The Answer Is Transaction Costs
Michael Munger
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This podcast explores how transaction costs explain virtually everything in economics and daily life. Host Michael Munger, a professor of political science and economics, breaks down complex ideas into accessible episodes. The show features short weekly episodes in summer and longer monthly interviews during the academic year. It also includes listener Q&A segments and occasional commentary on current events.
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Transaction Costs Killed the Medical Stars 30.06.2026 48dkSend us Fan Mail We try to make sense of a real problem many of us feel: paying a lot for U.S. healthcare while still waiting months to see a doctor. We trace how engineered transaction costs, from the Flexner Report to modern residency caps, restrict physician supply and protect price power while leaving clinicians overworked and patients stuck. • getting “fired” by a health system and what it reveals about access • why shortages don’t clear when prices rise, and how transaction ...
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Parasites And Property Rights 23.06.2026 50dkSend us Fan Mail BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE: The information in this episode comes from Red Flags Press. Their main web site is very useful for research purposes, and I recommend it! We follow the idea of the “social parasite” through socialist writing and show how it shifts from moral accusation to an enforceable legal category once society claims ownership over individual labor. We argue that the transaction costs of monitoring effort and assigning “socially useful” work push real-wor...
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Books Don't Bet, They Match 16.06.2026 1sa 4dkSend us Fan Mail We break down how sportsbooks function as brokers that match contracts, set prices through the point spread, and earn their living through the vig. Kevin Braig joins us to explain how law, technology, and property rights shape whether sports betting markets stay clean or slide toward corruption and bad incentives. • five reasons people gamble, from dopamine to positive skewness • what a sports bet is as a contract and why a book exists as a broker • how the 11-to-10 price ...
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Hereditary Monarchy: At Least You Know Which Idiot Is Next 09.06.2026 31dkSend us Fan Mail Hereditary monarchy seems like a ridiculous way to pick a leader, yet it dominates most of human political history. We argue the reason is transaction costs: succession systems survive when they settle “who rules next” cheaply enough to prevent recurring civil war. • Why hereditary monarchy is historically prevalent compared with democracy and universal suffrage • Why “divine right” stories often rationalize a choice people already find tolerable • Thomas Pa...
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Swollen Permits? Call Chile! 31.05.2026 45dkSend us Fan Mail Permits feel like “just paperwork”, until they quietly become the biggest barrier to building, investing, and even basic economic growth. We use Chile’s fight with “permisologia” to show how bureaucracy creates delay, uncertainty, and political risk even when the stated goal is safety or environmental protection. • permits as transaction costs that quietly tax projects and entrepreneurship • why bureaucracy is not the same thing as government and why it crowds out...
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Honor Among Thieves: Anja Shortland and Ransomware 28.04.2026 1sa 6dkSend us Fan Mail A talk with Dr Anya Shortland about the economics of ransomware and the gray-zone institutions that let extortion markets function when nobody can truly enforce trust. We dig into how cyber insurance quietly becomes a form of governance, why data leaks change the game, and what national security risks emerge as everything gets connected. • criminal markets that sit between legal firms and underworld gangs • insurance as governance through protocols, repeat play, a...
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Are Transaction Costs Really Just Human Distance 24.03.2026 43dkSend us Fan Mail We connect Adam Smith’s moral psychology to the modern idea of transaction costs and argue that the biggest frictions in markets start with the cost of understanding other people. We show how sympathy, propriety, self command, and reputation turn separate perspectives into workable cooperation and why justice is the real precondition for a stable commercial order. • why transaction costs always exist and why institutions matter when exchange is costly • a brief hi...
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Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations Episode 10: Always Contemporary 24.02.2026 1sa 28dkSend us Fan Mail We assess Adam Smith’s enduring ideas—moral authorization of commerce, division of labor, emergent order—and confront where his optimism breaks: how democratic politics and business fuse to create monopoly privilege. The result is a maintenance‑intensive commercial order that needs competition defended, not assumed. • presumption for markets under secure property, justice, and competition • division of labor as the main engine of productivity and growth • invisible hand refr...
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Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations Episode 9: Spending, Taxing, and Debt 27.01.2026 1sa 28dkSend us Fan Mail We walk through Book Five of The Wealth of Nations to map a state that defends, adjudicates, and builds wisely, then pays for it without killing growth. From militias to standing armies, fee-based courts to salaried judges, turnpikes to basic schooling, and taxes to debt, we test what holds up now. • defense as a professional, civilian-controlled standing army • justice as predictable law and salaried judges • public works funded by user fees where feasible • education to of...
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Adam Smith Episode 8: A Nation of Shopkeepers 30.12.2025 1sa 25dkSend us Fan Mail Smith closes Book IV by dismantling mercantilism through the lens of colonial policy, monopoly, and rent seeking, then weighs physiocracy against the system of natural liberty. We trace why colonies grew despite Europe, not because of it, and how “wealth as money” broke policy and fueled war. • mercantilism’s definition of wealth and the balance of trade myth • monopoly and bounties as tools for concentrated gains • chapter 7 on colonies as a case study in institutional desi...
