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Traveling today? Nearly 18 million people are expected to catch a flight between now and Sunday. In today’s newsletter, we’ll take a look at the state of air travel post-shutdown. Plus: The numbers we lost in 2025 and the plans for this newsletter the rest of the week. — Tony Wagner and Virginia K. Smith, newsletter editors


Zohran Mamdani and President Trump meet in the oval office.
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Why we can't stop talking about affordability
President Donald Trump and his team are talking about affordability. So are Democrats like Zohran Mamdani and Jim Clyburn. Why does the word hold so much political power? “Marketplace” host Kai Ryssdal asked some experts.

There’s a new political buzzword when it comes to talking about the economy: affordability.

In the past few weeks, politicians from both sides of the aisle including President Donald Trump, New York City Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, and Rep. Jim Clyburn of South Carolina have all discussed affordability.

Jessica Rett, a professor of linguistics at the University of California, Los Angeles, said “affordability” is “a much weirder” noun than “economy.”

“We come to it via this indirect route. It starts off as a verb: afford,” Rett said.

From there, it becomes an adjective adjective: affordable. Stick another ending on it to make it a noun: affordable. This path from a verb to an adjective to a noun means the word “affordable” holds lots of adjectival properties that “economy” doesn’t hold, Rett said.

“Nouns like economy often describe a bunch of dimensions all at once, but affordability is really honing in on a particular dimension,” she said.

This means the word “affordable” is easier to understand, since it’s just about one slice of the whole economy. All of this could add to the word’s political power.

“The economy is something that you have to have a PhD in order to be a specialist in,” Rett said. “But everyone’s an expert in affordability, because it’s very subjective. It’s relative to their own personal experience, and it’s something that they have a daily interaction with.”

Mihaela Pintea, chair of the economics department at Florida International University, said it captures the disconnect between macroeconomic indicators, which are pretty good, and how people are feeling about the economy, which is not so good.

“People feel, ‘But what about me?’” she said. “Maybe somehow everybody else is doing OK, but why is it that I have a hard time just living my life?”

Abdullah Al-Bahrani, an economist at Northern Kentucky University, said he knows people who talk about price increases on things like groceries, child care, and housing when they talk about affordability.

“The reality is real wages have not kept up,” he said. “I think that’s what the average American is complaining about when they bring up the term affordability.”

Like Rett, Al-Bahrani described the word affordability as subjective.

“We spend money on different things and we have different priorities, and that’s where it gets a little complicated,” he said.

There’s no one set economic definition for the term. For one person, affordability might include paying off student loans. For another, it might include feeding a family of five or paying off a mortgage.

People have different ways of defining affordability, but the term captures a feeling in this economy.

READ MORE


 
News you should know

Let’s do the numbers

  • Stocks rose for a fourth straight day, with the Dow and S&P 500 both up 0.7%, and the Nasdaq up 0.8%. Markets are closed tomorrow for Thanksgiving, they’ll reopen Friday for a shortened trading day.
  • Experts are trying to read the tea leaves of what jobs numbers and the bond market can tell us about the economy, and the results remain a mixed bag.
  • Let’s take a look back, with gratitude, at all the federal datasets and tools that "died" this year.
  • New data says about one in seven Social Security recipients depend on benefits for nearly all of their income. Still, about 10% of older adults live in poverty.

Your money

  • Here’s something to chat about at the Thanksgiving table: By many measures, millennials are doing better than their boomer parents were. So why doesn’t it feel like it?
  • Earlier today the Trump administration announced price cuts on 15 medications covered by Medicare.
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QUOTE OF THE DAY
"I think it’s the least dirty shirt in the laundry basket."
—  Sebastian Mallaby, senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, on the U.S. dollar

The dollar’s value plummeted in the first half of the year, largely thanks to the uncertainty caused by Trump’s trade policies. But in recent months, it’s been regaining some of those losses. Economic stagnation has made other currencies in that laundry basket a bit less desirable, Mallaby added.

White domestic turkey
Artur Harutyunyan/Getty Images
Final note
Happy Thanksgiving!

This newsletter will be taking a break for the rest of the week, but Marketplace will still be on your radio dials and podcast apps. Our weekly newsletter will also go out Friday morning as usual, with stories about holiday shopping and the secret class history of Jell-O. Subscribe here so you don’t miss it!

This newsletter was written and edited by Virginia K. Smith and Tony Wagner. Andie Corban produced our top story on affordability.

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