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The war in Iran is raising the price of just about every commodity, except copper. Economists look to the metal to understand what’s going on with the economy, so what’s “Dr. Copper” trying to tell us? We’ll get to that, and other leading indicators, in today’s newsletter. Then: There’s a huge tax deduction for high earners, but it comes at a big cost. Next, worker productivity slowed more than expected in the fourth quarter. But transit project work sped up, thanks to the World Cup. Finally, we’ll unravel the argument for putting your hobby to work. But first, my colleague  Caleigh Wells takes us to Beaver County, Pennsylvania, a former steel town that pinned its hopes on plastic. — Carrie Barber, newsletter editor
A steel bridge stretches across a river. Above it is blue sky with white fluffy clouds.
This steel bridge that trains use to cross the Ohio River is "every piece of Beaver County identity wrapped into one piece of infrastructure," says resident Daniel Rossi-Keen. (Caleigh Wells/Marketplace)
A plastic plant didn't save an old steel town. Residents are trying something new.
In Beaver County, Pennsylvania, the community is investing in small businesses.
Beaver County’s population has been declining since the steel mill there closed 40 years ago.The shift to plastic manufacturing isn’t panning out, so some residents are investing in a different kind of economic model.
 
Daniel Rossi-Keen has lived in Beaver County for 15 years.
 
He’s driving through small town after small town along the Ohio River, past lots of people in Pittsburgh Steelers beanies, plus boarded up storefronts and closed down factories and power plants.
 
“It's like in West Virginia, you know, can we just get back to coal? It's like in Detroit. Can we just make cars in America again? That sensibility is very strong,” he said.
 
Beaver County, Pennsylvania, just northwest of Pittsburgh, used to be steel country. People who lived there made steel used in the Empire State Building and military hardware that won the World Wars. But its steel mill closed 40 years ago, and the population has been declining ever since.
 
Then in 2012, some residents were convinced that a new plant would reverse Beaver County’s decline. It was the height of the shale boom, and Pennsylvania and neighboring states were some of the largest sources of natural gas in the U.S.
 
Shell announced it was going to build a plant that turns that gas into the plastic in water bottles and toys and car parts. And it would be right in Beaver County.
 
“Shell officials stood up and said, ‘When we turn the lights on at that facility, you'll never recognize your community again,’” Rossi-Keen said.
 
With it would come new jobs and tax revenue and prosperity, just like the old days. The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania granted a $1.65 billion tax break, the largest in its history.
 
“What I’ve learned about this area because of the steel boom and the steel decline, I can understand why it sounded like such a great addition to the county,” said Beaver County resident Joline Atkins. “It just doesn’t seem like the employment cash cow that it was supposed to be.”
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News you should know
Let’s do the numbers 
  • Financial markets slipped today on mixed signals about ending the war in Iran. The S&P 500 dipped 0.4%, the Dow sank 0.2% and the Nasdaq fell 0.8%.

  • The national average for a gallon of regular gasoline was $3.97, AAA reported.

  • Disney announced a deal to license its characters for OpenAI’s video app Sora a few months ago, along with an up to $1 billion investment in the company. Now, the app is dead, and the deal is off. 

  • High earners are likely to see bigger tax refunds this year, thanks in part to bigger state and local tax deductions. But the larger write-offs aren’t free; they’ll cost the country $140 billion over the next 10 years.
Leading indicators
  • The Treasury Department is selling bonds this week. The interest rates investors demand can tell us where they expect the economy is headed, but the war in Iran is making the future foggy.
  • Copper prices are an economic indicator, and they’ve been falling while other commodity prices have spiked during the war. What’s going on?
Productivity
  • Worker productivity grew only 1.8% in the fourth quarter instead of the 2.8% originally reported by the Labor Department. But overall, U.S. productivity is heading in the right direction, economists said.

  • Some of us are more productive with deadlines. Take transit agencies in Seattle, Boston and Kansas City. They’re pushing to complete some long-awaited projects in time for June’s World Cup.

  • American workers’ personal and professional lives were worse at the end of 2025 than during any other time during the past three years, based on Gallup’s Life Evaluation Index. One reason: More than half of workers were looking for a new job even when most believed it was a bad time to do so.  


QUOTE OF THE DAY
“It's not that the current use needs to stop. It's just that the race to make smarter and smarter machines that nobody understands needs to stop.”
— Nate Soares, president of Machine Intelligence Research Institute
Artificial intelligence is racing forward, but where? As tech companies rush to build more powerful systems, some researchers like Soares are dead serious about pausing AI development. And while MIRI’s mission sounds like science fiction — preventing AI-driven human extinction — it recalls fears of global destruction in the atomic age. Soares said world leaders need to collaborate to prevent a disaster. “All we really need is the political will,” he told Marketplace’s David Brancaccio.
HEAR MORE
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Reema Khrais crochets a rabbit while her cat walks behind her on the couch.
Reema Khrais, host of “This Is Uncomfortable," crochets animals for “the babies in my life.”
Final note
You should sell those!
All over social media, people are spinning hobbies into side hustles: mosaic belt buckles , ax-throwing, crocheted animals. Creative outlets feed our souls, but extra cash to feed our incomes isn’t bad either. One in four Americans juggle side gigs, and the pressure to monetize free time is rising — along with questions about burnout and fulfillment.
HEAR MORE
 
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