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Leadership Economics

Leadership Economics

By: Aaron Phipps and Spencer Clouatre
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Most leadership advice is a collection of motivational stories or checklists pulled from someone else's company. Leadership Economics starts from a different premise: that leadership is an economic problem at its core, a question of scarce resources, incomplete information, and choices made under uncertainty. Aaron Phipps, an economist at West Point, and Spencer Clouatre, a retired Army Colonel and former Special Operations aviator, work through new ideas about how people actually decide, lead, and create, and they sit down with leaders from across sectors to hear how those leaders think about the challenges in front of them. The goal is not hacks or formulas. It is a sharper way of seeing your own situation, so you can diagnose what is actually wrong rather than what is most visible.Leadership Economics LLC Economics Management Management & Leadership Personal Development Personal Success
Episodes
  • How we got here and why leadership is an economics problem
    Apr 28 2026

    In the pilot, Aaron and Spencer argue that great leaders are quietly good economists, and introduce AIME (Allocation, Information, Motivation, Execution) as the four focal points of a leader's job.

    The pilot episode of Leadership Economics. Aaron and Spencer trace how the framework took shape. Spencer brings the operational side, a career flying assault helicopters and teaching at West Point. Aaron brings the academic side, an economics dissertation on incentives. Together they lay out the case for treating leadership as an economics problem and introduce the AIME framework (Allocation, Information, Motivation, Execution) as the four focal points of a leader's job. Every future episode will return to one or more of those pillars.

    What we cover

    • Why the leadership shelf is full of books but short on a definition
    • Why first principles thinking, the way Newton built physics, beats pattern-matching from observed greats
    • Spencer's path from enlisted combat engineer to special operations aviation to the West Point Economics Department
    • Aaron's dissertation on teacher performance incentives, and the puzzle of why big financial incentives so rarely work
    • The Joint Allocation Meeting (JAM) in Afghanistan, a single decision that touched all four AIME functions at once
    • A first look at AIME: Allocation, Information, Motivation, Execution

    Mentioned

    • Adam Smith and David Hume, the intellectual lineage of treating human behavior with rigor
    • The Hero with a Thousand Faces (Joseph Campbell), Aaron's closing reference to the "coordinated soul"

    Subscribe to the newsletter — one short essay every other Tuesday: leadershipeconomics.com

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    50 mins
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