The Economist - 21.10.23
The Economist - 21.10.23
Launched in 1953, the Fifty Fathoms is the first modern diver's watch.
Created by a diver and chosen by pioneers, it played a vital role in the
development of scuba diving. lt is the catalyst of our commitment to
ocean conservation.
           RAISE AWARENESS,
           TRANSMIT OUR PASSION,
           HELP PROTECT THE OCEAN
Schumpeter, page 58
                                                                       41   Chaguan The ghost of
                                                                       - ZhengHe
The holes in export controls
America's allies are the problem,
                                                                            Middle East & Africa
page53
                                                                       42 Escaping conflict traps
Argentina's radical option                                             43 The ruin of Khartoum
Javier Milei still leads the polls.                                    -
                                                                       44 To save 200,000 wornen's
 But the country needs more than                                          lives ayear
dollarisation, page 29                     Bartleby The role of luck
                                           in careers, companies and
A race toread the Herculaneum              compensation, paqe 54
scrolls Al could help unearth a
trove of lost classical texts,
page 67
     -
     64 Pree-market law
     65 Free exchange
     - Trustbusters v big tech
            Thc
       Economist
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The world this week Politics                                                                                 The Economist October zist 2023 g
H
       ow RAPIDLY things fall apart. The deadly blast in Gaza at Ah-   have chosen to sabotage their people's long-term interests.
       li Arab hospital on the evening of October rzth killed many         For Iran, that looks like victory. For years it has hada strategy
Palestinians who were taking shelter. Despite strong evidence          of financing, arming and training proxies like Hamas and Hiz-
that their deaths were caused by the failure of a Palestinian rock-    bullah. It calculates that violence and mayhem weaken Israel
et laden with fuel, Arab countries rushed to condemn Israel.           and discredit Arab governments. If the sight of America fighting
Hizbullah, a heavily armed Lebanese militia, is lurching closer        Hizbullah alongside Israel leads to a rupture of Mr Biden's rela-
to outright war with Israel. Bridges built painstakingly between       tions with the Arab world, an exultant Iran will have built the
Israel and its Arab neighbours lie in ruins.                           foundations for its own regional dominance.
     How fragile are the forces trying to hold things together. Fif-       Russia and China are winning, too. There is a perception in
teen hours after the blast, President Joe Biden landed in Israel,      the global south that this complex story is actually a simple one
an old man with the weight of the world on his shoulders. Mr Bi-       of oppressed Palestinians and Israelí colonisers. China and Rus-
den's diplomacy is a geopolitical moment. As well as signalling        sia will exploit this caricature to argt1e that America is revealing
grief and support for Israel, it brings into focus how much this       its true contempt for brown-skinned people in Gaza and its hy-
crisis matters to the Middle East and to America (see Briefing).       pocrisy over human rights and war crimes-just as they claim it
     For the past half-century the United States has been the only     did by supposedly provoking a war in Ukraine.
country willing and able to bring any kind of order to the region.         What can Mr Biden do? His analysis must start with the need
Regardless of the many failures of American policy there, in-          for peace between the Palestinians and Israelís and a recogni-
cl uding in Iraq and Syria, Mr Biden and his secretary of state, An-   tion that there can be none foras long as Hamas governs Gaza-
tony Blinken, have once again taken up that burden. Death and          not after it has demonstrated that it puts Jew-hatred befare any
disease hang over Gaza. The poison is spreading across the Arab        other goal. Gaza city is honeycombed by tunnels. Destroying Ha-
world. They do not have long.                                          mas's ability to wage war therefore requires a ground offensive.
     The imminent danger is on that second front in the north of           Everything follows from the prosecution of that ground war.
Israel. The death toll at Ahli Arab means that Hizbullah and its       The tragedy of Ahli Arab validates the cynical calculation that
lranian sponsors risk losing face if they fail to                                           Palestinian casualties help Harnas by under-
avenge lost Palestinian lives. Hizbullah will                                               mining support for Israel. The Israeli arrny
now also have strong backing in the Arab world                                              needs to be seen to spare civilians, not least be-
if it attacks, If Israel concludes war is inevitable,                                       cause it needs time to destroy Harnas's tunnels.
i t may strike first. America has tasked two air-                                           Gaza is on the brink. Poor sanitation threatens
craft-carriers with deterring Hizbullah and Iran                                            epidemic disease. Israel has at last agreed that
from opening a second front. If they defy it, it                                            sorne aid can cross into Gaza. Much more will
should use them for a show of force.                                                        be needed. If Egypt continues to bar refugees,
     A second danger is of Arab-lsraeli relations                                           Israel should go further by creating havens on
being put back decades. Amid Israel's unprecedented bombing,           its own territory in the Negev, supervised by UN agencies.
Arabs remember previous wars in which Israel hit schools and               It is also vital to spell out what comes after the invasion. Isra-
hospitals. Israel has imposed a total siege of Gaza; its president     el needs to show that its fight is with the terrorists, not the peo-
has said all Gazans share responsibility. Despite Israel's excess-     ple of Gaza. It should pledge a new beginning after the war, with
es, Arab leaders could have called for calm and for an indepen-        a programme of rebuilding and the promise that it will not stran-
den t investigation of the hospital blast. What looks like the mass    gle Gaza's economy. It should support a new Palestinian consti-
killing of Palestinians by Palestinians ought to have redoubled        tution and new elected leaders. All this would be easier under a
their efforts to safeguard Gaza's civilians and spurred them on to     new Israelí government voted in when the war is done.
create a regional plan for a better Palestinian future.                    Even if Mr Biden can persuade Israel to take these steps, that
     Instead, the blast has deepened hatred and grievances. In         leaves the hardest question of all. How to provide security in
words that cannot easily be taken back, Israel's Arab partners         post-Hamas Gaza? Israel cannot occupy the enclave permanent-
heaped blame upon the Jewish state. Jordan immediately can-            ly. That idea was rightly abandoned in 2005. An international
celled a summit between Mr Biden and Arab leaders that had             commitment is therefore needed. Because it is not clear who
been the best hope for regional diplomacy. Egypt is more re-           would join this, Mr Biden should start building a coalition now.
solved than ever to keep temporary refugees out of the Sinai,          The more Israel shows the Arab world that it is serious about
partly for fear of being seen to abet Israel in what Palestinians      protecting civilians and planning for the day after, the more
worry is a plan to empty Gaza permanently.                             likely Arab leaders are to play their part.
     This is a lamentable failure of leadership, with profound re-         This is a tall order. Much can and will go wrong. Ordinary Ar-
gional and global implications. Most Arab governments loathe           abs' ingrained anti-Zionism will gnaw at their leaders' willing-
Hamas and its backer, Iran. Countries like the United Arab Emir-       ness to help. But the alternative is the decay that feeds scavenger
ates and Saudí Arabia need stability and benefit from good rela-       states like Iran and Russia. Mr Biden is the only leader who can
tions with Israel. However, they are so wary of testing their citi-    pull things back together. If he fails, and the securi ty of the Mid-
zens' anger with the truth about the rocket's origin that they         dle East crumbles, it will be a catastrophe for America, too. •
12    Leaders                                                                                               The Economist October zist 2023
American politics
         HE VIEW   of the world from the White House end of Penn-           the House has had a temporary speaker, Patrick McHenry of
     T   sylvania Avenue looks like this: Hamas has attacked Israel,
     one of Arnerica's closest allies. The biggest war in Europe since
                                                                            N orth Carolina. The hitherto obscure Mr Me Henry has yet to re-
                                                                            ceive the memo about his party being the tribunes of working-
     1945 is raging, and Ukraine needs American support to prevent it       class Americans, and has never been seen in public without a
     from being swallowed by Vladimir Putin. Taiwan also needs              bow-tie on. Yet Mr McHenry may also, by a bizarre sequence of
     help. Anda government shutdown is looming. Meanwhile at the            events, now find himself in a position to change the fate of more
     other end of Pennsylvania Avenue, the world looks like a lot of        than one country.
     men in suits arguing about who should be in charge of the meet-            Both parties are keen to support Israel. There is also majority
     ing. House Republicans have spent two weeks squabbling about           support in the House for continuing to arm Ukraine and fund
     who should be speaker, Congress is paralysed.                          the American government. But the Republicans who run the
        It has been a poorly timed piece of self-indulgence. Fortu-         House have long refused to allow bills to come to a vote unless
     nately, there is a chance of a reprieve. That could mean a Con-        they enjoy the support of a majority of Republican lawmakers.
     gress that works slightly better, at least temporarily, plus a fresh   So matters of great importance have been left to fester.
     package of military support for Israel and for                                               One possible (and indeed plausible) sol-
     Ukraine (and perhaps for Taiwan too). The gov-                                            ution is that support for Israel is packaged to-
     ernment may even stay open.                                                               gether with support for Ukraine and Taiwan,
        To recap, on October 3rd Kevin McCarthy, the                                           sorne more money for border security anda bill
     House s peaker, was sacked by a small faction of                                          to keep the governmen t funded un til this time
     Republicans led by Matt Gaetz, an elaborately                                             next year (see United States section).
     coiffured nepo-politician who seemed to be                                                   The principies of good governance suggest
     acting out of personal animus. With Mr McCar-                                             these matters should be considered one by one.
     thy gone, Steve Scalise, an affable congressman                                           The dealrnaking required to get them through
     from Louisiana who has spent a decade climbing the Republican          the House, however, suggests lumping them together. Given the
     leadership ladder, tried his luck. He was rejected by the House        necessary authority, Mr McHenry could shepherd such a bill
     Republican caucus, too.                                                through with support from Democrats. And, because he <loes not
        Then Jim J ordan, a congressman from Ohio who is known for          officially have the job of speaker, he cannot easily be removed by
     his dogged support of Donald Trump's efforts to overturn the           his own side, as Mr McCarthy was.
     election of 2020 and his delight in shutting down the govern-              Sorne combination of Republicans and Democrats should
     ment at every opportunity, put himself forward for the position.       grant Mr McHenry the authority, at least for now, to bring bills to
     This would have been like placing the most unco-operative              the floor. All it would take is a simple majority. For pragmatic Re-
     member of a team in charge of running it, in the hope that the re-     publicans who are fed up with being at the merey of their party's
     sult would be less disruption. Mr Jordan was rejected as well.         least constructive lawmakers, it is an opportunity to break the
     The Republicans have such a thin majority in the House that            logjam. They should take it. Israel, Taiwan and Ukraine need
     once the regicide has begun, i t is hard to end the bloodletting.      American help. America needs a Congress that can consider leg-
        While this abdication of responsibility has been under way,         islation. Right now it has urgent work to do. •
Poland
� strike down laws it deems unconstitutional, as well as in a coun-         Much can still go wrong. The opposition agreed to forma gov-
  cil that vets all lowerjudges. Ithas turned state broadcasters into   ernment if it won, but there is no guarantee that this will pro-
  megaphones for Pis propaganda. It has deployed its people to          ceed smoothly; the alliance consists of nine parties whose agen-
  lead state-run industrial enterprises, such as Orlen, an oil com-     das run from radical-left to centre-right. Andas prime minister,
  pany, which conveniently slashed the price of fuel ahead of the       Mr Tusk will encounter many obstacles, starting with the presi-
  election. It has been building a patronage system, whereby even       dent, Andrzej Duda, who though nominally independent is a Pis
  humble government jobs in towns it controls depend on sup-            ally. Mr Duda can veto all legislation, and the opposition will not
  porting, or at least not criticising, the ruling party.               have the votes to override him. Mr Tusk will also bump up
      There would, second, have been reason to fear a continuation      against the Pis-stacl<ed Constitutional Tribunal; its judges are
  and perhaps a deepening of ris's illiberal domestic agenda. Its       appointed for nine-year terms. Short of changing the constitu-
  judges have made abortion illegal except in cases of rape or in-      tion, there will be no easy way to get rid of them; so Mr Tusk may
  cest orto protect the life or health of the mother, and it started    find his bills struck down. Winkling out ris's judges from lower
  rewriting textbooks to make them more "patriotic",                    courts will be tricky too, and would invite the same criticisms
      Third, a re-emboldened Pis would have continued in its com-       that liberals used to make of Pis.
  bative stance towards the EU, where it often teams up with Vik-           Mr Tusk will be able to count on goodwill from Europe, but
  tor Orbari's government in Hungary, a populist alliance that was      this is no panacea. Sorne €35bn ($37bn) of covid-recovery funds
  strengthened by the recent return to power of Robert Pico in Slo-     owed to Poland, and even more from the regular budget, are
  vakia. The central Europeans have been hostile to schemes to          blocked because of the row over the rule of law; the European
  share responsibility for dealing with illegal migration, and have     Commission would be happy to unblock it, but first the Poles
  backed each other in disputes with Brussels over the rule of law,     must meet the conditions it has laid down. These obstacles are
  which the populists tend to flout. Most alarming, given its hith-     exactly why creeping authoritarianism, Pis- or Orban-style, is so
  erto excellent record of supporting Ukraine, the Pis government       dangerous. Turning it around will be hard. But at least a start can
  has recently started to play politics with the war, blocking the      now be made. And opposition parties around Europe and the
  import of grain from its neighbour in defiance of EU rules.           world can see that populists can be beaten. •
America's banks
      MERICA SPENT more than a decade trying to make its banks The new proposal lowers the asset threshold to Sioobn, requir-
 A    safer, only for several of them to collapse suddenly earlier ing banks of SVB's size to value accurately at least sorne of their
 this year. So it is no surprise that regulators are trying once again bonds. As a result many will have to build up capital, which
 to shore up the system. Their latest proposals would on average should help prevent a repeat of the debacle.
 increase by 16o/o the amount of high-quality equity capital banks            Por the biggest banks, the argument is less clear-cut. They did
 would need to fund their operations, among a litany of other not suffer during the spring crisis, and instead hoovered up de-
 changes designed to bring Arnerica's rules in line with prin- posits that fled from smaller institutions. They are considerably
 ciples agreed globally. If the package+dubbed the "Basel 3 end- better capitalised than they were a decade ago. And because
 garne" -is implemented, banks, which have been reporting their depositors remain loyal even if they do n't pay much inter-
 their profits over the past week, will have to spend years build- est, higher rates have served mainly to boost their profits by rais-
 ing up their safety buffers.
