Campaigns can be a jargony slog. Why not turn that slog into a game of Bingo! : Planet Money Campaigns can be a jargony slog. And this year, we are seeing a lot of economic terms being thrown around, many of which... aren't entirely straightforward.

In this episode, we try to make the mess of words that accompany a presidential campaign into something a little less exhausting: A game of bingo.

Follow along as we dig into five terms that we expect to hear in the upcoming presidential debate, along with some others we hope to hear.

You can play along, too, at npr.org/bingo. Play online or print cards to play with friends on debate night!

This episode was hosted by Nick Fountain and Erika Beras. It was produced by Sam Yellowhorse Kesler with help from Emma Peaslee. It was edited by Meg Cramer. It was fact-checked by Sierra Juarez and engineered by Cena Loffredo. Alex Goldmark is our executive producer.

Help support
Planet Money and hear our bonus episodes by subscribing to Planet Money+ in Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org/planetmoney.

Bingo! (Presidential debate edition)

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  • Transcript

SYLVIE DOUGLIS, BYLINE: This is PLANET MONEY from NPR.

(SOUNDBITE OF COIN SPINNING)

ERIKA BERAS, HOST:

So we have an election coming up, and there is some serious economic policy being lobbed about.

NICK FOUNTAIN, HOST:

Yeah. For the wonks, this has actually been an exciting few weeks because we are starting to see hints, at least, of economic policies from both candidates. Some of them are clear, but most of them are shrouded in jargon or hidden behind campaign slogans.

(SOUNDBITE OF MONTAGE)

VICE PRESIDENT KAMALA HARRIS: Opportunity economy.

DONALD TRUMP: Deindustrialized third-world nation.

HARRIS: A homeowner bill of rights.

TRUMP: Energy dominance.

HARRIS: A middle-class tax cut.

TRUMP: To a net-zero policy. What does that mean? I have no idea.

BERAS: Yes, what does any of that mean?

FOUNTAIN: Right? But these are all things you are likely to hear out on the campaign trail or at next week's debate. And you know what? We were thinking. These next few months are going to be a jargony slog. So what if - hear us out - we turned that slog into a game?

BERAS: That's right. We're doing bingo.

(SOUNDBITE OF LARS KRISTEN, TRENT LARSEN AND FRANK DE KOVA'S "BETTER THAN ANYONE")

BERAS: Nope. Stop it. Hold on. Halt (laughter).

(SOUNDBITE OF RECORD SCRATCH)

BERAS: That's not bingo music. Let's go for something a little more chill.

(SOUNDBITE OF JASON GLOVER, MARK DAVID ALLAWAY AND ANDREW DAVID PROSSER'S "TATTY TUMMLER (CHUTZPAH REMIX)")

BERAS: That is bingo music.

FOUNTAIN: Really?

BERAS: Yeah. Hello, and welcome to PLANET MONEY's economic wonk election lingo bingo extravaganza. I'm Erika Beras.

FOUNTAIN: And I am Nick Fountain - not a huge bingo guy, which is a big contrast, apparently, to you, Erika.

BERAS: That's right. I'm not going to brag here or anything, but I know my way around the bingo hall.

FOUNTAIN: Awesome. Well, we're going to lean into your expertise when it comes to bingo today, and we're going to look for wonky economics terms to fill our bingo card with. That's right. Our bingo card is going to be chock-full of econ lingo.

BERAS: So roll up your sleeves, turn up your TVs, get those daubers ready.

FOUNTAIN: Daubers?

BERAS: You know, the stamp you use every time you get a bingo square.

FOUNTAIN: Of course.

(SOUNDBITE OF JASON GLOVER, MARK DAVID ALLAWAY AND ANDREW DAVID PROSSER'S "TATTY TUMMLER (CHUTZPAH REMIX)")

FOUNTAIN: All right. So what we are going to do today is make a bingo card, mostly for our own entertainment, so the PLANET MONEY staff can compete during the next debate.

BERAS: But we figured, if we're going through all the work, we might as well make a real proper bingo card, too. And you, dear listener, will be able to find that at npr.org/bingo. And you can print it out and play along with us.

FOUNTAIN: Erika, you are our guide to all things bingo. What do we need to know about the game?

