Tuesday's Assorted Links
Netflix, interest rates, summer jobs, electricians, and a new minimum wage

Hi y’all! Here are five stories from this week that contained some neat applications of economic principles or are related to teaching:
Netflix added 100,000 U.S. subscribers on each of two days after it started enforcing the new rules related to password sharing [CNN | Monday Morning Economist]
The Federal Reserve is expected to do something it hasn’t done in the last 15 months: not raise interest rates [Bloomberg]
Summer jobs are hot right now as teenagers' pay is up 11.5% on last year [Axios]
Driven by a shift to electrify everything, the Bureau of Labor Statistics predicts that 80,000 new electrician jobs will be created annually until 2031 [The Washington Post]
New York City becomes the first to set a new minimum wage for food delivery workers, requiring they be paid at least $17.96 per hour before tips [The New York Times]
Canada is facing a severe wildfire crisis, with over 400 active fires and widespread smoke plumes that have even reached northern U.S. cities. It's a story of climate change, labor shortages, and the struggle to keep communities safe.