NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani has certain ideas that make mainstream economists' head explode. Anything in the ballpark of rent control, specifically, is widely derided by defenders of the orthodoxy. But how did the orthodoxy become the orthodoxy? And how did the heterodoxy become the heterodoxy? On this episode, we speak with Jamee Moudud, a professor of economics at Sarah Lawrence College and author of the new book, Legal and Political Foundations of Capitalism. His scholarship sits at the intersection of economics and legal theory. He argues that one can not analyze the economy as if it were some separate thing that exists outside of the institutional and political realities of the time. We discuss the history of economics in the 19th and 20th centuries, and why certain ideas were adopted by the field, while others discarded and relegated to the margins.
Read more:
Mamdani Stacks NYC Board to Carry Out Promised Rent Freeze
Mamdani Threatens to Hike NYC Property Tax to Fill Budget Hole
Only http://Bloomberg.com subscribers can get the Odd Lots newsletter in their inbox each week, plus unlimited access to the site and app. Subscribe at bloomberg.com/subscriptions/oddlots
Subscribe to the Odd Lots Newsletter
Join the conversation: discord.gg/oddlots

A16Z's David George on How Private and Public Markets Fused Into One
48:30

Jared Sleeper on Which Software Companies Will Survive the "SaaSpocalypse"
49:14

Ray Wang on How AI Is Causing DRAM Prices to Surge
45:28