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The $47 Billion Port Strike That Exposed America's Biggest Weakness

Published 1 day, 17 hours ago
Description
Three days. That's how long it took for dock workers to shut down 60% of America's containerized imports and expose just how fragile our entire supply chain really is. In this episode, Emma Reid breaks down the $47 billion port strike that just ended and what it revealed about America's crumbling infrastructure advantage. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • Why 36 ports handling $2.1 trillion in trade annually went completely dark • How a 62% wage increase over six years actually makes economic sense (and why the companies can afford it) • The automation gap that's making US ports embarrassingly slow compared to Rotterdam and Singapore • What $5 billion in daily economic losses really means for your grocery bill and Amazon deliveries 👤 Perfect for: Anyone who's ever wondered why their stuff takes forever to arrive and costs more every year. 📍 Chapters: [00:00] The strike that caught everyone off guard [01:45] Why dock workers demanded 77% raises (spoiler: they had a point) [04:15] The real cost of three days without ports [06:30] How Singapore moves cargo 3x faster than New York [08:45] What this means for inflation and your wallet [11:00] The automation debate that's splitting America's ports The strike might be over, but the underlying problems aren't going anywhere. Emma breaks down why this was just a preview of bigger disruptions coming and what it means for anyone trying to understand why everything costs more and takes longer than it used to. 🔔 Never miss an episode: Follow The Invisible Hand on Spotify or Apple Podcasts and turn on notifications. New episodes drop daily, your next favorite insight is one tap away. 🔍 Topics: port strike, supply chain, inflation, automation, trade, economic impact

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