59. Ronald Reagan Part 2: Reaganomics
Flipping Tables
Monte Mader
5.0 β’ 1.2K Ratings
ποΈ 18 May 2026
β±οΈ 92 minutes
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Summary
We met the carefully curated Ronald Reagan in part 1. We saw the Hollywood grin, the borrowed cowboy myth, the astrologer in the basement, the informant and the corporate lackey. In Part 2, we follow the money. The sale of a new economic dream for Americans during a time of desperate stagflation, unemployment and uncertainty. And what it sold has cost this country more than any single presidency in modern American history.
Reaganomics was pitched to Americans as common sense. The government takes too much, thats the problem. Taxes on "job creators" choke the economy, corporations are going to run if you tax them you know. Cut taxes, slash regulation, trust the market β and a tide of prosperity will lift every boat. Cut off the welfare queen and free the small business owner. Trust the rich. Trust the men in suits who already had everything to know what was best for the woman scrubbing the floor at the hospital. He sold it the way only Reagan could, with a tear in his eye, a flag behind him, and a story about a Cadillac driving welfare cheat in Chicago who statistically did not exist.
In this episode, we trace what actually happened next.
The top income tax rate fell from 70 percent to 28 percent. The estate tax was gutted and capital gains were slashed. Corporate rates collapsed. All the ways the wealthiest among us make wealth were unleashed while the rest of us stayed tethered, shouldering more than our share of the burden. Union membership crashed from one in four American workers to roughly one in ten. Wages stopped tracking productivity. The federal minimum wage was frozen in time. Wall Street was deregulated, manufacturing was offshored, and the bottom half of the country watched its share of national wealth fall from 4 percent to barely 2.5, while the top 1 percent's share doubled. All while the national debt tripled. The mental health system was hollowed out, causing homelessness to explode. And every Republican economic platform since has been some version of do that again. Even Democratic leaders have allied themselves with this ideology in some way.
We also dismantle the lie at the heart of it all, that spending on people is waste. Because every credible economist who has actually run the numbers has found the opposite. Every dollar invested in SNAP generates up to $1.80 in economic activity. Every dollar spent on early childhood education returns $7 to $12. Public transit returns roughly $4 to $1. WIC saves $3 in future Medicaid costs for every dollar it spends. Universal preschool, paid family leave, Medicaid expansion, infrastructure, these aren't handouts. They are the highest-return investments any government can make. The math has been clear for forty years. We were just told not to look.
Reaganomics were one expensive lie for the American people. In this episode we talk about why we bought it, who profited, who's still paying β and what this country would actually look like if we ran the numbers instead of the mythology.
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | On the morning of January 20th, 1981, the sun rose over Washington, D.C., and Ronald Wilson Reagan |
| 0:06.0 | placed his hand on a Bible that belonged to his mother, Nell, and took the oath of office as the 40th |
| 0:10.9 | President of the United States. The Bible was open to Second Chronicles 714, a verse about |
| 0:16.2 | healing a nation that has gone astray, and Reagan chose it with the same deliberate care he |
| 0:20.7 | brought to |
| 0:21.1 | every prop and every performance he had ever delivered. He had spent decades learning how to make a |
| 0:26.1 | moment feel sacred, and at this moment in front of hundreds of thousands of people gathered on |
| 0:30.5 | the National Mall and tens of millions more watching at home on television, this was the greatest |
| 0:35.4 | stage he had ever commanded. The country he was |
| 0:38.0 | inheriting was in genuine pain, real pain, and the pain was the kind that people feel not |
| 0:43.1 | just in their savings account, but in their bones, in their fatigue. The 1970s had been a decade |
| 0:48.4 | of economic misery unlike anything most Americans had experienced since the Great Depression. |
| 0:53.7 | Inflation, which is the steady rise in the price of everything from groceries to gasoline, |
| 0:57.8 | had been running at the double digits for years, meaning that the dollar, a working family |
| 1:02.2 | earned on Monday, was worth measurably less by Friday. |
| 1:05.6 | The same time, unemployment was high, factories were closing, interest rates that banks |
| 1:09.4 | charged people who wanted to buy a house and a car had climbed so far into the sky that the dream of home ownership felt out of reach for millions of young families. |
| 1:17.6 | Feel familiar? |
| 1:19.3 | Economist had a word for this particular combination of misery, stagflation. |
| 1:23.6 | The word was ugly and clinical, but what described it was far more personal than any textbook would capture. |
| 1:28.9 | It described a father in Ohio who had worked at the same factory for 20 years and was now watching the purchasing power of his paycheck shrink every single week. |
| 1:37.1 | It described a mother in Texas who had cut her grocery list down to the bare essentials and was still coming up short at the checkout counter. |
... |
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