BERAS: OK. So your standard Bingo card has 25 squares. And what we're going to do today is fill in each square with a different econ or econ-adjacent term. The first PLANET MONEY staffer to get five in a row wins some, like, yet-to-be-determined prize. Probably something from the office supply closet.

FOUNTAIN: (Laughter) And bragging rights.

BERAS: Yeah - and bragging rights. The middle square is usually the free square. Everyone gets that. And I've been thinking about this a lot. I think our middle square should just pretty obviously be the middle class because, even though the share of people in the middle class has been shrinking for decades, it sure seems like politicians' references to it have been steadily growing.

FOUNTAIN: Middle class in the middle. Love it.

(SOUNDBITE OF BELL)

FOUNTAIN: No politician can avoid saying that term ad nauseam. But that leaves 24 squares left to fill. So let's get moving.

BERAS: Yeah. So one term that I'm pretty sure is going to show up is one that I've heard economists talk about quite a bit over the past month - price controls.

FOUNTAIN: Literally every economist I've called lately has wanted to rail against price controls. Erika, you've been looking into this. Tell me, why are we talking about this?

BERAS: So last month, Kamala Harris made this big policy announcement about something we're all feeling right now - the high price of groceries.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

HARRIS: As president, I will take on the high costs that matter most to most Americans, like the cost of food.

BERAS: And what people heard when she made this speech was, I want the federal government to set or control the price of food. And economists hate price controls.

FOUNTAIN: Totally - because market prices are a signal to producers on how much of any given good to make. And when that signal is broken, it breaks the market. Every economist has a favorite cautionary tale about price controls.

BERAS: Yeah. One of them - the 1970s.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

RICHARD NIXON: Good evening.

BERAS: We had high-ish inflation, and President Nixon put in price controls.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

NIXON: I am ordering a freeze on prices.

BERAS: The results were a disaster. Like, farmers stopped sending their goods to market.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

UNIDENTIFIED PERSON #1: They're holding out for higher prices.

BERAS: Consumers cleaned out the shelves.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

UNIDENTIFIED PERSON #2: The cattle simply are not being brought to market.

BERAS: It just very famously did not work.

FOUNTAIN: But what I have gathered is that Kamala Harris was not actually advocating for price controls. Is that right?

BERAS: No. She was actually talking about a totally different thing - banning price gouging.

FOUNTAIN: Yes. But there seems to be considerable debate over what that actually means. What have you found?

BERAS: So price gouging is hiking up the price of a good. But it isn't just that. There are other criteria that are used to actually determine when something is price gouging as opposed to just a regular price increase. Like, are sellers taking advantage of an emergency situation - a hurricane or a wildfire? Are these essential goods? And are they excessively overpriced? Some state laws that ban this practice say price hikes of 10- to 25% are excessive.

FOUNTAIN: Sure. But, like, come on. During a crisis, it's just more expensive to make stuff. It's really hard to get stuff to a disaster area, for example.

BERAS: Right, right. And this is an important part of this. For it to be considered price gouging, those increased costs have to be taken into account.

FOUNTAIN: Huh. And so this is what Harris is proposing - is something similar to those state laws?

BERAS: The details are a little light. But most likely, her policy will look much more like those laws than any price controls.

FOUNTAIN: All right. Along with price gouging...

(SOUNDBITE OF BELL)

FOUNTAIN: ...And price controls...

(SOUNDBITE OF BELL)

FOUNTAIN: ...And, I guess, supply and demand...

(SOUNDBITE OF BELL)

FOUNTAIN: ...We have filled in three more squares. Erika, I was wondering, do you think we should throw in the fancy term that economists use when they want to say crisis but want to seem pretty cool - exogenous shock?

BERAS: No, I don't think so.

(LAUGHTER)

BERAS: It's a little too obscure. I'm actually trying to win this bingo game.

FOUNTAIN: Oh.

BERAS: So...

FOUNTAIN: Come on.

BERAS: Yeah.

FOUNTAIN: Fair. Fair.

BERAS: No dice.

(SOUNDBITE OF ANDREW BLYTHE AND MARTEN JOUSTRA'S "CHAR LADIES")

FOUNTAIN: All right. Erika has gone off in search of more terms for our bingo card. She's presumably watching stump speeches on four screens at once at double speed. In the meantime, let us take a detour into the world of monetary policy for a second. In any normal presidential campaign cycle, the candidates are not actually talking about monetary policy in the Federal Reserve very much - for a very important reason. Normally, the president doesn't meddle with the Federal Reserve's work of maintaining low unemployment and low inflation because the Fed is supposed to be independent. But this campaign, that very idea is being questioned. For more on that, we are joined by Darian Woods from across the hall at The Indicator. Hey, hey.

