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The hourly vs. salary wage gap

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Hourly wages went up 1.7% over the past year, according to Indeed Hiring Lab. Salaried wages went up 2.9%, reversing a 2022 trend in which hourly raises outpaced salary raises. Still, there’s one thin...

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Hey, I need a good word to describe an economy that is slowing, but where prices are rising. Anybody have any ideas? From American Public Media. This is Marketplace. [Music]

In Los Angeles, I'm Kai Rizdoll. It is Friday today. This one is the 29th of May.

It is always is everybody to have you along.

Alright, I was kidding. I know the word for a slowing economy where prices are rising. The question is whether stagflation is where we are. So let us discuss. Test my premise.

If you will. Amara Moquey. Is it Bloomberg? So deep ready? Is it MS?

Now, hey you two. Hey Kai. Amara, you get to go first. Let's see. GDP comes in this week at 1.6% or vision for the first quarter.

In your lives of course. PCE, the Fed's preferred measure of inflation. I'm required by a lot to say that phrase. It comes in at 3.8%. It sounds like stagflation to me.

Yes. I think it's not really. It's not. You don't sound convinced. No, no, no.

It's not really feeling great. But I mean, I think like when you look at the consumer spending data.

β€œAnd that's I think really important because we know that's a key driver”

economic growth. You know, we still got inflation adjusted spending. That was up, right? So it's, you know, that's I think. And we saw the personal savings rate also fall to the, like,

it's lowest level since mid 2022. And some people were flagging that.

Like, is this a sign that the consumer is finally cracking?

I think the reason why people are sort of hesitant to say, "Okay, yes, we definitely have stagflation is because one of the things we know about the consumer in recent years is that Americans have proven really resilient through a lot of different shocks. A lot of different twists and turns in the economy.

And so I think people are just, it's like, it's like feeling like it's maybe too soon to say. People want to see how this situation in a rotten place out. You know, it's really hard to get our arms around this situation because it seems like one day we're really close to a deal.

And then the next day maybe we don't have to feel at all. And so I think people are really sort of waiting for that time factor to figure out, okay, you know, is this going to wrap up soon or are we going to be dealing with a price shock that kind of indoors?

β€œSo I think, I mean, I think that's the big question.”

You have stolen like the next three bullet points on my list of things that I was going to talk to you guys about. But we're going to go there anyway. And so deep you get this question and it's this and it goes to the consumers.

Um, I'm right. I was talking about, you know, consumers are still spending but the savings rate is down credit card debt and delinquencies are up.

This is the first real hard data other than the vibes of

consumers are cranky that we've seen that are maybe not great for consumers. Do you think they are, they we are cracking finally? There are signs like you're standing on the piece of glass. And you see the tiny cracks in the corners of it, but it

hasn't actually hit in a big way. They're looking at the delinquencies in credit cards. Delinquencies and auto loans. Lower consumers are very clearly being hit harder, obviously because of gas prices in particular.

But there are just some signs here that are not good if they were to continue. We still have this looming question over as whether these these gas prices being so high are short term effects or they more durable.

If this goes on, we used to think, oh, this is only going to be a few weeks. Maybe a few months and well, we're out a few months now. And you can actually see it starting to hurt. I just didn't think it was going to show up at numbers that

look like they were 20 years ago during the financial crisis. Some of these numbers are, are bad yet yet. Job claims are very low. We are in a low firing economy. And employment rate is not bad right now. So the overall picture is is one of stability,

but the cracks are there and we've got to pay attention to them. All right, Mara, let's do this. Let's look at no pun intended here as you hear what I'm about to say.

β€œLet's look at looking through the current dynamic, right?”

And I say that because the federal reserve and in fact, Michelle Bowman today, a member of the Board of Governors, said, we are still looking through the energy spike. We are looking through the inflation caused by the war in Iran. Terracin Claire, not a Fed governor, but an esteemed economist

in the nation's capital, said, we cannot look through this stuff. And I guess my question is, how do we know what to look through and what is not doable? What can we take out of this? We try to figure out where the economy is going.

