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Redmond Carolipio

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  • MORRIS PLAINS, NEW JERSEY - AUGUST 17: Mailboxes sit outside of a Morris Plains, New Jersey post office on August 17, 2020 in Morris Plains, New Jersey. Postmaster General Louis DeJoy has accepted House Democrats' request to come before Congress on August 24th to answer questions about recent policy and operational changes inside the postal service. (Photo by Theo Wargo/Getty Images)

    Also today: A recent Bankrate survey notes how some Americans aren’t confident about their ability to save up for retirement.

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  • The White House says the goal is to find shared objectives for trade and define standards around technology and the digital economy.
    Roslan Rahman/AFP via Getty Images

    From the BBC World Service: Speaking at a summit in Singapore, Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo said that at the start of 2022, the Biden administration is likely to start building out an economic framework for the Indo-Pacific region. And, a BBC investigation found two of the world’s most wanted cyber-crime suspects appear to be living luxurious lifestyles in Russia, despite the Kremlin’s claims it doesn’t shelter hackers.

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  • Pump jacks and wells are seen in an oil field using fracking.
    David McNew/Getty Images

    Also today: Drew Matus of MetLife Investment Management helps us interpret the retail numbers from the Department of Commerce. An Ohio public employee pension fund is suing Meta, the parent company of Facebook. The fund claims Meta misled the public about the potential harmful effects of Facebook and Instagram.

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  • Consumers return to retail shopping at the a mall in Glendale, Arizona, in June. Holiday shopping will be mostly online this year due to the pandemic.
    Christian Petersen/Getty Images

    Also today: The impact of inflation has reached food banks and pantries, which have had to alter their inventories as well as how they distribute to people. We look at how the labor market is interacting with the growing movement to salary transparency.

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  • The talks emphasised the personal relationship between the leaders of the world's two biggest economies.
    Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images

    From the BBC World Service: Presidents Biden and Xi spoke for more than three hours in frank and direct discussions, which yielded some progress, though no specific breakthroughs. Plus, unemployment in the U.K. fell more than expected in October, while job vacancies hit a fresh record high. And, a diamond mining project in India has set off a debate about conservation and jobs for local people.

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  • The storm of holiday advertising might be a little lighter this season
    Getty Images

    Also today: We learn about how small businesses have been forced to adapt in the chaotic nature of the Great Resignation, where workers can just disappear with little notice given to their (former) employers. The BBC checks in with news about the stock exchange in Beijing as well as pollution in India.

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  • The latest jobs report shows that the number of workers in the health care sector has climbed back to around pre-pandemic levels.
    Mario Tama/Getty Images

    Also today: We examine what President Biden’s infrastructure bill could mean for rural America, and Democrats are hoping to pass Biden’s second spending bill proposal, with a sticking point being – once again – paid family leave.

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  • Germany's foreign minister said airlines taking migrants to Belarus could be banned from landing in the EU.
    Photo by OKSANA MANCHUK/BELTA/AFP via Getty Images

    From the BBC World Service: Foreign ministers from across the European Union are widening the criteria the bloc uses to impose sanctions on Belarus as thousands of migrants remain trapped in freezing conditions at the border with Poland. Also, the Beijing Stock Exchange officially opens for business. Plus, Austria introduces lockdown restrictions for unvaccinated citizens. And, India considers pollution lockdown measures in Delhi amid worsening air quality levels.

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  • IRVINE, CALIFORNIA - AUGUST 26: A sign is posted at the Johnson & Johnson campus on August 26, 2019 in Irvine, California. A judge has ordered the company to pay $572 million in connection with the opioid crisis in Oklahoma.
    Mario Tama/Getty Images

    Also today: We talk to our own Kimberly Adams about Marketplace Tech’s series of stories about tech regulation. Christopher Low joins us for our discussion about the markets.

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  • Turkey has banned people from three Middle Eastern countries from flying to Belarus due to the migrant crisis at the EU borders.
    Leonid Shcheglov/BELTA/AFP via Getty Images

    From the BBC World Service: Turkey is stopping citizens from Iraq, Syria and Yemen from flying out of the country to Belarus because of what it called the problem of “illegal border crossings” into the European Union. Many migrants face sub-zero temperatures close to the border. Plus, the Japanese industrial conglomerate Toshiba will split itself into three publicly-listed companies focused on infrastructure, devices, and memory chips. And, Cape Town’s unusual ways to cope with severe water shortages.

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