The best economic blogs in 2026 are not just websites. They are the last stronghold of original economic thinking in an era when ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini can answer almost any textbook question in seconds. An entire generation is now learning economics through AI tutors rather than through the blogs, newsletters, YouTube channels, and research institutions that shaped modern economic understanding. Something valuable is being lost in that transition, and this guide exists to make sure the best voices in economics keep getting read, watched, and heard.
This is an editorial appreciation, not an algorithmic ranking. We have curated 80+ essential sources across four formats: the 50 best economics blogs, the 12 most substantive YouTube channels, the 12 most influential research institutions, and the 10 best economics podcasts. When the 2008 financial crisis unfolded, it was bloggers like Paul Krugman, Brad DeLong, and Bill McBride who explained what was happening in real time. When the 2022 inflation surge arrived, it was Joseph Politano’s Apricitas Economics, Claudia Sahm’s Stay-At-Home Macro, and the IMF Blog that did the analytical work that later shaped academic consensus. Today, a new wave of YouTube creators like Money & Macro, Patrick Boyle, and Garys Economics are reaching audiences that traditional academic publishing never could.
If you read five of the sources on this list regularly, your understanding of the global economy will be sharper than 95% of professional commentators. We have refused to rank these sources numerically because ranking them would miss the point. Matt Levine’s Money Stuff and Thomas Piketty’s blog are doing radically different things, both brilliantly. Some entries on this list have multiple Nobel Prizes behind them. Others are YouTube channels started in the last three years that are quietly reshaping how young people think about inequality and monetary policy. All of them have earned a place here because they teach something that cannot be learned anywhere else.
This guide pairs well with our own foundational explainers. If you are newer to economics, we recommend starting with our guides on globalization, comparative advantage, price elasticity, and central banking and monetary policy before working through the sources below. These four pieces cover the conceptual scaffolding you will see referenced across almost every blog, channel, and podcast on this list.
The Essential Sources at a Glance
Below is a quick-reference table of every source featured in this guide, color-coded by format. Jump to any section using the navigation above, or browse the full list here first.
| Source | Type | Author / Host | Focus |
|---|---|---|---|
| Paul Krugman | Blog | Paul Krugman | Macro, policy, trade |
| Marginal Revolution | Blog | Cowen & Tabarrok | Everything, curiously |
| Grasping Reality | Blog | Brad DeLong | Economic history |
| Calculated Risk | Blog | Bill McBride | Housing, labour |
| Apricitas Economics | Blog | Joseph Politano | Real-time macro |
| Money Stuff | Blog | Matt Levine | Finance, law |
| FT Alphaville | Blog | FT team | Markets, plumbing |
| Chartbook | Blog | Adam Tooze | History, geopolitics |
| Noahpinion | Blog | Noah Smith | Macro, tech |
| Notes on the Crises | Blog | Nathan Tankus | Treasury plumbing |
| Economics Explained | YouTube | EE Team | Accessible macro |
| Money & Macro | YouTube | Joeri Schasfoort | Monetary theory |
| Patrick Boyle | YouTube | Patrick Boyle | Markets, finance |
| Ben Felix | YouTube | Ben Felix | Evidence-based investing |
| MRU | YouTube | Cowen & Tabarrok | Econ education |
| Garys Economics | YouTube | Gary Stevenson | Inequality, wealth |
| NBER | Institution | NBER | Research working papers |
| IMF Blog | Institution | IMF staff | Global macro |
| Liberty Street Economics | Institution | NY Fed | US financial system |
| Bank Underground | Institution | Bank of England | Central banking |
| Bruegel | Institution | Bruegel | European policy |
| Odd Lots | Podcast | Weisenthal & Alloway | Markets, macro |
| EconTalk | Podcast | Russ Roberts | Long-form interviews |
| Planet Money | Podcast | NPR team | Storytelling econ |
| Macro Musings | Podcast | David Beckworth | Monetary policy |
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Above: a selection highlighting each category. The full list of 80+ sources is organised by section below.
Part I: The Venerated Voices
After 25 years at The New York Times, Krugman moved to Substack in 2024, publishing three to five times weekly on US macro policy, trade, inequality, and political economy. His ability to translate complex models into clear prose remains unmatched.
Short posts, occasional humour, policy commentary. Mankiw is a centre-right voice with measured, rigorous analysis. Essential for anyone teaching or studying intermediate macro.
Running since 2003, multiple daily posts spanning economics, culture, books, travel, and emerging technology. The breadth is the point. One of the most widely-read economics blogs in the world.