Well, I mean, deep so. Deep so. I mean, I think Governor Roman had those remarks today, but I do think you are hearing a number of officials kind of changing their tune

and kind of warning that the central bank kind of needs to signal that the next move could very well be an interest rate hike

Because more of these federal officials are starting to get concerned

about this inflation being something that they can't look through.

β€œRight, this is the Fed that is the memory of the pandemic inflation”

and the transitory misstep is very fresh in their minds. They have not been able to get inflation back down to their 2% target for five years now. And so I think you're seeing more and more if ed officials saying we're not going to have tolerance

for inflation that looks like it is persisting regardless of what like the traditional economic theories would say. Right, right.

So deep you remember how chair Powell always used to say,

you know, we need more data. Depends on what the data is going to say. What more do they need than PCE at 3.8 and GDP at 1.6, you know? They need to be able to look into the future several months down the line.

Like, look, six years ago, they all joked about how have any become virus experts with the pandemic.

β€œBecause that is the key to figuring out where the path was.”

Now they're trying to become, they have to become straight of our moves experts to figure out what it's actually going to happen in the coming months in the Middle East and what kind of problems will melt and worsen for them along along those lines.

It's not a great picture.

A year ago, it was a concern about tariffs. Now it's a concern about the straight of our moves. There are enough things that are clouding their environment here that they've got to be concerned about it. And then they're going to act rashly and then have everything clear up.

That's the core uncertainty of the environment right now, which lots of businesses are dealing with it as well. Things could get really, really bad or they could be just fine in a few months. So you don't want to overreact. Oh, man.

β€œThings could be fine or they could be terrible.”

So do you ready at MS now on a Friday?

Amara Moquies, she's a Bloomberg.

Thank you, too. Thank you. Bye. Wall Street today stalks up again more record highs. Oil down though.

Here's your reminder that the straight of our moves is still closed. Bond's just kind of sitting there watching and I'll go by. We will have the details when we do the numbers. There are racial wage gaps in this economy. There is a gender wage gap in this economy.

There is also a wage gap between salary and hourly workers in this economy. It's fresh data from indeed hiring lab that shows hourly wages were up 1.7% the past year while salary wages were up 2.9%. Marketplace is Kelly Wells explains what's going on. hourly workers are typically younger, less experienced, new graduates.

The same people who are having a tough time finding a job right now. These are entry level professionals. They are contractors, freelance workers, interns. They are the ones that saw their posted wage go down. Economist Sneha Puri with indeed hiring lab wrote the report.

These people are finding it harder to find a job which makes it easier to not increase their posted reach at the same rate. That's a pretty big 180 from the post pandemic boom in 2022. Back then hourly wage increases actually outpaste the salary folks. When things opened up and players had to scramble a bit more to try to hire those workers

and they had to do more to attract and retain them. At least gold senior economist at the Economic Policy Institute says those jobs are more volatile if the economy is strong or those wages. Now the economy is weakened somewhat. They don't have that kind of leverage.

Unemployment is rising and therefore when employers see more sideline workers, they don't have to work as hard to get the ones they want. In the past year, salary wages have stagnated too but not as dramatically. Eric Hurst is an economics professor at the University of Chicago. So over a long period of time, these two things are kind of tracking each other.

So happen that the hourly grew a lot in the 2022 and 23 and now the salary you're growing more in the 25 and 26. One of the main ways to get a higher wage is to get a new job. Hurst says salary workers have a tougher time doing that. So if you're say an economics professor.

It takes us a little bit longer to turn and search and find a right match. And now we're making up for our losses a little bit later. Both hourly and salary workers saw their wages increase slower than the rate of inflation, which means their real wages or their ability to afford stuff actually went down. I'm Kaley Wells from Marketplace.

Here's a perhaps unheralded data point about this economy.

Convenience stores account for more than a third of in-person retail stores in the United States.

β€œSo says the National Association of Convenience stores big convenience, if you will.”

And increasingly, those stores are places for more than just gas. Marketplace a Christian Schwab takes it from there. Suki Japanese market sits on a busy commercial strip in Brooklyn. With a shiny, hello kitty statue greeting customers at the door. It's a small shop, just a few aisles wide.

