

#469
Mentioned in 64 episodes
Why Nations Fail
The Origins of Power, Prosperity and Poverty
Book • 2012
Daron Acemoglu and James Robinson argue that the success or failure of nations is determined by their political and economic institutions.
They present a comprehensive theory based on 15 years of research, using historical examples from the Roman Empire, the Mayan city-states, the Soviet Union, and various other regions to demonstrate how inclusive institutions foster economic growth and prosperity, while extractive institutions lead to poverty and stagnation.
The authors discuss critical questions such as China's economic growth, the future of the United States, and the most effective ways to help countries move from poverty to prosperity.
They present a comprehensive theory based on 15 years of research, using historical examples from the Roman Empire, the Mayan city-states, the Soviet Union, and various other regions to demonstrate how inclusive institutions foster economic growth and prosperity, while extractive institutions lead to poverty and stagnation.
The authors discuss critical questions such as China's economic growth, the future of the United States, and the most effective ways to help countries move from poverty to prosperity.
Mentioned by
Mentioned in 64 episodes
Recommended by 

as a book that explains why some nations succeed while others fail.


Tomer Cohen

1,524 snips
Why LinkedIn is turning PMs into AI-powered "full stack builders” | Tomer Cohen (LinkedIn CPO)
Listed in the episode resources as a contrasting institutional explanation for economic development.

401 snips
666. This Is How Progress Happens
Mentioned by 

when discussing how America could fall behind in the AI race, referring to the book's themes.


Ed Elson

296 snips
Are We Building AI for Progress or Power? — ft. Daron Acemoglu
Mentioned by 

and 

as the authors whose research on institutions won them the Nobel Prize in economics.


Greg Rosalski


Jeff Guo

293 snips
A Nobel prize for explaining why there's global inequality
Mentioned by 

among other influential books.


Kemi Badenoch

226 snips
Is Kemi Badenoch the Next Margaret Thatcher?
Mentioned in the episode description as a further reading recommendation linked to the discussion on automation and institutions.

165 snips
Chef vs. Robot
Mentioned by SincerelyTrue from Reddit as a source on preventing authoritarianism.

152 snips
Humanoid Robots, Building a Service Business, and Why CEOs Won’t Save Democracy


Richard David Precht

124 snips
AUSGABE 173 (Kurioses und Übersehenes: Randnotizen des Jahres 2024)
Mentioned in the episode description as background material related to property rights and civil society.

108 snips
EP 317 David Shapiro on Post-Labor Economics
Mentioned by 

as a book that was very critical of China.


Daron Acemoglu

57 snips
Is Trump an Economic Despot? (with Daron Acemoglu)











