Marketplace®

Daily business news and economic stories

Ariana Rosas

Producer

Ariana is a producer for “Marketplace Morning Report.”

Latest from Ariana Rosas

  • Despite supply chain bottlenecks and skilled labor shortages, homebuilders are "very optimistic."
    Justin Sullivan via Getty Images

    First, retail data for July has emerged from the Commerce Department. The downturn in new home construction offers a peek into the state of the housing market. The BBC reports on food prices and the pressure they bring to Peru and Nigeria.

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  • Many people who need hearing aids don't have them because of the high cost — about $5,000, which insurance often doesn't cover.
    Joe Raedle/Getty Images

    Later this year, it’ll be possible to acquire hearing aids without a prescription. We attempt to read the tea leaves on retail data and consumer behavior. The BBC reports on how Cuba will allow foreign investment in local wholesale and retail trade for the first time since 1959.

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  • People ride their electric bicycles along a street in Beijing.
    Wang Zhao/AFP via Getty Images

    From the BBC World Service: Residential areas in China’s southwestern Sichuan province have been told to limit the amount of electricity they’re using. Plus, Cuba will allow foreign investment in local wholesale and retail trade for the first time since the 1959 Communist revolution. And, what price pressures mean for families and businesses in Peru and Nigeria.

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  • Historic drought has brought water levels down to record lows on the Colorado River, seen here on March 28.
    Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

    First, we take the economy’s pulse with the help of MetLife’s Drew Matus. States that rely on the Colorado River are struggling with the logistics of conservation as a government deadline has come and gone. China correspondent Jennifer Pak discusses the job environment for the nation’s young people.

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  • Americans continue to spend on drugs at an increasing rate. 
    Tim Boyle/Getty Images

    The soon-to-be signed Inflation Reduction Act includes a variety of health care provisions, including allowing Medicare to negotiate over prescription drug prices. There appear to be questions on a vaccine plan against COVID variants. We check in with the BBC’s Victoria Craig regarding her chat with the former governor of the Afghan Central Bank.

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  • William Ruto's victory in Kenya's presidential election has been welcomed internationally despite a major disagreement over the result.
    Simon MAINA / AFP

    From the BBC World Service: William Ruto wants to unite his country after a narrow election victory. More than half the election commission’s members have rejected the outcome and the result could be subject to a legal challenge. Plus, a year on from the Taliban takeover in Afghanistan, we hear from the former central bank governor Ajmal Ahmady about the status of $7 billion in central bank assets, which are frozen in the U.S. 

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  • Oil storage tanks in Carson, California. The use of fossil fuels dropped during the lockdown, and supplies piled up.
    Robyn Beck/AFP via Getty Images

    Gas prices have dropped, but that hasn’t led to the big bump in consumer sentiment some might have expected. We check in on the minutes from the Fed’s July policy meeting. The BBC checks in on Afghanistan one year after the Taliban’s seizing of control. It appears colleges still have a long way to go when it comes to dealing with small businesses owned by people of color.

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  • The U.S. Capitol building in Washington. Congress is discussing what to do about the federal debt limit, again.
    Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images

    First, we peek ahead to some big retail data coming out this week. The People’s Bank of China makes a surprising move. Felicia Wong of the Roosevelt Institute discusses what could be next for the Democrats following a number of agenda victories.

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  • The People's Bank of China cut its benchmark interest rate by one tenth of a percentage point to 2.75%.
    Kevin Frayer/Getty Images

    From the BBC World Service: The People’s Bank of China cut its benchmark interest rate for the second time this year, in a surprise move after data showed slower than expected economic growth in July. Plus, South Korea promises aid to North Korea if the country stops developing nuclear weapons. And, a year after the Taliban seized power in Afghanistan, many women and girls are still excluded from work and formal education.

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  • There are some things to consider for investors during market periods that are especially turbulent.
    solarseven / Getty Images

    Christopher Low measures market activity with us. A wrinkle in the ongoing saga of gas prices: The price of crude is rising. The BBC looks in on how new COVID restrictions in the East have affected local lives as well as the global supply chain.

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