A postal worker carries packages through the snow on Jan. 3 in Washington, D.C. Sarah Silbiger/Getty Images hide caption
Retail
Wednesday
Friday
Buy now, pay later and online returns are just a couple of the hidden costs of holiday shopping. the_burtons/Getty Images hide caption
Thursday
Facing a union effort, Starbucks, which is also making changes to training and scheduling, says that it supports the workers' right to organize but that a union was unnecessary. Mario Tama/Getty Images hide caption
Friday
An employee organizes an aisle at Mary Arnold Toys, New York City's oldest toy store, on Aug. 2. Kena Betancur/AFP/Getty Images hide caption
Santa's sleigh is looking emptier. Fewer toys, higher prices loom for holiday season
Monday
At any moment of this past decade, U.S. retail jobs have supported about 15 million workers. Inti St Clair/Getty Images/Tetra images RF hide caption
Retail Jobs Are Treated As A Temporary Bridge To Something Better. But Why?
Monday
Thursday
People shop at a Macy's in New York this month. Kena Betancur/AFP/Getty Images hide caption
More Retail Workers Are Quitting Than Ever, But More Stores Are Opening Than Expected
Tuesday
Starbucks beat its own record this year, rolling out the pumpkin spice latte a full 24 hours earlier than it did last year. Still, it lags behind the Aug. 18 Dunkin's rollout of a similar beverage. Chelsea Kyle/Starbucks hide caption
Tuesday
Some families already got a head start on shopping for the school year when Amazon, Walmart, Target and others held huge summer sales. Now, parents are getting a new financial boost from the government: an increased child tax credit of up to $3,000 for school-age children. Michele Abercrombie/NPR hide caption
Families Splurge On Clothes And Electronics In Likely Record Back-To-School Spree
Friday
Thursday
Thursday
People wait to shop at a Costco in Texas on Feb. 20. Next week's pay increase would put Costco ahead of much of the industry. Joe Raedle/Getty Images hide caption
Wednesday
Shoppers line up near sale signs at a Burlington store in New York in June. Alexi Rosenfeld/Getty Images hide caption
People walk in front of stores in New York's Herald Square. Retail sales soared 5.3% last month compared to December as U.S. families began receiving new federal coronavirus relief checks. Angela Weiss/AFP via Getty Images hide caption
Friday
Shoppers walk past a "Sale" sign outside a store at the Easton Town Center Mall in Columbus, Ohio, on Jan. 7. Luke Sharrett/Bloomberg via Getty Images hide caption