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Hey, hope you’ve had a great week. Unfortunately that might depend on when you last put gas in your car. Prices are surging and more inflation could be on the way — we’ll break it all down below, plus:
  • The true cost of war in Iran
  • New survey data on how Americans see the economy
  • The economics shifting how colleges hand out degrees
  • A “work sucks” anthem
First though, is there any relief ahead at the pump? Let’s take a closer look at the gas tax.  — Tony Wagner, newsletter editor
 
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A gas station charging at least $6.59 a gallon.
Mario Tama/Getty Images
Why suspending the gas tax won’t help consumers
President Donald Trump has proposed pausing the country’s 18.4-cent gas tax. Marketplace’s Janet Nguyen explains what that (won’t) mean for you.
President Donald Trump has proposed suspending the federal gas tax as prices at the pump have jumped following the start of the Iran War. But would that really make a meaningful difference for cash-strapped consumers?

Gas prices rose 5.4% between March and April, pushing April’s year-over-year inflation to 3.8% — its highest level in three years, according to Labor Department data. Meanwhile, AAA gas price tracker shows that the average price of gasoline stands at over $4.50, which is about 43% higher than it was last year.

Americans have to pay more for their daily commute, while farmers are facing rising fertilizer and fuel costs.

But pausing the gas tax (a move that would require Congressional approval) won’t help U.S. consumers or farmers, and will end up worsening the national deficit, experts told Marketplace.

The federal tax currently stands at 18.4 cents per gallon of gas and 24.4 cents per gallon of diesel fuel. Getting that money back just won’t make a meaningful difference when gas prices have gone up by 40% or even higher in some parts of the country, said Gilbert Metcalf, a visiting professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Sloan School of Management.

Suspending the gas tax also won’t help farmers because they already get an exemption from the gas tax, Metcalf said.

“If eliminating the tax leads to a little bit more demand for gasoline, then that's just going to drive up the pre-tax price, which will just hurt farmers yet again,” Metcalf said.
READ MORE


 
Your weekend catch-up
Your money
  • Inflation accelerated last month, outpacing Americans’ wage gains for the first time in years. Worse, wholesale prices surged 6% annually at last check, which could soon affect the prices you pay.

  • More than half of college grads say they’ve delayed a life event over their student debt. Here’s how that number breaks down by age.

  • About 7 in 10 Americans say the economy is “poor,” according to a new CNN poll. See how that perception has shifted during the past five presidents.

  • Would you trust ChatGPT to look at your bank accounts and help you budget?
The Trump administration
  • The Senate confirmed Kevin Warsh as Fed chair this week. His predecessor, Jerome Powell, will be remembered for fighting back against the White House’s unprecedented pressure campaign to lower interest rates (which would likely drive prices higher).

  • The president ordered repairs to the Reflecting Pool, but costs have surged and the firm performing the work didn’t have to bid for it.

  • The Pentagon said it’s spent $25 billion on the war in Iran so far. Economist and frequent Marketplace guest Justin Wolfers says the real figure is eight times that.

  • We’ve been doing the numbers on Trump’s approval rating with this interactive graphic, from The Economist, updated daily. Just look at how the economy has surged on voters’ priority list.
It’s road trip season
  • Despite surging gas prices, AAA forecasts 45 million Americans will travel over Memorial Day weekend. That’s an all-time high, up just a hair from last year.

  • Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy met the moment by filming a reality show traveling across the country. Optics aside, the project raised ethics concerns because it’s funded by companies Duffy regulates.

  • Marketplace’s David Brancaccio took a road trip too recently, driving Route 66 partly in electric vehicles for the road’s centennial. Listen to David’s travelogue and then check out more of his photos in Haggerty.
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Michael Noble Jr. for The Washington Post via Getty Images)
Humanities degrees are becoming a luxury product at some colleges
Colleges have been closing programs due to low enrollment, financial cuts, or legislation. But what makes a major worth the tuition? Here’s Marketplace intern Richard Perrins:
Undergraduate students are turning away from the humanities, and some colleges are following suit by closing those programs.
 