     Bankers are furious. "What person in what          -  Russell 3000 index
                                                                                            ing the amount they can charge on loans. In
                                                                                            earnings reports released since October 13th
 ivory tower thinks that is a rational thing to           Jan 3rd 2023=100                  JPMorgan, Bank of America and Citigroup all re-
                                                                                     120
 do?" asked Jamie Dimon, the boss of JPMorgan                                               corded rising net interest margins in the third
 Chase, of one of the rule changes last month.                                       100
                                                                                            quarter of 2023, fitting a pattern whereby the
 Sorne of the industry's complaints about the de-                                           larger the bank, the more likely it has been to
 tails are reasonable. Overall, however, the in-                                      80    benefit from higher interest rates.
 creased safety brought about by more capital is             J F M A M J JASO                  Capital also comes with downsides. It is a
 worth the costs.                                                                           more expensive means of funding loans than
     The benefits of the reformare most obvious for the type of debt or deposits, and sorne of those costs get passed on to bor-
 bank that has been vulnerable this year. Silicon Valley Bank rowers. Sorne of the new rules might make financia! intermedi-
 (svn), which had $212bn in assets, collapsed in March having ation in important markets harder. If regulators neglect shadier
 suffered enormous losses on its bond portfolio as interest rates parts of the financia! system, activity could migrate there to es-
 rose. As a bank with assets of less than $7oobn, it was exempt cape their scrutiny. Mr Dimon is right that sorne of the new
 from having to mark its bond portfolio to market when calculat- edicts are poorly designed.
 ing its safety buffer, even if those bonds were categorised as               Yet the move towards bigger safety buffers is nonetheless de-
 holdings that may be sold (rather than held until they mature). sirable. The big banks did not collapse in the spring, but it is they
 Only when depositors fled from SVB, forcing it to sell bonds ata whose failure would cause an economic catastrophe-and,
 loss, was its capital cushion revealed to be an accounting fiction. probably, land taxpayers with the biggest bail-out costs. By one ��
14    Leaders                                                                                               The Economist October zist 2023
 � estima te the global financia! crisis of 2007-09 cost every Amer-       banks are enduring a profit squeeze, because they are having to
   ican $70,000 in income over their lifetimes. So painful are bank-       pay more interest to retain depositors, or now depend on short-
   ing crashes that studies which attempt to weigh the costs and           term borrowing at the prevailing high rate of interest. Use of a
   benefits of capital often call for a much fatter cushion than           supposedly temporary emergency lending programme at the
   would be in place even if the Basel 3 endgame is implemented.           Federal Reserve, for example, has crept up over the summer. The
      It is no surprise that bankers object to more capital, which is      facility has outstanding balances of $109bn.
   rather like being forced to buy insurance against unlikely                  Bond portfolios also continue to shrink in value. By the end
   events. But society as a whole benefits enorrnously when that           of J11ly, banks' unrealised securities losses were worth $558bn;
   insurance is in place. The strength of America's economy means          since then, long-term bonds have sold off further as investors
   that now is a good time to try to make the system safer, beca use       have bet on interest rates staying higher for longer, reducing the
   building safety buffers is harder than maintaining them.                chance of a reprieve. Por many banks the best path to viability
      Even if the proposals are enacted, America's banking woes            will be to find another institution willing to gobble them up. The
   are far from over. The simplest way to build capital is to retain       system that emerges will be more concentrated. Regulators are
   profits rather than pay them out in dividends. Yet many small           right to seek to make it less fragile, too. •
Al and health
          T THE HEART of Britain's publicly funded health-care system      NHS, and possible riches for developers, but in the long run
     A    lies a contradiction. The National Health Service generates
     and holds vast swathes of data on Britons' health, organised 11s-
                                                                           would benefit the service and its patients. And if used outside
                                                                           Britain, it might mean more revenue overall.
     ing NHS numbers assigned to every person in its care. The sys-            Comparability of data is also vital. Though everyone has an
     tem enables world-leading studies, like the RECOVERY trial dur-       NHS number, scans are often gathered and stored in different
     ing the pandemic, which discovered treatments for covid-iq.           ways in different places, rnaking it harder to create large datasets
     You might suppose it to be a treasure trove for artificial-intelli-   for machine learning. The NHS is poised to announce the winner
     gence (AI) developers eager to bring their models to bear on im-      of a contract to link up disparate datasets. This will help, but
     proving human health. Yet if you put this to a developer theywill     more is needed. Por example, scans of the same type should be
     roll their eyes and tell you why all is notas rosy as it seems.       carried out in ways similar enough to allow Al to detect signals
         That is beca use the kinds of tabular data that inform clinical   of health rather than differences in the scanning process.
     trials-who took which drug, what the outcome was-are not                  The final pillar is consent. Though everyone wins if everyone
     the same as those most useful for training machine-learning           lets their data be fed to computers, Britons should be allowed to
     models, such as scans or genomes, which hold more informa-            opt out. Politicians must persuade people of the benefits of vast
     tion about a patient. Much of this sort of NHS data is a mess, or-    datasets in which everyone-young or old, black or white-is
     ganised in ways which serve doctors treating                                             represented. They must also reassure them that
     patients, but not Al developers hoping to feed it                                        their data will be anonymised, and not used to
     to computers. Making it suitable for those mod-                                          their detriment, for instance by insurers.
     els is a task wi th which the N HS has not yet                                               The NHS has no time to waste. The rewards
     come to grips. It is often easier for those seek-                                        on offer are better, earlier diagnosis of disease,
     ing to organise these richer data to start from                                          anda more productive, efficient system. That is
     scratch, as with a vast data-collection exercise                                         sorely needed when waiting lists are long and
     now under way (see Britain section).                                                     funds squeezed. The NHS's position as a world
         To open up the nns's data riches to Al, its                                          leader in data-heavy trials faces a stiff threat
     managers and political masters should turn to three principles:       from health systems in other places, which are digitising rapid-
     cleanliness, comparability and consent. Cleanliness starts with       ly. Abu Dhabi, for example, is considering feeding health-care
     hosting rich data in cloud-computing environments where the           data into foundation models, and may open up its trained mod-
     data are easier for Al developers to wrangle. Hospitals and clin-     els to the world. Consumer technology-smartphones, watches
     ics also need greater incentives to prepare their datasets forma-     and devices connected to them-is fast improving its capacity to
     chines. Most of the NHs's successful Al projects so far have relied   peer inside the human body. It may one day begin to rival the
     on the drive of dedicated, intellectually curious doctors who         scanning capacity of the NHS, usurping it as the easiest and
     have had to fight the system rather than be helped by it. Forging     cheapest channel for the provision of algorithmic health care.
     stronger links between the NHS and universities-and giving                The economy stands to gain, too. NHS data could be the basis
     PhD students easier access to datasets-is another good idea.          of a thriving export industry, licensing Al tools to health-care
         A more open approach to licensing intellectual property           systems around the world. But if it <loes not clean up its digital
     would also help. Too often, the NHS demands fees and terms so         act, Britain will become a taker of new health technology, justas
     steep and strict that they deter developers. It should see the big    it has become a taker of American digital services like online
     picture and accept smaller fees, to incentivise the building of       search and social media. That would be a missed opportunity,
     clean datasets. That will mean less money proportionally for the      and the beginning ofthe end of the data primacy of the NHS. •
Executive focus                                                                                                                                        15
\/,le act discreetly through our 15�000 strong Headhunter ne work. UNIQUE NETWORK • OUTSTANDING TALENT
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16
     Letters                                                                                                    The Economist October zist 2023
                                         to the less well off, who are      there is always space for new       Nobel for someone much more
     Unleash the MHRA                    more Iikely to own non-com-        entrants who are part of            esoteric. Today, a writer like
     The Society of Chemical             pliant vehicles. Low-traffic       the solution.                       Stephen King, whose work
     Industry's recommendations          neighbourhoods, where roads        SID EFROMOVICH                      permeates our society in books
     for the British life-science        are blocked off or pedestri-       Co-founder and CEO                  and also in movies and televi-
     ind ustry are broadly welcome,      anised, are popular with resi-     Generation Pledge                   sion, will never be considered
     and I hope that sorne of the        dents, bu t they have aroused      Millburn, New Jersey                for a Nobel even though l1e has
     more sensible ones will be          significant ire in places like                                         shaped American li terature
     adopted by the government to        Oxford, where they simply                                              and culture.
     support the industry's success      make it difficult to get around.   Live longer, in poverty                 Having your work actually
     in the long run. Bu t nowhere           Driving everywhere at          Successive governments and          read by the public should not
     does sharon Todd, the society's     zornph might save a few lives,     businesses are failing to plan      be a disqualification. It would
     chief execu tive, nor the report,   but why stop there? Even more      for demographic change. We          be nice if the Nobel prize-
     mention one of the most crit-       lives would be saved by reduc-     are not prepared for the aged to    givers did not act like an eru-
     ica! and, at least historically,    ing the limit still further, or    live to 100, let alone 120 (Tech-   dite faculty committee show-
     globally competitive pieces of      banishing cars altogether.         nology Quarterly, September         ing off its arcane knowledge
     infrastructure that Britain has     Sorne sort of balance would        joth). Short-term reactive          and instead took an author's
     to drive forward innovation         seem wise. And I don't agree       policymaking has contributed        impact into consideration.
     (By Invitation, October 7tl1).      that motorists are coddled.        to workforce shortages, eco-        THADHALL
     That is Britain's progressive       They fork out hugely for gov-      nomic stagnation anda health        Pittsburgh
     and responsive Medicines and        ernment fuel duties and road       and care system failing to meet
     Healthcare products Reg-            taxes. Trains, by contrast, are    our changing needs.
     ulatory Agency (MHRA).              massively subsidised.                  Future generations may not      Brevity is the soul of wit
         Right here and now, the         JEREMY HI Cl(S                     only be bored-not least if they     J ohnson (September joth)
     biotech industry in Britain is      London                             continue to be pushed out of        reiterated the common advice
     squealing under the signif-                                            the employment rnarket soon         for effective writing: keep
     icant erosion of this crucial                                          after they hit 50-they are also     syntax simple, use short and
     organisation's capacity to          'Er indoors                        likely to spend longer living in    active sentences, with com-
     engage with innovators, and in      When it comes to the domi-         poverty and with ill health.        mon words, be brisk and clear.
     providing essential ad vice and     nance of invisible spouses,        Innovations in biotech are one      Yet writing is not only a tool
     feedback. This is stifling pro-     Rebecca, the unseen character      thing, but finding solutions to     for communication but an art
     gress on world-beating med-         in Daphne du Maurier's novel,      the financial, heal th, housing,    form that crea tes possibilities
     icinal products and services        pales against Mrs Mainwaring       transport and leisure needs of      for sophisticated expression.
     that could transform patients'      in "Dad's Arrny" (Back Story,      our ageing society is the chal-     Instead of complex sonnets,
     lives globally, and support a       September zjrd).                   lenge we must address first.        Shakespeare might simply
     growing British innovation          MARI( I<NIGHT                      DAVID SINCLAIR                      have written "'I love you" and
     ind ustry. A startu p that can't    sevenoaks, J(ent                   Chief execu tive                    "Relationship: need to talk."
     get MHRA advice will have an                                           International Longevity Centre      The English language and ali of
     even harder time raising                                               London                              i ts users would be vastly
     funds, especially in the pre-       Wealth and well-being                                                  impoverished if he had wri tten
     sent constrained environment.       The wealth-rnanagement             You made no mention of two          so effectively.
         The government would be         industry narrowly defines          fictional examples of immor-        PAGE NELSON
     well advised to act very, very      itself as one of only protecting   tality gone right, Connor and       Charlottesville, Virginia
     quickly to address this serious     capital ("Tl1e $1ootrn prize",     Duncan MacLeod, the
     risk to Britain's leading status    September 9tl1). My organisa-      Highlanders. Never-ending life      Brevity is important in exams,
     in this industry which, regard-     tion, which asks people to         is really only appropriate for      too. I am reminded of an old
     less of Ms Todd's noble propos-     donate at least 1oo/o of their     thrifty Scots who will use their    Oxford essay question: "Was
     als, could be set back by a         inheritance to effective causes    time to deal in antiques,           Hegel a good philosopher? Be
     decade or more.                     within the first five years of     philosophise and occasionally       brief", One smug student
     SIMON GOLDMAN                       inheriting, interacts each day     save us mortals from our            wrote, simply, "Yes".
     Cambridge, Cambridgeshire           wíth ultra-high-net-wealth         own mistakes.                          When the paper carne back,
                                         families around the world.         I<YLE MCCOY                         the examiner had given ita
                                         We've observed a rising senti-     Middleton, Wisconsin                high mark but scribbled a
     Road rage                           ment of dissatisfaction with                                           comment in the margin: "This
     Rishi sunak is misguided in         wealth managers.                                                       was a good, brief answer. But a
     his attempt to woo irritated            With over $13otrn under        Reward the bestsellers              better, briefer answer would
     British drivers, you say ("The      management it is appalling         It seems the goal of the Nobel      have been No."
     war on the war on motorists",       that there are still gaps in       prize in literature is to reward    SAM WILLIAMS
     October 7th). I am no supporter     funding to solve climate           authors whose works are not         London
     of the prime minister but I         change, prevent pandemics          widely read ("Prestigious,
     think he has a point. The ultra-    and much more. N ot only do        lucrative and bonkers", Octo-
     low emission zone, which            banks not recognise this, they     ber 14 th). By contrast, the         Letters are welcome and should be
     charges certain polluting cars      actively fund the problem by       science N obels are given to         addressed to the Editor at
                                                                                                                 The Economist, TheAdelphi Building,
     to drive in certain areas, made     keeping dirty industries, like     scientists whose work have           1-11 John Adam Street, London wc2N 6HT
     sense in inner London bu t the      coal, thriving. Clients can        hada great impact in their           Email: letters@economist.com
     difference is marginal in outer     easily move their money. If        field. Charles Dickens would         More letters are available at:
                                                                                                                  Economist.com/letters
     London, and at significant cost     wealth managers don't change       have been passed over for a
                                                                                                                                                     17
     � this time other than stopping this war,"         ing more accurate ones than Hamas can             other slice of Palestinian territory, with
       said Ayman Safadi, J ordan's foreign minis-      deploy, which would severely tax Israel's         roughly 2.7m inhabitants. The 40°/o of it
       ter. In the end the best Mr Biden could do       missile-defence systems.                          that Israel does not administer directly are
       was secure an Israeli pledge not to obstruct         The possibility of war with Hizbullah is      in the hands of the PA. But Mr Abbas is
       aid deliveries and an Egyptian one to let 20     looking likelier by the day, say Israeli in-      weak and unpopular. After the tragedy at
       trucks a day into Gaza. He also announced        siders. Although Hizbullah might prefer           the Ahli Arab hospital widespread protests
       that America itself would provide $1oom          not to invite Israeli retaliation against Leb-    broke out against his government. The
       in aid to ease the Palestinians' plight.         anon, which is gripped by a dire economic         IDF's fear is not so much of a third front, in
           The tragedy at the hospital underlined       slump, it ultimately answers to its Iranian       the form of a popular uprising against Isra-
       the slow progress of Israel's effort to en-      paymasters, not ordinary Lebanese. On Oc-         el, so muchas chaos that requires the pres-
       courage Palestinian civilians to move to         tober 16tl1 Hossein Amir-Abdollahian,             ence of more Israeli troops. There is also
       the southern part of the Gaza Strip to es-       Iran's foreign minister, made an ominous          the constant threat of violence between
       cape the brunt of the looming battle. The        warning: "The possibility of pre-emptive          Palestinians and the almost 700,000 Israe-
       IDF says that only 600,000 or so of the 1.1m     action ... is expected in the coming hours,"      li settlers in the West Bank and the eastern
       residents of northern Gaza have heeded its       he told Iranian state television. The same        part of J erusalem.
       call. By delaying a wide-ranging deal on         day lsrael's government issued an unprec-             A final reason for Israel to delay its of-
       h urna ni tarian aid or safe zones where ci-     edented order to evacua te 28 Israeli villag-     fensive was an effort to free at least sorne of
       vilians can take shelter, the explosion at       es within zkm of the border with Lebanon.         the Israelí hostages captured on October
       Ahli Arab will have set back efforts to per-     On October rzth the IDF killed four people        zth. The IDF believes that Hamas, Islamic
       suade the holdouts, As it is, more Gazans        attempting to cross a security fence.             Jihad and other grou ps hold 203 of thern.
       have already been killed just by Israel's            Sorne ministers and defence officials         Israeli spies have been trying to gather in-
       bombing campaign since October 7tl1 than         have suggested that it may be better for Is-      telligence about where they are being held.
       in any previous conflict involving the terri-    rael to attack Hizbullah pre-emptively,
       tory (see next story). Inevitably, a ground      rather than wait for another surprise at-         Discussions disrupted
       assault will lead to far more deaths.            tack, this time from the north. Israel's war      Quier talks to secure the release of hostag-
           Southern Gaza has become extremely           cabinet, which includes both Binyamin             es had been under way. Qatar, which hosts
       overcrowded, with no organised provision         Netanyahu, the prime minister, and va-            Hamas's political leadership and has
       of food or shelter for arrivals from the         rious political rivals, including former          strong tiesto the group, had been acting as
       north. Hamas has told Gazans to stay pu t.       generals, seems inclined to wai t while           a go-between. But those diploma tic efforts
       What is more, Israeli bombing continues          sending more troops to the border.                appeared to collapse on October rzth after
       in sou thern Gaza as well, wi th reports of          Israel may also be waiting for more           the tragedy at the Ahli Arab hospital. Most
       refugees from the north being killed in air      American firepower to arrive in the region.       Arab states, including those who had pre-
       strikes. A common refrain among Gazans           A flotilla led by an aircraft-carrier is alrea-   viously appeared sornewhat sympathetic
       is that nowhere in the territory is safe, and    dy in the eastern Mediterranean. Another          to Israel, such as the United Arab Emirates,
       that they might as well stay in the relative     is en rou te. These forces are in tended to de-   blamed the IDF for the disaster, despite Is-
       comfort of their homes.                          ter Iran, Hizbullah and other Iran-aligned        rael's detailed disavowal of responsibility.
