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Plus: A sixth-grader determined to wipe out school lunch debt. 
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Meta is planning to cut about 8,000 workers next month, the third round of cuts this year as it pushes into generative artificial intelligence. Microsoft, meanwhile, is offering voluntary buyouts to about 8,750 workers. If you’re a business applying for a tariff refund, take a seat . We’ll explain. Also: Stocks fell and oil prices rose; those numbers are below. But first, other countries are capping gas prices. Why not the U.S.? My colleagues Kai Ryssdal and Andie Corban explain why. — Carrie Barber, newsletter editor
A closeup of a person's arm reaching for a gas nozzle at a station.
Asanka Ratnayake/Getty Images
Will more countries cap gas prices as the energy shock continues?
Price caps can cause big problems and lead to supply shortages, according to economic theory.
We often look back to historical parallels in order to understand the current moment. And in today’s economy, there’s a lot we can learn from the 1970s.
 
The 1970s were “perhaps the last most chaotic time in terms of uncertainty in global oil markets,” said Meg Jacobs, a Princeton University history professor who wrote the 2017 book “Panic at the Pump: The Energy Crisis and the Transformation of American Politics in the 1970s.”
 
There were two oil shocks in the ‘70s: one caused by the Arab oil embargo in 1973 and another by the Iranian Revolution in 1979. It was also a time of stagflation — high inflation coupled with slow growth. And earlier in the 1970s, President Nixon had implemented a series of price and wage controls.
 
“I have a point of view based on the past about today,” Jacobs said. “I do not see any kind of price caps in our future.”
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News you should know
Let’s do the numbers
  • Wall Street retreated today after setting records Wednesday. The S&P 500 fell 0.4% after hitting its top, the Dow dipped 0.4%, while the Nasdaq dropped 0.9% from its own record.

  • A barrel of Brent crude, the international standard, rose 3.1% to $105.07 today. The national average for a gallon of regular gas rose a penny to $4.03. 

  • Manufacturing output rose this month at the fastest rate in four years, fueled by a big jump in new orders, according to S&P Global. But it’s not because of a surge in consumer demand.

  • Avis’ stock fell by about 50% today, after the car rental company’s shares surged sevenfold in the last month. The roller coaster ride was courtesy a “short squeeze.”
 
Tech layoffs
  • Meta announced it will cut 8,000 jobs, or 10% of its workforce, next month, as the Facebook owner shifts its focus from the metaverse to generative AI. Meta stock closed down 2.31%.

  • Microsoft is taking a softer approach to downsizing, offering voluntary retirement buyouts to up to 7% of its U.S. workforce, or about 8,750 employees. Its stock fell 3.97%.

Your money
  • Mortgage lenders can now consider rent-payment history, utility payments, and other data not previously used to prove an applicant's creditworthiness, the Trump administration said today.

  • Businesses started applying for tariff refunds Monday, after the Supreme Court ruled the taxes illegal. But don’t expect a full refund right away.  It’s only Phase 1 of the process, covering about 60% of $166 billion owed, and most companies will have to go through it all over again. Phase 2: TBD. 


QUOTE OF THE DAY
“They are facing either going back to their home country … or an indefinite stay in a detention facility that is heavily underfunded, that is routinely and systematically denying and violating people's constitutional rights.”
— Michael Foote, immigration attorney
That tough decision is pushing more immigrants to self-deport, Foote said. It’s expensive, he said: $20,000 to cover airfare to a new country, lost wages and replacing possessions. For Dreamers, immigrants brought here illegally as children, the cost is more than money. Host Reema Khrais talked with Foote, and a Mexican-born immigrant who left the U.S. for Germany, on the latest episode of our podcast “This Is Uncomfortable.”
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A child with dark hair sits at a school lunch table eating a meal on a tray.
Michael Loccisano/Getty Images
Final note
A sixth-grader’s school-lunch bailout
It sounds Dickensian, but it’s true: Meal debt has been rising since a COVID-era program providing free meals for all students ended in 2022. Kids who fall in the gap are often given smaller meals as they accumulate debt. Kansas sixth-grader Lizzy Chobad has raised $900 to pay off meal debt in her Valley Center district by selling T-shirts, one with the message “Be Kind.” She hopes to reach a $4,000 goal and establish a running account.
 
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