NPR.
This is the indicator from Planet Money. I'm Wale and Wong. I'm Darian Woods, and I'm Adrian Ma. And today is the day of the week when we talk about our favorite numbers from the news. That's right, everyone. It is. It's the indicator from a week.
So today is episode.
“How Minnesota workers are affected by the administration's immigration crackdown?”
How copy is getting very hot price wise. And now basically a sci-fi blog piece jolted the stock market. Indicators of the week, um, Wale and do you want to go first?
My indicator is a hundred and six million dollars.
That is the estimated amount of wages that workers in the Minneapolis Saint Paul Ariel lost during Operation Metro Surge. This hundred and six million dollar figure was published this week by a Minnesota Research Institute called North Star Policy Action. And Erin sojourner helped crunch the numbers.
He's a labor economist that we've had on the show before. So the department of Homeland Security, they say they're ending this Operation, right? Yeah, DJ says it's with drawing agents. Although it is keeping a presence in the state.
And we have seen a devastating human toll from Operation Metro Surge.
Federal agents shot and killed two people.
It ran a good and Alex predi. And fear of detention or violence kept people home. That means they missed school and work. And they couldn't go out to get groceries or to access healthcare. So this crackdown caused a lot of ripple effects and lost wages is one of them.
So where do these levels come from? So the researchers were able to get data from a company that makes payroll and scheduling software for small businesses. They were able to look at things like the number of employees working and how many hours they worked. And then they compared numbers in January and February with what would be considered typical activity.
And there analysis estimated that the number of employees fell almost 3%.
And total hours worked fell almost 2%.
Okay, so employees fell 3%. The hours worked fell 2%. There's no sound like huge numbers, but I'm guessing they add up. Yeah, and one important thing to note is that this analysis picked a single hourly wage around $17 as a proxy for all workers.
That is the median wage for food prep and serving employees in the area. And the researchers said that they're one of the lowest pay groups. So if you picked a higher wage as the proxy, you would actually end up with a lot more lost wages. Well, thank you, Rayland. Now onto AJN.
What's your indicator? Mine is sort of bouncing off the state of the union address that President Trump gave this week. In it, he said that quote inflation is plummeting. Is it though? Well, he named a lot of things which were not all correct.
“But to try and back up his statement, he did name a few household staples where this has seemed to be the case, right?”
Like, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the prices of butter, chicken, and eggs have decreased over the past year. And Trump had mentioned all of those. But as we know, the prices of many other staples are still going up. And some a lot more than others, which brings me to my indicator of the week, which is $9. In 37 cents. That is the price of a pound of coffee, according to the BLS.
And $9.37 is 33% higher than a year ago. That is a huge increase, but also I've been feeling this because just like a month ago or something, I went to the grocery store. And I saw what just like a can of fulgers, you know, really basic coffee was selling for. And I literally took a photo and texted it to my husband. And I said, "Coffee prices are out of control."
Yeah, it's, you know, in all of these sort of major food categories that the BLS tracks in its consumer price index. This one seems to have had the biggest increase over the past year. And there are two basic forces at work here, right? One is that this is part of a long-term trend. Climate change is really affecting the clients in some of the biggest coffee producing countries like Brazil, Vietnam, Colombia, Indonesia.
What researchers have found is that these countries have gotten hotter on average. And when temperatures get too hot, it hurts coffee production. And that challenge to the coffee supply means higher prices.
“And I imagine because in the giant of economists demand is an elastic, right?”
People will still pay for higher prices of coffee because they need the caffeine fix.
In the jargon of a coffee drinker, coffee is drugs.
It is addictive.
And the other important factor to mention is President Trump's tariffs.
It is worth noting that back in November Trump issued an executive order exempting coffee from tariffs. But it will probably take time for that to actually show up in the price of coffee.
“The best way to avoid this problem is consumer problems.”
It's not drink coffee. Yeah, what's the price of tea? I don't think that's the price of tea. There's no substitute for coffee for the millions of people who drink it, right? They're not going to switch to tea.
They're not going to switch to tea. Which is also more expensive, by the way. They're not going to switch to kombucha, kombucha. Mushroom, coffee, whatever that is. Mushroom coffee, I feel like that's a scam.
I mean, it ain't coffee. I feel like it's like in the Civil War when they didn't have coffee. So they would just boil random things that grew in the ground. And be like, this is coffee. That's what Mushroom coffee feels like.
I saw this article today that I thought could be another solution to the expensive coffee problem. You could just buy a ton of coffee at a time and try and stretch it out. Apparently Dunkin is selling a 48 ounce ice coffee now. And you can buy it in a bucket with a handle. I feel like that would give me a heart attack.
Well, maybe if I spaced it out, right? If I didn't consume it all in one sitting, I'd be like stuck in my face and drank it during the week. Is that what we're doing now?
“If you want to live on the edge, you could just go for it.”
I want to live at the hospital. Well, who needs caffeine to get your heart racing when you've got the stock market? That's right. My indicator is 1% which is roughly how much the S&P 500 fell on Monday morning.
Amidst AI-duming gloom, which is partly thanks to basically a sci-fi story,
posted on Substack. Okay, so this is like a war of the world style panic. Yeah, there are definitely parallels. I mean, everyone knew that this thing was fiction, but were the projections into the future real or not?
That's the question. So this is a scenario posted by the Financial Research Group, Citrini Research, Citrini is a small company, but it's the number one finance Substack newsletter. It's a memo from a couple of years into the future,
and it details what they call the global intelligence crisis. Is this the crisis where we all get done? In relative terms, we had done a confed with the machines. So global intelligence crisis as in, as in like a global financial crisis, but for artificial intelligence, essentially,
this is their branding of this kind of economic crisis that will might emerge in the next couple of years. Okay, this war of the world style note wrote about things about AI we have heard before, like a picture of AI taking over more and more jobs, and then it runs through all the links in the chain of the wider economy,
like house prices falling, a stock market crash, and that being part of this endless loop of companies losing money, and so they try to save money by replacing even more stuff with AI.
“Okay, so what's like your personal assessment of whether all this stuff will actually come to pass?”
So there's been a lot of debate about whether the AI apocalypse is sound, like productivity improvements are usually a good thing for the economy, not bad, even if there are pockets of disruption, another financial firm, Citadel, even wrote a note poking holes in this satrini scenario. Hmm, okay, like what?
They point out a few things, like that the adoption of a new type of technology usually peat is out at some point, and this kind of critique might have contributed to the stock market. Soon, recovering all the value at last on Monday, but, you know, I do think this satrini episode highlights just how uncertain it is,
how rapidly inviting AI is going to affect the economy, and how jittery investors are, and that they're jumping pretty strongly at any excuse to sell,
even from sci-fi sub-steck first.
The power of the pen. The pen is mightier than the sword. This episode was produced by Andrew Carellis, with Engineering by Quicy Lee. It was fact-text by Julia Ritchie and Fito Emmanuel. Take a look at it at the show and the indicator is a production of NPR.
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