           Another worry for lsrael's generals is       militias in Iraq, syria and Yemen from en-        That both rnakes it much harder for Israel
       the risk of a war on two fronts. Iran, an ally   tering the war, or attacking American in-         to build diplomatic support for a ground
       of Hamas, was caught by surprise on Octo-        terests in the Gulf. The American ships' air-     war and gives it less reason to delay, now
       ber 7tl1, according to people familiar with      defence systems may also be able to pro-          that Mr Biden has left the region.
       the situation. But it has since urged Hiz-       vide Israel with additional warning of mis-           Israeli commanders, at any rate, are get-
       bullah, a big militant group in Lebanon, to      sile strikes, if nota degree of protection.       ting itchy feet. The IDF began mustering
       enter the fray. Hizbullah has an arsenal of          Another potential disruption to Israel's      withín hours of the atrocities of October
       sorne 150,000 rockets and missiles, includ-      preparations for war is the West Bank, the        7th. Its forces have been largely in place for
                                                                                                          almost a week.'We really should get going
                                                                                                          this weekend," says a colonel. "You can
                                                                                                          main tain this level of readiness for two
                                                                                                          weeks at the most."
                                                                                                              The invasion, when it comes, will be
                                                                                                          hard-fought and bloody. Israel's leaders
                                                                                                          have loudly and repeatedlypromised to de-
                                                                                                          stroy Hamas's military capabilities for
                                                                                                          good and end its is-year rule. That means a
                                                                                                          campaign of a different order from previ-
                                                                                                          ous incursions into Gaza, in 2009 and
                                                                                                          2014, which aimed merely to dirninish Ha-
                                                                                                          mas's military capacity and were followed
                                                                                                          by a gradual return to the status quo.
                                                                                                              But the Gaza Strip is a difficult place to
                                                                                                          fight, for severa! reasons. First, it is full of
                                                                                                          dense cities, composed of tightly packed
                                                                                                          apartment blocks. Such places will limit
                                                                                                          the invaders' lines of sight and hamper
                                                                                                          their communications, with the tall build-
                                                                                                          ings impeding radio signals. Civilians
                                                                                                          could be anywhere, and there will be end-
                                                                                                          less places for Harnas's fighters to hide.
      There are 995 more                                                                                      What is more, Hamas has built a sool<m ��
  The Economist October zist 2023                                                                                     Briefing Israel and Gaza       19
                                                                                                   History lessons
                                                                                                   Israel's own history offers similar warn-
                                                                                                   ings. In 1982, arnid a series of attacks by the
                                                                                                   Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO),
                                                                                                   the nationalist urnbrella group, gunrnen
                                                                                                   shot and wounded Israel's arnbassador in
                                                                                                   London. The Israeli governrnent took the
 Forty years later, militias in Lebanon rema in a threat                                           killing as a casus belli to invade Lebanon
                                                                                                   and disrnantle the PLO, even though it was
� network of tunnels under Gaza-a territory       for sorne rnilitary purpose and proportion-      attributed to rnilitants frorn a rival, the Abu
  only aokm long and iokm wide. The inten-        ate "in relation to the concrete and direct      Nidal grou p. Israeli forces besieged the PLO
  tion was in part to undercut Israel's tech-     rnilitary advantage anticipated". In other       in west Beirut, forcing its leader, Yasser
  nological advantage in seeing and striking      words, Israel can legally justify the deaths     Arafat, and thousands of fighters, to sail
  frorn the air. Even the most sophisticated      of civilians as long as they are killed in the   into exile. Israel's Christian ally, Bachir Ge-
  drones cannot provide rnuch inforrnation        crossfire in operations that did not use dis-    mayel, was elected Lebanon's presiden t.
  about what is happening underground.            proportionate force.                                 Then it all fell apart. Gernayel was
  Troops entering the tunnels cannot navi-            Whatever international law rnight say,       blown up. In sight of Israeli forces, his Pha-
  gate by GPS or cornrnunicate by radio.          however, as civilian casualties rnount, so       langist fighters exacted revenge by killing
      In its invasion of Gaza in 2014 the IDF     will pressure on Israel to withdraw and ac-      Palestinians in the Sabra and Chatila refu-
  struggled to deal with such tunnels. It has     cept a ceasefire. Its previous invasions of      gee carnps. An Israeli cornrnission of in-
  since invested heavily in subterranean          Gaza, in 2009 and 2014, were quite brief. In     quiry found Ariel Sharon, Israel's defence
  warfare, setting up special units for the       both cases, the IDF rernained on the             rninister, indirectly responsible. Within a
  task and constructing a sirnulacrurn of Ha-     ground for about is days. Thatwould notbe        year, under pressure frorn anti-war prot-
  rnas tunnels for training. It has developed     nearly enough time to achieve Israel's stat-     ests, Menachern Begin, the prime rninister,
  various technical rneans to hunt for thern,     ed goals this time around. It took Iraqi         announced his resignation.
  including sorne rnodelled on the under-         troops nine rnonths of house-to-house                One effect of the Lebanese irnbroglio
  ground surveys conducted by the oil in-         cornbat to subdue Mosul.                         was that the PLO was replaced by Hizbul-
  dustry, as well as rnethods based on old-           That points to perhaps the biggest chal-     lah, a more formidable, Shia mili tia, which
  fashioned intelligence=looking for spots        lenge for Israeli forces in Gaza: not getting    succeeded in pushing Israel out of Leba-
  where rnilitants' mobile-phone signals          bogged down. America's invasions of Af-          non in 2000. Another irnpact was on Pales-
  suddenly disappear, for instance. Even so,      ghanistan and Iraq after the terrorist at-       tinians within the Israeli-occupied West
  finding and dernolishing the tunnel net-        tacks of 9/11 and Israel's war in Lebanon in     Bank and Gaza Strip. Their first intifada, or
  work will be the work of rnonths, if not        1982 (the last time ali those tanks were de-     "shaking off", a stone-throwing uprising
  years, and certainly nota few days.             ployed) provide cau tionary tales.               that started in 1987, set the stage for the Os-
      A second concern is the presence of so          America's "global war on terror" started     lo accords between Israel and the PLO of
  rnany Palestinian civilians. Arnerican-led      triurnphantly. Just two rnonths after al-        1993. Arafat rnade a triurnphant return to
  assaults on cities during the Iraq war and      Qaeda's attacks on America in Septernber         Gaza the following year.
  the Iraqi-led, Western-backed capture of        2001, Arnerican-led forces were in control           Harnas emerged as the rnain force of
  Mosul frorn Islarnic State in 2016-17, were     of Kabul, the capital of Afghanistan. The        violent rejectionisrn and did rnuch to de-
  painstakingly planned and conducted             Taliban governrnent was gone. Al-Qaeda           stroy the Oslo accords. It torced Israel out
  with the benefit of copious intelligence.       was hounded. Its leader, Osarna bin Laden,       of Gaza in 2005 and won the Palestinian
  Large nurnbers of civilians died nonethe-       was tracked to Pakistán and killed in 2011.      legislative elections in 2006. The following
  less-perhaps as rnany as 10,000 in the bat-     But the Taliban fought a growing insurgen-       year it pushed out the PA.
  tle for Mosul alone.                            cy. Having lost more than 2,400 rnilitary            For Hussein Ibish of the Arab Gulf
      In theory, international hurnanitarian      personnel, Arnerica left in 2021. The Af-        States Institute, an American think-tank,
  law, which governs the cond uct of arrnies      ghan governrnent collapsed alrnost irnrne-       the lessons are clear. Terrorist and insur-
  once they are waging a war, dernands that       diately and the Taliban returned to power.       gent groups, he argues, resort to spectacu-
  soldiers distinguish between cornbatants                                                         lar violence to provoke an irrational re-
  and rnilitary objects on the one hand and                                                        sponse. "They know that the harrn that
  civilians and civilian objects on the other.    f)   Read more                                   they can do to the dorninant power is lirn-
  Targeting those on purpose is always ille-                                                       ited," he says. "They understand that the
  gal. But an attack that kills civilians-even    For more coverage on Israel and Gaza visit       harrn that the dorninant power can do to it-
  lots of thern-can be legal if it is necessary   economist.com/israel-hamas                       self is infinitely greater." •
20    Briefing Israel and Gaza                                                                                                                                                                                                                                      The Economist October zist 2023
                                                                     ..
       Detected damage, Oct 7th-12th 2023                                                                                  -- ---- ----,                                                                                                        -,         Population density, 2020
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                                                                                                                                                                                                              Sources: European Cornmission, European Space Agency¡ OpenStreetMap¡ UN¡ The Economist
     Graphic detail                                                                      flies over Gaza at least three times every 12                                                                                                                   nificant areas of its north may have been
                                                                                         days, and creates an image by bouncing                                                                                                                          damaged or destroyed. The city of Beit Ha-
     Destruction                                                                         microwaves off the Earth's surface and                                                                                                                          noun appears to be the worst hit. Sources
                                                                                         measuring the "echo" when they return.                                                                                                                          on the ground confirm that the Al-Sousi
     in Gaza                                                                                 By comparing images taken before the                                                                                                                        and Ahmed Yassin mosques=whích our
                                                                                         war began with the la test image from Octo-                                                                                                                     analysis highlighted as damaged-vhave
                                                                                         ber izth, we identified areas with dramatic                                                                                                                     been levelled. Overall, our estimates sug-
                                                                                         changes in signal, a hallmark of damage.                                                                                                                        gest that n.ooo buildings in Gaza are alrea-
     At least 4.3% of the enclave's buildings
                                                                                         We verified the method's accuracy by ap-                                                                                                                        dy damaged or destroyed.
     appear to have been destroyed
                                                                                         plying it to data from the Ukrainian city of                                                                                                                        Gaza's population is particularly vul-
                   Gazans the dull boom of an air                                        Mariupol in the spring of 2022, and com-                                                                                                                        nerable to air strikes. Around 2.2m people
     F
         OR MOST
         strike is a familiar sound. The current                                         paring it with human-ceded assessments.                                                                                                                         live in the sliver of land-vaokrn (25 miles)
     barrage-which began after Hamas, a Pal-                                             Our method is not perfect. Not all damage                                                                                                                       long and iokm wide-that rnakes up the
     estinian militant group, murdered more                                              can be detected from above. As a result, our                                                                                                                    strip. All border crossings are closed. In
     than 1,400 Israelis on 7th October-is the                                           numbers, if anything, may be too low.                                                                                                                           sorne refugee camps as many as 400 peo-
     beginning of the fifth war since Israeli                                                Our analysis of Gaza revealed that sig-                                                                                                                     ple live in each roo-rnetre square. Hun-
     troops withdrew from the area in 2005.                                                                                                                                                                                                              dreds of thousands have already been dis-
         But nothing could have prepared the                                             Total deaths, by day reported                                                                                                                          2,866    placed. By merging our damage map with
     people of Gaza for the scale of destruction                                         First ten days                                                                                                                                                  fine-grained population data, our analysis
     this time around. The Israeli Air Force                                                                                                                                                                                                             suggests at least 92,000 will have no home
     claims to have dropped nearly 6,000                                                 lsraeli                                                                           Palestinian                                                                   to return to when the fighting stops. This is
     bombs on the narrow strip of land in the                                                                                                                                                                                                            about three times our number for roughly
     first week of the war-more than the yearly                                                                                                                                                                                                          the same point of the 2021 war.
                                                                                         2023 war
     rate of American forces in their operation                                                                ----1,300                                                                                                                                     Israel says the strikes have killed hun-
     against Islamic State in 2014-17. Our analy-                                                                                                                                                                                                        dreds of terrorists and destroyed Hamas
     sis of satellite images suggests that in this                                                                                                                                                                                                       command centres. The Ministry of Health
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                741
     short space of time at least 4.3o/o of the en-                                                Otherwars,                                                                                                                                            in Gaza reports around 3,500 Palestinian
     claves' buildings have been destroyed.                                                         2008-21                                                                                                                                     257      lives lost, more than in any other Israel-Ga-
         To assess the damage caused by the                                               ·--,:-= '    1       1       .-.                      1
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                         za conflagration. With bombs still falling,
     strikes we analysed freely available data                                                                                                                                                                                                           and Israel expected to launch a ground at-
                                                                                             =
                                                                                         1             5                                10      1                                                      5                               10
     from Sentinel-i, a European satellite. It                                                                                          Day of war                                                                                                       rack, this number is sure to rise. •
 The Economist October zist 2023                                                                                    Briefing Israel and Gaza   21
 � ful tool to stymie the Palestinian dream of         a transition towards a Palestinian state. If                           majority of Israelís want to obliterate Ha-
   an independent state. "Netanyahu had a              there's no poli ti cal horizon, then the whole                         mas, not reward i t.
   flawed strategy of keeping Hamas ali ve and         PA becomes irrelevant,"                                                    Two other questions will shape Gaza's
   kicking," says Ehud Barak, a former Israelí             Israelís contend that the PA has under-                            future. One is what role Arab states will
   prime minister.                                     mined itself through rampant graft. Bil-                               play. In prívate conversations over the past
       Both Hamas and the PA rule their state-         lions of dollars in foreign aid have been si-                          week, severa! Arab officials floated the idea
   lets as one-party authoritarian regimes. In         phoned off over the past three decades to                              of a foreign peacekeeping force for the en-
   2021 Nizar Banat, a critic of Mr Abbas, was         buy plush villas in Jordan and topad bank                              clave-but most quickly added that their
   beaten to death by Palestinian police at his        accounts in Europe. Asked to name the                                  country was not eager to participa te.
   home in Hebron. Those who oppose Ha-                main problems in Palestinian society,                                      Egypt is not popular in Gaza, both be-
   mas in Gaza risk torture and execution.             more people cite their own government's                                cause it l1as joined Israel in blockading the
   Most Palestinians choose to keep silent,            corruption (25%) than Israel's continued                               territory and because of its prior history as
   shunning politics and focusing on their             occupation (19%).                                                      Gaza's ruler from 1948 to 1967. The UAE
   day-to-day struggles.                                   There is blame enough to share. The re-                            would be hesitant to play a big role. "We
       The most recent poll from the Palestin-         sult, though, is that Fatah is probably irre-                          don't act solo," says an Emirati diplomat.
   ian Centre for Policy and Survey Research           deemable in the eyes of most Palestinians,                             The same is probably true of Saudí Arabia.
