Marketplace - AI chips away at cybersecurity job opportunities
Episode Date: May 18, 2026Cybersecurity was once the focus of a huge workforce development push. Job opportunities and training programs were abundant. But as artificial intelligence makes it easier for hackers to pul...l off sophisticated cyber crimes, it’s also replaced entry-level cybersecurity roles. In this episode, one corner of the AI-affected job market. Plus: What retail earnings could reveal about consumer spending, how homebuilders are feeling, and how the U.S. dollar became dominant.Every story has an economic angle. Want some in your inbox? Subscribe to our daily or weekly newsletter.Marketplace is more than a radio show. Check out our original reporting and financial literacy content at marketplace.org — and consider making an investment in our future.
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Okay, serious question.
What is a dollar?
Anyway, from American public media, this is Marketplace.
In Los Angeles, I'm Kyle Rizzdahl.
Monday. Today, this one is the 18th day of May. Good as it always is. To have you along, everybody.
Our dollar discussion in just a minute, but retail earnings are the macroeconomic metric
oh the week. We are going to get in no particular order, Walmart Target, T.J. Max, Home Depot,
Loz, and a bunch of others telling us how their first quarters went. As you know, the markets have
been on a tear and investors are pretty pleased, but consumers, in addition to their usual crankiness,
are actually showing some signs of economic strain.
So Marketplaces Kristen Schwab gets us going today
with what those earnings calls might be able to tell us.
There's been a phrase economists, analysts, and companies
have used to describe consumers month after month
and at this point, year after year.
Resilient, but still choiceful.
Mari Shore is a retail analyst at Columbia Threadneedle investments.
And I think that those words are still going to be used.
to describe the consumer.
She says big picture, consumers are still spending, but look closer and it's mostly just
the more moneyed Americans keeping retail sales strong.
So when we look at the high-level economic data, a lot of that is reflecting strength
at the high end and not necessarily across the income spectrum.
It's why even a stellar earnings season doesn't necessarily equal a strong consumer economy.
Sonia Lepinski is a managing director of the retail practice at Alex Partners.
When we say they're still spending, it's a pretty macro view that I think gets blended across a lot of things and kind of just suppresses some noise.
The noise is where the real information is right now.
What will companies say about the spending categories people are pulling back on?
What types of stores are consumers shopping at?
If consumers are really stretched, they're going to buy the necessities and they're going to go where they think they can.
get the best deal.
But these first quarter earnings might not give us the full economic picture.
It covers some time before the war started, and it includes tax season.
Returns this year were, on average, 10% higher.
It's why Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Analytics, will pay attention to what
retailers say about future pricing.
You know, what kind of pricing power retailers have?
Again, can they pass through?
Are they passing through?
As in passing through higher costs if companies think consumers can handle paying more.
Because he says from ongoing inflation to higher borrowing rates to gas prices, lower income consumers might not have much more room to keep spending.
I mean, they're hanging tough. They're hanging in there. Those tax cuts really bought them some time, but they're running out of time.
Zandi says if the economy keeps on the path it's on, we could see a shift from consumers in the coming months or even weeks.
I'm Kristen Schwab for Marketplace.
Wall Street today, a funny thing happened on the way to the close.
Stocks were down.
Oil was up, bond yields were up, and then the White House got interested.
President Trump put off his new threatened attacks on Iran.
Wasn't enough to turn things around, but he did stop the slide.
We will have the details when we do the numbers.
The U.S. dollar is the overwhelmingly dominant global reserve currency.
More than a half of the foreign currency reserves sitting in central banks around the world are in U.S. dollars.
It is just really hard to overstate the role that the dollar plays in the global economy.
But why?
The more history-aware among you will, of course, think of the financial system that was built in large part by the United States after the Second World War.
And you're right, it is part history.
But it's also part policy.
And part, stay with me now, the philosophy of money.
And that gets me to Brendan Greeley.
He's a financial journalist turned academic who's out with a new book called The Almighty Dollar 500 years of the world's most powerful money.
