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Good evening: Stocks squeaked out a win today after sell-offs in artificial intelligence dragged markets down in recent weeks. In today’s newsletter, we’ll look at the outsized role AI is playing in growing the U.S. economy. Plus, we’ll talk with comedians parodying all the AI ads you see around, and revisit the effort to make daylight saving time permanent.  — Tony Wagner, newsletter editor
Workers walk through a data center
Amanda Andrade-Rhoades for The Washington Post via Getty Images
How AI investment is fueling the broader economy
But can it last? Marketplace reporter Justin Ho games it out for us.
The Bureau of Economic Analysis will report later this month how much the economy grew in the second quarter.

If it’s anything like the first quarter, the data will show us that the economy is being increasingly fueled by investment in artificial intelligence: all of the spending that goes into building data centers, along with all of the other technology that powers AI.

It has been a while since there has been this much spending from the tech sector.

“We haven’t really seen it since the 1990s, when we saw the growth of the internet,” said Charlie Dougherty, senior economist with Wells Fargo.

Business investment, in general, makes up about a fifth of overall GDP. So, Dougherty said, it’s encouraging that AI investment is so strong, considering what’s going on with the rest of the economy.

“What we’ve seen is a housing market that’s really been struggling,” Dougherty said. “We still have relatively high interest rates. Consumer spending looks like it’s moderating.”

But there are limits to how much AI-related spending can support the broader economy. For instance, data centers rely heavily on imported electronics, said Josh Lehner, senior U.S. economist at SGH Macro Advisors.

“So, if we’re trying to talk about trying to re-shore U.S. manufacturing activity, this spending is not really translating into a lot of domestic jobs on the manufacturing side,” Lehner said.

Lehner said AI investment is creating jobs in construction. But that’s just a short-term boost, according to Bernard Yaros, lead U.S. economist at Oxford Economics.

“Once you stand up a data center, it doesn’t really take many people to man it or to maintain it,” Yaros said.
READ MORE


 
News you should know
Let’s do the numbers
  • Stellar earnings reports pushed Wall Street back near record highs. The S&P 500 closed up 0.4%, the Dow rose 0.3% and the Nasdaq added 0.6%.

  • That’s despite more expensive oil; Brent crude rose to $84.95 a barrel as Iran threatened to block oil exports and the U.S. blockaded the Strait of Hormuz. The national average gas price rose to $3.89 a gallon.

  • They weren’t all winners today on Wall Street. SpaceX dipped below its IPO price before settling just above it. Not for nothing, have you checked your retirement accounts?

  • Shares in IBM slid further today after tanking 25% yesterday on a poor earnings report. Why are last century’s tech giants struggling so much right now?

  • Wholesale prices fell 0.3% in June, but the future is uncertain and the U.S. is still seeing much higher inflation than other developed nations. What’s going on?
The Trump administration
  • FCC Chair Brendan Carr and other commissioners have reportedly accepted lavish gifts from Paramount, which is trying to get a $111 billion deal through.

  • Tens of billions in tariff refunds are creating an accidental stimulus for businesses, and straining the federal budget. Your situation is, uh, basically unchanged.
More in tech
  • A group of employees sued Meta, claiming the company’s AI system for determining layoffs disproportionately targeted workers on medical leave.

  • What comes after the binge-watch? Turns out a bunch of Netflix’s buzziest shows lose half their audience or more in season 2.

  • People keep falling asleep in Waymos, and the 911 calls are draining city resources. What happens when a passenger gives birth? It’s happened a couple times already.


QUOTE OF THE DAY
“Are you poor? Sell your possessions.”
— A fake subway ad for SellYourPossessions.com
Harris Alterman and Dave Ross posted a series of advertisements for made-up tech companies around the New York City subway system. The ads are fake, but they bear an eerie resemblance to the real tech marketing all over American cities. “Ziplink is now Froggle,” indeed. Check out more and listen to our interview with the comedians on “Marketplace Tech.”
LISTEN NOW
Jamie Dimon's face photoshopped on the popular
Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images
Final note
Spring forward, permanently?
The House of Representatives passed the Sunshine Protection Act last night with overwhelming, bipartisan support. The bill would make daylight saving time permanent, and it got approved by the Senate a few years ago, only to die in the House. President Donald Trump is a supporter, as are many Florida golf course owners . Early risers and the Senators who represent them might be a different story. As CNN points out, memories are short. The Nixon administration tried this 50 years ago and Americans hated it.
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