   (PCPSR) found that 65o/o of Gazans would            a liberation movement turned ossified and                                  Israel would probably veto any role for
   vote for Ismail Haniyeh, the leader of Ha-          decadent. In recent years even sorne Israe-                            Qatar, one of the countries with the most
   mas, in a head-to-head presidential race            lís had begun to wonder if Hamas could be-                             influence in Gaza. For years the emirate
   against Mr Abbas (who would lose the West           co mean interlocutor, following the same                               has helped stabilise Gaza's economy wi tl1
   Bank as well). Hamas would win 44 % of              path Fatah did decades earlier, from viol-                             Israel's blessing, distributing up to $3om a
   the vote in Gaza in a parliamentary ballot,         ent militants to pliable bureaucrats.                                  month in welfare payments, salaries for
   whereas Fatah, Mr Abbas's faction, would                Not only had Hamas appeared focused                                civil servants and free fuel. But its support
   take just 28%.                                      on trying to improve Gaza's economy,                                   for Hamas-some of the group's leaders
                                                       sorne of its leaders also seemed amenable                              live there-will now make it suspect. "The
     Between a rock and a crock                        to a two-state solution. That would have                               whole strategy of Israel during the last de-
     At first glance this would suggest end uring      been a rernarkable shift for a group whose                             cade was to trust Qatar," says Mr Milstein.
     support for Hamas. But such polis offer           chárter used to call for Israel's destruction.                         "One of the lessons we should learn from
     only a binary choice between militants and        Last year Bassem Naim, a member of the                                 this war is that we should not give Qatar
     incompetents. Fully 80º/o of Palestinians         group's political leadership in Gaza, told                             any more involvernent."
     want Mr Abbas to resign. Hours after the          your correspondent that it was willing to                                  Although Arab states do not want to se-
     hospital explosion there were protests in         accept "a state on 1967 borders", Ghazi Ha-                            cure Gaza, they may be willing to help re-
     cities across the West Bank, where demon-         mad, another political official, said mucl1                            build it. After the last big war, in 2014, do-
     strators chanted: "The people demand the          the same ayear earlier.                                                nors pledged $3.5bn for reconstruction
     downfall of the presiden t." He is 87 and has         Such thoughts now seem naive. Mr Mil-                              (though by the end of 2016 they had dis-
     no clear successor. None of his would-be          stein was one of the few prominentisraelis                             bursed just 51% of that). The bill will be
     replacements inspires much enthusiasm,            who warned, well before the massacre, that                             even bigger this time (see Finance section).
         In a hypothetical race between Mr Hani-       Harnas's apparent pragmatism was just a                                    The other question is what happens to
     yeh and Muhammad Shtayyeh, the PA's               ruse. His view, vindicated by awful events,                            the PA. Half of Palestinians tell pollsters it
     colourless prime minister, the former             is now anear-universal one in Israel. Even                             should be dissolved. Doing so would de-
     would win by a 45-point margin in Gaza            if Hamas were willing to take part in peace                            prive many of thern of an income (the PA is
     and 21 points in the West Bank. Agaín, this       talks, an angry, grieving Israelí public                               the largest employer in the West Bank) and
     is less a testament to Mr Haniyeh's popu-         would not be a willing partner: the vast                               probably lead to more violence. But it
     larity than to Mr Shtayyeh's lack of it: a poll                                                                          would also raise the costs of lsrael's occu-
     in 2019, after his first 100 days in office,                         25 km                                               pation and, perhaps, force Palestine's long-
     found that 53% of Palestinians did not even                                                                              term future back onto Israel's political
     know he was the prime minister.                                                                                          agenda after two decades in which it was
                                                                 o
         Open-ended questions yield more tell-                                                                                rarely discussed. "It's the only card he has
                                                                                                        Nablus
     ing results. When the PCPSR asked Pales-                                                       •                         left," says a former confidant of Mr Abbas .
     tinians to name their preferred successor                                                           West                     There is no lasting solution for Gaza
                                                                        Tel Aviv •
     to Mr Abbas, a plurality said they did not                                                          Bank .......
                                                                                                               o              alone. Despite the long schism, Palestin-
     know, The second most popular answer, in                                                 Ramallah                  ::o
                                                         Mediterranean Sea                     I•
                                                                                                                        o     ians there still see thernselves as part of a
                                                                                                                        )>
     both the West Bank and Gaza, was Marwan                                                                 }
                                                                                                                        z     larger polity. Anyway, the strip is too small
     Barghouti, a member ofFatah serving mul-                                Jerusalem --ar:             ¡
                                                                                                                              and bereft of natural resources to thrive by
     tiple life sentences in an Israelí prison for                           Municipal                                        itself. Its economy depends on Israel's:
                                                                             boundary
     orchestrating terrorist attacks in which Is-                                        Hebron                               everything from strawberry farms to furni-
     raelí civilians were killed. Severa! of the         Gaza
                                                                                          •                      Dead         ture factories relies on exports to its
                                                                                                                  Sea
     other top choices, such as Mr Dahlan and            Strip                                                                wealthier neighbour, Whoever takes con-
     Khaled Meshal, a former Hamas leader, do                                                                                 trol, Gaza will be neither stable nor prospe-
     not even live in the Palestinian territories.                           ISRAEL                                           rous asan isolated statelet.
         Exiles, prisoners-or no one: Palestin-                                                                                   The only way to bring enduring quiet to
     ian political life is moribund. Palestinians                                                                             Gaza is through a broader settlement of the
     blame this sorry situation on Israel, argu-        West Bank, a reas of control, 2023                                    Israeli-Palestinian conflict. If the prospect
     ing that the lack of meaningful peace talks                                                                              of a negotiated sol u tion evapora tes com-
                                                        • Palestinian      Palestinian/lsraeli      Israelí
     has deprived the PA of its raison d'étre. "I         Jewish settlements (including planned expansion)
                                                                                                                              pletely, warns Mr Khatib, "with it, moder-
     think Mr Abbas will be the last Palestinian                                                                              ate leadership will vanish." Israel can de-
                                                        Israelí separation barrier - Built - Planned
     president," says Mr Khatib. "The whole                                                                                   capitate Hamas. But it is far less clear that
                                                        Sou rce: OCHA
     idea of the Palestinian Authority is that it's                                                                           anything better will take its place. •
                                                                                                                                               23
 � person in America is low compared with           policymakers stress that involuntary treat-      House Republican, gave up. But Mr Jordan
   much of the OECD, a club mostly of rich          ment should remain a last resort. Their          tell short during a full House vote on Octo-
   countries. America has less than half as         hope is that the expansion of beds makes it      ber rzth. He lost even more support in the
   many beds per personas France.                   more likely that people suffering from           second round of voting. The top job always
       Mr N ewsom describes his overhaul as         mental illness get the level of care they        seemed an odd fit for a conservative fire-
   fulfilling a promise made by then-gover-         need, and avoid languishing in jail or hos-      brand like Mr Jordan. A former Republican
   nor Ronald Reagan in the 196os to replace        pital for want of a safe alternative.            speaker once called him a "legislative ter-
   overcrowded, often abusive state-run in-             The neglect that California showed its       rorist", and after nearly 17 years on Capital
   stitutions with smaller, local facilities. Yet   most vulnerable when the institutions            Hill the Ohioan had yet to be the primary
   after Reagan, rightly, closed the asylums        were closed is a prime example of good in-       sponsor of a bill that became law.
   and expanded patients' rights, he failed to      tentions gone wrong. Decades later, Mr               Perhaps Mr Jordan will find a way. He
   fund community care. When Reagan be-             Newsom hopes California can provide              had not dropped out by the time this issue
   came president, the country followed Cali-       America with a model for how to fix things.      was published, though many House Re-
   fornia down this road. Butblaming Reagan         He refers to the restof his termas "the great    pu blicans were already looking elsewhere.
   ignores the nearly 50 years of inaction          implementation", His focus on beds ech-          Sorne Iawrnakers even began weighing a
   since he left Sacramento, the state capital.     oes those who spend the most time among          more quixotic measure: empowering the
   "The failure of successive state govern-         homeless and mentally ill Californians.          interim speaker.
   ments to uphold the community funding            When asked whatwould make herjob easi-               Patrick McHenry became speaker pro
   promise is one of the main reasons people        er, Dr Bird laughs. Without any hesitation,      tempore on October 3rd after being hand-
   are suffering so badly today," says Darrell      she answers: "More housing." •                   picked by the recently removed Kevin Mc-
   Steinberg, the current mayor of Sacramen-                                                         Carthy. The ten-term congressman from
   to and an advocate for reform.                                                                    North Carolina embraced a limited role in
       The other striking feature in California     House Republicans                                his unprecedented position and did little
   is the expansion of involuntary treatment.                                                        more than oversee the election of a new
   Mr Newsom signed a law on October ioth,          Hail McHenry                                     speaker. Butwith no end to the Republican
   SB 43, that loosens the criteria for people to                                                    impasse in sight and critica! legislative
   be placed in a mental-health conservator-                                                         deadlines approaching, talk of expanding
   ship, in which a person appointed by the                                                          Mr Mclíenry's power has grown louder.
   state directs their care. Its passage follows                                                         To do so, the House would have to pass a
                                                    WASHINGTON, DC
   the creation last year of CARE Court, a pro-                                                      simple resolution giving Mr McHenry
                                                    The House of Representatives still
   gramme that allows health workers, police                                                         more authority, "That would basically just
                                                    needs a speaker
   and family members to enroll people with                                                          empower McHenry to be able to do things
   psychosis in court-mandated treatment.               OHN MCCAIN,    the late senator from Ari-    like bring bills to the floor and conduct
   Alex Barnard of New York University, who
   is tracking state laws that expand forced
                                                    J  zona, liked to joke that the approval rat-
                                                    ing for America's Congress had fallen so
                                                                                                     sorne basic business of the House," says
                                                                                                     Molly Reynolds of the Brookings Institu-
   treatment, finds that reforms are clustered      low that legislators could expect support        tion, a think-tank. This is nota permanent
   in coastal Democratic states such as Cali-       only from "paid staffers and blood rela-         solution and his expanded powers would
   fornia, Oregon and Washington that are           tives" McCain's old line seemed closer to        almost certainly come with an expiry date.
   reckoning with very visible displays of          reality than hyperbole as the House began        But members in both parties could find
   mental illness among horneless people.           its third week without a speaker. Yet, un-       sornething to like with this short-terrn fix.
       Growing anger from voters helps ex-          likely as it seems, good legislation still has       Mr Mct.arthy lost his job after negotiat-
   plain why Democratic politicians in liberal      a chance to pass despite the House Repub-        ing a temporary extension of government
   states are grasping for policies usually as-     licans' dysfunction.                             funding. Mr McHenry, not long for the job,
   sociated with law-and-order Republicans.             Jim Jordan, a hard-right Ohio congress-      could oversee the passage of a long-term
   Civil liberties and disability rights groups     man, became speaker-designare on Octo-           funding bill=something the permanent
   are figh ting the poli ti cal tide. They argue   ber ijth after Steve Scalise, the number two     speaker should then be grate ful for, even if
   that SB 43 and CARE Court infringe on pa-                                                         he votes against the legislation. Many Re-
   tients' freedoms and bodily autonomy.                                                             publicans, however, would balk at giving
   Disability Rights California, a non-profit,                                                       up what they consider one of their main
   worries that the laws will unfairly target                                                        points of leverage against the White House
   black Californians, who are disproportion-                                                        and Democrat-controlled Sena te.
   ately represented among the state's home-                                                             Strong bipartisan majorities in Con-
   less population, and will traumatise peo-                                                         gress also support more aid for Israel and
   ple. They have a point. The evidence for the                                                      Ukraine, but a growing anti-Ukraine bloc
   efficacy of involuntary treatment is mixed.                                                       has held up supportwhile remaining assis-
       "They're simply wrong," Mr Newsom                                                             tance dwindles to dangerously low levels.
   says of the civil-rights groups. "Look                                                            Tl1e Wl1ite House reportedly plans to ask
   what's happening on the streets. It's night                                                       Congress for sioobn to fund a mix of secu-
   of the living dead in the Tenderloin in San                                                       rity priorities, including money for Israel
   Francisco ... and people are dying." He sug-                                                      and Ukraine, potentially to last until the
   gests that the extreme libertarianism dis-                                                        2024 presidential election.
   played on the streets is an embarrassing                                                              "It's time to end the Republican civil
   abdication of state responsibility. To the                                                        war, and in order to do that all options are
   governor and his allies, these new laws                                                           on the table," Hakeern J effries, leader of the
   representa move towards the centre and a                                                          House Democrats, told Politico. Other
   recommitment to a social contract. To his                                                         Democrats expressed an openness to ele-
   opponents, they reek of state overreach.                                                          vating Mr McHenry for the purpose of
       Even while trumpeting the new laws,          Pro the temporary speaker                        avoiding a shutdown or passing bipartisan ��
  The Economist October zist 2023                                                                                                 Un ited States      25
� legislation. John Boehner and Newt Ging-        mostly obscure speakers get about 15 min-           lens. Forces of good and demonic evil are
  rich, former Republican speakers, have en-      utes each to stoke one menace or another,           constantly struggling. (A third of evangeli-
  dorsed the idea, as have sorne moderates        for 15 hours straight. The tour is a stew of        cals hold this worldview strongly, accord-
  still in Congress. Dave J ayee, leader of a     apocalyptic sermonising, QAnon and elec-            ing to surveys by Paul Djupe of Denison
  centrist faction, said that "by empowering      tion denialism.                                     University in Ohio.)
  Patrick McHenry as speaker pro tempore              The point, if there is one, is to over-             The disposition dovetails with and pro-
  we can take care of our ally Israel until a     whelm=or as Steve Bannon, a banker-                 pels lots of conspiracies. That is not new:
  new speaker is elected."                        turned-provocateur once described the               in 1991 Pat Robertson, a Baptist televange-
      Various procedural gimmícks could           way that disinformation operates, to                list, published "The New World order", a
  slow the process. Mr McHenry, perhaps           "flood the zone with shit" A former mar-            bestseller about how a cabal of elites was
  fearing a potential primary challenge,          keting manager for a hotel chain who bills          bent on creating a totalitarian govern-
  might oppose the scheme himself. But,           herself as a "geopolitical expert" talked of        ment. Apocalyptic trapes figure heavily in
  reckons Matt Glassman of Georgetown             Iranians posing as Venezuelan asylum-               QAnon, which is more popular among
  University, "if a majority is hellbent on em-   seekers to infiltrate and attack America            white evangelicals than just about any
  powering McHenry, they will be able to do       ("We will be the next Israel"). Someone             other religious group.
  it." The past month has been one of sur-        pitched precious metals as an alternative               Politicians long ignored conspiracists.
  prises, generally unpleasant. Maybe the         to central-bank digital currencies: the idea        They tended to vote at lower rates: why par-
  biggest of all would be all this chaos ending   being that the government can turn off              ticipa te if you think the game is rigged? In
  with sorne responsible governance, even if      your money should you misbehave, so put             surveys after the 2012 election, Joseph Us-
  it proves short-lived. •                        it in gold or sil ver. "There are lots of threats   cinski of the University of Miami found a
                                                  out there=-I could talk for three hoursl" ex-       self-reported turnout gap of 23 percentage
                                                  claimed another speaker as her 15 minutes           points between people with low and high
 End times                                        of blame ran out.                                   predispositions to conspiracy.
                                                      Michael Barkun, a political scientist at            During his campaign Mr Trump legiti-
 Michael Flynn's                                  Syracuse University, wrote of the princi-           mised the latter group by suggesting,
                                                  ples underlying conspiracism: nothing               among other nonsense, that Barack Obama
 flying circos                                    happens by accident, nothing is as it               had been born abroad and that Hillary
                                                  seems, and everything is linked. Connect            Clinton had taken bribes from Russia. In
                                                  the dots and a hidden, malevolent scherne           surveys by Mr Uscinski after the 2016 elec-
 TRUMP NATIONAL DORAL, MIAMI
                                                  emerges. Such thinking is correlated with           tion, the gap closed. It is not so much that
 Part of Donald Trump's base thinks he
                                                  feelings of powerlessness and anxiety.              Mr Trump persuaded lots of people to turn
 is fighting a spiritual war
                                                  Conspiracy theories are perversely reas-            conspiratorial, reckons Adarn Enders of
     N A HOTEL   ballroom owned by Donald         suring, then: events become ordered rath-           the University of Louisville. Surveys of
 I Trump, barely an hour into a two-day
 conspiracist talkathon, your correspon-
                                                  er than randorn. Educated, establishment
                                                  types are the dupes. There may be evil at
                                                                                                      sucl1 thinking are pretty stable over time.
