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Primate Economics
CHANNEL INTELLIGENCE

Primate Economics YouTube channel analysis

@Primateeconomics 4.4y old Australia

Primate Economics is a YouTube channel with 561.0K subscribers and 30.1M total views, and an estimated $3K – $10K/mo revenue. This analysis breaks down its outlier videos, content strategy, similar channels, revenue & valuation estimate.

Analysis generated with AI from public YouTube data. Revenue and valuation figures are estimates derived from public data, not financial advice.

01

Primate Economics channel stats

lifetime totals
Subscribers561.0K
Total views30.1M
Videos25
Avg views / video1.2M
Views / day · life18.8K
Views / subscriber54
Share of views by format
Long-form 94%Shorts 6%
03

Top videos

biggest ever
01 Inflation Explained with Bananas
1.7M1.8×Analyze
02 Tariffs Explained with Bananas
1.3M1.4×Analyze
03 Tax Explained with Bananas
Tax Explained with Bananas
304d ago·evergreen
1.1M1.2×Analyze
04 Credit Cards Explained with Bananas
1.1M1.2×Analyze
06 Stocks Explained with Bananas
952.0KAnalyze
08 Crypto Explained with Bananas
816.0K0.9×Analyze
09 How To Buy A House Explained with Bananas
406.0K0.4×Analyze
10 Investing Explained with Bananas
395.0K0.4×Analyze

Replicate this channel immediately. It achieves massive view counts (median 952k) with an incredibly simple, highly templated visual metaphor that strips away the complexity of dry financial topics.

04

Niche & positioning

Visual Economics & Finance Education

Explaining complex macroeconomic concepts and personal finance fundamentals using a single, absurdly simple physical proxy: bananas.

05

Content strategy

Evergreen 100%Trendjacking 0%Other 0%

100% evergreen educational content focusing on timeless economic principles, financial systems, and personal finance basics that viewers search for year-round.

06

Outlier playbook

the repeatable breakout formula
Formula

Pick a broad, high-anxiety money/economics topic that people hear constantly but feel they do not fully understand — especially inflation, tariffs, taxes, credit cards, stocks, crypto, financial bubbles, the Great Depression, buying a house, or investing — and turn it into a simple banana-based analogy. The breakout format is not interviews or guests; it is a short educational explainer where bananas act as the universal stand-in for money, goods, prices, debt, assets, trade, or speculation. The strongest performers combine evergreen usefulness with current-event relevance: inflation, tariffs, crypto, taxes, credit cards, and bubbles all feel both timeless and topical.

Title pattern

"[Big financial/economic concept] Explained with Bananas" — keep the title extremely literal, searchable, and repeatable. The winning hook is the contrast between an intimidating topic and a childish/simple explanation device: "Inflation Explained with Bananas," "Tariffs Explained with Bananas," "Ta

  1. 1Choose a topic with mass confusion and high personal relevance: inflation, tariffs, taxes, credit cards, housing, stocks, investing, crypto, bubbles, or a major economic crisis like the Great Depressi
  2. 2Build the entire explanation around one banana economy metaphor: bananas as money, bananas as goods, banana prices rising, monkeys borrowing bananas, governments taxing bananas, countries trading bana
  3. 3Use the exact repeatable packaging: title it "[Topic] Explained with Bananas" and make the thumbnail/visual premise immediately show the topic plus bananas.
  4. 4Prioritize topics that are both evergreen and currently discussed in the news or personal finance culture; the biggest examples are "Inflation Explained with Bananas," "Tariffs Explained with Bananas,
  5. 5Avoid guest-led or opinion-led formats; the channel’s repeatable breakout engine is a clean, simple, analogy-driven explainer that makes viewers feel they can finally understand a complicated financia
07

Performance drivers

01
The 'Explained with Bananas' Hook — Using bananas as a universal, tangible unit of currency and commodity lowers the cognitive barrier to entry for complex financial topics.
02
Macroeconomic Pain Points — Topics that directly impact everyday purchasing power, like Inflation (1.7M views) and Tariffs (1.3M views), drive the highest audience curiosity.
03
Personal Financial Liabilities — Demystifying mandatory or high-risk financial systems like Taxes (1.1M views) and Credit Cards (1.1M views) taps into high-intent viewer anxiety.
08

Topic clusters

Macroeconomics & Trade Policy4Personal Finance & Wealth Management4Financial Markets & Assets3Economic History & Crises1
09

Channels similar to Primate Economics

channels with similar audiencesCompetitor Studio →

The audience is highly concentrated around accessible, visual explanations of economics, finance, and history, though they occasionally drift into general science, food, and internet culture.

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10

Primate Economics revenue & valuation

from public data
Est. revenue
$3K – $10K
per month · incl. sponsorship
Ad revenue
$2K – $3K
per month
Est. valuation
$56K – $427K
benchmarked vs comparables

Based on these figures, your business is valued between $56,180 and $427,109, with an absolute floor of $43,215 and a medium confidence rating. This valuation is heavily driven by your current reliance on third-party platforms and untapped monetization channels.

Estimates derived from public data (earnings history + comparable channels). Not an offer, appraisal, or financial advice.

Frequently asked questions about Primate Economics

How many subscribers does Primate Economics have?
Primate Economics has 561.0K subscribers and 30.1M total views.
How much money does Primate Economics make?
Primate Economics's estimated YouTube revenue is $3K – $10K per month (including sponsorships), derived from public data — an estimate, not an exact figure.
What is Primate Economics's most popular video?
“Inflation Explained with Bananas”, with 1.7M views.
What kind of content does Primate Economics make?
Visual Economics & Finance Education — Explaining complex macroeconomic concepts and personal finance fundamentals using a single, absurdly simple physical proxy: bananas.
What channels are similar to Primate Economics?
MonkeyExplains, LITTLE BIT BETTER, Explains 101, Crayon Capital, EverythingProfessor.
How often does Primate Economics post?
Primate Economics posts about 0.3 videos per week (~1.1 per month).
How long has Primate Economics been on YouTube?
Primate Economics has been active on YouTube for about 4.4 years.
How this analysis was made
  • Source: public YouTube channel & video data (12 recent videos sampled).
  • Outlier videos: uploads with ≥1.5× the channel's recent median views.
  • Revenue & valuation: estimated from public earnings signals and comparable channels — ranges, not exact figures.
  • Last updated: 7/8/2026.
Published 7/8/2026 · analysis by OutlierKit
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