DARIAN WOODS, BYLINE: Hey, Nick.

FOUNTAIN: All right. So why, right now, are we talking about Fed independence?

WOODS: Well, because the candidates are. Here's former President Donald Trump just a few weeks ago talking about the Fed.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

TRUMP: I feel the president should have at least say in there, yeah. I feel that strongly. I think that, in my case, I've made a lot of money. I was very successful. And I think I have a better instinct than, in many cases, people that would be on the Federal Reserve or the chairman.

WOODS: And here's Vice President Kamala Harris with pretty much the opposite take.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

HARRIS: The Fed is an independent entity. And as president, I would never interfere in the decisions that the Fed makes.

FOUNTAIN: All right. So different takes on how much and whether the president should influence monetary policy. Why does this matter, Darian?

WOODS: Well, think about the current situation we're in. You know, we had very high inflation not too long ago.

FOUNTAIN: Yeah.

WOODS: And the Federal Reserve has mostly gotten it down to a place that they're more comfortable with. But could they have done that had the president been meddling?

FOUNTAIN: Aha.

WOODS: Raising interest rates is a challenging lever to pull. It brings down prices by slowing the economy down. It makes new mortgages more expensive. It can put people temporarily out of work.

FOUNTAIN: And whereas a president might not want to pull that challenging lever because it's politically unpopular, an independent Fed is more likely to do it.

WOODS: Yeah, it's not a popular line of action for any politician.

FOUNTAIN: Now, the Fed is not totally independent, though. The president appoints members of the Fed board, and Congress has oversight over the Fed. We love to see Jerome Powell being grilled by members of Congress.

WOODS: Yeah. Well, I'm not sure if he loves it. But yes...

FOUNTAIN: (Laughter).

WOODS: ...He does regularly get his feet held to the fire. And it's worth saying that the idea that the Fed gets to do the hard work free from meddling by the executive branch is this long-standing tradition that goes back to the 1950s.

FOUNTAIN: OK. But that could change very soon, it seems like.

WOODS: Yes. However - and this is a big however - we should note that Donald Trump has recently walked back that comment about Fed independence, though those of us who remember his presidency will remember that this is not exactly new territory for him.

FOUNTAIN: I remember a lot of angry tweets about Jerome Powell.

WOODS: So many - and, listen, one final point about this is that it's not just a theory that central bank independence tends to mean lower inflation. The evidence points to it, too. Countries with more independent central banks have lower levels of inflation - though it is a correlation, not necessarily causation.

FOUNTAIN: All right, Darian. I appreciate you schooling us on this subject. Thank you for coming in.

WOODS: Yep, anytime. And if you want to call me again - maybe even for this very episode - to chat about something else election-related, just let me know.

FOUNTAIN: I will take that under advisement. Thank you, sir.

(SOUNDBITE OF CARL DAVID HARMS' "ON THE JOB")

FOUNTAIN: Erika, you're back. How was it?

BERAS: I've been watching those stump speeches (laughter).

FOUNTAIN: What economic lingo have you picked up from them? What should we be adding to our card?

BERAS: I have picked up housing shortage.

(SOUNDBITE OF BELL)

BERAS: Trump likes to talk about the Great Depression...

(SOUNDBITE OF BELL)

BERAS: ...Also a favorite topic of economists - and the national debt.

(SOUNDBITE OF BELL)

BERAS: Big topic.

FOUNTAIN: Terrific. And Darian hooked us up with a few as well - Fed independence.

(SOUNDBITE OF BELL)

FOUNTAIN: Let's throw in inflation and unemployment.

(SOUNDBITE OF BELL DINGING TWICE)

FOUNTAIN: Interest rates.

(SOUNDBITE OF BELL)

FOUNTAIN: Maybe even Fed Chair Jerome Powell.

(SOUNDBITE OF BELL)

FOUNTAIN: Erika, you are the official keeper of the official bingo card.

BERAS: Yes, I am.

FOUNTAIN: How are we doing? How many squares have we filled in so far?