Deep academic analysis with forthright policy commentary, particularly on monetary policy, inflation, and the shortcomings of Modern Monetary Theory. Developer of the fiscal theory of the price level.
Prolific on economic history, macro, and technological change. His book Slouching Towards Utopia is a defining text for understanding the long twentieth century from 1870 to 2010.
Monthly columns on inequality, the discontents of globalisation, climate economics, and the failures of free-market fundamentalism. His writing remains a reliable counterpoint to market-first orthodoxy.
Thoughtful critic of hyperglobalisation. Develops arguments about the political trilemma of the world economy and the case for heterodox industrial policy. Essential reading on the new wave of tariffs and reshoring, and a useful complement to our primer on comparative advantage and specialisation.
Monthly columns on wealth inequality, taxation, and European politics, grounded in the extraordinary empirical work of the World Inequality Database. Piketty has done more than anyone to put inequality back at the centre of economic debate, and his work connects naturally to our guide on welfare economics and Pareto efficiency.
Part II: Data-Driven & Analytical Blogs
The gold standard for US housing and labour market analysis. McBride famously called the 2005 housing bubble and the 2008 crash before most mainstream economists took either seriously. Still publishing essential weekly updates in 2026.
Explores economic data through the FRED platform. Each post explains what an indicator actually measures, why it matters, and how to visualise it well. The best free resource for learning to think with data, and a natural companion to our guide on mastering economic indicators.
One of the most technically rigorous macro blogs in existence. Chinn covers international macro and exchange rates; Hamilton covers oil prices and recession forecasting. Posts routinely cited in peer-reviewed research.
Chart-heavy, empirically grounded newsletter focused on understanding the current economy through the latest data releases. If you read one newsletter on US macro in 2026, make it this one.
Publishes 30+ charts each weekday covering global financial markets, central bank policy, and macroeconomic data. A morning ritual for thousands of institutional investors worldwide.
Co-author of Trade Wars Are Class Wars. The Overshoot does deep dives into capital flows, exchange rate dynamics, and the policy debates behind global imbalances. Among the most intellectually ambitious macro newsletters on Substack, and best read alongside our analysis of balance of payments equilibrium and disequilibrium.
The clearest place online to understand the economics of long-run growth. His book Fully Grown argued that slowing US growth reflects affluence rather than dysfunction, a thesis that continues to shape debates about secular stagnation. Pairs well with our overview of production functions and isoquant curves.
Creator of the Sahm Rule, now tracked by the Federal Reserve itself as a real-time recession indicator. Her newsletter focuses on US macro, Fed policy, and how policy affects ordinary households. An excellent accompaniment to our primer on understanding unemployment.
Part III: Policy, Markets & Fed Watching
The single most-read financial newsletter in the world. Explains complex deals, corporate fraud, crypto mishaps, and market structure with rigour, wit, and dry humour. A daily read for hundreds of thousands of finance professionals.
The FT’s irreverent but technically rigorous markets blog, running since 2006. Covers corporate accounting scandals, market microstructure, and central bank operations with unusual depth.
The leading source for analysis of international trade, macroeconomic policy, and global economic governance. Essential reading for anyone tracking tariffs, sanctions, or IMF programs.
Daily commentary from scholars including former Fed officials and Treasury alumni, covering fiscal policy, monetary policy, healthcare, and climate economics. The Hutchins Center on Fiscal and Monetary Policy is particularly strong.
The leading non-partisan source for analysis of US federal tax policy. Distributional impact of reforms, tariff revenue, and state and local taxation are all covered with technical precision.
Translates cutting-edge economics research into policy-relevant columns, typically 1,500 words and written by the original researchers. Contributors include central bank governors, Nobel laureates, and top academics.
Dean Baker has been correcting economic reporting in major newspapers for more than two decades. Beat the Press is part media watchdog, part progressive economic commentary, and consistently one of the sharpest voices calling out loose reasoning in mainstream coverage of trade, housing, healthcare, and labour markets.
Clear, evidence-based memos on policy questions from leading economists, written to be accessible to policymakers, journalists, and the general public without sacrificing rigour.
Daily posts connecting current news to economic concepts. A great resource for teachers and students looking for real-world applications of supply and demand, elasticity, and market structure. For the underlying theory, see our guides on price elasticity and market structures in microeconomics.
The leading proponent of NGDP level targeting and the founder of market monetarism. Sumner argues that tight monetary policy caused both the 2008 crisis and the post-crisis stagnation. Required reading for anyone interested in monetary policy design.