Brendan Greely, welcome to the program.
Good to have you on.
Good to be here.
With the understanding that you just wrote a 350-ish page book about the question that I'm about to ask you,
I kind of have to start with what is a dollar?
That's actually a really good question to start with.
when we take economics in college,
what we're taught is that money used to be gold
and then it was paper that represented the gold,
and now it's just a social convention
because the gold is gone.
That has always felt like a cop out to me.
And it's odd to me that macroeconomists
who are very hard-nosed analysts of data
will say when it comes to the question of money,
I don't know, man, it just kind of works.
I can define for you what a dollar is.
It is a department.
in a commercial bank.
That's how almost all of our dollars are made.
When a bank gives you a loan, it is marking up your deposits with brand new dollars.
It did not get those dollars from the Fed.
Nobody arrived with a briefcase of $100 bills to hand over to the bank, to hand to you.
They marked it up on their balance sheet.
What they get in return, because they're not giving you that for nothing, is what they
think of as an asset.
That's your mortgage.
You will pay them back over time.
So that's all that a dollar is.
It is credit that is generated when you borrow from an American bank.
That's how it works right now.
Student of history, though, I consider myself.
I did learn through this book in the opening pages, actually, that there were dollars before
there was America.
And then, in fact, America didn't invent the dollar.
That said, the U.S. dollar now is the dollar.
And I guess in some radio interview appropriate length, how did the dollar become what it has become?
We tend to think of global currencies as coming from great empires. And it's a very simple equation,
a powerful country, powerful currency. I don't think that's actually how it works.
After the Second World War, yes, absolutely, America was the only sort of remaining functioning,
industrialized economy. But to understand why American bank dollars had value,
value. We have to go back a little farther. We had banking panics every 15 years or so in the
19th century. After each one of these banking panics, we end up with regulation, having a
controller of the currency, making sure banknotes are backed one-to-one with treasuries. So now, when we
get to the 50s and 60s, what starts to happen is countries in the rest of the world, and particularly
foreign banks working with each other in the city of London, start to see American bank deposits,
these absolutely secure things that now have federal deposit insurance. As, as a foreign bank,
having value outside of the country. And so we refer to this now as the Eurodollar system,
which is a really complicated way of saying. These are offshore dollars that are being used by
foreign banks. Then they innovate on top of that. And this is how the dollar became the global
currency. Foreign banks make up their own dollar deposits. They are making loans to foreigners
outside of our own shores. They're making those loans in brand new dollars that those banks
created. There are about
$14 trillion in
offshore brand new dollars created by
foreign banks. To give you a sense of scale,
there are only $19 trillion
created by the Federal Reserve and
American banks. They're within the same
ballpark. That's the global dollar system.
You are not doing anything to reassure
me or anybody listening to this
that our money is a real thing.
I mean, honestly, right?
It is, well, okay,
if you tell me that money is just
a social convention, my answer is
Well, yeah, but so's the bond market and so is your mortgage.
These are all acts of finance.
These are all promises that sit on bank ledgers.
They are very real.
We can analyze them.
We can measure them.
But I can't touch it.
I can't feel it.
I can't pull it out of my wallet, you know?
Well, no, you can't.
But the thing is, this question of sort of virtual money is very old.
Any historic market that you look at, and I will not make you look at all of them with me in this radio interview.
You end up finding a lot of the same thing.
Colonial bars, for example, if you look at the ledger on a colonial pub, what you see is people
owe money to the pub, and they will owe money to the pub for six months a year.
Then they'll take the money they owe to the pub and use it to pay each other.
So I can pay off your bar debt, and in doing so, I'm paying you.
And we can see these transfers on that ledger.
That starts to look a lot like a bank.
So this idea that money is something you can't touch, and that's weird now, I don't think is
correct.
I think money was often in the past something.
you couldn't touch. It's just that people in the past sort of understood this a lot better than we do now.
I'm going to flip to the back of the book and, you know, it's got those bullet points and this is the greatest book ever on anything, you know, in this ambition, groundbreaking history, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. Talking about the origins of our money.
