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Plus: Doing the numbers on holiday weekend travel. 
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Heading into the long weekend, both airfares and gas prices are cheaper than they’ve been in recent years, but that doesn’t mean that travel is easy to book for consumers, or easy to predict if you’re in the industry. We’ll get into it.

But first, let’s talk about the only stock that seems to matter right now, Nvidia, and the massive capex spending companies are making to stay competitive in the AI race.

— Tony Wagner, newsletter editor and Virginia K. Smith, digital editor

A data center in Columbus, Ohio
The Washington Post via Getty Images
How many data centers can one country build? We’re about to find out.
Spending on AI data centers could soon run into the trillions, making it a bigger business than traditional office space. Marketplace’s Nova Safo reports.

Spending on data center infrastructure has played a huge role in powering GDP growth.

On Nvidia’s earnings call this week, CEO Jensen Huang estimated this year alone, artificial intelligence infrastructure spending will total $600 billion. By the end of the decade? Between $3 trillion and $4 trillion.

All of that spending is helping prop up a whole host of companies, in construction, real estate, energy and more.

Data center construction started exploding hand in hand with artificial intelligence. Consulting firm McKinsey and Company estimates  buildouts globally will total nearly $7 trillion. 

“It is really difficult to compare what is happening today to other types of investment,” said Eugenio Aleman with Raymond James. Still, he took a shot. He said it’s analogous to the build-up of the internet itself. 

“We have to go back to the end of the 1990s where we saw this very, very large investment,” he said. 

READ MORE


 
News you should know

Let’s do the numbers

  • Stocks retreated from recent all-time highs on Friday, with the S&P 500 falling 0.6%, the Dow Jones Industrial Average down 0.2%, and the Nasdaq down 1.2%.
  • In its latest move to centralize government spending power, the Trump administration informed Congress it will be cutting $4.9 billion in foreign aid spending via the legally untested process of “pocket recissions.”

Labor Day Travel

  • The Transportation Safety Administration said it’s expecting record-breaking travel around the holiday weekend.
  • Gas prices are currently at the lowest they’ve been over the holiday weekend since Labor Day 2020.
  • Domestic airfares are less expensive than last labor day, but demand changes fast and this summer cheap seats have been harder to find. 
  • What if you aren’t flying out of a major hub? The Essential Air Service program funds commercial flights to small airports around the country, but the White House has proposed cutting that funding by half.
A promo image for the event described below with headshots of Kai Ryssdal, Amy Scott and Elizabeth Kolbert.

Climate change is an economic crisis

As the climate crisis accelerates, so does the risk of economic disruption, with massive consequences for jobs and entire industries. Join Amy Scott, host of Marketplace’s "How We Survive," and Pulitzer Prize-winning science writer Elizabeth Kolbert in conversation with Marketplace host Kai Ryssdal as they discuss how these shifts are poised to unfold, the impact to our daily lives, and how true solutions may be at odds with how our economy functions. Plus, we’ll dive into the solutions that are giving us all hope right now.

Presented by Odoo with additional underwriting support from The Economist.
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QUOTE OF THE DAY
"It takes a village to rebuild a village, right?"
—  Brandi Crawford Ferguson, of the nonprofit McKenzie Community Land Trust

This September marks five years since the Holiday Farm Fire burned up more than 173,000 acres in Oregon’s McKenzie River Corridor. It’s a scenic mountain town that’s been around since 1900, with mining and timber as its former big industries.

The fire consumed hundreds of homes and businesses. In fact, most of the town was leveled. Locals are still putting their community back together, piece by piece.
 
Final note
Monday is Labor Day

This newsletter will be off for the holiday, but Marketplace will still be on your radio dials and podcast apps as usual. Meantime, revisit this newsletter from last year, about the fascinating history of union songbooks.


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