2024-08-22
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This is Planet MONEY from NPR.
Welcome back, everyone, to Planet money summer school economic history of the world.
The only way to make your summer feel like it's 5000 years long.
In a good way, of course.
We have only two episodes left before Labor Day.
Like every history class you've ever taken, we have to pick up the pace if we're gonna finish.
So today we tackle the big one, the moment so often referenced by planet money that we made a jingle about it.
We're going back to the Great Depression.
Lesson seven, the Great Depression, the New Deal and how it changed economics.
Im Robert Smith.
Usually transforming an economy can take decades, centuries even.
But the Great Depression rapidly transformed the relationship between government and business.
Today, well, trace how the 1930s altered the very nature of money itself and how we went from the worst moment for workers in the United States to one of the best.
Joining us again is our us financial history professor from Providence College, Sharon Murphy.
Hey, Sharon.
Hey.