Marketplace®

Daily business news and economic stories

Meredith Garretson Morbey

Supervisory Senior Producer

Meredith is a supervisory senior producer at Marketplace.

Latest from Meredith Garretson Morbey

  • 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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  • A climate change activist in a hammock occupying Oxford Circus in the busy shopping district of central London on April 18, 2019 uses a megaphone on the fourth day of an environmental protest by the Extinction Rebellion group. - Nearly 300 people have been arrested in ongoing climate change protests in London that brought parts of the British capital to a standstill, police said on April 17.
    ISABEL INFANTES/AFP/Getty Images

    From the BBC World Service… The U.K.’s target for lowering carbon emissions has been criticized as unobtainable. Activists shareholders at the Barclays bank’s annual general meeting. Plus, we look at the rise of female gambling addicts.

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  • A small organic farm in the middle of Houston’s concrete sprawl. 
    Travis Bubenik for Marketplace

    Jobs numbers come out Friday, but private data show the job market is hot. With its acquisition of Aetna, CVS has moved towards in-house health services. Plus, how some in “food deserts” are gaining access to fruits and vegetables.

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  • Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex and Meghan, Duchess of Sussex walk through the walled public Andalusian Gardens which has exotic plants, flowers and fruit trees during a visit on February 25, 2019 in Rabat, Morocco.
    Facundo Arrizabalaga/Pool/Getty Images

    A new study finds that raising the minimum wage could prevent suicides. The U.S. will begin to implement  sanctions against Cuba. Plus, we take a look at the booming business around the forthcoming royal bundle of joy.

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  • A large anti-U.S. mural covers the wall of a building in the center of the Iranian capital Tehran, on April 23, 2019. - The White House announced yesterday it was calling an end to six-month waivers that had exempted several countries from unilateral US sanctions on Iranian oil exports.
    ATTA KENARE/AFP/Getty Images

    From the BBC World Service… Paris is bracing itself for May Day protests. Venezuela’s President Nicolás Maduro has claimed victory over an attempted coup. Plus, can the Trump administration reduce Iran’s oil exports to zero?

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  • As part of a nationwide hiring effort, Taco Bell Cantina hosts Hiring Party at 840 8th Avenue on April 23, 2019 in New York City.
    Dave Kotinsky/Getty Images for Taco Bell

    It’s not that hard to get a job these days, but it does take a little more work to get a raise. Cleveland and Ohio go the state’s supreme court to decide the fate of the city’s local hire ordinance.

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