This famously is the year of elections. So the Stephanomics feed has been taken over by our bonus se
Will the Conservatives loosen the purse strings and spur a growth revival? Can Labour realize its vi
What does the business of flashy superyachts for the megarich have to do with the health of the U.S.
This week’s episode of Stephanomics comes to you from Beijing, where Bloomberg hosted the second ann
Beneath the tariffs, counter-tariffs and on-again off-again negotiations between the U.S. and China
The 2020 U.S. presidential election may be a year away but one policy idea is already stirring fierc
Economies represent the ultimate sum of millions of people and businesses making millions of decisio
What is the future for international institutions like the International Monetary Fund - and what, i
Bloomberg's Travel Genius podcast is back! After clocking another hundred-thousand miles in the sky,
The macroeconomic kind of economist tends to get the most attention - talking about growth, inflatio
Growth has been slowing around the developed world — not just in recent months but for decades. One
Stephanie Flanders returns with a new season of Stephanomics, bringing on-the-ground insights from B
Stephanie Flanders, head of Bloomberg Economics, returns to bring you another season of on-the-groun
On this new season of Prognosis, we look at the spread of infections that are resistant to antimicro
Under pressure from President Donald Trump, Mexico is cracking down on migrants coming from its own
The yellow-vest protests that shook France last year may be over, but the forces of political and ec
Donald Trump’s trade policies have created winners and losers around the world. Among the big losers
This week we bring you a special conversation between host Stephanie Flanders and Financial Times co
This week we focus on the two giants of the global economy: China and India. At first glance, China
European Central Bank President Mario Draghi earned the ire of Donald Trump this week with his farew
Workers around the globe are in for a shock in coming decades as automation transforms the workplace