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Parts is (Not) Parts: The Life Cycle Problem for Heavy Equipment 23.12.2025 1sa 3dkSend us Fan Mail We trace how Alex Schuessler, the once and once-again President of SmartEquip--also a scholar of expressive choice!--built a platform that makes machines more profitable by erasing the friction between parts, service, and uptime. The rental economy, Japan’s utilization model, and IoT diagnostics reveal why transaction costs, not price tags, decide who should own and who should rent. • rental vs sharing and why property rights matter • how serial-number specific data kills er...
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Money Killed Barter; Can a Platform Bring It Back? 09.12.2025 48dkSend us Fan Mail We explore why money became the default middleman and how a modern platform can make barter practical by slashing the costs of search, matching, and trust. Founder Jassim Baqer shares the story behind Tbadel, what people actually trade, and how reputation, bundling, and scale (might) make swaps work. • Adam Smith’s "double coincidence of wants" problem and transaction costs • Platforms as connection engines that lower search and matching costs • Tabottle’s origin, goals and ...
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Adam Smith Episode 7: The Errors of Mercantilism--Bullion, Balances, and Bounties 25.11.2025 1sa 15dkSend us Fan Mail Tracing out Adam Smith’s Book IV, chapters 1–6, to show how mercantilism mistakes money for wealth, how protection creates monopolies at home, and why free exchange raises real prosperity. Smith defends two narrow exceptions—defense and tax parity—while rejecting bounties and politicized treaties that entangle trade with war. • mercantile vs physiocratic systems and their influence • wealth as goods and industry, not specie • balance of trade as a “pestilent error” • make-or...
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Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations Episode 6--Division of Land 21.10.2025 1sa 16dkSend us Fan Mail We trace how Adam Smith solves a historical puzzle: why Europe’s path to prosperity inverted the “natural order,” and how commerce quietly dissolved feudal power to make room for liberty. The story follows incentives, from primogeniture and entail to charters, free towns, and the market’s “silent and insensible” revolution. institutions as congealed preferences and elite incentiveswhy Smith’s natural order inverts in Europethe physiocrats’ growth model and Smith’s critiqueS...
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Little's Law: The Transaction Costs of (Re)Drawing Lines 14.10.2025 55dkSend us Fan Mail A conversation with Andrew Wagner, production and manufacturing engineer, now in aerospace, but with experience also in the auto industry. We trace how transaction costs shape production, from Adam Smith’s pin factory to Toyota’s SMED, and why empowering workers and redesigning tools can raise quality while cutting cost. An aerospace manufacturing engineer joins us to unpack Little’s Law, line reconfiguration, and the culture that makes flexibility real. • division of labor ...
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Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations: Episode 5--The Text of Book II 30.09.2025 1sa 16dkSend us Fan Mail This episode explores Book 2 of Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations, focusing on his revolutionary concept of the "division of stock" and how capital accumulation drives economic growth. • Smith distinguishes between fixed capital (machines, buildings, land improvements) and circulating capital (money, goods in transit) • Money is described as "the great wheel of circulation" – necessary but not productive in itself • Banking allows society to economize on expensive metallic curr...
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Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations: Episode 4--Capital and Book II: Introduction 23.09.2025 54dkSend us Fan Mail Book Two of Adam Smith's "The Wealth of Nations" provides the conceptual foundation for understanding how commercial society sustains growth through capital accumulation and the employment of stock. Smith challenges common misconceptions about wealth creation and offers profound insights on the role of capital in economic development. • Capital is not capitalism – Smith wrote before "capitalism" was invented, using the term "stock" to describe accumulated resources • Divisio...
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The Innovation is the Exchange Itself! 16.09.2025 1sa 8dkSend us Fan Mail Chris Cornette, a longtime securities trader who grew up in the business, reveals how the most important innovation that made US capital markets preeminent in the world was the exchange itself. • Cornette's father worked in the P&S (Purchase and Sales) department on Wall Street, eventually becoming the controller of an American Stock Exchange specialist unit • The original Buttonwood Agreement from 1792 created exclusivity among traders that helped establish trust in the...
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When Bribes Become the System: Understanding Lock-In 26.08.2025 25dkSend us Fan Mail Corruption persists not because people like it, but because it becomes embedded in the incentive structure of the state, creating feedback loops that reinforce themselves and resist reform. • A prebend is a type of benefice historically given to clergymen, now a useful concept for understanding corruption in developing nations • Douglas North extended Coase's concept of transaction costs to explain why institutions matter in economics and politics • Bad institutions cr...
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Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations: Episode #3--Introduction and Book I 19.08.2025 1sa 21dkSend us Fan Mail Adam Smith's "The Wealth of Nations" developed from decades of lectures on jurisprudence, examining how market exchange creates prosperity through division of labor and specialized skills. • Two core observations drive Smith's thinking: humans seek approval from others and have a propensity to "truck, barter and exchange" • Exchange is Smith's key concept—not just for goods but for ideas, sentiments and social coordination • Division of labor dramatically increases productiv...
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