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    The Indicator from Planet Money

    A little show about big ideas. From the people who make Planet Money, The Indicator helps you make sense of what's happening today. It's a quick hit of insight into work, business, the economy, and everything else. Listen weekday afternoons.

    Try Planet Money+! a new way to support the show you love, get a sponsor-free feed of the podcast, *and* get access to bonus content. You'll also get access to The Indicator and Planet Money Summer School, both without interruptions. sign up at plus.npr.org/planetmoney
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    Episodes (371)

    Why tariffs are SO back

    Why tariffs are SO back
    Last week, President Biden placed tariffs on a slew of Chinese goods. When Donald Trump was president, he did the same. Regardless of who wins the election, the US is gearing up for heavy tariffs on imports in 2024. But this is far from the first time the economic tool has been in style.

    Today, a brief history of US tariffs: how they came into fashion, fell out of fashion, are now back again and why economists aren't too happy about it.

    Related Episodes:
    Trade wars and talent shortages (Apple / Spotify)
    The surprising leader in EVs (Apple / Spotify)
    A brief history of tariffs
    Worst. Tariffs. Ever.

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    How Fortnite brought Google to its knees

    How Fortnite brought Google to its knees
    In August 2020, Epic Games launched a legal assault against both Google and Apple, alleging that their mobile app stores are illegal monopolies. Almost four years later, Epic could be close to forcing Google to make major changes to its Play Store.

    Today, we explain the legal battle behind Epic v. Google and why the outcome could have major implications for where consumers get their apps and how they pay for them.

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    AI Tupac and the murky legality of digital necromancy

    AI Tupac and the murky legality of digital necromancy
    With a few clicks of AI software, anyone can conjure the voice or visual likeness of a dead celebrity — or really anyone. This new world has opened up a bunch of new legal questions about the rights of people and their heirs to control digital replicas of themselves. Today on the show, how a Drake diss track featuring the voice of Tupac made it into the Congressional record, and how it may lead to more regulation of AI.

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    Related episodes:
    AI creates, transforms and destroys ... jobs (Apple / Spotify)
    Are the Products in your shopping cart real? (Apple / Spotify)
    Planet Money makes an episode using AI

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    Building generational wealth in rural America

    Building generational wealth in rural America
    Homes are not just where we eat and sleep, but one of the primary ways people build generational wealth in the U.S. But with home shortages and harsh climates, rural America's path to building that wealth looks a little different than other parts of the country. Today on the show, we focus in on housing challenges in Alabama's Black Belt and one innovative solution to preserving generational wealth.

    Related:
    There is growing segregation in millennial wealth

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    Trade wars and talent shortages

    Trade wars and talent shortages
    Indicators of the Week is back. This time, an in-depth look at what Biden's massive tariffs on Chinese imports might mean for inflation and jobs. After that, why it may soon become easier to become a certified public accountant, addressing that nagging CPA shortage.

    Related Episodes:
    If the world had no accountants (Apple / Spotify)
    The surprising leader in EVs (Apple / Spotify)
    How electric vehicles got their juice (Apple / Spotify)

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    How the Dominican Republic became Latin America's economic superstar

    How the Dominican Republic became Latin America's economic superstar
    For decades, the Dominican Republic's economy has been growing at a remarkably steady pace. The Caribbean nation of 11 million people is today considered a middle-income nation, but the International Monetary Fund projects it could become an advanced economy within the next 40 years.

    Today on the show, we uncover the reasons behind the Dominican Republic's economic success and whether or not these benefits are being felt widely in the country.

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    The highs and lows of US rents

    The highs and lows of US rents
    The latest inflation numbers are in. This month's Consumer Price Index, or the CPI, is ... well, good and bad news for renters. Shelter prices went up over the last year, but at a slower pace. Shelter makes up nearly a third of the CPI. Today's episode: Rent. Where is it high? Where is it low? What exactly is "coffee milk"? The Indicator tours the U.S. to bring you the answers.

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    The "Winner Take All" problem

    The "Winner Take All" problem
    When June Carbone, Naomi Cahn and Nancy Levit set out to write a book about women in the workforce, they initially thought it would be a story all about women's march towards workplace equality. But when they looked at the data, they found something more disturbing: of the ways in which women's push toward workplace equality has actually been stalled for years.

    In today's episode, law professor June Carbone argues that the root of the problem lies in something they call the "winner take all" approach to business. That's the thesis of their new book, "Fair Shake: Women & the Fight to Build a Just Economy".

    Related episodes:
    What would it take to fix retirement? (Apple / Spotify)

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    Is 'government crypto' a good idea?

    Is 'government crypto' a good idea?
    Advancements in cryptocurrency networks are sparking conversations about the potential for Central Bank Digital Currencies, or CBDCs for short. Advocates for CBDCs think they would provide security and unlock more efficient fiscal policy actions. However, opponents believe they would provide a shortcut for government interference and the erosion of privacy.