BERAS: Twelve out of 25, which means we've got to keep them coming.

FOUNTAIN: Right. And for the next subject area we thought we could mine for lingo bingo, we thought we would turn to taxes.

BERAS: OK. So both candidates are probably going to talk about the rate that corporations pay on their taxes, also known as the corporate tax rate. Trump wants to reduce it. Harris wants to raise it.

FOUNTAIN: So we should add it to the card - corporate tax rate.

(SOUNDBITE OF BELL)

FOUNTAIN: And, of course, parts of the Trump tax bill from back in 2017 are set to expire next year. And so maybe we're going to get real wonky about the tax code. Maybe the candidates are going to start talking about the standard deduction and the SALT deduction. What do you think? Should we add those to the list?

BERAS: The state and local tax deduction - the one that residents of high-tax states like to use to lower their federal tax bills? - I highly doubt the candidates are going to say it. It doesn't play that well in most swing states. But one can dream. Add them to the card.

(SOUNDBITE OF BELL DINGING TWICE)

FOUNTAIN: Yeah. This wouldn't be a good game if we didn't throw some real hardballs in there, right?

BERAS: Yeah, yeah. We don't want anyone getting a cover-all, which is, you know, when you get every square on the bingo card.

FOUNTAIN: (Laughter) Now that I know what that means, I know that I especially don't want Kenny to get one.

BERAS: (Laughter).

FOUNTAIN: And there are some other hotly debated tax credits that are being bandied about by the candidates. Here, I'm just going to let Kamala Harris speak about them.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

HARRIS: Under my plan, more than 100 million Americans will get a tax cut, and we will do this by restoring two tax cuts designed to help middle-class and working Americans - the Earned Income Tax Credit...

(APPLAUSE)

HARRIS: ...And the Child Tax Credit.

(APPLAUSE)

BERAS: OK. Now, there are two policies in there - expanding the Child Tax Credit that is supported not just by Harris, but also by Trump. That one is kind of self-explanatory. It gives money to people with kids. So we're going to just add that to the card.

FOUNTAIN: Put it on the card.

(SOUNDBITE OF BELL)

BERAS: Put it on the card. But, Nick, you cannot shut up about that other thing that Harris mentioned - the Earned Income Tax Credit.

FOUNTAIN: Yeah, the Earned Income Tax Credit is, like, the undisputed heavyweight champ of public policy. I wanted to geek out about it, so I called up Diane Schanzenbach, an economist at Northwestern.

Is this economists' favorite policy?

DIANE SCHANZENBACH: It might be. It's...

FOUNTAIN: Let's go with it.

SCHANZENBACH: It's certainly my favorite policy.

FOUNTAIN: (Laughter) Awesome.

SCHANZENBACH: That's right. Yeah.

BERAS: That was the longest pause I've ever heard. OK. So maybe not every economist's favorite policy, but certainly Diane's. So tell me about it.

FOUNTAIN: Yeah. So first off, it comes from this rather unusual place - the OG of conservative economics, Milton Friedman. And this idea that he helped popularize - it's called the negative income tax.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

MILTON FRIEDMAN: The proposal for a negative income tax is a proposal to help poor people by giving them money, which is what they need, rather than...

BERAS: Milton Friedman - not exactly who you think of when you think of a policy that a Democratic candidate would be into.

FOUNTAIN: Yeah. Well, this idea is really popular across the board. Economists who usually disagree about a lot of things agree on how brilliant this policy is. And the basic idea behind the negative income tax is that, at low levels of income, rather than tax people for every dollar they earn, you do the opposite. You give them a little extra.

BERAS: Like a bonus?

FOUNTAIN: Yeah. Yeah, sure. That is a good way to think about it. And that is how the earned income tax credit - which was introduced in the '70s and then expanded in the '80s and '90s - works. If you make no money, you get no bonus. But then, if you earn a little bit of money, the government doesn't tax you. They supercharge your earnings, says Diane, by giving you more money than you earned.

SCHANZENBACH: And so that makes working more attractive. And the way that then this is set up is it's going to draw more people into working for the first time that haven't been working before.

FOUNTAIN: So whereas, like, if there was just an income tax and not this policy, every hour I work, the government's going to take away a little bit of that in taxes. Now, every hour that I work, the government's going to add?

