2024
December
05
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

December 05, 2024
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

As the United States watches its next administration take shape, political game boards and subterfuge unfold in Syria, the Baltic Sea – and everywhere sitting governments have been unseated of late, something that has happened in more countries than you might think. Today, our writers unpack three stories of international risks and reactions. They weave a remarkable array of perspectives and motives.


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News briefs

• Georgia opposition leader arrested: Police raid the offices of an opposition party and arrest its leader in an attempt to squelch a wave of protests over the decision to suspend negotiations on joining the European Union. 
• Zimbabwe acts on abortion rights: A High Court judge rules that provisions of a law that deny abortion services to girls under the age of 18 and women raped by their husbands are unconstitutional. 
• A NATO prompt on defense: Secretary-General Mark Rutte leads a push for European countries to ramp up defense spending. Since Russia invaded Ukraine, NATO’s 32 countries have agreed that they should spend a minimum of 2% of gross domestic product on their military budgets. 
• OPEC+ puts off production boost: Eight members of the alliance of oil-exporting countries decide to put off increasing production as they face weaker than expected demand and competing production from nonallied countries.
• Genocide accusation: Human rights organization Amnesty International says Israel’s actions in the Gaza Strip during its war with Hamas amount to genocide. It says Israel has prevented the delivery of humanitarian aid. 

Read these news briefs.


Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Karam al-Masri/Reuters
A rebel, led by the group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, holds a document at a police station seized by the rebels in Aleppo, after their lightning assault last week, in Aleppo, Syria, Dec. 5, 2024.

What can Iran do to help Syrian President Bashar al-Assad defeat newly energized rebel forces? Its anti-Israel “Axis of Resistance” has been overworked and diminished. Yet even as Iran searches for solutions, there are some suggestions that it is not panicking.

Recent instances of suspected sabotage in Europe don’t necessarily have proven ties to Russia. But it is clear that Vladimir Putin makes a strategy of churning up uncertainty and fear.

Patterns

Tracing global connections

2024 was “the year of the election,” with around 70 countries going to the polls. But it also became the year that incumbents fell around the world. Can their replacements offer better solutions to voters’ problems?

The carbon-intensive U.S. construction industry is scrambling to help ease a nationwide housing shortage. Startups are trying to find climate-friendly solutions, but the challenges they face are emblematic of the barriers to industrywide change.

Difference-maker

Kang-Chun Cheng
Lee Chatata (right), a producer for Farm Radio Trust, records an episode of “Spot On: Kalikonse Tikadziwe” in Undi, Malawi, with Tiyanane Samuel (left) and Bridgette Kachala.

Many young people in Malawi find there’s no space to discuss sensitive issues. The intimate medium of radio has the power to change that.


The Monitor's View

Reuters
Friends and family eat on a home patio in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

A standard tool kit to assess a nation’s economy includes the prices of daily goods, the number of people looking for jobs, and the output of factories. Argentina may be operating under a new and softer metric: a citizen patience index.

The reason is that a country where roughly 60% of people have relied on the state for services is conducting a dramatic experiment in economic and political transformation. A year ago, voters elected Javier Milei, a self-styled “anarcho-capitalist,” as president. He promised to radically rein in the size and scope of government. Since then, he has slashed Argentina’s vastly bloated public spending, vetoed funding increases for pensions and education, and eliminated nearly a dozen government ministries.

One pollster is now asking people: “How much longer can you wait for President Milei to improve the economic situation?” The answer is surprising.

Against all predictions to the contrary, his plan seems to be working. Monthly inflation was down to 2.7% in October from 25.5% last December. Since April, wages have outpaced prices. For the first time in 12 years, the country has a budget surplus.

His austerity measures have come with political risks, namely impatience. The poverty rate spiked to 52.9% during Mr. Milei’s first six months, from 41.7% during the latter half of 2023. Yet his public approval has risen. Nearly 1 in 2 Argentines support the president’s agenda, an AtlasIntel survey conducted for Bloomberg shows. Similar polls indicate rising levels of patience and trust.

Overall, more than 60% of Argentines said they did not think it was unreasonable to wait at least through the midpoint of Mr. Milei’s four-year term for his reforms to bring positive change.

Rising degrees of patience reflect a society eager to move from dependency on government to individual agency. Younger voters in particular were drawn by Mr. Milei’s promises of less taxation or, as he told The Economist, “the power to be the architect of your own life.”

Mr. Milei’s talk about freedom has “made a difference for a lot of people,” Juan Ignacio Folco, an agriculturalist, told the Monitor. Javier Pinto Kramer, a manager at a seed and fertilizer company, said, “The country is in patience mode.”

For soccer-loving Argentines, another analogy may be even more apt. In June, when the national team was on its way to winning the Copa América tournament, captain Lionel Messi described his team’s philosophy: “We have patience to have the ball and find the spaces.” After decades of economic turmoil, many Argentines are patiently watching for new openings to make economic progress.


A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

Each weekday, the Monitor includes one clearly labeled religious article offering spiritual insight on contemporary issues, including the news. The publication – in its various forms – is produced for anyone who cares about the progress of the human endeavor around the world and seeks news reported with compassion, intelligence, and an essentially constructive lens. For many, that caring has religious roots. For many, it does not. The Monitor has always embraced both audiences. The Monitor is owned by a church – The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston – whose founder was concerned with both the state of the world and the quality of available news.

Holding to the truth of God’s goodness equips us to overcome unhelpful temptations and experience our God-given health and harmony.


Viewfinder

Elizabeth Frantz/Reuters
U.S. President Joe Biden greets workers as he stands with Lobito Atlantic Railway Chief Operating Officer Nicolas Gregoir during a visit to Lobito Port Terminal in Lobito, Angola, Dec. 4, 2024. The railway project, which is partially funded by the United States, will extend from Angola's western border with the Democratic Republic of Congo to Lobito, on the Atlantic coast.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris and Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for diving into your Daily today. For tomorrow, we’re working on a story about the reopening of the Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris, shuttered since its fire in 2019. And two veteran politics writers will join our “Why We Wrote This” podcast to talk about how empathy and humility help anchor them in their work. 

More issues

2024
December
05
Thursday

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