                                                                                                      Rather Mr Trump activated existing beliefs
 dent lost the plot. It happened amid calls       work, but it can be resisted. A woman on a          and connected them to politics.
 for the audience to quit being "weak-kneed       cigarette break told your correspondent as              Not that doom-mongering is exciting
 wussies" and "join Team Jesus", and warn-        much: "We know everything. Every lie                all the time, even among the most die-hard
 ings about child traffickers and poisonous       known to man was revealed to us alrea-              conspiracists at the Reáwaken tour. As a
 vaccines. What really did it, though, was an     dy...The government is a mafia."                    pastor read from the Book of Revelation
 invitation to approach the stage to be               Talk of a spiritual war suffuses such           and described how to identify the coming
 healed by a self-styled prophet resembling       events. That makes sense: those evangeli-           Antichrist, the crowd thinned and flagged.
 Ozzy Osbourne.                                   cal Christians who believe in the end-              Phones carne out. Sorne played Candy
     La ter one of Mr Trump's sons took to the    times-when Jesus will return to Earth,              Crush, others shopped online. "Are you ali
 podium. Worship music played: severa!            battle the Antichrist and save the faithful-        awake?" carne a call from the stage. Then
 hundred hands went up in prayer. Some-           often see the world through a Manichean             more pleadingly: "Are we doing alright?" •
 one blew a shofar, a trumpet used in [ewish
 rituals that is popular among sorne charis-
 matic Christians. Was this a Trump rally, a
 religious revival or a gabfest about how
 globalists had spread covid-is to suspend
 civil liberties? Was it all of those things?
 The man selling tickets over the phone-at
 a recommended price of $250, or pay what
 you wish-had offered just two instruc-
 tions. No masks allowed and please leave
 guns in the car.
     The event was part of the Rexwaken
 America tour, a roadshow helmed by Mi-
 chael Flynn and born of protests over lock-
 downs and election "theft", (Mr Flynn
 served as Mr Trurnp's first national securi-
 ty adviser, was prosecuted for lying to the
 FBI, then pardoned by his ex-boss.) This
 was the zist incarnation of the event and
 the second at Mr Trump's hotel in Miami;
 previous stops around the country have
 largely been at megachurches. Dozens of          Flynn's fancies
26    United States                                                                                            The Economist October zist 2023
Abortion laws
                                                                    •
                     cancercare 1n
                                                               •
                                                      enea
              ....                                                                                     ' ' '   .......
                                                                                                  Supported by           kY BeiGene
Cancer is a leading cause of death globally,      families, but more broadly for societies
contributing to more than one in six deaths,      and economies. Economist I mpact's report
and incidence is expected to rise by 50°/o        'The Future of Cancer Care: Health-System
by 2040 as popu lations age. The situation is     Sustainability in Latin America", supported
even more acute in Lati n Ame rica, where the      by BeiGene, explores the growing cancer
share of the population aged 65 years and          burden in the region, the challenges this
older will more than double in the next three      presents, and potential policy actions and
decades. That will have the knock-on effect of    interventions that could help countries
increasing cancer incidence by an average of      improve access, system sustainability and
64°/o across nine of the region's most populous    patient outcomes.
countries-ranging from an increase of 42°/o in
                                                  The countries of Latin America are diverse,
Argentina to 98º/o in Guatemala.
                                                  as are their health-care systems, so a ene-
In Brazil alone, the projected 68°/o increase     size-fits-all solution is unlikely to deliver the
would mean about irn newly diagnosed              best outcomes. However, sorne common
cancer patients needing care each year-           approaches, such as bridging the equity
which would significantly impact its health       gap in the private and public health sectors,
system. This huge influx of additional            a n d i nvesti ng in hea lth-wo rkforce capa city-
patients will force countries to reconsider       bu i l di ng, can help countries mitigate
how they prioritise resources in arder to         cancer incidence and increase access to
sustainably deliver high-quality cancer           sustainable cancer care.
treatment, while maintaining care across
                                                  Find out more about what countries in
their wider health systems.
                                                  Latin America can do to reduce the impact
How countries adapt to this challenge has         of cancer on patients, health systems and
implications notjust for patients and their       society at: econ.st/LATAM
32    The Americas                                                                                             The Economist October zist 2023
     Guatemala                                        tober iath an appeals court quashed the         The <leal, which was overseen by N orway's
                                                      conviction of José Rubén Zamora, a promi-       government, was entitled a "partial agree-
     Democratic display                               nent investigative journalist who was sen-      ment", It initially appeared to be under-
                                                      tenced in June to six years on trumped-up       whelming, albeit with sorne concessions.
                                                      charges of money-laundering. (But it also       The document finally cleared the path for
                                                      ordered a retrial.)                             the opposition to hold its primary elec-
                                                          The continuous challenges are hurting       tions, scheduled for October zznd. The op-
                                                      Semilla. Formed by a group of urban aca-        position will be allowed to choose its can-
     GUATEMALA CITY
                                                      demics, the party ran its first round on        didate "according to its interna! rules." An
     Bernardo Arévalo battles on
                                                      $20,000. It did not even have money to do       approximate date was agreed for presiden-
          ORE THAN      two weeks after protests      interna! polling. The party has no experi-      tial elections. These will be held in the sec-
     M     began outside a drab government
     building in the capital of Guatemala, hun-
                                                      ence of holding power. It will hold only 23
                                                      of 160 seats in Congress.
                                                                                                      ond half of 2024.
                                                                                                          Just getting Mr Maduro to agree to these
     dreds of demonstrators are still in place.           Still, Mr Arévalo should be able to make    small democratic steps had taken months
     Amid flags and the noise of vuvuzelas, the       his mark. Alejandro Giammattei, the out-        of mostly secret negotiations. The day after
     crowd camped outside the public prosecu-         going president, has strengthened the           the <leal was signed it finally emerged just
     tor's office in Guatemala City calls for the     powers of the presidency. "Cuatemala's          how he was cajoled. On october isth. Presi-
     resignation of a list of officials, starting     public administration is so bad that even       dent Joe Biden's administration an-
     with María Consuelo Porras, the public           using a few executive powers he could           nounced that, with immediate effect, it
     prosecu tor. They are not alone. Since Octo-     drastically improve it," reckons Daniel         would lift most of the restrictions placed
     ber znd hundreds of Guatemalans have             Haering Keenan of the Universidad Fran-         on Venezuela's energy, gold and financia!
     been blocking roads across the country,          cisco Marroquín in Guatemala City. And          sectors. The state oil company Petróleos de
     protesting against those who appear to be        the battle for Mr Arévalo has sparked a de-     Venezuela SA (PDVSA), which has been un-
     undermining democracy in the Central             sire to protect democracy more generally.       der sanctions since 2019, will be able to sell
     American country.                                As Esteban Toe Tzay, an indigenous leader       oil to whoever it chooses, with the excep-
         Ms Porras, who has been put under            who was at the protests, put it: "This is the   tion of Russia. Sorne Venezuelan bonds
     sanctions by the United States for corrup-       feeling of the Guatemalan people." •            can be traded by American entities again.
     tion (which she denies), is at the forefront                                                         The turnaround represents a signifi-
     of a select group trying to stop the transfer                                                    cant financia! boost for Mr Maduro's gov-
     of presidential power to Bernardo Arévalo.                                                       ernment, particularly the change of rules
     Since his landslide win in elections in Au-                                                      for PDVSA. For the last four years i t has been
     gust, on an anti-corruption platform, Mr                                                         bypassing sanctions by selling oil on the
     Arévalo has become a syrnbol of hope in a                                                        black rnarket, for as much as a 40°/o dis-
     country and region where democratic                                                              count. "I think this could almost double
     backsliding has become the norm.                                                                 Maduro's revenues from oil: he will be re-
         Initially "the pact of the corrupt", as                                                      ceiving a much lower discount, and ex-
     Guatemalans refer to a small elite drawn                                                         porting more," says Francisco Monaldi, at
     from the ranks of the political, mili tary and                                                   Rice University in Houston, Texas. Mr Ma-
     judicial spheres, claimed, without evi-                                                          duro was certainly jubilant when he ap-
     dence, that the elections were fraudulent                                                        peared on state television. "It is a world
     and forced the ballot boxes to be reopened.                                                      consensus that sanctions against Venezue-
     The result stayed the same. Then they tried                                                      la be lifted ," he gushed.
     to suggest that Semilla (Seed), Mr Arévalo's                                                         But the wily dictator has more to do if
     party, was fraudulently formed and should                                                        he really wants to come in from the cold.
     be dissolved. That case is continuing.                                                           Antony Blinken, America's secretary of
         Most reckon these attempts to stop Mr                                                        state, said that the Biden administration
     Arévalo from being sworn in on January                                                           has given Mr Maduro only until the end of
     iath will fail. Although sorne Guatemalans                                                       November to start releasing political pris-
     are fed up with the roadblocks, the peace-       Venezuela                                       oners and any "wrorigfully detained"
     ful protests are putting pressure on the                                                         Americans. On October 19th five Venezue-
     elite, as are many foreign governments.          Blowout                                         lans-journalists and politicians who had
     Keeping Mr Arévalo from power would risk                                                         been imprisoned for years-were set free.
     a widespread uprising. "The most sacred                                                              Another, more difficult, request for the
     thing in a democratic country is the vote,"                                                      regime to comply with involves the oppo-
     says Alida Vicente, a lawyer and elected                                                         sition primary election, on October zznd.
     member of an indigenous administration                                                           The ele ar favouri te to win is Maria Corina
                                                      CARACAS
     in Palín, in the south, who travelled to the                                                     Machado, a conservative. She has already
                                                      President J oe Biden lifts sanctions
     capital to join the protest.                                                                     been banned from holding office. Mr Blin-
         On October isth Guatemala's interior             ICOLÁS MADURO, Venezuela's     autocrat-    ken made clear that, also by the end of No-
     minister resigned, after a group of 50 peo-
     ple wielding guns, wooden planks and
                                                      N    ic president, has managed to stay in
                                                      power by undermining his country's
                                                                                                      vember, Mr Maduro's government must
                                                                                                      "define a specific timeline and process for
     stones killed a protester while trying to        democratic politics. So few held out much       the expedited reinstatement of all candi-
     disperse a protest. Many businesspeople          hope when, on October rzth, members of          dates". He warned that "failure to abide by
     are su pporting Mr Arévalo, either beca use      his government and the opposition jetted        the terms of this arrangement will lead the
     they are keeri to be close to those in power     to Barbados to strike a <leal in order to set   United States to reverse steps we have tak-
     or for fear of American sanctions if they do     out how free and fair presidential elections    en". Mr Maduro has a poor track record of
     otherwise. The courts are divided. While         could be held in 2024.                          keeping his part of a bargain. Now he is
     the case against Semilla continues, on Oc-          Such cynicism seemed well founded.           about to be tested. •
                                                                                                                                                  33
. , ...
F
    ROM AFAR,   the Japanese archipelago ap-     Sado, off the northern coast of Honshu, or        value carne to the fore during the second
    pears to consist of just a few islands.      Rishiri, near Hokkaido, dernographic              world war, when Iwo To, a speck in the Oga-
Zoom in and more come into view, dotting         change is hollowing out communities. Cli-         sawara, became the site of a terrible, leg-
the map like the ink splatters of a calligra-    ma te change threatens the already fragile        endary battle. (Iwo Jima, its widely known
phy brush. Japan has around 14,000 is-           supply chains of places like the Ogasawara,       anglicised name, resulted from a Japanese
lands, sorne 400 of which are inhabited.         a group of islands halfway to Guam, which         military mispronunciation.)
These often-remote abades, known as ti          rely on ferries to connect thern to the               After the war, the rito u struggled to l<eep
tou, define the country's borders. Though        mainland. In the Nansei, the islands that         up as Japan boomed. (The Nansei and the
small, and sometimes tiny, together they         stretch between Taiwan and Kyush u, resi-         Ogasawara remained under American oc-
shape Japan's identity as an ocean nation        dents are rnaking flight plans in case of a       cupation for decades.) Many in Tokyo con-
and underpin its maritime power.                 war with China.                                   sidered them an encumbrance. But percep-
    The ritou are often overlooked. Fewer            Remate islands closer to the mainlands        tions changed as international maritime
than 1o/o of [apan's 125m peo ple live outside   have been Japanese for centuries. Visitors        law evolved. In 1982, the United Nations
its five main islands, Honshu, Kyushu, Shi-      to Sado can find dozens of thatched-roof          Convention on the Law of the Sea granted
koku, Hokkaido and Okinawa. Remate is-           Noh theatres, a testament to the influence        states exclusive rights over marine re-
lands make up about 2% of [apan's land                                                             sources extending 200 nautical miles
mass. Yet they account for half of the exclu-                                                      (37ol<m) beyond their territorial waters.
                                                   7 Also in this section
sive economic zone (EEZ) which helps Ja-                                                           That "changed the shape of the nation" and
pan punch above its weight at sea: it is the      34 India and free lave                           helped Japan become a "maritime great
world's 62nd-largest country yet has the                                                           power", says Iwashita Akihiro of Hokkaido
                                                  35 Gay rights in India
sixth-largest marine area (see map on next                                                         University. The ritou conferred it with vast
page). The combined coastlines of the ti         35 Race in Australasia                           fishing waters and undersea resources.
tou, 20% of japan's total, are longer than                                                             Marine riches draw China's attention.
                                                  36 Australia's coal habit
the whole of Brazil's. They are also store-                                                        Oil and gas reserves are one reason that it
houses of cultural and biological diversity.      36 South Korean chipmakers                       covets a group of uninhabited islands in
    Yet these quietly consequential islands                                                        the East China Sea that Japan controls and
                                                  37 Banyan: lndia-Pakistan cricket
face mounting pressures. On islands like                                                           calls the Senkaku (China claims them and ��
34    Asia                                                                                                                              The Economist October zist 2023
 � calls them the Diaoyu). Deposits of rare-                                 local markets=some 70°/o of the ritou have            Remoteness is not in and of itself a
   earth minerals, perhaps equivalent to hun-                                fewer than 500 inhabitants.                       death sentence. Take the Ogasawara, the
   dreds of years' worth of global demand,                                       Many islands hope simply to arrest the        most remote of all the inhabited ritou, ac-
   have been discovered in hard-to-extract                                   slide. On Sado, the population of 49,000 is       cessible only by a ferry that takes 24 hours
   mud on the sea floor near Minamitorishi-                                  projected to drop to 19,000 by 2060; the lo-      to travel one way. The population has been
   ma, which belongs to the Ogasawara; Chi-                                  cal government's goal is to keep the decline      stable for years; if anything, housing is in
   nese research ships have been spotted sur-                                to 30,000. Government subsidies aim to            scarce su pply. The internet keeps islanders
   veying the sea floor nearby. On distant Chi-                              encourage migration to the island. But            connected to modern services; what can-
   chijima, the main island of the Ogasawara,                                they are u p against powerful social forces       not be found in the small handful of shops
   locals recall with horror a night in 2014                                 that are pushing young peo ple away. "They        can be ordered from Amazon. Tropical
   when hundreds of large Chinese fishing                                    hear from their parents and grandparents          weather, stunning vistas and an open-
   boats descended on the island to harvest                                  that there's no point in staying, that you        minded community attract many new-
   its coral. "The fact that China is interfering                            should leave, go make it in Tokyo," laments       comers. For many of them, living so far off
   in these areas is a testament to their value,"                            Watanabe Kazuya, a local official.                the map has its own wonderful appeal. •
   says Itokazu Kenichi, the mayor ofYonagu-
   ni. China's threats to nearby Taiwan have
   also spurredJapan to reinforce defences on
   sorne remote islands in the south-west.