Part IV: Academic & Theoretical Blogs
A rigorous critic of British austerity and eurozone policy failures for over a decade. Combines formal macro models with sharp policy analysis. Essential reading for understanding UK fiscal policy since 2010, and a useful complement to our breakdown of the IS-LM framework.
Summarises important new papers, digests reports from the CBO, Fed, and international institutions, and offers thoughtful commentary. One of the best places to stay current with the breadth of the field without reading 40 journals.
Blogging since 2005, combining mainstream economics, heterodox perspectives, and political philosophy. Dillow is one of the few writers who takes both neoclassical models and Marxist critique seriously on the same page. The blog migrated to Substack in 2025 and continues its regular cadence with recent posts on regulatory capture, poverty, and competence in government.
Explains new working papers and published research with the clarity of a seminar leader. Coverage focuses on innovation, industrial organisation, and the economics of science.
Long-form essays on banking, monetary policy, and the political economy of finance. Writes infrequently but always rewards the read. His essays on the 2008 crisis shaped academic thinking on systemic risk.
Creator of the famous “elephant curve” showing global income growth over the past generation. Commentary on global capitalism, political economy, and development, often with a historical sweep few blogs match.
One of the best teaching-focused macro blogs online. Posts are rigorous, pedagogical, and often develop original theoretical insights in a conversational register. Moved to a new WordPress home in September 2025 after TypePad’s shutdown and continues publishing active commentary.
Reviews important new economics books, covers the state of economic measurement, and reflects on the evolution of the profession. Her own book GDP: A Brief but Affectionate History remains the best short introduction to national income accounting, and a natural companion to our guide on measuring national income.
Part V: Behavioural & Everyday Economics
The franchise that redefined how economics reaches general audiences. Applies economic reasoning to unconventional questions, from drug dealing to sumo wrestling. Still publishing new content alongside its flagship podcast.
Harford has written the FT’s Undercover Economist column for more than 20 years. His books have translated economic ideas for millions of readers worldwide and his radio work has made him one of the most recognisable economics voices in Britain.
The most consistent voice for classical liberal and free-market economics in the blogosphere. Whether you agree or disagree, Cafe Hayek is essential for understanding the strongest version of the free-market case.
Multiple authors including Bryan Caplan, David Henderson, and Scott Sumner writing from a classical liberal perspective. The associated library of free economics texts is one of the best educational resources on the internet.
For over 15 years, the single best daily aggregator of economics commentary. Even with reduced posting frequency, the archive is an invaluable historical record of the post-2008 economics discussion.
Writes economics in a distinctly millennial voice, using pop culture references and current news as entry points for serious teaching. One of the best resources for undergraduates who want economics to feel alive.
One of the most engaging economics communicators alive, writing for The New York Times and co-hosting the Think Like an Economist podcast. His social threads turn dense data releases into genuine learning moments.
Part VI: The Next Generation
One of the most widely-read economics writers on Substack. Covers macroeconomics, technology policy, industrial policy, and US-China relations with a distinct combination of optimism and rigour.
One of the most influential economics newsletters in the world, combining historical perspective, geopolitical analysis, and macroeconomic commentary in a way no other publication attempts.
Covers US economic policy, housing, urbanism, and the politics of abundance. Central to the “abundance agenda” movement reshaping US centre-left policy thinking.
One of the most distinctive voices writing about finance, management cybernetics, and organisational failure. His book Lying for Money is the best introduction to financial fraud ever written.
The most detailed, institutionally accurate coverage of how the US Treasury, Federal Reserve, and commercial banking system actually operate on a daily basis. Read closely inside the Fed and Treasury themselves.
A research organisation arguing for full-employment macroeconomic policy. Their blog is influential on Federal Reserve policy debates and labour market analysis. Often cited in FOMC discussions.
Coined the term “vibecession” to describe the gap between strong economic fundamentals and weak consumer sentiment. Combines rigorous macro analysis with a TikTok-era sensibility that reaches audiences traditional economics never could.
The leading proponent of prediction markets and one of the most original thinkers in economics. Ranges across futurism, the economics of AI, medical reform, and social status in a single week’s posts.
European economist covering macro policy, growth economics, and international convergence. Shares consistent, data-driven analysis on LinkedIn and via his blog and AIER pieces.
Part VII: The Best Economics YouTube Channels
The largest dedicated economics channel on YouTube, with a signature format that dissects the economies of individual countries in 15-minute explainers. Over 2.5 million subscribers and growing.
