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Daniel Shin

"Marketplace Tech" Producer

Daniel helps produce the daily “Marketplace Tech” show and podcast, and he’s interested in tech policy and ethics.

Latest from Daniel Shin

  • Picture of a cup of coffee at a Luckin Coffee on January 14, 2019. - When Starbucks came to China two decades ago it promised to open a new store every 15 hours. Now a homegrown rival, Luckin Coffee, plans to build a high tech-driven shop every three and a half hours to dethrone the US giant. The Chinese upstart is burning through millions of dollars to lure customers with steep discounts, challenging Starbucks' dominance by targeting office workers and students who prefer to have their java on-the-go or delivered to their doorstep.
    FRED DUFOUR/AFP/Getty Images

    The U.S. is out of the Iran nuclear deal, but what about Europe? Luckin Coffee is giving Starbucks a run for its money in China. Italy floats a “citizens’ income.”

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  • "I can’t say that we’ve shifted any more manufacturing back to the U.S. based on the tariff," said Todd Adams, president of stainless steel manufacturing company Sanitube, about last year's steel tariff. Above, a steel market in China in 2018.
    AFP/Getty Images

    Todd Adams just wants to see an end to trade and tariff volatility between the U.S. and China.

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  • Wooden sign board hanging on door of cafe
    nathaphat/iStock/Getty Images Plus

    President Trump’s tariff tweet causes a financial stir. Mike Pompeo talks Arctic meltdown in Finland. How immigrants are breathing new life into abandoned businesses.

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  • Paper circles with the Facebook logo are displayed during the F8 Facebook Developers conference on April 30, 2019 in San Jose, California. Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg delivered the opening keynote to the FB Developer conference that runs through May 1.
    Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

    President Trump spooks the markets with tariff talk. Facebook gets into the crypto game. What does Brexit hold for the U.K.’s ambitious high-speed rail project?

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  • An investor looks at stock price movements on a screen at a securities company in Beijing on May 6, 2019. - China's key stock indices plunged more five percent on May 6 after US President Donald Trump threatened to hike tariffs on Chinese imports, potentially derailing high-level trade talks as they enter their final phase.
    NICOLAS ASFOURI/AFP/Getty Images

    A presidential tweet on tariffs sends global markets into chaos. Why Mike Pompeo is in Finland today. Voters in South Africa head to the polls this week.

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  • Woman in casual clothes carrying her baby in baby carrier and using a smartphone on the desk.
    kohei_hara/Getty Images

    Could the hot jobs market overheat the entire economy? The federal consumer watchdog gives small banks a new level of privacy. Plus, we look the widening gender gap.

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  • Oculus on display at CES on the hill.
    Robyn Edgar/Marketplace

    Fewer teens are getting jobs, due, in part, to not really looking for them. Maine becomes the first state to ban styrofoam, but some say these prohibitions aren’t very environmentally friendly. Plus, the Consumer Electronics Show comes to Capitol Hill.

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  • Kickstarter and other companies are experimenting with the four-day workweek to gather data on its impact.
    Tatomm/iStock/Getty Images Plus

    From the BBC World Service… Investor hunger for Beyond Meat sent shares soaring on their Wall Street debut. Pepsi backs down from a fight with Indian farmers. Plus, the campaign for a four-day working week is gaining traction.

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  • Members of the uninsured Morales family, with five children, wait to enter to be treated at a free dental clinic put on by volunteers with the California Dental Association Foundation on Oc. 27, 2018, in Modesto, California.
    Mario Tama/Getty Images

    Inflation is low, but the Fed chair calls it “transitory.” After years of decline, the number of children without health insurance is on the rise. Plus, the condom business isn’t what it used to be.

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  • The food industry is going to the dogs, literally
    Chalabala/iStock/Getty Images Plus

    What does the Fed’s decision to leave interest rates untouched mean for inflation? Auto makers shift from monthly sales numbers to quarterly reports. Plus, some big names in “people food” are cashing in the multibillion-dollar pet food industry.

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Daniel Shin