Tag Archives: Russi

Previews: The Economist Magazine – March 25, 2023

Image

The Economist – March 25, 2023 issue:

The world according to Xi

Even if China’s transactional diplomacy brings some gains, it contains real perils

A lesser man than Xi Jinping might have found it uncomfortable. Meeting Vladimir Putin in Moscow this week, China’s leader spoke of “peaceful co-existence and win-win co-operation”, while supping with somebody facing an international arrest warrant for war crimes. But Mr Xi is untroubled by trivial inconsistencies. He believes in the inexorable decline of the American-led world order, with its professed concern for rules and human rights. He aims to twist it into a more transactional system of deals between great powers. Do not underestimate the perils of this vision—or its appeal around the world.

Central banks face an excruciating trade-off

They have to choose between financial instability and high inflation. It wasn’t meant to be that way

Mandatory Credit: Photo by SHAWN THEW/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock (13840861r)US Federal Reserve Board Chairman Jerome Powell concludes a press conference following a Federal Open Market Committee meeting at the William McChesney Martin Jr. Federal Reserve Board Building in Washington, DC, USA, 22 March 2023. Powell announced a 0.25 percentage point interest rate increase.Powell announces a 0.25 percentage point interest rate increase, Washington, USA - 22 Mar 2023

The job of central bankers is to keep banks stable and inflation low. Today they face an enormous battle on both fronts. The inflation monster is still untamed, and the financial system looks precarious.

The trouble with Emmanuel Macron’s pension victory

The way a wise policy was forced through will have political costs

TOPSHOT - A firefighter holds a bin as he stands next to a burning pile of rubbish in front of Opera Garnier during a demonstration a few days after the government pushed a pensions reform through parliament without a vote, using the article 49,3 of the constitution in Paris on March 20, 2023. - The French government survived two no-confidence motions in parliament on March 20, 2023 but still faces intense pressure over its handling of a controversial pensions reform. (Photo by Christophe ARCHAMBAULT / AFP) (Photo by CHRISTOPHE ARCHAMBAULT/AFP via Getty Images)

Any French president who asks his fellow citizens to retire later does so at his peril. When Jacques Chirac tried in 1995, crippling strikes made him shelve the project; 18 months later voters sacked his government. Piles of rubbish were left to rot on the streets, as they are today on the boulevards of Paris. Bin collectors have joined strikes against the decision by the current president, Emmanuel Macron, to raise the minimum pension age from 62 to 64. So it was with some relief that on March 20th his minority government narrowly survived two no-confidence votes, opening the way for his reform to enter the statute books.