Marketplace for Tuesday, May 19, 2015
May 19, 2015

Marketplace for Tuesday, May 19, 2015

HTML EMBED:
COPY

Airing on Tuesday, May 19, 2015: The San Francisco Federal Reserve suggests an improved way to crunch official growth statistics. The director of research at the San Francisco Fed says that there should be a second, final seasonal adjustment to GDP data—on top of the seasonal adjustments the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) currently makes. Next: a new report shows that ethics continue to be an issue on Wall Street. Nearly one-third of those making more than $500,000 said they “have witnessed or have firsthand knowledge of wrongdoing in the workplace.” Why do the incentives of finance lure people to do wrong? And why is that so hard to change? We explore. 

 

 

Segments From this episode

Cattle ranchers lock horns with almond investors

May 19, 2015
Amid California's drought, not everyone is happy with the boom in almonds.

Ethics in finance: stuck at mediocre

May 19, 2015
A new report shows that Wall Street remains an ethical wasteland.

David Letterman wears the pants at Worldwide Pants

May 19, 2015
The production company was crucial when Letterman moved to CBS two decades ago.

How calculating GDP is like making a gravy

May 19, 2015
"Reduce it down and get the real essence of flavor," says a Fed economist.

The global influence of hip hop and breakdancing

May 19, 2015
Filmmaker Adam Sjöberg chronicles the lives of b-boys and girls around the world.
Breakdancers in Cambodia.
Bond/360

Tic Tac to release mint flavor geared toward millennials

May 19, 2015
The mint company will try to stay fresh with its new Tic Tac Mixers.

America's infrastructure isn't sexy

May 19, 2015
What it'll take to put America's infrastructure back in the lead.

Airing on Tuesday, May 19, 2015: The San Francisco Federal Reserve suggests an improved way to crunch official growth statistics. The director of research at the San Francisco Fed says that there should be a second, final seasonal adjustment to GDP data—on top of the seasonal adjustments the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) currently makes. Next: a new report shows that ethics continue to be an issue on Wall Street. Nearly one-third of those making more than $500,000 said they “have witnessed or have firsthand knowledge of wrongdoing in the workplace.” Why do the incentives of finance lure people to do wrong? And why is that so hard to change? We explore. 

 

 

Music from the episode