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Plus: The jobs report and Travis and Taylor’s prenup. 
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Economists weren’t exactly expecting fireworks in the June jobs report, but what they got was barely a sparkler.

The U.S. economy added just 57,000 jobs last month, and wages are still lagging inflation. We’ll do more numbers below, but first let’s address a big source of anxiety in the job market right now: artificial intelligence. — Tony Wagner, newsletter editor

P.S. This newsletter is taking tomorrow off for the holiday, but Marketplace will still be on your podcast feeds as usual. Our weekly flagship newsletter will gather the best books Marketplace staff have read so far in 2026, subscribe to that so you don’t miss it! 
Children playing musical chairs
Carl Court/Getty Images
“Marketplace” host Kai Ryssdal explains the “lump of labor fallacy” and how it affects our understanding of tech and jobs.
“Marketplace” host Kai Ryssdal explains the “lump of labor fallacy” and how it affects our understanding of tech and jobs.
Right now, a good chunk of Americans feel threatened by artificial intelligence.

A recent Reuters/Ipsos poll found that more than half of Americans are worried that AI could put them or someone in their household out of work.

One economic concept that can help explain how new technologies tend to impact the labor market is known as the “lump of labor fallacy.”

“The lump of labor fallacy is simply the notion that there's a fixed amount of work to be done,” said Edouard Wemy, an associate professor of economics at Clark University. “And if one person [were] to gain one job, then it must be at the expense of somebody else.”

Catalina Amuedo-Dorantes, a professor of economics at the University of California, Merced, said in that scenario, the economy would be like a big game of “musical chairs,” where one player equals one worker and one chair equals one job. “So if one more worker is going to enter the labor market, someone else must lose a seat.”

But history tells us that the economy is not, in fact, a game of musical chairs. “Technology does not simply eliminate labor; it changes basically what workers do, and it can raise productivity, lower cost, and create new products, firms, and occupations in general,” said Amuedo-Dorantes.

That’s the fallacy part of the “lump of labor fallacy.”

If you think about the new technologies of the past, like mechanized agriculture, sewing machines, or word processors, those technologies did not lead to mass unemployment. Instead, they freed people up to work in other industries, create new businesses, and make new jobs.

“It's actually that they bring more chairs,” Amuedo-Dorantes said. “Some jobs will be lost,” said Wemy. “But more jobs overall are going to be created in terms of total employment.”
READ MORE


 
News you should know
Let’s do the numbers
  • Stocks were mixed today as AI stocks keep weighing down the market. The S&P 500 barely moved, even as most stocks rose. The Dow leapt 1.1% to a new record, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq fell 0.8%.

  • A barrel of Brent Crude crept up to $71.80 today, while the national average gas price fell to $3.83 just in time for the holiday weekend. (About 61 million travelers are expected to hit the road).

  • Economists didn’t get the six-figure job growth they’d expected in June, but that’s not the only bad news: April and May were revised down from their surprising highs.

  • Wage growth ticked up from May, but slowed from a year ago. Turns out, it’s hard to get a raise when people aren’t changing jobs.

  • Jersey Mike’s filed to go public, and its S-1 says the sandwich chain is doing AI Mike’s way.
Government
  • The deadline to renew the U.S.-Mexico-Canada trade deal passed yesterday. What happens now?

  • President Donald Trump signed his big tax and spending bill into law on July 4, 2025. Nearly a year later, food benefit enrollment has fallen dramatically.

  • As part of that law, tax-advantaged “Trump accounts” will start rolling out to children after Independence Day. Here’s how to sign up and get the government seed money.

  • Your kid gets a savings account, but Trump got himself a new jet. The president showed off the new Air Force One, a $200 million gift from the Qataris. Here’s what it’s like inside.

  • Three million people dropped Affordable Care Act health insurance plans this winter after Congress let pandemic-era subsidies expire, sending premiums soaring.


QUOTE OF THE DAY
“Worth the investment. Worth the money. Could run a marathon in these things.”
— Cayla Kessinger, of Nashville, on her cowboy boots
The global western boot market recently topped $1 billion, and it’s still growing, fueled by what industry observers call the “‘Yellowstone’ effect.” If you’re inspired by the hit TV show, be prepared to pony up; a comfortable pair like Kessinger’s can cost $1,000.
READ MORE
Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce pictured after a football game.
Patrick Smith/Getty Images
Final note
The other big celebration this weekend
Pop star Taylor Swift and Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce are reportedly marrying this week at New York City’s Madison Square Garden. (Or they may already be married, but either way, there’s a big event at MSG.) It’s a wedding venue befitting a Super Bowl champ and a multi-billionaire, but because we’re nosey and nerdy, we’re most interested in Swift and Kelce’s prenup.

The New York Times spoke with experts to learn what might be in a Swift-Kelce contract. Divorce works differently depending on what state you’re in, and these agreements can not only cover song catalogs and real estate but also bad behavior and pets. Here’s a gift link to read all about it.

Prenups aren’t just for American royalty; more young people with average incomes are interested in them, too. Revisit our podcast episode about protecting assets without killing romance.
 
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