Well, no, you're right. Sorry.
Brendan Garilli makes a new argument about the origins of Romney and the people and nations who have surrendered to it, which gets me to the dollar
dominance of the global economy today. And I guess I want to value judgment from you. Is that a good
thing? Is that a good thing for America? Is it a good thing for the world? I think it can be a good
thing and it could have been a good thing, but we have to be aware of it and understand what it means.
So we figured out in the 80s in America that we could borrow on global markets and that there was
absolutely no visible bottom to the amount of money that we could borrow in global markets.
And it still sort of seems like that, right?
I mean, look, the national debt, you know, right?
Come on.
Yeah.
What we're seeing in America is something that looks honestly a lot like the resource curse,
except our resources, we can manufacture dollars.
And what that does is when we look at all the literature on resource curses in other countries,
what we find is it breaks down governance because it becomes very easy to just pay off elites
with this brand new money that you're getting from the resource.
And so I think we can say that's something comparable to what happened in America.
it's very easy to just sort of pass tax cuts or pass stimuli without thinking about sort of how we pay for it because in America we don't have to think about it.
There is a line or a train of thought through parts of this book. You talk about, you know, we have a zillion different kinds of dollars, Petro dollars, Euro dollars. There's this amazing thing called the Amanda dollar in the epilogue, which I encourage everybody to read about. The thing you point out, though, is that all of these dollars don't serve everybody equally, which seems to me to be a problem.
Yeah, there's an old theory about coins, which says that there's big money and little money.
They work very differently.
Big money is large value coins that are sort of used by merchants and the wealthy and for international trade.
Small money is used for retail purchases of just wheat and beer and bread.
I think that carries over to now as well.
It is much cheaper for the bank to produce big loans, to take big deposits, to make big transfers,
than it is to make lots and lots of little loans, little transfers, little deposits.
And for that reason, the American banking system favors large depositors, large borrowers.
If you are not, then your money is poorer quality in America.
You have to pay for transfers to move small amounts of money from one bank to another.
If we can understand that money isn't magic, that it's not all just fiat, then we can start to look at how it's produced, for whom it's produced, and who gets the high quality money, and who gets the poor quality money.
And I think we don't take seriously enough the problem of small depositors and people outside of the banking system in America.
There's a series of question, Chair, I could ask you about the dollar as the global reserve currency, exorbitant privilege, strong dollar, all that.
I'm not going to.
What I am going to ask you, though, is whether you think the global economy would be what it is today without the dollar.
Oh, God, that's a question I haven't encountered before that I'll actually have.
have to think about. You're welcome. I think that the dollar system enabled rapid globalization
in a way that we hadn't seen before. You know, the oldest problem in finance is, how do you pay someone
in another country, in another currency? Very difficult to solve this. You have lots of banks and lots
of companies with access to American dollars, deposits in American banks, and some brand new dollar loans
from those banks in the city of London. That creates this vast pool of what we call liquid.
dollars that can very easily move back and forth. And I don't think that global trade would have
grown as quickly as it did at the end of the 20th century without that pool.
It is a book called The Almighty Dollar 500 Years of the World's Most Powerful Money. Brendan Grealy
wrote it. It used to be a journalist covering among other things of Federal Reserve. Now he's
back in academia. Brendan, thanks a lot. I really enjoyed it. Thank you. Coming up. You know what's worth a lot of
money, tools that mean
companies don't have to hire so many
cyber techs. I mean, great
unless you're a cyber
tech? But first,
let's do the numbers.
Dow Industrial's up 159.
Today, a third of 1%
49,68. The NASDAQ
went the other way, subtracted 134
points. About a half percent, 26,000
0-9 or 0. The
S&P 500 down five points.
Just under a tenth of one percent
ended things at 74 and 3.
So retailers where we started, Walmart rang up 1 and 4 tenths percent.
Today Target collected 1.5 percent.
T.J.X., which is the parent of T.J. Max, founded one and nine tenths of one percent.