Stocked with colorful, crinkly packages of seaweed flavored chips and matcha kit cats. Austin Johnson hunches over a high top near the front of the store. Sure, just so you know, I have to leave in five minutes. That's the, I'm stopping my face with the only Gary before work. It's known and Gary, a rice ball filled with eel and a savory soy sauce for $3.99.

It's a staple, it's very cheap and it's filling and I have a long shift ahead of me. So it's good energy. Johnson works at a photos studio nearby. He often stops on his way in for a snack and on his way out for an ice cream treat. I love convenience stores.

Me and my partner are kind of like efficient autos when it comes to trying like weird snacks and stuff or like new Reese's flavor or new soda. That's, you know, strange or something. So yeah, that's what's cool. Convenient stores are increasingly becoming sought out destinations.

Instead of pit stops on the way to somewhere else, Tom Brennan is chief merchandising Officer at KC's, which has nearly 3,000 stores mostly in the Midwest. He says the majority of the chain's customers don't even buy gas. So two thirds of our profitability comes from inside of the store. That allows us actually to be very competitive when it comes to how we price retail fuel.

Most convenience stores only make a few cents a gallon on gas. Sometimes even less when prices are high. Which again is why, you know, we're so focused on the other areas of the business and that inside the store offering that food offer. Because we know that there's much more stability inside of that.

For KC's stability comes in the form of a slice. It's actually the fifth largest pizza chain in the country.

β€œWhich kind makes you wonder, what even is a convenience store?”

Constance Bailey is co-editor of get it while it's hot, gas station, roadside, and convenience cuisine in the US South. She says the definition of a convenience store depends on where you are and who you ask. Are these grocery stores that have gas or are they gas stations that have food right? And so in some parts of the South, you know, people think of these as more as restaurants.

Bailey says convenience stores have become community gathering spots, especially in rural towns. For the book, her team surveyed southerners and asked, "Where are you most likely to eat a hot meal?"

Behind churches, like an actual church meal or church function, gas station was the second most popular answer.

Convenience stores are also hubs for international cuisine. Nearly half of them are owned by immigrants, according to the non-profit immigration research initiative. You can get it all at a gas station. Indian curry, Mexican street tacos, and Southern staples, like fried chicken.

β€œThat definitely got to gratuitously engage in a lot of fried food, right?”

And it's not just about the food. Convenience stores have become so ironically cool that early outspanned the all-American rejects recently performed a pop-up concert at a Sheets store in Pittsburgh. The internet has even coined the aesthetic gas station core. Fashion, featuring trucker hats, and those visor-like sunglasses in chrome colors.

At Mitsuki Japanese market in Brooklyn, owner Jake Cow says blind boxes are super popular right now. They're affordable little figurines. You don't know which toy you're going to get until you open up the box.

So people, you know, when they bring a key, they always fuzzy snappy here.

He says this is what convenience stores are about. Accessible retail that's a little curious, a little quirky. When we first opened the store, they said, "What's that store?" They're looking for the new product, people love to do that. Because the life needs something new.

Something more than just convenience. In New York, I'm Kristen Schwab from Marketplace. [Music] Coming up. You literally get paid more than we do to go travel to different cities and move around.

As always, though, there's a catch. First, though, let's do the numbers. That one does shows picked up 363 points.

Today, 710% finished at 51,000 and 32.

That has that get at 55 points, 210%. 26,972, the S&P 500 of 16 points, 210%, 75 and 80 there. For the week, the Dow rose 9,101%. The Nasdaq grew 2 and 410% S&P 500 of 1.4%. More about the oil futures market in the second oil traders today, though.

Optimistic, about progress. On the wrong piece, the old Brent Crude hovered around 92 dollars barrel.

β€œHad been up through about 114, if you remember.”

Start market once again boosted by technology.

After the Bell yesterday, Dell reported its first quarter revenue was up 88% at 43 billion

American dollars. Where'd all that money come from? AI, of course, Dell Technologies. Surged 32 and 3/4 is a 1%. Today, bonds up yield on the 10-year T-note down just a little bit 4.43%.