       Yet the biggest challenge for most ritou                                            Playing it safe during Navratri
   is asevere version of one that much of Ja-
                                                                                                                          MUMBAI
   pan faces: shrinking, ageing populations.
                                                                                    Social-media influencers are battling to educate young lndians about sex
   "They cling to the memory of their golden
   age," says Saito Jun, an author who has vis-
   ited hundreds of islands. The population
   of remote islands shrank by nearly 6oo/o be-
                                                                              T   HIS WEEI< marks the start of Navratri,
                                                                                   a Hindu festival spanning nine nights
                                                                              that honours    the goddess Durga. In
                                                                                                                               Gujarat, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh,
                                                                                                                               Maharashtra and Rajasthan have all
                                                                                                                               banned sex education in schools=with
   tween 1955 and 2010 (excluding those occu-                                 western India, men and women cele-               predictable results. According to a survey
   pied by America). By contrast, japan's over-                               brants will re-enact the fight between           published in 2021, 78% of young men had
   all population began declining only in                                     good and evil by clanking wooden sticks          had unprotected sex with their last
   2008. On the joo-odd inhabited ritou not                                   and swaying in circles together to loud          partner. The incidence of venere al dis-
   linked to the mainland by bridge, 37% of                                   music. Sorne go further. Navratri's em-          ease among adolescents is growing.
   the population was over 65 years old in                                    phasis u pon heady mingling between the              This is a chronic failing. Social-media
   2020, compared with 29% nationally. If                                     sexes l1as long been associated with free        influencers such as Tanaya Narendra, an
   they were a prefecture, it would have been                                 love. The Hindu nationalist government           ernbryologist with 1.1m followers on
   one of the most aged in the country. These                                 of Gujarat once attributed a rise in abor-       Instagram, are at least trying to fill the
   trends worry security-conscious officials.                                 tions in the state to the festival. Condom       gap. "I aman ordinary girl from a small
   "It's important that people live there=it                                  sales are reported to soar ahead of it.          town in Uttar Pradesh. So people are not
   serves to patrol the borders," says Tsuka-                                     "We stock u p a few weeks beforehand         intimidated by me," she explains. A study
   moto Kuniyoshi of the rernote-islands de-                                  and sell 30-40% more than usual during           among teenage girls in northern India
   partment at the infrastructure ministry.                                   Navratri", says Mahendra Kumavat                 last year found a higher understanding of
       Decades of state-backed investments                                    of I<&s Pharmacy in the Gujarati city of         sex, birth control and pregnancy among
   have sought to make remote-island life                                     Ahmedabad. The growing scale of the              social-media users than non-users. If
   more attractive. Yet health care remains far                               festivities, as India gets richer, is creating   they want to play with love this Navratri,
   more precarious even than in rural areas                                   opportunities for surreptitious cou pling.       they are likelier to do so safely.
   on the mainland, acknowledges Kosaka                                       Reduced family sizes have meanwhile
   Katsuya, a town-hall official on Rishiri. Lo-                              made parents less able to rely on one of
   cals there must trek to bigger islands to                                  their offspring to police libidinous teens.
   give birth; helicopters evacua te those who                                Sorne go so far as to hire detectives in-
   need emergency surgery. Many remote is-                                    stead. "On two occasions we do great
   lands do not have high schools, and sorne                                  business: one is Valentine's Day and
   are losing elementary and middle schools.                                  another is Navratri", says Lalit Raval, a
   Complex logistics mean higher prices for                                   former air force officer, who runs a priv-
   consumers. Businesses struggle with tiny                                   ate detective agency in Gujarat.
                                                                                  Sorne condom sellers are seizing the
     -                          RUSSIA                         Territorial
                                                               waters
                                                                              opportunity. In 2021Nyl<aa, an e-com-
                                                                              merce outfit, slashed prices of condoms
                                                               0-12           and lubes as part of a "Navratri sale". A
                                  Rishiri-'                    nautical
              CHINA                                            miles          few years earlier Manforce, an Indian
                                       Hdkft�ido
                                           •                   Exclusive      condom maker, ran hoardings featuring
                  N. KOREA                                     Economic       a former porn star called Sunny Leone
                      ,
                                                               Zone
                    S. KOREA                                   12-200         with the slogan, "This Navratri, play, but
                Tsushirna-«                                    nautical       with lovc'' The signs were castigated by
                   Ea.st Ky({Jhu Shikoku                       miles
                  Chine
                                                                              Hindu activist groups and taken down.
                            I
     Australian energy                                 er such as hydro. Meanwhile, investment          South Korea's chip industry
                                                       in green energy is flagging.
     Lucky but sooty                                       That is partly d ue to years of stop-start   Chipping away
                                                       climate policy, which tied up parliament
                                                       and toppled three Australian prime minis-
                                                       ters. Between 2013 and 2022, conservative
                                                       governments tore up a carbon price
     SYDNEY                                                                                             SEOUL
                                                       scheme created by Labor and resisted
     Australia's energy transition                                                                      Sorne good news for South Korea's
                                                       emissions cuts. "The problems we face
     is in trouble                                                                                      besieged chípmakers
                                                       now are a legacy of that dysfunction," ar-
� and the stockpiles of chips that semicon-     helpful market conditions, China's indus-        South Korea. If America makes another
  ductor firms have built upas a result, mean   trial policy and its advancing chip industry     such move to hamstring China's semicon-
  South Korean exports of semiconductors        mean export levels are unlikely to recover.      ductor development, Samsung and SI<
  to China are down this year. And China has        The unpredictability of the Sino-Ameri-      could again face being collateral damage.
  been pumping money into its own semi-         can tech war crea tes further risk, South Ko-        For these reasons, both firms will prob-
  conductor industry. As a result YMTC, Chi-    rean officials like to say the row highligh ts   ably try to reduce their dependence on Chi-
  na's memory-making champion, has sur-         the relative closeness of America and            na as a manufacturing location. Both are
  vived being cut off from global chiprnaking   South Korea. It also reveals America's ten-      already looking to open more facilities in
  tool supply chains by American export         dency to design industrial policy without        America and South Korea, Manufacturing
  controls. It is dueto complete a new facto-   consulting allies. Its roll-out last August of   costs are higher there than in China, de-
  ry this year, relying on Chinese machine      the Inflation Reduction Act, which incen-        spi te the inducements both countries are
  tools instead of foreign ones. Almost 56°/o   tivises EV and battery manufacturers to re-      offering chipmakers. Tl1at is the new reali-
  of South Korean semiconductor firms sur-      route supply chains away from China and          ty chiprnakers, and ultimately their cus-
  veyed bythe Bank of Korea inJune said un-     towards America, was a particular shock to       tomers, will increasingly face. •
  In cricket and otherwise, India is leaving its rivalry with Pakistan behind
      N THE BUILD-UP   to India's World Cup     struggling. Three decades of jihadist vio-       explain why polis show Indian public
  I  clash wi th Pakistán in Ahmedabad on
  October 14tl1, Indian news anchors spoke
                                                lence have made foreign sports teams
                                                afraid to visit Pakistán, giving it near-
                                                                                                 sentiment towards Pakistán growing
                                                                                                 more hostile, even as the country fades
  of "the greatest rivalry". For once they      pariah status. By banning Pakistanis from        from view. India's ruling Bharatiya [anata
  were not exaggerating. Cricket con tests      its lucrative domestic tournaments, India        Party, which has risen by peddling fear of
  between the South Asian giants have           has compounded the problem. The team             Muslims, has encouraged this. Its sup-
  been their main interaction off the bat-      trounced in Ahmedabad had no star ap-            porters are the most hostile of all.
  tlefield for three-quarters of a century.     proaching the stature of Mr Khan (a great            All these changes were evident at the
  Into thern each has poured subcontinen-       cricket captain, though an awful prime           ma tch in Ahmeda bad-the sixth India-
  tal volumes of love and hate, nationalist     minister, who is now in prison).                 Pakistán clash your columnist has wit-
  chest-beating, aching for peace, addic-           Pakistan's relative decline has changed      nessed on the subcontinent and by far
  tion to the fray-and the wholehearted         the bilateral relationship. Contemptuous         the most depressing. The first encoun-
  commitment of two great and fascinat-         of its neighbour, and now globally mind-         ters were d uring an uplifting Indian tour
  ingly contrasting cricket cultures. Even      ed, India has downgraded it. The days of         of Pakistán in 2004, part of a promising
  for cricket ignoramuses, India-Pakistán       expanded transport links and people-to-          peace process. India's cricketers and
  bouts are an essential window onto            people exchanges, generally for cricket          thousands of Indian fans were ernbraced
  South Asian politics and culture. What,       games, are over. Indian diplomats spend          by Pakistaní crowds as long-lost cousins.
  then, to make of the Ahmedabad match,         more time on Bangladesh than Pakistan->          By contrast, there were no Pakistaní fans
  which was attended by Banyan and end-         never mind China and America, the great          in Ahmedabad, because India had re-
  ed in an easy Indian victory?                 powers India increasingly counts itself          fused to give them visas. And the Indian
       Mostly that the rivalry has become       among. "No one is thinking about Paki-           fans Banyan spoke with expressed only
  extremely lopsided, in cricket as other-      stan," says an official in Delhi. Save in one    disdain for their neighbours. Asked what
  wise. India's win was its eighth on the       regard: India's fear of Pakistaní terrorism.     they knew of Pakistanis, three students
  trot over Pakistán in World Cups. And it          That most divisive facet of the relation-    from Mumbai said only "terrorism",
  was significantly crushing. The con test      ship has become more dominant as                 "Everyone hates thern," a middle-aged
  was held in the recently opened Na-           others, including economic ties and cul-         man, listening in from the row in front,
  rendra Modi Cricket Sta di um, the cricket    tural affinity, have fallen away. This helps     volunteered. Meanwhile, the crowd
  world's biggest, and attended by over                                                          screamed abuse at the visiting players.
  100,000 raucously partisan Indian fans.                                                        After one, Mohammad Rizwan, was
  It was an illustration of the demographic                                                      dismissed, jubilant Indians chanted a
  and economic heft powering India's rise                                                        Hindu victory cry, "Jai Shri Ram", at him.
  in cricket and beyond. Pakistan's players,                                                         India-Pakistán cricket has been
  only a couple of whom had visited India                                                        charged in the past. But never has the
  before, visiblywilted in the arena.                                                            hostility seemed so unidirectional and
       This denotes a big change. In the                                                         detached from geopolitical reality. The
  decades after British India's bloody parti-                                                    security threat to India from Pakistán.
  tion, Pakistán outperformed India off                                                          though real, is diminished. The potential
  and on the field. Its G D P per head was                                                       benefits of co-operation between the
  5oo/o more than India's in 1970. Its crick-                                                    world's most populous country and,
  eters, led by dashing fast-bowlers such as                                                     soon enough, its third-most populous
  Imran Khan, beat India's much more                                                             are growing as environmental and pop-
  often than they lost to them. But Indians                                                      ulation pressures bite. Yet the prospects
  are now much richer than Pakistanis,                                                           of realising them, in cricket and other-
  and their crickerers among the world's                                                         wise, have never looked more remote.
  wealthiest and best, while Pakistan's are                                                      Pakistán is unable and India unwilling.
Chinese feminism                                                                              was from the internet that China's #MeToo
                                                                                              movement emerged in 2018. Women ac-
Standingup                                                                                    cused prominent professors, businessmen
                                                                                              and television personalities of sexual as-
                                                                                              sault, and in sorne cases launched law-
                                                                                              suits. But most of these failed, and accus-
                                                                                              ers were sometimes sued for defamation.
                                                                                                  One of the most high-profile #MeToo
NEW YORK
                                                                                              cases was brought by a woman named
As China cracks down on feminists, its women build a movement abroad
                                                                                              Zhou Xiaoxuan who had accused Zhu Jun,
    wo CHINESE women sit on the stage of        about sexual harassment or immigrant          a television presenter, of forcibly kissing
T   a basement comedy club in Manhattan.
They wear matching blazers and speak
                                                hardships: and even accounts of detention
                                                and abuse by Chinese police. Most of their
                                                                                              her when she was an intern. Mr Zhu denies
                                                                                              the accusation; Chinese courts dismissed
highly formal Mandarin, just like present-      stories are funny. Many are bittersweet.      the case in 2021. Ms Zhou and her su ppor-
ers on Chinese state television. But their          These are not good times for Chinese      ters were censored online, while national-
"news cornmentary" is acid. Chinese             who consider thernselves feminists. In the    ists were permitted to spread videos call-
you ths who have recently been making           early 201os wornen's rights activists were    ing #MeToo a plot to destabilise China.
nuisance phone calls to Japan-in protest        able to mount frequent public protests in     That same year Huang Xueqin, one of the
at the release of waste water from the          China. They occupied men's toilets and        first Chinese journalists to report on #Me-
wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant-have            marched through the streets in red-stained    Too cases, was arrested and charged wi th
shown "cornmendable spirit" insists one         wedding dresses to protest gender inequal-    "inciting subversion of state power",
of the newsreaders, to a guffawing crowd.       ity and domestic violence. Activity of this       As it cracks down on feminists the
Despite having "no jobs or incomes" these       sort ended abruptly in 2015. That year five   Communist Party has also ramped up pro-
nationalistic youngsters have "spent their      prominent feminists were detained just        motion of traditional gender roles. Xi Jinp-
own money on long-distance calls"               before International Wornen's Day, for        ing, China's leader, has called for a reviva!
