Marketplace®

Daily business news and economic stories
  • Barclays Capital has produced a new skyscraper index, which finds the correlation between the tallest buildings in the world and economic recessions.

  • Dumping Gatorade on a coach after a big victory is a tradition for college and professional athletes, but where did that tradition come from?

  • Miller, Coors and Anheuser-Busch products sit side-by-side in a cooler at a liquor store. Coors Light is now the second more popular beer in the country, after Bud Light.
    Scott Olson/Getty Images

    The Consumer Electronics Show is all about gadgets, but this year, it's also all about advertising. One organization is making strides to recycle all the unused soap from big hotel chains. And earnings season begins with a poor showing from bellwether stock Alcoa, a major U.S. aluminum producer.

  • We speak to Marketplace's senior foreign editor, John Buckley, about protests going on in Nigeria over corruption in the government, and the recent cut of oil subsidies there.

  • PODCAST: Geithner heads to China, techies head to Vegas

    Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner is on his way to Asia today with a goal of getting Japan and China on board with new economic sanctions against Iran, as tensions between that country and the U.S. continue to grow. The Consumer Electronics Show is underway in Las Vegas and there will be plenty of hype and hooey regarding a zillion new tech products being displayed.

  • Unemployment numbers for the month of December 2011 showed some positive signs.
    Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

    The economy continues to add jobs, but not fast enough to make campaigning easy for President Obama. The government is about to reveal how many hours people work on average each week. Many businesses aren't happy about a move to start registering an expanded number of web suffixes next week. Alternative sentencing through special problem-solving courts is better for the job prospects and earning potential of offenders.

  • Amelia's Grocery Outlet employee Dale Groff stocks a freezer in New Holland, Penn. GDP is rising, but are we growing in the wrong areas? We may be stocking up on too much inventory.
    William Thomas Cain/Getty Images

    Why is the frozen food industry hurting, even as more people are dining at home?

  • Bottle of wine are categorised ready for tasting during the 'International Wine Challenge' event at the Barbican centre in London, England. Wine is one item that should actually drop in price in 2012.
    Dan Kitwood/Getty Images

    Economists are worrying about inflation in the coming year, but a few products will actually be cheaper. What should we buy in 2012?

  • Netflix is about to venture into original content.
    Hector Vivas/Latin Content/Getty Images

    Boeing will close a military aircraft factory in Wichita, Kansas, laying off 2,000 workers over two years. The European Union could soon begin cracking down on how online companies use personal data. Shares of Netflix soared yesterday after data showed that users watched over 2 billion hours of TV and movies last quarter. And in this week's Attitude Check with Gallup, we look at the extent to which the 2012 election will focus on economic issues.

  • Guests try out the wireless connection to the Internet on their laptops onboard Boeing's latest aircraft 'Connexion', which allows passengers to connect on the Internet in flight.
    Photo by STR/AFP/Getty Images

    Only a small percent of airline passengers log on to the internet in-flight despite a growing number of airlines and private services

Mid-day Update