IT IS SOMETHING of a tradition every December to take stock of the year that is ending and consider what might lie ahead. This is true on a personal level: in my family, we tend to do this around the dinner table. But it is also true more broadly, with the time of year inviting an examination of the intersection of economics, national politics, and global geopolitics.
You would be forgiven if, as a starting point, you expected these three areas to be in alignment. After all, they are deeply interconnected, which suggests self-reinforcing dynamics. But 2024 brought some unusual dispersion in this relationship that actually widened, rather than narrowed, over the course of the year.
Begin with geopolitics. In 2024, Russia secured a greater advantage in the Ukraine war than the consensus forecasts of a year ago anticipated. Similarly, the human suffering and physical destruction resulting from the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza exceeded most observers' already-grim expectations, and spread to other countries, such as Lebanon. The apparent impunity of the strong, together with the absence of effective means of preventing dire humanitarian crises, has deepened the sense for many that the global order is fundamentally imbalanced, and lacks any enforceable guardrails.
This story is from the December 26, 2024 edition of Financial Express Pune.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the December 26, 2024 edition of Financial Express Pune.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Microsoft to spend $80 billion on AI data centers this year
MICROSOFT CORP PLANS to spend $80 billion this fiscal year building out data centers, underscoring the intense capital requirements of artificial intelligence.
Mike Johnson Re-elected US House Speaker
Republican Congressman Mike Johnson on Friday was re-elected as Speaker of the US House of Representatives with a narrow victory margin of three votes.
Rohit clears the air: Not going anywhere
Says those on outside can't influence when he stops playing
S Korea investigators ask acting prez to clear way for Yoon's arrest
SOUTH KOREAN INVESTIGATORS again asked the country's acting president on Saturday to order the presidential security service to comply with an arrest warrant for impeached President Yoon Suk Yeol.
Border-Gavaskar Trophy: As Bumrah leaves, 'captain' Kohli calls the shots
Kohli took charge after Bumrah left bowling due to spasm
No jail time for Trump, suggests judge in US hush money case
Will keep fighting, says communications director Cheung
Big rockets, a telescope & big changes in space await in 2025
Some key events to look forward to in space & astronomy
The Fall season
Fun and games for the elite players, the Fall Series gave the fans plenty to watch
Worrying signs from the Arctic
Scientists say fires in the region could have major consequences
Dr Manmohan Singh, RIP
emissary he had deployed. Although sceptical, I bounded off to North Block and was ushered in. It was my first official meeting with the FM. I conveyed the request, not a direction, of the prime minister. Dr Singh was puzzled — I could see that on his face — by the message or, perhaps, the messenger. He listened politely and told me that the second step had already been taken within minutes of the markets opening at 10 am.