Home Depot, up about three quarters of one percent.
Hey, where has Warren Buffett been putting his money?
His company, Berkshire Hathaway.
Yes, I know Buffett's retired, but work with me here.
Berkshire Hathaway reports it's invested more than $2.5 billion in Delta Airlines
and up at stake in Google's parent alphabet, both of which today basically unchanged.
bonds up yield on the 10-year T-note down 4.58% you're listening to Marketplace.
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This is Marketplace.
I'm Kai Risdal.
If it seems like we've been talking about housing a lot lately, I mean, it's because we have.
biggest asset most people own and all that?
We are supposed to be right now, smack and peak home buying season, a huge time not only for
buyers and sellers, but agents and lenders and the many, many people whose livelihoods
depend on people fixing up and furnishing the homes that they have just bought.
This is overall a light week, data-wise.
Housing accepted.
We're going to get pending home sales and new home starts and a reading on Builder Confidence
out today from the National Home Builders Association.
Spoiler alert, builders are a teensy bit more confident, but still pretty dejected.
Marketplace is Carla Javier, got back on the phone with some of the realtors she's been talking to.
To hear how things are going in their local markets.
Builders' expectations of current sales conditions, sales expectations, and potential buyer traffic ticked up a few points in May after dropping in April, according to the National Home Builders Association.
In Bellevue, just across Lake Washington from Seattle, Michael Orbino with Team Foster at Compass,
says he follows national numbers like these, but it's been a tough market for the builders he works with.
There isn't a lot of land to expand into, and material and labor costs are high.
All at the same time, the buyers are, I think, finally saying, and they have been saying for a couple of years,
that these prices are just getting too high, combined with the high property taxes, high insurance costs, and high interest rates.
He says builders are squeezed and are rethinking what they can afford to build, if they can build at all, which may mean smaller projects.
Anything that's not out of the ground yet, at this moment, it's likely we're going to be redrawing it for a future economy that maybe the prices are lower than where they have been.
Over in Miami, Joanna Jimenez of the Opus Group at Compass says most of the transactions her team works on are resales of existing homes.
And she's noticed that two different markets are emerging.
In neighborhoods where buyers are heavily relying on financing, we are seeing they are taking
longer to make decisions.
They're touring more properties.
They're very price sensitive.
So a lot of those buyers are asking for credits to help upset like the higher borrowing cost.
Jimenez says in the other market where a significant number of the transactions are in cash,
buyers are moving much faster.
She says it's good to be aware of what's happening across the country, but she's focused on the local picture.
What are the cash sales shared in Zipode? How many months of inventory do we have?
What is the median sales price that it go up? Has it going down?
Because she says it's these hyper-local numbers that help the most when navigating the market with her buyers and sellers.
I'm Carla Javier from Marketplace.
There are those who sing the people.
praises of artificial intelligence of all the incredible things it can or will be able to do.
And then there are those who are anticipating all the harm it can do.
There's the whole Mythos thing, the latest model from Anthropic, which the company very publicly
has declined to release to the public because of worries it could be a super hacking tool
in the wrong hands.
But even before Mythos, AI was already helping bad guys automate bigger and faster and more
sophisticated attacks.
FBI data shows cyber.
cyber crime losses in the United States were up more than 25% last year. Yes, AI is being used to
defend cyber systems, but a lot of organizations have been chronically underinvested in security
and industry groups have long pointed to a shortage of people with the skills needed to defend
against all that hacking. And to top it all off, as marketplace Megan McCarty Carino reports,
a lot of job seekers trying to break into that field are hitting a firewall.
Megan Osteen has wanted to work in tech pretty much forever.
My dad, he was a software engineer, and I just remember, like, a lot of my childhood, I would sit in his office with him and he would explain to me what he was doing, like, how it worked.
Life sort of got in the way of her plans. She left college when she became a mom and grabbed the work she could, most recently as a behavioral therapist for kids with autism.
