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Hello: It’s Juneteenth, the holiday commemorating the end of slavery in the U.S. in 1865. 
 
Prejudice casts a long economic shadow: In 2019, for every $1 of wealth belonging to white Americans, Black Americans had 17 cents, though some states have wider racial wealth gaps than others. We’ll kick off today’s newsletter examining a different gap: The disparity in educational attainment.
 
We’ve also got several fascinating stories from local economies around the country this week, from the scary expensive real estate in California to controversial nuclear plants in Missouri. We’ll also look at what might happen if the world gave up the U.S. dollar and explain how drug companies come up with those crazy names. Haven’t you always wondered? — Tony Wagner, newsletter editor
Several Black men in caps and gowns at the Millhouse College graduation ceremony last year.
Paras Griffin/Getty Images
Black educational attainment has boomed. Will anti-DEI laws change that?
Black students are left with less mentorship and support as schools roll back diversity initiatives. Marketplace’s Stephanie Hughes reports.
For decades after emancipation, there was an active movement to keep Black people uneducated.

“Historically, we purposely created policies to stop Black people from going to college, and in more recent decades, we had taken the steps to actually lessen the impact of those historical policies,” said Dominique Baker, an associate professor at the University of Delaware.

That includes the passage of the Civil Rights Act, which provided protections against discrimination, said Baker. “And it takes a while for that to show up, and so that is why we start seeing much higher attainment in recent decades.”

The portion of Black adults in the U.S. over the age of 25 who had earned at least a bachelor's degree hit nearly 28% in 2024. That’s almost double from the year 2000, according to an analysis of government data released by the Pew Research Center earlier this year.

But education policy has changed in the past few years. In 2023, the Supreme Court ruled that colleges can no longer legally consider race in admissions. Now, schools such as Johns Hopkins and MIT have fewer Black students enrolling.

Both Texas and Florida have banned DEI programs at public colleges, and Jordan Nellums, a higher education senior policy associate with the Century Foundation, said schools elsewhere have rolled them back — and that leaves students with less mentorship and support.

“They may end up thinking that college isn't for them,” he said.

These programs are designed to help students succeed, Nellums added, and he called their elimination a potential disaster for Black educational attainment.


 
Your weekend catch-up
Podcast recs
  • Marketplace contributor Lee Hawkins explored the legacy of Jim Crow laws in his family history on the podcast “What Happened in Alabama?” In season 2, he dug into how racial covenants shaped his Minnesota upbringing.

  • Be sure to check out Lee’s new show with Marketplace, “Must Be The Money,” featuring long conversations with Black business leaders about their success and lessons learned along the way. 
Your money
  • Festivities marking the nation's 250th birthday have already begun across the country, so we looked at the state of the American Dream. Who can afford it these days?

  • When prediction markets give different odds on the same event, that’s free money. The catch? You have to be lightning fast, very patient and good at math.

  • Congressional inaction is pushing us toward a Social Security cliff. Let’s explain exactly what that means (and doesn’t mean).
Local economies
  • Rural America doesn’t have enough veterinarians. It’s hard to find vet school grads who will work round-the-clock for lower pay than the city.

  • Corpus Christi’s water supply is reaching crisis levels. A new desalination plant could produce 30 million gallons a day, but residents are concerned it could kill fish and tourism. 

  • Missouri is among several states reviving a policy that allows utilities to charge residents for power plants as they're being built rather than after they come online.
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An overhead view of houses in the Bay Area
Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
AI wealth is already sending San Francisco real estate soaring
A new class of overnight millionaires and billionaires are bidding up the city’s housing. For the three months ending in May, median home prices were up almost 15% over last year. Marketplace Meghan McCarty Carino reports.
There’s perhaps no better illustration of how AI equity has become the currency of the housing market than the listing at 160 Noe St.

The turnkey Edwardian home, fresh off a two year luxury renovation, hit the market last month for just under $3 million. It’s located on a quiet tree-lined street in Duboce Triangle, adjacent to Cerebral Valley, the neighborhood known for its concentration of AI startups and workers.

It has unique features like a motorized stairway to the attic that folds into the ceiling, an oversized marble kitchen island that seats six and custom nine-foot doorways.

But perhaps the most distinctive thing about this listing is one of the forms of payment accepted: shares in OpenAI or Anthropic.

“We have had at our open houses a lot of folks come in and be like, ‘Oh my gosh, I wish I wish this was six months from now,’” said realtor Kristal Pollack with Swann Group. “And so the seller said, ‘Well, yeah, I would just take their stock for it.’”

Employees and other shareholders have also had opportunities to cash out billions of dollars of stock before the IPOs by selling shares back to the company during funding rounds, or on the booming (though not always legitimate) secondary market.
READ MORE
 
ICYMI: Your picks
Here are the stories readers clicked on the most in our Daily Wrap newsletter this week. Sign up to get the latest news and numbers in your inbox every weekday evening.

  • Social Security is not running out (The Purse)

  • How do consumers manage to keep spending? (Marketplace)

  • You Have No Idea What a Trillion Dollars Is—and We Have Proof (The Wall Street Journal)

  • The American protectionism bill that made the Great Depression worse (Marketplace archives)

  • Why teens are struggling to find summer jobs this year (Marketplace)
$100 bills mixed in with other foreign currency.
Khaled Desouki/AFP via Getty Images
What if the US dollar was no longer the world's reserve currency?
We asked economists to play out “de-dollarization.”
The U.S. dollar is the most widely used currency in the world.

Around 90% of all international transactions have the U.S. dollar on one side. Close to 60% of reserves held by foreign central banks are in U.S. dollars or dollar-denominated assets, and nearly two-thirds of world debt is in dollars, too.

This gives the U.S. economy and government certain advantages. It gives the United States what’s sometimes referred to as “exorbitant privilege” of cheaper borrowing costs and powerful leverage in international relations.

But in recent years, conversations about “de-dollarization” have gotten louder.

The share of non-dollar assets held in foreign reserves, such as gold, has gone up. There are efforts by countries, including China and Russia, to develop payment systems that avoid U.S. dollars. And this spring, ships have reportedly gotten through the Strait of Hormuz by paying fees in Chinese yuan.

The dollar is so ingrained in global commerce that it’s unlikely to lose its international status overnight. But if it did, what would the global economy look like?

“Marketplace” host Kai Ryssdal spoke with three economists about that hypothetical world.
READ MORE
 
SONG OF THE WEEK
"5 Flucloxacillin" by Los Campesinos!
The album cover for
Kimberly Adams, circa 2015
Listen to "5 Flucloxacillin" on YouTube | Apple Music | Spotify
 
Flucloxacillin is an antibiotic, often sold under the brand name Floxapen outside the United States. American doctors might instead prescribe nafcillin, sometimes branded as Nallpen. See a pattern here?
 
There are companies that specialize in naming drugs as they go to market, Marketplace’s Janet Nguyen explained in her column “I’ve Always Wondered” recently. These branding pros have to balance drug regulation and language differences while coming up with a name that’s easy to pronounce and remember.
 
This is marketing at the end of the day; pembrolizumab is a cancer drug that’s hard to say, while Keytruda might make you think of unlocking new possibilities.
 
One more note about Los Campesinos! — a Welsh band, despite the name. They’re remarkably transparent about their finances, and this blog post is worth checking out if you’re curious what it costs for a foreign band to tour the U.S. these days.
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