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Plus: Job-hopping doesn’t pay like it used to. 
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Hey, hope you’ve had a great week. We’ve got a lot of stories to make you smarter about the economy this week. We’ll learn why:
  • Job-hopping doesn’t pay like it used to
  • Rolling back emissions rules won’t make cars cheaper
  • Video games are headed for their biggest year yet
  • “Trump accounts” come with a catch
First though, “Marketplace” host Kai Ryssdal explains an economic term I never found super odd until I thought about it a little harder. Why do economists say "it's baked in" anyway?  — Tony Wagner, newsletter editor
Bread on display at a bakery.
Yuki Iwamura/AFP via Getty Images
Why markets don't always react to big news
Will you permit us a tasty extended metaphor?
“It was already baked into the market reaction.”
 
It’s something we at Marketplace, and other business news outlets, say when big news happens and the markets don’t seem to care. But why not?
 
“I would say that the analogy to baking, when we talk about ‘baked in’ is pretty appropriate,” said Sasha Indarte, a professor of finance at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School.
 
It’s a bit on the nose, but stay with us. Once all the ingredients are mixed together and the cake is in the oven, what’s going to come out when the timer goes off is already decided. It’s baked in.
 
The market works kind of the same way. Once news — or more accurately, anticipated news — is incorporated by stock market traders and other economic decision-makers, the news isn’t really new when it happens.
 
“For example, when the [Federal Reserve] makes its announcement about monetary policy rates and the path of monetary policy going forward, we don't always see a big market reaction,” said Indarte. “Sometimes mortgage rates or stock prices don’t move a whole lot.”
 
Take the analogy just a hair further: When markets don't move a whole lot on what otherwise would be big news, it means Wall Street has a pretty good recipe for what the future market is going to look like.
 
“What are the ingredients here? That would be the data that would be things like job reports, the latest inflation numbers,” Indarte said.
 
Right now, traders are baking in the January jobs report, the latest consumer price index, the personal consumption expenditures price index , and tons of other data points they might use to, say, take a guess at what the Fed is going to do in March at their next interest rate-setting meeting.
 
And all those ingredients taken together? When mixed, they make a forecast. And that’s kind of like the batter, Indarte said. So long as they get the batter right, when the Fed announces interest rates, there’s not going to be a big market reaction.
 
But, as anyone who’s baked can probably relate to, sometimes you get the batter wrong.
 
READ MORE


 
Stories for the weekend
Who’s hungry?
  • Check out this interactive chart tracking grocery prices for the past five years.

  • It’s awards season. Here’s what stars are eating at awards shows, and what it says about the economy at large.

  • The ube supply chain wasn’t made to handle Americans’ appetite for the purple, flexible yam.

  • Burger King is testing an AI chatbot that will monitor employees to make sure they say “please” and “thank you.” Its name is “Patty.”

  • Lost your appetite? Novo Nordisk is cutting the price of its GLP-1 meds by as much as half. The price war comes as some employers are dropping coverage from their health plans, and the FDA is cracking down on knockoffs.
Trump’s tariffs
  • The Supreme Court invalidated some $175 billion worth of tariffs imposed by the White House last year. A couple days later, President Donald Trump raised new ones. How’s that legal? 

  • Companies are lining up to get their import taxes refunded, and some consumers have their hand out too. What are the chances the government would give any money back?
Your money
  • In our exit interview this week, Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic said he’s watching consumer expectations to see if they’re adjusting spending for persistently high inflation. Here’s the thing: Inflation can be a self-fulfilling prophecy. 

  • There’s a new tax deduction for auto loan interest on American-made cars. Here’s what you need to know.

  • New tax-advantaged, government-seeded “Trump accounts” could build wealth for low-income families — provided they go to the trouble of signing up.
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A job fair.
Joe Raedle/Getty Images
Welcome to the Great Stay
Switching jobs for a significantly higher salary is so 2022. Marketplace’s Caleigh Wells dives into the narrow wage growth gap between job-hoppers and their colleagues who stay put.
You may remember that strange phase of the labor market after the pandemic that got dubbed The Great Resignation — when employers were hiring like mad, and lots of workers were leaving for better-paying jobs.
 