    Today on the show, we'll dive deep into the world of CBDCs and pose the question if countries actually need them at all.

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    A new gold rush and other indicators

    A new gold rush and other indicators
    Indicators of the Week is back! This time, we dig into why gold prices are spiking, why the Biden administration has only spent a small portion of money pledged to infrastructure projects, and what the spurt of streaming consolidations means for you.

    Related episodes:
    Gold Rush 2.0
    The semiconductor shortage (still) (Apple Podcasts / Spotify)
    The secret entrance that sidesteps Hollywood picket lines (Apple Podcasts / Spotify)

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    Iceberg ahead for Social Security

    Iceberg ahead for Social Security
    According to a government report released this week, Congress has until 2033 to fix Social Security before retirees receive an automatic benefit cut of about 21%. This is a more optimistic estimate from a previous report that stated the Social Security Trust Fund would run dry sooner, but it still paints a grim picture for a program that millions of retirees rely on.

    Today, NPR's Chief Economics Correspondent joins the show to explain what exactly lawmakers can do to fix Social Security and why proposed solutions might be easier said than done.

    Related episodes:
    What would it take to fix retirement? (Apple / Spotify)

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    Why Venezuela is no longer in freefall

    Why Venezuela is no longer in freefall
    Back in 2019, The Indicator started checking in on with a Venezuelan economist Gabriela Saade. The economy was in freefall. The country was suffering from hyperinflation and a huge jump in poverty. Today, the U.S. faces a spike in migrants at the U.S.-Mexico border, many from Venezuela. So we check back in with Gabriela. Venezuela is due to go to the polls in July. We ask Gabriela and two other Venezuelans: what are economic conditions like at the moment? How has life changed since the pandemic? Some of the answers surprised us.

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    Hazard maps: The curse of knowledge

    Hazard maps: The curse of knowledge
    What happens when small town politics collide with the climate crisis? And how do hazard maps—maps that show which homes in your neighborhood are at risk of getting destroyed or damaged by a natural disaster—come into play? On today's episode, how some people—from Indiana to Oregon to Alaska—are facing some very real concerns about insurance and the ability to sell their houses.

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    How Colorado towns are trying to get some water certainty

    How Colorado towns are trying to get some water certainty
    In Western Colorado, towns and farms are banding together to pay a hundred million dollars for water they don't intend to use. Today on the show, how scarcity, climate change and a first-dibs system of water management is forcing towns, farms and rural residents to get spendy.

    Related episodes:
    A watershed moment in the West? (Apple / Spotify)
    The Amazon, the Colorado River and a price on nature
    Water in the West: Bankrupt?

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    Not too hot, not too cold: a 'Goldilocks' jobs report

    Not too hot, not too cold: a 'Goldilocks' jobs report
    It's Jobs Friday and the jobs report is in! There's more jobs! ... but not as many as expected. And there's a teensy bit more unemployment and slower wage growth. But there's an upside ... Plus, healthcare is growing like gangbusters and how immigrants affect American-born workers.

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    Protesters want schools to divest from Israel. How would that work?

    Protesters want schools to divest from Israel. How would that work?
    College campuses nationwide are erupting with protests against Israel's war on Hamas in Gaza. A consistent theme among these actions: a call for university endowment "divestment."

    Today, we unpack what that means and how divestment would work. Plus, we hear from an expert who explains why divestment might not have the effect that many believe.

    Related episodes:
    Why Israel uses diaspora bonds (Apple / Spotify)
    How much of your tax dollars are going to Israel and Ukraine (Apple / Spotify)

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    What a cabinet maker can teach us about interest rates

    What a cabinet maker can teach us about interest rates
    The Beigie Awards are back to recognize the regional Federal Reserve Bank with the best Beige Book entry. This time, we shine a spotlight on one entry that explains how some businesses are feeling the impacts of higher for longer interest rates.

    Related episodes:
    The interest-ing world of interest rates (Apple / Spotify)
    The Beigie Awards: Why banks are going on a "loan diet" (Apple / Spotify)
    Where are interest rates going?

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    Is the federal debt REALLY that bad?

    Is the federal debt REALLY that bad?
    Sandwiched between a burger joint and an oyster bar in New York City hangs a daunting image: The National Debt Clock. And that debt number? It just keeps ticking up. How deep in the hole are we? Nearly a hundred percent of gross domestic product. And counting. Today on the show, the federal debt. Is it time to freak out? Or is there nothing to see here?

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    Taxing the final frontier

    Taxing the final frontier
    Launches by commercial space companies are becoming more frequent. Last year, the Federal Aviation Administration licensed 117, an all-time high. But these spaceflight companies aren't paying for all of the FAA's services that they use.

    Today, we explore why the government is looking to change that and dig into the larger debate over whether human activity in space is a public or private project.

    Related episodes:
    Economics in space
    Planet Money goes to space
    Space economics

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