When her dad died a few years ago, she decided it was time to make a career leap, and she kept hearing cybersecurity was the way to go.
because of the projected job growth and the demand within the field.
It seemed promising.
She took online courses and in February earned her first cybersecurity certification.
She's been looking for jobs, but not finding many opportunities.
I'm trying to find ways to keep pushing forward and not get stuck in the mud,
but it has been truly very difficult.
I just feel like it was false advertisement.
Cyber security jobs have been the focus of a decades-long workforce development push,
learned to code but with the urgency of a national security imperative.
It spawned a cottage industry of federal and state programs,
for-profit boot camps, certifications, and online career coaches like Evan Lutz.
The thing that initially gave me rise on social media is that I can speak very,
very quickly with concise ideas.
He's not joking.
If you want to start your cybersecurity career in 90 days, making $90,000 a year,
the first thing you're going to need your certifications.
Let's quit his job teaching high school math in 2019 to get into cyber and now advises
others on his roadmap for success.
I've never seen this fail in the U.S., and it works every time.
Which at the time was true.
Through the early 2020s, Lutz says, demand seemed insatiable.
Interest rates were near zero.
tech was booming and workers were in short supply coming out of the pandemic.
You could literally have a security plus IT certifications in a month or two
and no experience and get a job making $60,000 a year.
But workers weren't the only ones who got the message, says Joseph Fuller at Harvard Business School.
If you are an innovative company, you're looking out there and saying,
you know what's worth a lot of money?
Tools that mean companies don't have to hire so many cyber techs
because they're hard to get and they're expensive.
AI is increasingly taking over the routine tasks
that junior workers once handled,
like monitoring systems for anomalies
and deciding which ones to prioritize for response.
And you're going to see that again and again and again.
Anywhere, the labor market is signaling high demand.
It makes it nearly impossible.
for workers to plan for a secure future, says Lisa Countryman Kiroz at JVS, a job training
nonprofit in the San Francisco Bay Area.
There's almost a generation of people for whom the rug has been pulled out from under them.
When entry-level IT jobs started drying up, JBS pivoted to cybersecurity training last year.
But Countryman Kiro says employers seem to be hiring for senior roles, people with the experience
to be the boss of AI.
The market is tough for people starting out,
and she's not sure if they'll continue the program.
We are focused on moving people from poverty to the middle class.
And, you know, there have been, for decades,
really a declining number of opportunities that allow you to do that.
Jobseeker Megan Osteen says she might have to go back to her old job
in behavioral therapy while she plans for her next steps.
There's a lot of weight on it, financial weight, especially,
because I am a single mom and I did, you know, pause my career, pause everything in order to pursue this.
I want to, you know, prove that I can do it to, like, my dad, you know, and there's a lot of weight on it.
In the meantime, she's putting her skills to practical use.
She used AI to build a system that flags job scam fishing messages, which she's been getting a lot of during her search.
I'm Megan McCarty Carino for Marketplace.
This final note on the way out, I don't think we've touched on energy at all today, so there is this.
More evidence, if you needed it, which regular listeners to this program do not, that oil trades in a global market.
Saw it in the Wall Street Journal today that late last month, the United States was exporting 14.2 million barrels of crude and crude derivatives every single day.
As the journal points out, before the presidents were with Iran, that was basically one out of every single.
seven barrels consumed on the entire planet.
Amir Babawi, Kitlanesh, John, Gordon Noia Carr, Steve Mullis, and Stephanie Seek are the
Marketplace editing staff.
Kelly Silvera is the news director.
And I'm Kai Rizdal.
We will see you tomorrow, everybody.
This is APM.
There's so much happening in the world.
And if you have particularly, shall we say, inquisitive kids, it can be hard to answer their
questions.
Hi, I'm Ryan.
And I'm Bridget.
We host Million Bazillion, a podcast from Marketplace about money for kids and their families.
We help your little ones think big about important but tricky topics like taxes, gas prices,
and even what a cashless society might be like.
There's a bunch of new episodes out now, so go listen to Million Bazillion on your favorite podcast app.
