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Happy end of Q2! Q3 is right around the corner and I for one can’t wait to hit some fresh KPIs. 

Today marks the end of Marketplace’s fiscal year and jokes aside, this has not been an easy one. We lost federal funding last summer, and that means your support is all the more crucial. So if you can, please make a donation and help safeguard public-service journalism for the long haul.

All right enough of that, let’s get to today’s newsletter! It’s all about the wage gap, the Supreme Court and price of eggs. — Tony Wagner, newsletter editor
A woman works while holding a baby.
Miguel Pereira/Getty Images
The gender wage gap is dragging down the whole economy
The gap has been widening for several years, after it narrowed at the start of the pandemic. Marketplace’s Justin Ho traces the ripple effects.
We’re going to get the government’s official employment tally for June on Thursday.

The report is coming on the heels of three straight positive monthly jobs reports, in terms of the number of jobs the economy added.

That said, those reports have been telling us that wage growth has been steadily slowing. And for women, it’s slowing even more, according to an analysis of weekly earnings data by the Institute for Women’s Policy Research.

Throughout the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s, the gender wage gap got narrower. Kate Bahn, chief economist at the Institute for Women’s Policy Research, said that was thanks to more women entering the workforce, broader minimum wage protections, and better access to contraception.

“There’s research showing that that directly led to women finishing college and going on to grad school and earning money later on,” Bahn said.

Bahn said a lot of that progress was down to policy decisions by lawmakers. And by the 2000s and 2010s, that progress stalled.

Then came the pandemic. Demand for low-wage labor spiked. So wages did, too.

“Women are over-represented in low-wage jobs,” Bahn said. “And so when you have low-wage workers broadly have more earnings growth, that is going to reduce the gender wage gap.”

But since the pandemic, the gap has started widening again.

“Men’s earnings grew 3.7% in 2024, adjusted for inflation, and women’s grew, in our findings, only 1.5%, but it was not statistically significantly different from zero,” Bahn said.

A lot of the job growth in the economy has shifted away from those lower-wage positions that helped boost women’s average earnings, said Yana Rodgers, a professor at Rutgers University.

“So as demand rose again for other jobs, more dominated by men, their wages picked up,” Rodgers said.

Also, Rodgers said women are still disproportionately responsible for taking care of children and elders at home.

“Care work is probably the biggest constraint that women face,” Rodgers said. “So they’re just not as able to respond to opportunities in the labor market as men.”
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News you should know
Let’s do the numbers
  • Stocks rose to cap off a winning Q2 on Wall Street. The S&P 500 closed up 0.8% and ended June down but managed to notch its best quarter since 2020. The Dow rose 0.3% today and the Nasdaq composite added 1.5%.

  • We got new data on consumer confidence for June, and it’s a mixed bag. Americans are feeling better about the future, but still pretty crummy about the present.
Energy
  • The price of Brent Crude fell to $72.95 today, and the national average gas price fell again to just over $3.84 a gallon.

  • Natural gas is in high demand, both for stateside data centers and international buyers. To take advantage, the U.S. needs a critical but invisible infrastructure: pipelines.
Your money
  • Donors gave American charities a record $617.2 billion, though the biggest increases came from big-fish donors and estates.

  • The typical CEO made $17.7 million in 2025, up nearly 6% from last year. This tool lets you compare your salary to chief executives, including how long it would take you to match their compensation.

  • If you’re a well-compensated CEO or just have a couple bucks to spare, consider donating to Marketplace before our fiscal year ends tonight. Any amount makes you a Marketplace Investor, and we have some great thank-you gifts too.


QUOTE OF THE DAY
“It's a critical decision, but it's a fragile decision.”
— Sarah Binder, political scientist
That could apply to today’s 5-4 ruling upholding the 14th Amendment and birthright citizenship, but Binder was actually talking about the Federal Reserve.

A central bank’s political independence makes for a stronger economy, and the Supreme Court gave the Fed the smallest carveout at the same time it handed the White House more power to reshape nominally independent federal agencies. Binder came on “Marketplace Morning Report” to talk about how the government moves forward from this week’s big rulings.
HEAR MORE
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A woman shops for eggs at a store.
Brandon Bell/Getty Images
Final note
You can’t make an omelet… 
Without breaking the bank. At least, you couldn’t last year when the price of a dozen eggs surged nationwide. The industry blamed avian flu, but the federal government and 17 states opened investigations into price fixing.

Now, three major egg producers will pay $3.3 million and donate 53 million eggs to nonprofits around the country to settle those claims without admitting wrongdoing. The Associated Press notes prices plunged as the flu outbreak subsided and, it just so happens, when the feds started asking questions.
Get your life together!
Join host Reema Khrais and the rest of the "This Is Uncomfortable" team for a virtual meet-up to cross that financial task off your to-do list!
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