Arguably the most intellectually serious economics channel on YouTube. Schasfoort, a Dutch macroeconomist, tackles monetary theory, fiscal policy, and banking with an academic rigour that is rare in the format. His explainers on central bank balance sheets pair well with our primer on central banking and monetary policy.
A former hedge fund manager who now makes some of the most incisive commentary on markets, banking, and financial scandals on YouTube. His deadpan delivery disguises genuinely sophisticated analysis.
The gold standard for applying academic financial economics to ordinary investment decisions. Every video is grounded in peer-reviewed research, delivered without hype or sales pitch.
The video companion to the Marginal Revolution blog. Full courses on macro, micro, development economics, and more, taught by Cowen and Tabarrok with guest lectures from top economists.
A former top-ranked Citibank FX trader who now runs one of the most-watched economics education channels on YouTube. His focus on wealth inequality and how the rich get richer has resonated with a broad public audience.
A Canadian CFA who debunks financial scams, explains investment concepts, and breaks down market events with refreshing honesty. Among the most trusted voices in financial education on YouTube.
The video channel of the Institute for New Economic Thinking, founded after the 2008 crisis. Features long-form interviews and lectures from economists rethinking mainstream assumptions, including Stiglitz, Akerlof, Mazzucato, and Tooze.
A PBS Digital Studios channel that explains personal finance and everyday economics for millennials and Gen-Z. Well-produced, warmly presented, genuinely educational.
The former Greek finance minister who challenged the Eurozone during the 2015 debt crisis continues to offer sharp, heterodox commentary on global capitalism, tech monopolies, and the future of money.
One of the best pure-teaching channels for UK A-Level, IB, and introductory university economics. Thousands of students credit EconplusDal for helping them pass exams and actually understand the material.
Among the most-watched finance explainer channels on YouTube. Topics range from how banks create money to why the housing market behaves the way it does, delivered in an accessible, visually strong format.
Part VIII: Top Economics Research Institutions
The NBER publishes working papers from virtually every major US academic economist before those papers reach peer-reviewed journals. If you want to read the latest research as it happens, this is where it lives.
The International Monetary Fund’s blog publishes accessible analysis of global macro trends, country surveillance, and the latest World Economic Outlook data. Essential for anyone tracking global debt, currency crises, or cross-border capital flows.
A constellation of blogs covering development economics, impact evaluation, poverty measurement, and infrastructure. The Development Impact blog is particularly valuable for anyone working in or studying development economics, and a natural counterpart to our coverage of multinational corporations in the global economy.
The BIS is the primary institution for central bank coordination globally. Its Quarterly Review, Working Papers, and Annual Economic Report contain some of the most sophisticated analysis of monetary policy, financial stability, and cross-border banking anywhere.
The research blog of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, covering US financial markets, banking, housing, and the mechanics of monetary policy implementation. The NY Fed has unique visibility into US financial plumbing.
The SF Fed’s Economic Letter series publishes concise, accessible research notes from Fed economists. Topics range from the natural rate of interest to immigration’s effect on inflation, all written to inform policy debates.
A staff blog run by Bank of England employees covering monetary policy, financial stability, banking regulation, and macroeconomic research. Often publishes work that previews or supplements Bank of England Working Papers.
The OECD produces the Economic Outlook, country surveys, and a stream of comparative research on productivity, inequality, and labour markets across 38 member countries. Indispensable for anyone comparing advanced economies.
Bruegel is the most influential economics think tank in Europe, covering EU fiscal policy, monetary union design, trade, and technology regulation. Consistently cited by the European Commission, ECB, and European governments. Their analysis of open-economy policy pairs naturally with our walkthrough of the Mundell-Fleming model.
The leading UK think tank focused on living standards, inequality, labour markets, and household finances. Their analysis of UK Budgets, Autumn Statements, and cost-of-living data is unmatched in British policy research.
Based at the LSE, the CEP produces some of Europe’s most cited applied economics research on productivity, labour markets, education, and Brexit. Their CentrePiece magazine translates research for general audiences.
CFR’s Geo-Economics and International Economics programmes produce essential commentary on sanctions, trade, sovereign debt, and the dollar system. Brad Setser’s blog on international capital flows is a particular highlight.
Part IX: The Best Economics Podcasts
The most essential markets podcast of the past decade. Weisenthal and Alloway have a gift for finding the niche expert on any topic, from shipping container rates to Japanese bond yields, and turning it into a genuinely interesting conversation.
Weekly hour-long conversations with economists, writers, and thinkers since 2006. Roberts’s Socratic interviewing style and genuinely open intellectual curiosity have made EconTalk a favourite of serious listeners for nearly two decades.