You're listening to Marketplace. This Marketplace podcast is supported by Intuit QuickBooks. If you're trying to grow your business into it QuickBooks Workforce, and help you lead your business with confidence clarity in a way that makes sense for you. As a sponsor at Marketplace's My Economy, QuickBooks Workforce recognizes that no one person or business's finances are the same.

β€œAs your needs evolve, QuickBooks Workforce evolves with you.”

Bringing together the core HR capabilities businesses expect with the flexibility to adapt to your specific needs. QuickBooks Workforce combines human intelligence and AI-powered tools so you get smart automation without ever losing control. Spend less time reconciling and more time deciding what to do next. Your process is get streamlined and you get precious time and energy back to move forward proactively. Move from reactive to proactive with brand new tools by making the switch to QuickBooks Workforce today.

Your Marketplace's My Economy at Marketplace.org/My Economy, and learn more about how QuickBooks can help your business grow at QuickBooks.com/workforce. That's QuickBooks.com/workforce. This is Marketplace. I'm Kai Rizdom. Every now and then on this program, we do a story on the bond market.

Specifically, a story about what's known as the yield curve, comparing the yields and the interest rates for short, medium and long-term government bonds. We do those stories because the yield curve can tell us some things about when investors think is going to happen across each of those short, medium and long-term timeframes. There are, it turns out, similar conclusions to be drawn from the oil futures market,

which are basically bets on what the price of oil is going to be at the end of could be next month, next year, even a decade from now.

Marketplace is just in hell. Look at what oil futures are telling us then about where oil prices and energy markets overall might be headed. The market for actual physical barrels of oil is really complicated. There are different grades of oil that can't be substituted for each other. And nobody really knows what anybody's paying because transactions are private. But oil futures contracts are a totally different matter. They're standardized and they're traded on public exchanges.

And so, that makes it a much easier, a transparent way to form a proxy for what's happening in this very diverse, complicated global marketplace. That's Mark Finley, with Rice University's Baker Institute. He says futures contracts for one month from now give you a pretty good sense of oil prices right now. But contracts are also sold for basically any month in the future.

β€œThe only limit is where's the trading activity? I mean, how far out do people want to trade?”

Finley says some people buy oil futures to lock in prices, to hedge against uncertainty. Others trade them to speculate. Either way, the price of oil that's baked into those contracts reveals people's expectations about the future. This is Anami Kulska, head of analytics at CGCN Group.

It builds basically up on what we're thinking the market is going.

For instance, if the market thinks demand for oil will slow down in the near future. That means that in maybe two three months we will see the oil prices going down. Hence, we're not going to be pricing the oil at what it is right now. We will discounted by another $5 of $10. But right now, futures markets are reflecting a very different expectation.

The prices will remain high over the next few months, as long as the straight of our moves remains closed, around $90 a barrel. That's telling us that the market is extremely tight. Matt Smith is director of commodity research at the data and analytics firm Kepler. Even a year from now, the futures market is betting that prices will still be higher than they were before the war. Smith says that's because once hostilities and demand for oil will pick up,

especially from countries that depend on the Middle East for their oil. That going to build these inventories that they have a bigger buffer, so they're not left dependent and scrambling on other countries to get barrels from. When you go even farther out in the curve, say five plus years from now, or even longer, prices fall to $60 a barrel, or even less. Dylan White, an oil market analyst with wood McKinsey says that means by then the market is expecting a glut of oil. And that obviously puts downward pressure on oil prices, especially compared to 2026, where we have a major under supply due to the straight-of-war moves closure.

White says oil producing countries, including the U.

And demand for oil may well plateau in the next decade.

β€œAnd that's a number of factors, but one of them has certainly been increasing electrification and EV penetration.”

White's firm Wood McKinsey says the war in the Middle East could cause oil and gas importing countries to intensify their embrace of renewables. So how the world responds to the Middle East conflict will help define energy transition moving forward and absolutely that has major implications for oil demand as well. And for oil prices, I'm Justin Hop from Marketplace. [ Music ] Back in the heyday of the pandemic economy, we were doing a whole lot of stories about travel nurses.