Between 2015 and 2024, the share of all bachelor’s degrees awarded in the humanities dropped from 10.9% to 8.5%, replaced by a larger share of STEM degrees.
 
Different colleges shut down programs for different reasons. Some, like Syracuse University, are closing programs with low enrollment. In Ohio and Indiana, state law mandates public colleges shutter programs that graduate few students. Smaller schools, like Earlham College, change curriculum when their budgets are crunched.
 
Students have their own reasons for changing majors. They generally want their education to lead to jobs, especially with the college sticker price rising, and an uncertain job market ahead.
 
But if Middle Eastern studies and fine arts are only offered by elite universities with large endowments, and only to students who can afford to study them, that would subvert the democratic purpose of higher education, Syracuse humanities chair Gregg Lambert said.
 
“These are programs that are being closed precisely at the moment that I think we need more,” he said. “I don’t see that these kinds of knowledge are going to be able to exist outside a university environment.”
 
Rosie Jacobson, who graduated from Earlham College in 2010 with a degree in sociology/anthropology that will now no longer exist, worries future students will miss out on a well-rounded college experience.
 
“I feel deeply sad that other people might not be able to have that experience,” she said. “And that other young weirdos are not going to be challenged and invited into a legacy of thought the way that I was.”
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.

  • Why this number might be more important than GDP (Marketplace)

  • Why is it hard to find Funyuns on sale? (Marketplace)

  • Retail investors' shift towards AI chip stocks could signal an end to the boom (Marketplace)

  • Why young and old men are leaving the labor force at record rates (Washington Post)

  • Do you say 'wash' or 'warsh?' Here's where the pronunciation comes from (NPR, with regards to our new Fed chair)
The Southern Idaho booth at SelectUSA
Michael Reaves/Getty Images
Prediction markets let you bet on anything… horse racing. Why?
Betting on the ponies is on the decline, but the sport has fended off Polymarket and the like. Marketplace’s Caitlin Tan reports.
Pat Cummings remembers his favorite Preakness race. “Smarty Jones winning in 2004. I grew up in Philadelphia, and it was just such incredible that because a Philadelphia horse had won it.”

Cummings is executive director of the National Thoroughbred Alliance. He bets on horses all the time. So does Jon Stettin, founder and publisher of Past the Wire .

“My mom was at the racetrack the day before I was born and at the racetrack about four or five days after I was born with me in a stroller,” he said.

Back then, you bet in person. Now, you don’t even have to be at the track; you can bet online, but all through platforms okayed by the racing industry. That doesn’t include prediction markets.

Saturday is the Preakness Stakes, the second event in the “Triple Crown” (which also includes the Kentucky Derby). Americans have been able to bet on horse racing longer than any other sport , but interest has waned. Over the last couple of decades, betting on racing has declined by more than 50%.

You might think prediction markets would see this as fertile ground. Even though sports betting on platforms like Kalshi and Polymarket is surging, they have not made inroads in horse racing.

“For the industry, it's better to lock them out and just keep all the money for themselves and restrict where I wager,” Stettin explained.
READ MORE
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SONG OF THE WEEK
“9 to 5” by Dolly Parton
The cover art for Dolly Parton's album
Listen to “9 to 5” on YouTube | Apple Music | Spotify

Spotify, the app that would soon swallow the music industry whole and turn it into a subscription service, was born 20 years ago.

To celebrate, the company is leveraging the data behind its viral “wrapped” feature to show users not just what they’ve listened to in a given year, but their whole time on the app. It’s also released new data that sheds light on how the world listens.

Some of this is predictable — newsflash, Taylor Swift is huge — but we’re interested in all the “work sucks” playlists out there. Spotify collated them and found “9 to 5” is one of the most frequently featured, along with Blink 182’s “All The Small Things” natch and “Sugar, We’re Goin Down” by Fall Out Boy. Personally, I’m partial to Cam’ron.
But we had to give it up this week to the queen of country music, theme parks and public radio, Dolly Parton. I highly recommend this pocket history of “9 to 5,” the movie and the song. Read to the end for a wild, Marketplace-y cover by Tune-Yards.


 
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