SCHANZENBACH: That's right. That's right. You know, only up to a certain point.

FOUNTAIN: After that point - a certain income threshold - the credit slowly fades away until the earner enters the world of regular income taxes, where the government just takes money out of our checks.

BERAS: OK. So this is, like, a way to draw people into the workforce by supercharging their earnings.

FOUNTAIN: Yes. And - and...

SCHANZENBACH: Now, I do want to say, just before we forget it, this policy is a huge deal. It lifts more children out of poverty than any other policy that we have. It's the second, you know, biggest anti-poverty policy that we have behind Social Security. And, you know, many, many people are no longer in poverty because of this program.

BERAS: OK. And so what Harris is proposing is expanding the Earned Income Tax Credit. Is she going to sweeten the deal even more?

FOUNTAIN: Kind of. Right now, the policy is sweetest for people who have children. And Harris' proposal is to expand the number of childless workers who it reaches and also make it more generous for those people.

BERAS: All right. Thank you, Nick, for your tribute to the Earned Income Tax Credit.

(SOUNDBITE OF BELL)

FOUNTAIN: I'm just thrilled that it's going to be on our bingo card, getting the respect it deserves - however, not in full form. We're going to use the abbreviation, EITC.

BERAS: Real ones know.

(SOUNDBITE OF JOHN DEAN KOTASKA AND YEN LEE LOH'S "OTOMAR TRIES TO DANCE")

FOUNTAIN: All right. Now from a topic that I personally love to one of your favorite topics, Erika - trade.

BERAS: I do love a good trade story. And there is no better place for a bunch of trade lingo than a presidential campaign economic bingo card because, as opposed to a lot of other things, presidents actually do influence trade policy quite a bit.

FOUNTAIN: Trump, of course, did a whole lot on trade. He pulled out of and renegotiated trade deals.

(SOUNDBITE OF BELL)

FOUNTAIN: He was extremely hostile towards the big international trade organization, the WTO.

(SOUNDBITE OF BELL)

FOUNTAIN: But his administration will be remembered first and foremost for the trade wars.

(SOUNDBITE OF BELL)

BERAS: Yes. And the economics term that Trump maybe popularized the most - and which we should definitely add to the card - is, of course, tariffs.

(SOUNDBITE OF BELL)

FOUNTAIN: Of course.

BERAS: No president in our lifetime has slapped so many tariffs on imports. And this time around, he is proposing even more - a 60% tariff increase on goods from China and a 10- to 20% across-the-board tariff increase on goods from all other countries - so quite a lot.

FOUNTAIN: And, Erika, the thing I wanted to ask you about is a trade-related thing that came up in a Trump speech that I was watching the other day. It was not an economics term, per se. But as a student of economic history, my ears really perked up.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

TRUMP: Our greatest company by far was United States Steel Corporation. That was the big deal. And now we have Japan buying it. They shouldn't be allowed to buy it. We have to make it work. We have to make it work. You don't want to sell U.S. Steel.

FOUNTAIN: Erika, I heard that, and I was like, where have very recently I heard about U.S. Steel from? And then I realized...

BERAS: Me. Right here. Me.

FOUNTAIN: ...It was you.

BERAS: Yeah.

FOUNTAIN: And it is not just that you're PLANET MONEY's Western Pennsylvania correspondent. You are also PLANET MONEY's resident trade wonk, and you did this show earlier this year about the rise and fall of American-made steel. But this - this U.S. Steel stuff - was new to me. So catch us up. What is going on here?

BERAS: OK. So late last year, the company, U.S. Steel, announced it was going to be sold to Nippon Steel, a Japanese company. And this caused an uproar. Since then, both Trump and Biden have been talking about blocking the sale. And on Labor Day, Kamala Harris said U.S. Steel should remain American-owned and American-operated. And I think the response to the proposed sale says so much about where our economy is at the moment. So first, I'm going to give you this tiny, little backstory on U.S. Steel.

FOUNTAIN: Hit me.

BERAS: It was started by Andrew Carnegie, Henry Clay Frick, Charles Schwab, J.P. Morgan - like, the original supergroup of business barons.

FOUNTAIN: The Backstreet Boys of 19th-century capitalism.

BERAS: Yeah. More like Boygenius, but sure.

FOUNTAIN: Ah.

BERAS: And they created the biggest company in the world.

