-
Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, who was appointed to the court by President Biden, dissented.
-
Electronics and back-to-school supplies are expected to top many shoppers' lists.
-
Katie Wagner, the supply chain director of an Iowa-based computer hardware maker, talks about how her company expects their bottom line to be hurt if the U.S. follows through on threats to impose retaliatory tariffs on trading partners starting Aug. 1.
-
Some sellers are not offering discounts this year because they are already dealing with higher costs.
-
The Planet Money newsletter rounds up some new economics studies.
-
There was a circle in Maria Burns' yard where grass wouldn't grow and trees died. She knew what it was: An old natural gas well, plugged when she was a little girl, starting to leak again.
-
The dollar has just posted its worst first-half of a year since 1973. And now investors wonder — is it a sign that America is losing its financial standing?
-
There could be about a million 'orphan' oil and gas wells across the U.S. As they age, they can leak greenhouse gases or unhealthy chemicals.
-
The leaders of Japan and South Korea were the first to get letters on Monday that informed them of the new tariff rates.
-
NPR's Ayesha Rascoe speaks with Duke University professor Tim Meyer about the looming deadline for international trade deals to be worked out and what's been accomplished thus far.