President Donald Trump’s plan to guide cargo ships through the Strait of Hormuz, and thereby reopen it, came apart today when the U.S. and Iran fired on each other. We’ll tell you how the stock market and oil prices reacted below, along with lots of news on gas. Also, RIP Spirit Airlines. And today is “Star Wars” Day: May the 4th be with you. We’re starting off with serious business: Fewer full-time workers are earning a living wage. My colleague
Caleigh Wells explains why. — Carrie Barber, newsletter editor |
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Charly Triballeau/AFP via Getty Images | Fewer full-time workers are earning a living wage, a new study says |
For many, wages aren’t rising as fast as costs, especially for food, housing, child care and other essentials. |
Just over half of full-time workers earn enough to provide for themselves and their families, a fresh report from Dayforce and the Living Wage Institute found. That’s down five percentage points compared to four years ago.
What counts as a living wage depends on how much stuff costs.
“The cost of housing, food, child care and other essentials are elevated,” said Jason Rahlan, global head of sustainability and impact at Dayforce. “Energy prices have recently spiked, of course.”
He said wages have been going up, just not as fast as costs.
“Job growth has recently slowed, and millions of workers haven't seen a meaningful improvement in their financial situation,” Rahlan said.
The report shows familiar demographic gaps: Women are less likely to earn a living wage than men, hourly workers less likely than salaried workers, Black and Latino workers less likely than white and Asian workers.
All of those gaps widened in 2025.
“Certain workers are always more vulnerable when the economy drops in any kind of way,” said Saba Waheed, director of the University of California, Los Angeles’ Labor Center. “When there's an unemployment bump, you often see Black workers to experience it harder, first, and so on.”
Waheed said one way to alleviate wage gaps is to elevate the lowest wages. The federal minimum wage, she pointed out, hasn’t increased since 2009. | |
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| Let’s do the numbers Oil and gas | |
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QUOTE OF THE DAY | “I started to think … I have more than I can use, and what I need to do is set a limit on it.” |
— Lois Moore, financial industry retiree in South Bloomfield, Ohio |
How much do you need to retire comfortably? An average of $1.46 million, a recent survey says, up 15% from last year. Lois Moore is asking the opposite: How much don’t I need? After she inherited more than expected from her mother and “the market started dumping money on me,” she decided to put a cap on her net worth and give serious donations to charity. She explained her decision, and what it’s like spending after a lifetime of saving, in the latest installment of our series“My Economy,” sponsored by Intuit Quickbooks.
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Borja B. Hojas/Getty Images | Final note |
May the 4th be with the box office? |
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