    The pair are performers at a Chinese        planning a campaign against sexual ha-        of Confucian ideas that encourage women
feminist stand-up show called "Nvziz-           rassment on public transport.                 to be good wives and mothers, and to teach
huyi" (a play on words that can be read ei-         In the aftermath of those arrests, Chi-   their families to love the country. Since he
ther as "Wornen's Ideas" or "Good Ideas"). It   nese feminism largely moved online. It        carne to power, China has restricted access
is part of a new, irreverent form of diaspora                                                 to divorce by implementing a jo-day man-
activism led by young Chinese women.                                                          datory "cooling-off period", banned ef-
Each month "Nvzizhuyi" invites Chinese            ¿ Also in this section                    feminate men from appearing on televi-
citizens, mostly women, onto the stage in                                                     sion, and encouraged regional govern-
                                                 39 Trainingforeign engineers
NewYork to say things that they could nev-                                                    ments to experiment with schemes that
er u tter in public back home. Their rou-        40 Hong Kong's sprawling mansions            might prompt people to procrea te.
tines incorporate stories about coming out                                                        All this has silenced many feminist ac-
                                                 41 Chaguan:TheghostofZheng He
to their conservative parents; complaints                                                     tivists or forced them to flee overseas. Sev- ��
   The Economist October zist 2023                                                                                                          China      39
� eral of the people who are involved in the        ment and discrimination at work, A care-          there is no organiser. There are just indi-
  New York comedy nights have seen the              fully managed consultation on the amend-          vid uals who disagree with you." Chines e
  sharp end of the party's paranoia. One of         ment drew more than 700,000 comments              women who object to Mr Xi's big push for
  the event's organisers, Liang Xiaowen, left       online, making it one of the most widely-         family valu es have been showing their dis-
  China in 2016 bu t remained active in femi-       discussed legal changes in recent years.          pleasure by simply opting out. Many are
  nist groups until 2021, when her WeChat           Reproductive rights have also grabbed the         delaying or rejecting marriage and child-
  and Weibo accounts were shut down. A              public's attention. A woman who sued a            birth. China had 6.8m marriages in 2022,
  state-run tabloid accused Ms Liang of re-         hospital for the right to freeze her eggs-il-     roughly half the number in 2013. China's
  ceiving payments from abroad to help              legal for unmarried women in China=re-            population shrank last year for the first
  America foment unrest in China. (China's          cently sparked a debate aboutwidening ac-         time in six decades.
  propagandists have been doubling down             cess to in vitro fertilisation.                       The people who run "Nvzizhuyi" have
  on their claim tha t feminism is a tool of            Women in China will continue to de-           no delusions that they can transform Chi-
  "hostile foreign forces"; the Communist           mand better treatment, says Ms Li, even if        nese politics from afar. "If you fantasise
  Youth League has called radical feminism a        they cannot band together in action. The          about sorne kind of overnight, earth-shak-
  "poisonous online turnour" that provokes          feminist movement will just become                ing change, it's not really possible," says Ms
  "gender antagonisrn")                             increasingly "decentralised and individ-          Liang. Their goal, instead, is to "quietly
      Li Maizi, one of the "Feminist Five" de-      ualised", she thinks. "The government             keep sorne seeds alive" within the space
  tained in the crackdown in 2015, decided to       feels very helpless about this: they think        they have created abroad, she says. One day
  leave China last year, not long after police      there must be an organiser. But in this era,      they may bring those seeds back home. •
  carne into her apartment and arrested her
  flatmate for putting up posters protesting
  against draconian covid lockdowns. Ms Li          Global influence
  had been under heavy surveillance and had
  also lost her social media accounts; she felt     Training days
  voiceless and powerless. "This was my bot-
  tom line: ifl cannot do anyuseful activities
  in mainland China, írs time to leave."
      For the feminists who have found their
  way to New York, comed y is one way to re-
  build their movement. The stage at the
                                                    China is educating engineers around the world
  "Nvzizhuyi" open-mic night in early Octo-
  ber was decorated with slogans, including
  one calling Mr Xi a "dictator" and "#notmy-
  president", The event serves two purposes,
                                                    e   HINESE OFFICIALS     often talk of the Belt
                                                        and Road Initiative, a global infrastruc-
                                                    ture building spree, in hyperbolic terms.
                                                                                                      2016 China has set up sorne 27 vocational
                                                                                                      colleges in two dozen countries, mostly
                                                                                                      poorer ones. These "Luban Workshops"
  says Ms Liang. She argues that years of           On october rzth and 18th Xi Jinping, China's      (named after a fabled carpenter from the
  choosing to censor oneself online and in          leader, hosted a big summit in Beijing to         fifth century BC) have trained thousands of
  public-as many Cl1inese are forced to-            celebra te the tenth anniversary of what the      students in fields including artificial intel-
  eventually leads to self-censored thinking.       government Iikes to call the "project of the      ligence, electric vehicles, railway opera-
  Participating in stand-up is an antidote, of      century" (see Chaguan). Lately this hype          tions and robotics. One of the newest
  sorts. And it is important to hold the events     has rnasked an awkward reality. Since 2020        workshops opened on September ath at
  in Chinese, says Ms Liang, because it is the      China has scaled back the scheme as gov-          Meru University of Science and Technolo-
  language they were censored in. It is very        ernments have found it harder to repay            gy in Kenya.
  easy to be funny when talking about poli-         Chinese infrastructure loans.                         The purpose is not charity. Luban work-
  tics, she adds, because China's version of it        Yet in recent years one part of the pro-       shops promote technology and standards
  has become so absurd.                             ject l1as stood out as a quiet success. Since     that China wants to export to developing
      The show also aims to encourage more                                                            countries. Gear for the new workshop in
  people to get involved in feminist activ-                                                           Kenya will come from Huawei, a Chinese
  ism. Momo, in her twenties, says she                                                                telecoms giant America would like to see
  sought out independent reporting about                                                              excluded from its allies' mobile networks,
  the crackdowns on Xinjiang and Hong                                                                 for fear its kit could assist Chinese spying.
  Kong when she was still living in China,                                                            Huawei (which denies America's allega-
  and also followed many online feminist                                                              tions) helped build Kenya's mobile net-
  groups before theywere censored. But only                                                           work and is now working with its biggest
  after coming to America as a graduate stu-                                                          telecoms provider to roll out SG services.
  dent in 2021 did she finally meet like-                                                                 The workshops also help assuage wor-
  minded Chinese women in person. Momo                                                                ries about the Belt and Road. Participating
  was shocked when she attended her first                                                             governments sometimes complain that
  open mic last year and heard someone on                                                             the companies which win its infrastruc-
  the stage say, "I love to have sex." She felt a                                                     ture projects rely too much on labour and
  twinge of concern when the speakers start-                                                          supplies from China. Severa! Luban work-
  ed joking about politics, but also a thrill.                                                        shops now provide training directly relat-
  Within a few months she was on stage                                                                ed to Belt and Road projects. One in Djibou-
  making her own jokes.                                                                               ti has trained employees of a new rail line
      Wornen's rights in China have made                                                              to Ethiopia. That $4bn railway was built
  sorne progress despite the shrinking space                                                          and financed by China bu t struggled to
  for organising. In 2022 the government                                                              make a profit after opening in 2018.
  amended a wornen's protection law to add                                                                The Luban programme has echoes of
  stronger language against sexual harass-          lt all fits together                              China's earlier drive to expand its influ- ��
40      China                                                                                                     The Economist October zist 2023
     � ence by opening more than 500 "Confuci us         Property                                        tensions go up without the proper permits.
       Institutes" to teach Mandarin in universi-                                                        Liber Research Community, an NGO, iden-
       ties around the world. Yet so far it has          There goes the                                  tifies sorne 170 homes in eight rich neigh-
       avoided the controversies that have                                                               bourhoods that it believes have spread into
       dogged those institu tes, many of which           neighbourhood                                   more space than they are entitled to. In
       closed after being accused of promoting                                                           sorne cases, it says, the overspill covers a
       propaganda and stifling dissent. This is in                                                       larger area than the official plot.
                                                         HONG KONG
       part because the Luban workshops focus                                                                The landslip in Redhill has bolstered
                                                         A landslip in Hong Kong fuels
       on technical skills and in part because Chi-                                                      old complaints about lax and partial polic-
                                                         resentment of the rich
       na has spent more time consulting host                                                            ing of rules. In theory rigging u p unautho-
       governments before setting them up. "Un-             HE MILLIONAIRES     of Redhill Peninsula,    rised structures or encroaching on public
       like Confucius Institutes, Luban work-
       shops are actually different in each coun-
                                                         T    a posh coastal community in Hong
                                                         Kong, are a little poorer than they were.
                                                                                                         spaces can land homeowners injail. But on
                                                                                                         sorne occasions authorities permit thern to
       try, beca use of the different skills that are    Last month a supertyphoon named Saola           start paying the government rent for the
       demanded by host countries," says Niva            brought the city rainfalls heavier than any     additional land, reckons Liber. When prop-
       Yau of the Atlantic Council, an American          this century. At Redhill, a big chunk of sod-   erty owners are forced to reverse alter-
       think-tank. She sees thern as evidence that       den earth slipped into the sea. Though the      ations or retreat from government-owned
       China is responding to criticism of Belt          landslip mostly spared surrounding hous-        land, appeals can hold things up for years.
       and Road without abandoning core goals,           es, it exposed basements that had been d ug         Hong Kong's government says it han-
       such as exporting its technology,                 without permission and that may have            dles things as well as possible, given its re-
           The workshops compete with training           contributed to the collapse. Prompted by        sources. Last year it sent out more than
       that America, Japan and other rich coun-          journalists, the government began an in-        16,000 orders to rectify "illegal structures"
       tries offer countries in the global south.        vestigation, which is still going on. By Oc-    and brought 3,600-plus prosecutions. Crit-
       Germany, for example, has given more              tober 6th it had found a dozen houses in        ics say it is meek when taking on the rich.
       than 100 countries guidance on how to co-         the area that broke rules in sorne way.         Activists say the government enforces the
       PY its famed system of vocational educa-              Hong Kong's systems of planning often       laws selectively and sometimes uses thern
       tion. The Luban workshops are unusual,            look dysfunctional. One guess is that as        to hassle people it links with the pro-de-
       though, in providing equipment as well as         many as one in four properties in the terri-    mocracy movement. Mount Zero, an inde-
       teaching, and in having their own brand.          tory have been altered or extended without      pendent bookshop, was recently told by
           When the Luban programme began it             the right permissions. Canopies on flat         government inspectors that its front step
       was led by the local government in Tianjin,       roofs create room for recreation. Externa!      was illegally occupying public land.
       a big city near Beijing that was known for        balconies are walled in. And landlords              Things may be coming to a head. Chi-
       technical training (local authorities have        have been chopping their buildings into         na's leaders worry about Hong Kong's
       been encouraged to support and profit             ever-smaller, "subdivided" apartments.          cramped housing. They think property
       from Belt and Road). The first workshop           Ten years ago a government report said          prices helped stir up big protests in 2019.
       (pictured on previous page) opened in             that widespread disregard for planning          Local media, though much cowed since the
       Thailand in 2016; it used equipment sent          rules and building regulations could            introduction in 2020 of a noxious nation-
       by a Tianjin chernical company. Por a time        "cause injuries and fatalities"                 al-security law, increasingly report on vio-
       Luban workshops cropped up in rich coun-              The liberties taken by Hong Kong's rich-    lations of planning. Climate change is in-
       tries as well as poor ones. Between 2018          est residents are often the largest-and,        creasing the severity of wet and wild
       and 2020 a workshop at Crawley College,           given the cramped quarters most Hong            weather; this raises the risk that shoddy ex-
       near London, taught Chinese cuisine; one          Kongers put u p wíth, the ones that most of-    tensions or overloaded hillsides will col-
       in Portugal still offers training in electrical   ten cause a stir. Gardens and swimming          lapse. Ríght now Redhill is "under the spot-
       automation and industrial robots. The pro-        pools sometimes s prawl beyond a proper-        light", says Brian Wong of Líber. But he
       gramme was not always restricted to Belt          ty's registered boundaries. Three-story ex-     thinks there are similar risks elsewhere. •
       and Road participants: India (a sceptic) has
       a Luban workshop in Chennai.
           More recently, however, the pro-
       gramme a ppears to have been co-opted by
       China's central government. It has grown
       to involve training providers and compa-
       nies from outside Tianjin, and been linked
       more explicitly to Mr Xi's foreign policy. In
       2018 Mr Xi pledged to open ten workshops
       in Africa; a dozen have since opened there.
       In May he promised leaders of Central
       Asian countries that China would set up
       more workshops in their region (the first
       opened in Tajikistan last December).
           It remains to be seen how long China
       will subsidise Luban workshops, and how
       far they will live up to their promise. Sorne
       are questionable, such as one in war-torn
       Mali that teaches traditional Chinese
       medicine. But for the moment they repre-
       sent a refreshing example of China's gov-
       ernment listening to critics-and learning
       from its mistakes. •                              What líes beneath
 The Economist October zist 2023                                                                                                            China      41
     Liberia and Sierra Leone                                                                         recurring violence. What can Africa and
                                                                                                      the world learn from these two countries?
     Escaping the conflict trap                                                                           First, long conflicts rarely end in deci-
                                                                                                      si ve military victories, so diplomacy and
                                                                                                      negotiations are needed. The wars in Libe-
                                                                                                      ria and Sierra Leone both ended in agree-
                                                                                                      ments, signed under heavy diplornatic
                                                                                                      pressure, that tried to tackle the root caus-
     DAKAR
                                                                                                      es of the violence. In Sierra Leone, sorne
     Liberia and Sierra Leone show the possibilities-and limits-of recovery
                                                                                                      fighting resumed after the agreement until
         HE ELECTION on October ioth in Liberia           Liberia and neighbouring Sierra Leone,      a small British military intervention
     T   (pictured) may have seemed a sleepy
     affair, But it was far more rernarkable than
                                                      where another bloody civil war ended in
                                                      2002, are poor, troubled countries with ro-
                                                                                                      pushed the rebels towards a version of the
                                                                                                      deal they had already signed.
     it appears. Just 20 years ago the west Afri-     py democracies. Yet both are in much bet-           Another lesson for peacebuilders is
     can country was emerging from two devas-         ter shape than 20 years ago. The level of ex-   how to disarm combatants. Sorne 180,000
     tating bouts of civil war in which drug-ad-      treme poverty has plummeted. Both coun-         fighters handed in their guns across the
     dled commanders forced child soldiers to         tries were resilient enough to remain           two countries, but unlike in other con-
     kill their parents, among other atrocities.      stable through an Ebola crisis in 2014-16.      flicts, they were not integrated wholesale
     The war killed perhaps 250,000 people-           Since the wars, power has changed hands         into the regular army. This was sensible,
     roughly a twelfth of the population.             peacefully between rival parties once in Li-    argues a forthcoming book by two experts:
         As wi th every poll sin ce the war, this     beria and twice in Sierra Leone.                Alan Doss, who was the UN's top person in
     election took place amid sorne fears of vio-         No post-war president in either country     post-war Liberia and befare that its num-
     lence and a few deadly clashes. Yet on the       has sought to flout constitutional term         ber two in Sierra Leone, and David
     day the voting was calm, helped by a pledge      limits, as has happened in severa! other        Harris of Bradford University. In Liberia
     by all political parties to ensure a peaceful    countries in west Africa. Unusually, nei-       the army was disbanded. Sierra Leone's
     election. After a tight race there will be a     ther country has fallen back into war,          was restructured and downsized. The se-
     run-off between the incumbent, George            whereas many other poor ones-from               nior ranks were depoliticised. Liberia even
     Weah, once a famous footballer, and Jo-          Cameroon and Congo to Somalia and Su-           hada foreigner in charge of its new armed
     seph Boakai, a former vice-president.            dan-have been stuck in a "conflict trap" of     forces. Now 61o/o of Liberians say that they
     Though sorne worry that violence may yet                                                         trust the army, up from 46% in 2012, ac-
     erupt if the result in the next round is                                                         cording to Afrobarometer, a pollster.
