The coronavirus crisis snarled global shipping in early 2020 as borders were closed, but lots of people expected it to improve as vessels returned to position. Instead, more than a year later, the shipping crisis has only gotten worse and standard container rates on some transpacific routes have more than quadrupled, leading to yet another headwind for economies in the midst of fragile recoveries and global trade. On this episode, we speak to economist, historian, and author Marc Levinson. He talks about where all this transport disruption is coming from, what it means for global trade, and whether it will lead to a big rethink of the shipping industry.

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