameron break down vacationing around Europe on the cheap.
Other Foreign Policy podcasts:

The Hidden Economics of Remarkable Women (HERO)
A Foreign Policy series about women creating change through economic empowerment, hosted by Reena Ninan. This season, we have partnered with journalists around the world to cover underreported ways women are challenging the status quo. You’ll hear about justice for domestic migrant workers in Gulf states, how to break down gender barriers in the film industry, and the financial factors behind female genital mutilation, among other issues. HER♀ is a Foreign Policy production made possible in part through funding from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. Watch the trailer below to see more about the show.

I Spy
Spies don’t talk—it’s the cardinal rule of the business. But here at Foreign Policy, we get them to open up. On I Spy, we hear from the operations people: the spies who steal secrets, who kill adversaries, who turn agents into double agents. Each episode features one spy telling the story of one operation. Want swag? Check out I Spy's merch by clicking here.
To learn more about creating a podcast with FP Studios, contact Andrew Sollinger at andrew.sollinger@foreignpolicy.com.