Our ends moving from hospital to hospital to help fill gaps in workforce demand.

According to a staffing industry analyst's report, travel nurse revenue peaked in 2020 to $45 billion almost.

Since then, the market has shrunk a bit, but as more healthcare workers are aging out of that slice of the labor force, there are still thousands of travel nurses roving around the country on those short-term contracts.

β€œSo here with today's installment of our series, Adventures in Housing.”

My name is Emma Larson, and I'm a pediatric ICU travel nurse. [ Music ] I graduated nursing school in May of 2022. When I was a baby nurse, there were travel nurses at the facility I was working at, and I would kind of just pick their ear.

And I quickly realized if my lifestyle did allow for it, it could be like the coolest thing ever.

I was like, you literally get paid more than we do to go travel to different cities and move around and not be tied down to one place. So when I saw the opportunity for myself, I took the leap and haven't turned back yet. The travel contracts are typically anywhere from eight weeks to 13 weeks in length with the option to extend. I started by going up to Upstate New York, then I was in Columbus, Ohio for a little bit. I did spend some time in New York City, and now I am over exploring the West Coast in Phoenix, Arizona, and loving it out here so far.

[ Music ] My permanent residence is in Florida. My husband and I, that's kind of our home base. He is flexible, he's able to work remotely, so he's able to come with me on these assignments, which is really cool. [ Music ]

Housing during these travel assignments can be a little bit of a challenge. We have found some great apps that we use mainly furnished finders. It offers fully furnished departments for short-term leases. The challenges that most travel nursing contracts are posted within a four week window. So it can be a little last minute and a little bit flustering trying to put all the pieces together. I feel like that's kind of what you sign up for when you choose travel nursing.

I feel like it takes a certain personality to be a travel nurse.

β€œYou have to be extremely flexible, adaptable, but also know kind of when to stand up for yourself.”

I spend a good deal of time, especially the past few weeks, as my contract here is wrapping up, you know, searching for different contracts, talking with recruiters, doing interviews with the management of these facilities, and then also negotiating the pay packages as well once they do come in. So yeah, it's definitely like another part-time job in addition to your full-time nursing job. [ Music ] You know, Kudos to all the travel nurses who travel alone.

I feel like a lot of them get pets. You know, they'll have like a companion dog to travel with, which is super fun. But yeah, being able to travel with my husband has been so much fun, especially before we settled down and have kids. I wouldn't dare to for anything. [ Music ] I'm Elarson, she's an ICU nurse in Phoenix for now.

Wherever you work or whatever you do, tell us about your adventure in housing. What do you can do it at marketplace.org. [ Music ] [ Music ] The final note on the way out, the Goldman Sachs is out with a new research note.

Nothing boring like equities researcher, corporate profit estimates, no. As it has done a couple of times in the past, Goldman has applied some analysis to the world cup, which starts in less than two weeks.

I'll spare you the details because honestly, they suck all the emotion and th...

So if I sit to say, Goldman has Spain with a 26% probability of winning France at 19% Argentina at 14,

β€œand just because of the way the knockout stage brackets work, Goldman says it's Spain over Argentina in the final.”

I don't know if I agree with that.

Our theme music was composed by B.J. Leadman, Marketplace's Executive Producer's Nancy Fargolly.

Joanne Griffith is the Chief Content Officer, Neil Scarborough is Vice President and General Manager. And I'm Kai Rizdahl.

β€œHave yourselves a great weekend to everybody.”

We will see you back here on Monday, all right? [ Music ] This is APM. [ Music ] So by now, you've probably heard the latest example of one big company buying another.

Oh, yeah, I know exactly what you're talking about. And if you've ever wondered how and why companies buy each other and what it means for the rest of us, you're not alone.

β€œThat's right, and that's why we've got a whole episode about it this week on million bazillion.”

We're learning all about something called mergers and acquisitions from personal experiences it turns out. And actually, I was looking for you too. I want to talk to you about something super duper important.

I want to buy million bazillion.

Listen to million bazillion on your favorite podcast app.

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