FOUNTAIN: OK. I am sensing a but. But?

BERAS: But that is, of course, not the case anymore. U.S. Steel is not the biggest company in the world. It isn't even the biggest steel company in the U.S. anymore. Obviously, manufacturing in the U.S. has been in decline for a long time, and selling this iconic company to a foreign entity feels like the final nail in that coffin. And blocking it, or at least signaling that you might, is just good politics.

FOUNTAIN: We should also note that both parties are using that other protectionist tool when it comes to steel - tariffs.

BERAS: Right. The Biden-Harris administration is trying to put additional tariffs on steel, even though research shows that those tariffs actually led to a decrease of tens of thousands of manufacturing jobs in the U.S.

FOUNTAIN: And yet, they are still very popular.

BERAS: Yeah. And I think it's that nostalgia thing. But just look at the numbers. Fifteen thousand people in the U.S. work at U.S. Steel. Compare that to another great American builder - Chipotle.

FOUNTAIN: (Laughter).

BERAS: It employs 120,000 people.

FOUNTAIN: That is not where I thought you were going with that one.

BERAS: (Laughter).

FOUNTAIN: But yes, point taken. We have a service-sector-oriented economy. I'm going to add that to our bingo card - service sector...

(SOUNDBITE OF BELL)

FOUNTAIN: ..Along with manufacturing and U.S. Steel.

(SOUNDBITE OF BELL DINGING TWICE)

BERAS: Coming up after the break, we're going to finalize this bingo card - send it off to the printers - after we add one more term. It's something people - probably yourself included - have a lot of opinions about.

(SOUNDBITE OF JASON GLOVER, MARK DAVID ALLAWAY AND ANDREW DAVID PROSSER'S "GRANDPA'S SHTIK (CHUTZPAH REMIX)")

FOUNTAIN: All right. Economic lingo bingo continues. Last, but not least, there is one policy this year that is all the rage, and it has to do with everyone's favorite part of buying a bag of coffee at the coffee shop these days - being coerced into tipping 20% at the register.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

TRUMP: It's called no tax on tips.

(CHEERING)

TRUMP: No tax on...

FOUNTAIN: That's Trump there. But he's not alone. Here is Harris with a very similar line.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

HARRIS: And eliminate taxes on tips for service and hospitality workers.

(CHEERING)

FOUNTAIN: To help break this down, we have taken Darian Woods up on his offer. He is back again. Thank you, Darian, for coming back.

WOODS: I'm back.

FOUNTAIN: I hope you had a nice break.

WOODS: Yeah, I just had enough time to get a flat white and tip.

FOUNTAIN: Ah, that was nice of you. All right. So what is going on here? Does everybody in the world love this policy proposal?

WOODS: No - particularly economists and tax policy experts like Howard Gleckman from the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center.

HOWARD GLECKMAN: It's a terrible idea.

FOUNTAIN: (Laughter) OK. Why does Howard hate this policy proposal?

WOODS: Well, for starters, it's not entirely fair, right? Like, why should a server get a big tax break while a dishwasher in the back doesn't?

FOUNTAIN: Sure.

WOODS: Reason No. 2 - actually a good portion - more than a third of workers who earn tips - don't even make enough to owe federal income taxes. So this isn't a tax cut for them. It's more for the higher earners.

FOUNTAIN: Got it.

WOODS: And thirdly, economists and Howard say that this will just warp how the economy works.

GLECKMAN: When you tax income in different ways, people are going to work very hard to characterize their income in the lower-tax form.

WOODS: So we're used to tipping the barber or the barista, but what if the...

FOUNTAIN: Sure.

WOODS: ...Surgeon or the dentist pulls out the touch-screen at the end, asking for a tip?

FOUNTAIN: Oh, I - definitely not going to tip them. No way.

WOODS: So this is a dangerous proposition, Nick, for not tipping your surgeon. What if you need a follow-up?

FOUNTAIN: (Laughter) All right. But given that both of these candidates support this change to the tax code, and there are several bills going through Congress right now about this, it might happen, right?

WOODS: Indeed. So I asked Howard - the guy who thinks it's a terrible idea - to think up how to make it less terrible.

GLECKMAN: So this starts getting really complicated. I mean, you could - you certainly could put in income limits.

