Greg Rosalsky
Since 2018, Greg Rosalsky has been a writer and reporter at NPR's Planet Money.
Before joining NPR, he spent more than five years at Freakonomics Radio, where he produced 60 episodes that were downloaded nearly 100 million times. Those included an exposé of the damage filmmaking subsidies have on American visual-effects workers, a deep dive into the successes and failures of Germany's manufacturing model, and a primer on behavioral economics, which he wrote as a satire of traditional economic thought. Among the show's most popular episodes were those he produced about personal finance, including one on why it's a bad idea for people to pick and choose stocks.
Rosalsky has written freelance articles for a number of publications, including The Behavioral Scientist and Pacific Standard. An article he authored about food inequality in New York City was anthologized in Best Food Writing 2017.
Rosalsky began his career in the plains of Iowa working for an underdog presidential candidate named Barack Obama and was a White House researcher during the early years of the Obama Administration.
He earned a master's degree at Princeton University's Woodrow Wilson School, where he studied economics and public policy.
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Despite turmoil in the real economy, the stock market spent months surging. That is, until recently. We speak with a Nobel laureate about what might be happening.
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Despite political and social progress, African Americans still lag far behind economically.
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Coronavirus has shed light on centuries of racial economic inequality. NPR's podcast The Indicator from Planet Moneylooks at how COVID-19 and the recession are hitting black Americans hard.
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The problem goes deeper than police misconduct.
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Among the bottom fifth of income earners, who are more likely to be black and Latino, about 35% of them lost their jobs.
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As COVID-19 makes density a danger, we look at what's in store for cities.
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As small businesses scramble for emergency assistance, big businesses get a new program of virtually endless lending from the Fed.
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About a third of Americans are working from home because of the coronavirus. The technology that enables this has been around for many years, but it took a pandemic to force the move to remote work.
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What social science says about killing the office.
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As COVID-19 causes a global meltdown, the world turns to the U.S. Federal Reserve.