Today in Focus (The Guardian): The global race for face masks

Today in Focus (The Guardian): The global race for face masks

Author: Professor Daniel Ludwinski September 10, 2025 Duration: 27:07
From Today in Focus (The Guardian):
The world economy may have dramatically dipped and the price of oil crashed, but one commodity is seeing an unprecedented boom: the face mask. Samanth Subramanian explores the newly distorted marketplace for masks and the lengths some will go to get them
When the coronavirus began spreading beyond China in January, the race to buy up any available protective face masks went global. It caused a frenzy of buying as prices rocketed and suppliers were overwhelmed by the demand.

For one man, Ovidiu Olea, a businessman in Hong Kong, it was the start of a wild ride from mask buyer to mask dealer to ultimately, mask producer. The Guardian writer Samanth Subramanian caught up with him as he begins production. He tells Rachel Humphreys about how distortions in the mask market have led to diplomatic incidents.

But with mask sales rocketing and many governments starting to either recommend or insist on their use, the evidence about their efficacy is still inconclusive. And some fear that widespread rush to buy up stocks will prevent them reaching the people who need them most: frontline workers and medics.

Professor Daniel Ludwinski guides his students through the real-world echoes of economic theory with Oxford College Principles of Microeconomics Course. Rather than a standard lecture series, this audio collection pulls from a wide spectrum of existing conversations and analyses, all curated to illuminate the principles discussed in class. You'll hear how foundational concepts like supply, demand, and market structures play out in current events, policy debates, and everyday life. The selected episodes serve as a bridge, connecting textbook models to the nuanced discussions happening in the broader world. This podcast is designed specifically for learners, offering a complementary audio syllabus that deepens understanding by placing economics in context. Tuning in provides a richer, more applied perspective on the course material, hearing expert voices explore the economic forces shaping our communities and choices. Each chosen episode acts as a case study, prompting listeners to think critically about the incentives and trade-offs that define our interconnected systems.
Author: Language: en-us Episodes: 14

Oxford College Principles of Microeconomics Course
Podcast Episodes
Planet Money: Why The Price of Coke Didn't Change For 70 years [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 20:34
From Planet Money:Prices go up. Occasionally, prices go down. But for 70 years, the price of a bottle of Coca-Cola didn't change. From 1886 until the late 1950s, a bottle of coke cost just a nickel. On today's show, we f…
Planet Money: The Pickle Problem [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 31:19
From Planet Money:In our second class, we find markets everywhere and discuss what makes them work and when they fail. We start off with the basic tools to understand a market: supply and demand. We find that the price o…
Planet Money: Big Government Cheese [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 20:14
From Planet Money:In 1976, Jimmy Carter made a campaign promise: I'm giving dairy farmers a break. And after he won, he set out to raise the price of milk. But that's easier said than done. The government couldn't just b…