What to read/view and learn in these days?
Another student of mine wrote to me a while ago, asking for tips along the lines that the title of this blog post suggests. Said person hopes to build a career in the finance industry, so my recommendations are fashioned accordingly, but it still might be of interest to some/all of you.
So here goes (The student's requests in bold italic, my responses are as per usual)
Books
Manias, Panics, and Crashes: A History of Financial Crises, by Charles Kindleberger
Can "It" Happen Again?: Essays on Instability and Finance, by Hyman Minsky
End this depression now!, by Paul Krugman
This time is different, by Reinhart and Rogoff
Keynes: The Return of the Master, by Robert Skidelsky None of these books have been written with the kind of crisis that we are bout to face in mind. Macroeconomics, and public policy are going to be tested like never before, but still, reading (or re-reading) these books is likely to be a useful exercise for the days to come.
Movies
Trading Places, starring Eddie Murphy and Dan Aykroyd
Groundhog Day, starring the inimitable Bill Murray
The Exterminating Angel, a Bunuel movie
Arbitrage, starring Richard Gere
Wild Tales, a movie from Argentina
Online Courses
It's not cheap, it's not free, but that may be an argument in its favor. Consider Akimbo.
Flip it! Why learn? Teach! Create YouTube videos, blogs, podcasts. If your argument is going to be "but I don't know anything well enough to teach it", well, that's a reason for you to teach, not the other way around.
The other sources are so well known that I won't bother repeating them here. But I strongly recommend 2. above
Other Miscellaneous Reading
Twitter! It remains gloriously underrated, but think of Twitter as a very delicate plant that needs daily nurturing. Be ruthless about culling people from your feed, and if you are looking for a good place to suggest, try #econtwitter
Prospect Magazine is not behind a paywall right now.
The Browser (I think they give one free read a day)
Things I should be doing/learning as a masters graduate
Build a project tracker using Microsoft Excel across multiple sheets
Learn some basic, fun coding. Here is a fun example.
Put your work out there. Your CV is work that is publicly available to see; it is not a printed piece of paper.
Build a network of people you have learnt from, get mentors in your field.
Pay it forward: build a network of people you have taught, get mentees in your field.