WOODS: So capping the income at which you can get tax-free tips is something that Kamala Harris said she would do. So that would stop those wealthy white-collar workers from claiming their income as tips. Donald Trump's proposal doesn't have that detail.

GLECKMAN: You certainly could try to define those occupations that are eligible for the tax-exempt tips and those that aren't.

WOODS: Again, this is something that Harris has included in her proposal - to only allow this for hospitality and service workers. Trump, again, hasn't specified this. But that said, Howard is skeptical that this would solve the problem. He says that people like freelancers could redefine what industry they're in in a way that's either legal-ish or outright tax fraud.

FOUNTAIN: I certainly know that, when I worked for tips, I would do some things that were pretty sketchy to increase my tips - my cash tips - in order to not pay taxes.

WOODS: I didn't know you would want to admit to tax evasion on air, Nick, but you do you.

FOUNTAIN: (Laughter) It was a long time ago. I think the statute of limitations is over. All right. So it seems like Howard at least has some good solutions on how to make this policy proposal better.

WOODS: I guess so. But, well, actually, no.

GLECKMAN: The bottom line really is, you know, it's unworkable. You can't. I mean, I'm not going to sit here and try to fix something that shouldn't happen and shouldn't actually be fixed.

WOODS: Well, I appreciate you being game at least enough to think about the hypothetical.

GLECKMAN: Yeah, I try, but I'm not going to help them out on this. They're making this mess. They've got to get out of it themselves.

FOUNTAIN: Love that man's honesty.

WOODS: Yeah.

FOUNTAIN: All right, Darian - taxed tips. Thank you for coming back and helping us again.

WOODS: Yes. Well, policy bingo - my favorite game.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

FOUNTAIN: Now for the moment of truth - the big bingo card reveal. Erika, how's it looking?

BERAS: With taxed tips...

(SOUNDBITE OF BELL)

BERAS: ...We are at 25.

(SOUNDBITE OF BELL RINGING)

FOUNTAIN: (Shouting) Let's go.

BERAS: (Shouting) Yeah.

FOUNTAIN: Bring that over here.

BERAS: We did it. Woop-woop (ph).

FOUNTAIN: Oh, look at that. This is beautiful.

BERAS: Oh, amazing.

FOUNTAIN: I've never seen a bingo card that warmed my heart so much. And you know what? Looking at this, there is something very satisfying about it, not just that we did it and that we're done with it. But also, this is kind of, like, a map for where we're at as a country economic policy-wise for the next little while. It's a beaut to behold.

BERAS: But also, Nick, this is, you know, just a game, right? Like, this is really just a reason for us to get up in each other's faces - probably most likely me - and yell, I won. You lost. That's it. Game over.

FOUNTAIN: (Laughter) Can't wait to compete against you next week.

BERAS: (Laughter).

FOUNTAIN: Let's go.

(SOUNDBITE OF MARK DAVID ALLAWAY AND ANDREW DAVID PROSSER'S "BOROUGH PARK BOUNCE")

FOUNTAIN: If you want to play along at home, beat me, maybe beat Erika...

BERAS: Impossible. You're not going to beat me.

FOUNTAIN: You keep talking about this like it's a game of skill. It is not a game of skill.

BERAS: There is so much skill to bingo. Are you kidding?

FOUNTAIN: Anyways, if you want to play along at home, whether it's during the debate or even out at a campaign rally, you can head over to npr.org/bingo to get a randomly sorted card of your own. We've added a bunch more terms to the list. May you be so lucky as to not get the dreaded inverted yield curve.

BERAS: And as we were about to hit publish on this episode, Harris was getting ready to lay out even more economic policy proposals. We're going to add another term to our card - small business.

Special thanks to Brent Jones and Alyson Hurt for making our bingo cards look amazing.

FOUNTAIN: Yes. Today's episode was produced by Sam Yellowhorse Kesler with help from Emma Peaslee and edited by Meg Cramer. It was fact-checked by Sierra Juarez and engineered by Cena Loffredo. Alex Goldmark is our executive producer. I'm Nick Fountain.

BERAS: I'm Erika Beras. Thanks for listening and for playing along.

(SOUNDBITE OF MARK DAVID ALLAWAY AND ANDREW DAVID PROSSER'S "BOROUGH PARK BOUNCE")

BERAS: Life is going to get so sad when I can't talk about bingo every day.

(LAUGHTER)

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