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January 21, 2021 talk by Brown University professor Mark Blyth who presented his and his co-author Eric Lonergan's research on how stress and anxiety are on the rise even while the vast majority of people are getting steadily richer. This talk was hosted by Stanford University's The Europe Center (TEC), and co-sponsored by Stanford's Global Populisms Project. Anna Grzymala-Busse, professor of political science and director of The Europe Center, introduced the speaker and moderated the Q&As. Prof. Grzymala-Busse is also a senior fellow at the Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies (FSI). Synopsis: Economics increasingly fails to explain why the pressures of life appear to be intensifying at the same time as income per capita is rising, or why we work more hours for less money in real terms. And why we see the rise of nationalism everywhere when globalization, on average, has made us all richer. The disconnect between our experience of the world and the economic model used to explain it has given rise to "angrynomics": an economy of heightened uncertainty and anger, where faith in the workings of markets and politics has been undermined and rapid and seemingly ever-accelerating economic change has become something to be feared. Eric Lonergan and Mark Blyth have written a book for anyone anxious, worried - or angry - about the mismatch between how they experience the world with the increasing day to day pressures they face and the model used by economic elites and politicians to explain and justify it. In a powerful and passionately argued analysis, they bring their critical insight and expertise to bear on the nature of angrynomics and offer a set of radical and innovative policies that cut across tired party political lines - and that if implemented might just help the world to be a less angry place. About the Speaker: Mark Blyth is the William R. Rhodes ’57 Professor of International Economics at the Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs at Brown University. Blyth graduated Strathclyde University in 1990 and then finished his PhD. in political science at Columbia University in 1999. He then joined the Johns Hopkins University before moving to Brown University in 2009.