Marketplace®

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  • Tess Vigeland talks with New York Times columnist Ron Lieber about reader and listener reactions to our collaboration, Money Through the Ages.

  • Susanna Wilson, the 70-year-old dressmaker interviewed for our series, Money Through the Ages, says she was overwhelmed by orders from listeners who heard her story of living without retirement. Now she gets advice on managing a growing business.

  • Most people want to kick back and relax in their 60s, but Tess Vigeland and the New York Times' Tara Siegel Bernard about one couple who are considering investing in and running a motel, instead of retiring.

  • The New York Times' Tara Siegel Bernard discusses the financial and legal issues gay couples face through the example of Amanda and Kay Shelton, a lesbian couple living in Michigan.

  • Susanna Wilson, 70, lives in Grass Valley, Calif, where she has a workshop setup to make children's clothing
    Josh Rogosin/Marketplace

    The 70s are often when people are sitting back and enjoying the fruits of decades of labor. But many older Americans haven't saved enough for their golden years and are barely clinging on.

  • Commentator J.D. Roth talks about why he's feeling optimistic and financially secure about his future.

  • Tess Vigeland talks to the New York Times' Paul Sullivan about the new set of financial responsibilities people in their thirties face.

  • We're starting our series on life through a financial lens at our teens. Tess Vigeland talks to the New York Times's Ron Lieber about a teenager who's trying to balance financial responsibility and college debt.

  • Courtney McNair, 25, prepares dinner for her parents and two sisters at her childhood home in Los Angeles.
    Josh Rogosin/Marketplace

    Tess Vigeland visits one 20-something who's living with her parents, loaded with debt and facing slim job prospects.

  • Financial planner Denby Brandon discusses money issues for people in their 80s and how to plan for your retirement.

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