NPR’s flagship economics podcast, launched in 2008 to explain the financial crisis and still going strong. Uses narrative storytelling to explore everything from cartel economics to the shipping container revolution.
The short-form daily counterpart to Planet Money. Each episode builds around a single number, trend, or concept from the day’s economic news, compressed into a tight 10 minutes.
The podcast that took the Freakonomics brand from book franchise to cultural institution. Long-form episodes on everything from teacher incentives to the economics of sumo wrestling, grounded in serious academic research.
Weekly interviews with economists, central bankers, and policy experts on monetary policy, banking, and macro. Among the few podcasts where you can hear Fed officials speak at genuine length about their frameworks.
Tyler Cowen interviews economists, artists, scientists, and thinkers in a format unlike any other. Guests arrive having read volumes of Cowen’s idiosyncratic questions. Guests have included multiple Nobel laureates, heads of state, and cultural figures.
A rigorous podcast examining what’s broken in contemporary capitalism. Zingales brings the academic rigour of the University of Chicago; McLean brings the investigative chops that uncovered Enron. Together they cover monopoly power, lobbying, and market concentration, themes that connect to our analysis of collusion in oligopoly.
The definitive podcast on ETFs, passive investing, and the plumbing of modern capital markets. A niche focus that becomes essential once you realise ETFs now hold more than $12 trillion globally.
A husband-and-wife economics teaching podcast that breaks down the economic way of thinking in everyday scenarios. Perfect for listeners who want to train their intuition, not just memorise concepts.
How We Curated This List
Our selection criteria
Every source on this list was evaluated against four criteria. A source only appears if it clears all four.
- Active in 2026. No list of the best economic blogs is useful if half the entries stopped publishing years ago. Every source here has posted, published, or released new material in the past 12 months.
- Intellectual contribution. The source must either add original analysis, translate research into public understanding, or synthesise ideas in ways that are not available elsewhere. Aggregators and news-only sites are excluded.
- Demonstrated influence. Either institutional credibility (academic, central bank, major think tank) or proven readership influence (cited by other leading sources, referenced in policy debate, read inside policymaking institutions).
- Accessibility and voice. Technical rigour matters, but so does the ability to reach readers. Every source here writes or presents in a way that non-specialists can follow when they put in the effort.
What we deliberately excluded
We did not include general news sites (even high-quality ones like The Economist or Financial Times main feeds), aggregators that republish other people’s work, personal finance blogs without macro content, or sources that have not published in more than 18 months. The goal was to highlight voices and institutions that actively contribute to economic understanding, not outlets that summarise it.
Why These Are the Best Economic Blogs, Channels & Institutions in 2026
The best economic blogs in 2026 are doing something AI cannot do. They are applying decades of accumulated judgment to events as they unfold, risking being wrong in public, and maintaining a personal intellectual voice in a world that keeps pushing toward generic outputs. The best economics YouTube channels are reaching audiences that traditional academic publishing never could, turning a generation of viewers into serious students of macroeconomics. The best economics institutions are producing the primary research that shapes how central banks set rates, how treasuries issue debt, and how governments regulate market structures. The best economics podcasts are creating the long-form conversations that textbooks cannot contain.
We did not rank these 80+ sources numerically because ranking them would be dishonest. Matt Levine is not better than Simon Wren‑Lewis; they are doing different things, both extraordinarily well. Economics Explained and the NBER exist in different intellectual universes, but both enrich the landscape. Appreciation, not ranking, is the right frame for what these writers, broadcasters, and institutions have given us.
If you write, host, or work at one of the sources featured on this list, thank you. Your work has shaped how an entire generation of economics readers, students, and practitioners thinks about the world. If you are reading this list looking for the best economic blogs, YouTube channels, institutions, or podcasts to follow in 2026, start with any three that catch your interest. Subscribe, read and listen consistently for a month, and you will learn more about real‑world economics than any textbook or AI tutor can teach you. These are the voices, channels, and institutions that made modern economics what it is, and they deserve to be read, watched, and heard for another decade at least.
If you want to keep building your own foundation alongside these sources, our explainers on various economic categories are a natural next stop:
Featured in this guide? If you write, host, or work at one of the sources above and would like to link back to this appreciation piece, we would be honoured. A simple mention of “Featured in MASEconomics’ Essential Economics Sources 2026” helps us continue the work of celebrating the voices shaping economic thought. Did you find this article helpful? Share it with someone who loves economics. And remember, at MASEconomics, we make complex ideas simple.
Stay curious, keep questioning, and never stop learning. Warm regards, MASEconomics Team