They had good reason. According to data from the payroll company ADP (where occasional Marketplace collaborator Nela Richardson is chief economist) back in the first half of 2022, your annual salary went up 8% more if you left your job than if you stayed. 
 
Those days are long gone. Now ADP reports that increase has fallen below 2%.
 
Some are calling this phase of the labor market The Great Stay.
 
It’s a classic case of supply and demand. The supply of available jobs is lower than it used to be, so employers can pay lower salaries for the open jobs still out there.
“That's what people call the frozen labor market, or The Great Stay. … if you find something, it's not going to pay much more than what you’re currently in and it might even pay less,” said Guy Berger, director of economic research at the Burning Glass Institute.
 
He said employers aren’t hiring or firing much these days. So if you like your current job?
 
“You're going to be hogging it, you're going to be holding on for dear life. You're not going to be at very high risk of being laid off. But if you want something else … you’re not going to get much of a pay premium for switching if you manage to find something,” Berger said.
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Cars lined up on a freeway
Kevin Carter/Getty Images
Who wins and who loses when the EPA rolls back emissions rules?
“I think the big loser is really the American people,” a climate scientist told our podcast “How We Survive.”
The environmental protection agency determined greenhouse gas emissions endanger public health and welfare in 2009. The Trump administration walked that finding back a couple weeks ago, unwinding emissions standards for motor vehicles. The EPA said this move will save consumers money, but many see it as a huge setback for climate policy in the U.S.
 
This week on our climate podcast “How We Survive,” host Amy Scott talks with climate scientist Chris Field and clean energy expert Rachel Muncrief about the economic winners and losers of this repeal.
 
Here are some takeaways: 
  • This move could cost consumers more. The EPA claims deregulation will save consumers over a trillion dollars. “That is not true at all,” Muncrief said. “It's costing consumers billions of dollars.” She had expected electric vehicle pricing to come down in the coming years, which would lower fuel spending. “The biggest winner here is the oil and gas industry,” Muncrief said.

  • The global transition to EVs continues on. The repeal could disincentivize automakers to innovate on electric vehicles (EVs) but Muncrief said it’s important to keep the global market in mind: “In 2025, 25% of the vehicles that were sold across the world were electric vehicles. That's up from like less than 5%, just five years before that.”

  • China may be the biggest winner. “I think the consequence of the endangerment finding is that we'll basically subject American consumers to being saddled with legacy technologies moving into the future,” Field said. “China has made amazing commitments to delivering low cost solar panels, low cost wind, low cost electric vehicles,” he added. “And I think that that positions them to be a leader in the future, and unfortunately, we're going to have to really struggle if we want to catch up.”
HEAR 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 concerns are growing over the private credit market (Marketplace)

  • Expecting high inflation can sometimes lead to higher inflation (Marketplace)

  • Read NPR's annotated fact check of President Trump's State of the Union (NPR)

  • Anthropic loosens safety pledge to compete with its AI peers (Marketplace)

  • Raphael Bostic looks back on nearly nine years leading the Atlanta Fed (Marketplace)  
 
SONG OF THE WEEK
"Video Games" by Lana Del Rey
Lana Del Rey performs onstage
Gareth Cattermole/Getty Images for ABA
Listen to “Video Games” on YouTube | Apple Music | Spotify
 
The video game industry had its second-biggest year on record last year, only beat by 2020 and its lockdown Animal Crossing craze.
 
Experts are saying 2026 could be even bigger. More games are adopting lucrative subscription models, and the player base is becoming more diverse than ever. 
 
“This is not one demographic. Young kids don't spend enough to spend $60.7 billion by themselves,” Aubrey Quinn of  the Entertainment Software Association told Marketplace’s Caleigh Wells. “I feel like every time I sit on a plane next to a woman 50 or older, she’s got her iPad out or her phone out, and she is doing some sort of puzzle-matching-something game.”
 
None of this even counts “Grand Theft Auto VI,” which is widely expected to be a massive blockbuster at the end of the year, but the industry owes just as much to 8-year-old Roblox players and the 80-year-old Candy Crushers. “It’s you, it’s you, it’s all for you…”
HEAR MORE
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