                                                        7 Also in this section
     close, it has so far been the fourth generally                                                       Much of this was possible thanks to ro-
     peaceful and broadly fair presidential elec-      43 The ruin of Khartoum                        bust support from ou tsiders. Nigeria, the
     tion since the civil war, and the first since                                                    regional hegemon, was "hellbent on end-
                                                       44 savlngzoo.ooo lives ayear
     UN peacekeepers left in 2018.                                                                    ing the war" recalls Gyude Moore, a former ��
   The Economist October zist 2023                                                                                           M id die East & A frica   43
� post-war cabinet minister in Liberia. "Even       crepancies were found between the official         says, echoes to the sound of gunfire and
  long after the war ended, Nigeria still re-       count and a parallel sample-based one              shelling "every day and every night".
  mained really, really involved," America          conducted by civil-society groups. The op-             The first shots of Sudan's civil war were
  and Britain also played an important part,        position has since boycotted parliament.           fired in Khartoum, where the two rival
  ensuring that UN peacekeeping missions            "They could have gone to court: they               warlords had their headquarters. On one
  were sent, and pushing through sweeping           didn't," retorts Mr Sengeh. The opposition         side is sudan's de facto president, General
  debt relief and a fourfold increase in aid        says the courts are not im partial.                Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, who leads the Su-
  per person.                                           Still, optimism is growing that the cri-       danese Armed Forces (SAF). On the other is
      Liberia and Sierra Leone also had inter-      sis will be resolved. Mediators from ECO-          the leader of the RSF, Muhammad Hamdan
  nationally respected leaders after the con-       WAS, the African Union and the Common-             Dagalo, better known as Hemedti. Since
  flict. President Ellen J ohnson Sirleaf in Li-    wealth have once again returned to Sierra          then the fighting has spread far beyond the
  beria and President Ahmed Tejan Kabbah            Leone. on october isth they began talks be-        capital's barracks. In West Darfur, the RSF
  in Sierra Leone won broadly credible elec-        tween the rival parties.                           and allied Arab militias are waging a geno-
  tions. Ms J ohnson Sirleaf had worked for             Thus the final lesson is that good things      cidal campaign against the Masalit, a black
  the UN and the World Bank, from which             take time and unrelenting effort to come to        African ethnic group. Nationwide, sorne
  her finance minister was directly second-         fruition. For hungry, hopeful people in            9,000 civilians have reportedly been
  ed. Mr Kabbah was a former UN official. Be-       countries trying to emerge from conflict in        killed, though this is probably a massive
  cause both presidents abided by term lim-         Africa-and for their foreign helpers who           underestimate. More than 5.6m have been
  its, they gave their rivals a strong incentive    may be distracted by other crises in places        driven from their homes.
  to stay in poli tics rather than resume figh t-   such as Ukraine and the Middle East=that               Though the fighting has spread, Sudan
  ing, note the two authors.                        is perhaps the hardest lesson of all. •            is unusual in the degree to which the cen-
      Sierra Leone and Liberia also faced up to                                                        tre of its war is the country's capital. Ever
  the atrocities of the wars, at least to sorne                                                        since British imperialists founded the
  degree. Both held Tru th and Reconciliation       Sudan and its capital                              modern city on the banks of the Nile, pow-
  Commissions (TRCs), which heard from                                                                 er and wealth in Sudan have been concen-
  both victims and perpetrators. "The TRC is        Africa's Aleppo                                    trated in Khartoum. The RSF, whose rank-
  critical," says David Sengeh, the chief min-                                                         and-file are mostly drawn from far-flung
  ister (prime minister) of Sierra Leone. Its                                                          and downtrodden regions, are now exact-
  recommendations are a guide "to rnake                                                                ing their revenge. "The RS F believe they
  sure you don't go there [back to conflict] ."                                                        cannot create a state in their own image
      Balancing truth, reconciliation and jus-                                                         unless they violently destroy the old one,"
                                                    After six months of civil war, little
  tice is tough. Sierra Leone established a                                                            argues Kholood Khair of Confluence Advi-
                                                    remains of Khartoum
  special court and successfully prosecu ted                                                           sory, a Sudanese think-tank. In recent
  sorne perpetrators. But sorne criticised the           OHAMMED HUSSAIN,          a merchant, is a    weeks, RSF fighters are alleged to have
  cost of $3oom. In Liberia Ms Johnson Sir-
  leaf controversially ignored the rnc's rec-
                                                    M      refugee in his own city. A few months
                                                    after civil war broke out in Khartoum's
                                                                                                       burnt land-registration records and taken
                                                                                                       over whole residential neighbourhoods.
  ommendation to establish a court, partly          streets in April, l1e tried to take his sick fa-   "Every house is occupied," says another Su-
  out of fears it could rekindle conflict. Yet      ther to hospital. But the roads were blocked       danese analyst. "The city is theirs."
  demands from victims and activists to do          by soldiers from the Rapid Support Forces              Though the RSF controls most of down-
  so have since grown louder.                       (RSF), a rebellious paramilitary group that        town Khartoum, including districts that
      Alas, not ali the lessons can be applied      is trying to seize control of the country. Un-     host the presidential palace and other gov-
  elsewhere. Conflict is easier to end for          a ble to get medica! help, his father died.        ernment mínístries, the SAF remains holed
  good when it is not about imposing a par-         Last month, fighters from the RSF seized           up in severa! well-fortified bases in the city
  ticular vision on society, say Messrs Doss        Mr Hussairi's home, robbing him and                centre. It also controls the air base at Wadi
  and Harris. In Sierra Leone and Liberia the       threatening to kill him. He fled to relatives      Saidna, to the north. For months the RSF
  fight was primarily about power and re-           in another part of the city. Khartoum, l1e         has been trying to overrun these redou bts
  sources, though this was often refracted                                                             of the army. The SAF has responded with a
  through ethnic divisions, rather than ide-                                                           combination of air strikes, including by
  ology, religion or secession. This made it                                                           armed drones, and the occasional raid on
  easier to get leaders to do deals. Jihadism                                                          residential districts and warehouses used
  in the Sahel and secessionist fighting in                                                            by the RSF, says Nathaniel Raymond, a
  Cameroon do not lend themselves so easily                                                            conflict monitor atYale University. Mr Bur-
  to compromise.                                                                                       han, who fled from the army headquarters
      Law and order may simply be easier to                                                            in August, now runs what is becoming a de
  sustain in small countries. The Economic                                                             facto capital in Port Sudan, on the Red Sea.
  Community of West African States (Eco-                                                                   Since the civil war began six months
  WAS), a regional club, could do a lot in Libe-                                                       ago, more than half the capital's popula-
  ria. "It can't do the same in Mali," says Mr                                                         tion has fled. "Everyone I know has left
  Moore. And peace has lasted because peo-                                                             now," says Waleed Adam, who escaped in
  ple had suffered so grievously that they                                                             July after RSF troops raided his apartment.
  said "never agaín", argues Mohamed Ibn                                                               Most of those who have remained are too
  Chambas, a Ghanaian who was the head of                                                              old or too infirm to leave. Many are also too
  the executive arm of ECOWAS at the time.                                                             poor. Civilians who try to get out risk being
      The path from war toan enduring peace                                                            robbed or torced to pay bribes to go
  is long. In Liberia the last UN peacekeepers                                                         through armed checkpoints. "If you forget
  left only after a deployment of 15 years. And                                                        your ID card for any reason the RSF arrest
  obstacles still abound. Sierra Leone's elec-                                                         you," says another recent escapee.
  tion in June sparked controversy after dis-       King of the rubble                                     Many parts of the city are, in effect, un-��
44    Middle East & Africa                                                                                                                                    The Economist October zist 2023
 � der siege. Aid agencies can barely operate        drawing the joker from a pack of cards.
   and medica! care hardly exists. In August             Even here, there is cause for hope. Suc-
   an airstrike hit one of the city's largest hos-   cessive governments have made maternal
   pi tals. "Nowhere is safe," says Mustafa Mo-      health a priority, training more midwives
   duay, a teacher who has stayed put.               and monitoring deaths closely. Since 2010
       Many of the capital's historie land-          a donor-backed initiative has made health
   marks as well its factories have been             care free for pregnant and breast-feeding
   ground to d ust. "old Khartoum has been           women. It works imperfectly, and under-
   effectively demolished," says Magdi el-Gi-        paid staff still ask for a contribution from
   zouli of the Rift Valley Institute, a think-      patients. But the scheme helps explain
   tank. The presidential palace was hit by an       why 83o/o of births now happen in clinics,
   airstrike in May. The iconic Greater Nile Pe-     compared with 50% before fees were abol-
   troleum Operating Company Tower, one of           íshed. Mortality, though still high, l1as
   the capital's tallest buildings and a symbol      dropped below the African average.
   of the regime of the former dictator, Ornar           Women in poor countries die because
   al-Bashir, was set alight last month. Khar-       they are slow to seek care, slow to reach
   toum, says Mr Raymond, faces the fate of          hospital, and slow to be treated. Lives can
   Dresden, a historie German city destroyed         be saved by spotting warning signs early.
   by Allied air raids in the second world war.      Sierra Leone is having trials for a blood-
   Whichever side conquers the capital will          pressure monitor, known as CRADLE,
   be left ruling over little more than ruins. •     which uses a simple traffic-Iight system. If                                                    More joy, less sorrow
                                                     the device flashes red, a patient should be
                                                     referred for emergency treatment. Maria-                                                            Another way to reduce maternal deaths
     Health                                          ma Momoh, a midwife and public-health                                                           is to empower women. When they have
                                                     specialist, says it lets workers with even                                                      control over their fertility, they have fewer
     No miracles                                     basic training rnake fast decisions.                                                            babies and at wider intervals, which reduc-
                                                         Another innovation, used in severa!                                                         es the risk of complications. Governments
     required                                        other African countries, is a plastic drape                                                     can help by boosting access to contracep-
                                                     that is placed beneath the woman during                                                         tives. In Senegal improved supply chains
                                                     delivery. By noting how much blood l1as                                                         Ied to fewer shortages of pills and implants
     KEN EMA
                                                     collected, health workers can quickly as-                                                       in public health centres, notes Gloria Ikile-
     How to save the lives of 200,000
                                                     sess danger. A recent trial in Kenya, Nige-                                                     zi of Exemplars in Global Health, which
     mothers a year
                                                     ria, Tanzania and South Africa combined                                                         studies good practice. When wornen's
         REVENTING MATERNAL        deaths is not     the use of a calibrated drape with a bundle                                                     health is a priority they are also more likely
     P   difficult, says Hannah Saidu, who man-
     ages a maternity unit in Sierra Leone, so
                                                     of treatments, such as oxytocic drugs and
                                                     uterine massage. Severe bleeding was 60%
                                                                                                                                                     to receive treatments like iron supple-
                                                                                                                                                     ments, which reduce the risk of severe
     long as "you have skilled midwives, and         lower in trial hospitals.                                                                       bleeding in childbirth.
     you know what to do". If that is obvious, it        Innovation only works when there are                                                            One recent study estimates that when
     still bears repeating. About 200,000 wom-       robust health systems to support it. One                                                        countries introduce quotas for women in
     en in sub-Saharan Africa die in childbirth      reason that Nigeria tares so badly is that                                                      parliament, maternal mortality falls by 7-
     every year, largely from bleeding, hyper-       only half of births there are attended by                                                       12% as reproductive-health services im-
     tensive disorders and infection. The World      skilled staff. In Rwanda, which has a sys-                                                      prove. As important are the conversations
     Health organisatíon estimates that there        tem of community-based health insur-                                                            that happen around the cooking stove or
     are 545 deaths in the region for every          anee, almost every birth is. Ethiopia has                                                       the water pump. In Sierra Leone, unwed
     100,000 live births, arate four times higher    mobilised a "health development arrny" of                                                       pregnant teenagers are often thrown out
     than in south Asia and 90 times higher          volunteers to encourage women to attend                                                         by their families and are afraid to visit clin-
     than in western Europe.                         health centres. In many countries, the                                                          ics, says Mangenda Kamara of Lifeline Ne-
         The rate in Africa has fallen by a third    growth of cities is bringing women closer                                                       hemiah Projects, a grassroots organisa-
     since 2000, but still has a way to go. There    to hospitals, where they get better care                                                        tion. She is pioneering a scherne that pairs
     has been barely any progress in Nigeria,        than in rudimentary rural clinics.                                                              girls with an older mentor, who encourag-
     the continent's most populous country,                                                                                                          es thern to go for antena tal check-u ps and
     where a woman has a 1 in 19 chance of dying
     in childbirth over her lifetime. By contrast,
                                                      -
                                                      Saved lives
                                                                                                                                                     goes with them to hospital during labour.
                                                                                                                                                     More than 250 girls have been mentored;
     mortality has fallen by three-quarters in        Maternal deaths per 100,000 live births                                                        none (in that small sample) has died.
     Angola, Ethiopia, Mozambique, Rwanda                                                                                                    2,000       Cheap innovation, stronger health sys-
     and Sierra Leone (see chart). Those num-                                                                                                        tems and wornen's empowerment are
     bers point toan encouraging truth: coun-                                                                                                        achievable anywhere. But globally, pro-
     tries do not have to wait until they are rich                                                                                           1,500   gress is slowing. There has not been quite
     to start saving wornen's lives.                                                                                                                 the same focus on maternal mortality as
                                                                                                          Nigeria
         Consider Sierra Leone, which was once,                                                                                              1,000   there has been on diseases like AIDS and
     alongside South Sudan, the worst place in                                                                                                       malaria, says Rasa Izadnegahdar of the Bill
                                                                                                          Ethiopia
     the world to give birth. Health clinics still                                                                                                   & Melinda Gates Foundation, a philan-
     regularly run short of drugs. Blood sup-                                                                              :...,,             500    thropic outfit. Innovation has therefore
     plies are so limited that patients muster                  Mozambique                                                                           spread more slowly than need be. The UN
     their own donations from relatives; one                                                                                                    o    has a goal of reducing maternal mortality
     doctor describes giving his own blood be-          1
                                                      2000
                                                            1   1   1   1   1
                                                                            05
                                                                                 1   1   1   1   1
                                                                                                 10
                                                                                                      1       1   1
                                                                                                                  15
                                                                                                                       1            1   1
                                                                                                                                        20
                                                                                                                                                     worldwide to 70 deaths per 100,000 live
     fore operating on a patient. A wornan's life-                                                                                                   births by 2030. On current trends that tar-
                                                      Source:WHO
     time risk of maternal death is the same as                                                                                                      get will be missed. •
                                                                                                                                                                                                        45
                                                                                      •
                                                                                              •
                                                                                                   •        •                                     47 Meloni and Le Pen
                                     -                                                        •
                                                                                                                                                  48 The EU's troubled electricity market
                                                                  •    ""   .   �         •       •              •
                                                                                                                     •
                                 •
                                                                                                                                                  49 Charlemagne: Adrift over Gaza
                    •        •   •
. '• • • •• • • f
            •
                             •                        •
                                         •
 � shadow of those in earlier years. Its leader,     vetoed by Mr Duda or blocked by the Pis-        ously corrupt company-in wartime.
   Jaroslaw Kaczynski, grimly acknowledged           controlled constitutional tribunal.                 Mr Smetanin, a design engineer who
   it might not be able to form a coalition.             Mr Tusk has promised to unlock €35bn        rose from the shop floor to the director's
   Days la ter the party still seemed to be in de-   ($37bn) in post-covid aid that the European     office, is on one level uniquely qualified
   nial. "Evil has temporarily won," said Mar-       Union has withheld over r ís's meddling         for the unenviable job. At the start of the
   ek suskí, a Pis MP. Another, Ryszard Ter-         with the courts. Pales who expect Mr            war in February 2022 he was to be found in
   lecki, warned that his fraction would not         Tusk's years in Brussels to smooth the way      his native Kharkiv, 35l<m from the Russian
   be "an easy, gentle and pliant opposition".       may be disappointed. Meeting sorne EU           border, as the director of its famed but fad-
       When Pis swept to power in 2015, i t was      conditions will be easy, but one crucial re-    ed tank factory. He lived in the factory
   Mr Tusk's party that was seen as corrupt          form has been blocked bythe constitution-       through the terrifying first weeks, as
   and out of touch. By contrast, Pis had its        al court. The European Commission will          bombs fell through its roofs, while a group
   ear to the gro un d. It wooed Po les wi th gen-   try to stick to its requirements, to refute     of key workers continued production in
   erous child benefits and infrastructure in-       the charge PIS always made: that its cut-off    breaks between the shelling. Every defence
   vestments, especially in the country's            of Poland is about politics, not the rule of    contract was eventually fulfilled. "If the
   poorer east. But the party's obsession with       law. "It's not that just because they have a    mortars or artillery were landing near,
   control of state institutions and its con-        different prime minister, we will say all the   you'd wait half an hour befare starting
   stant infighting gradually left it sealed in-     problems are gone," says a commission of-       again," he recalls.
   side its own media bubble. Its vicious elec-      ficial. Still, the promise of a firmly pro-EU       But there are questions about the pos-
   toral campaign, which blasted Mr Tusk for         prime minister in Warsaw is a sea change        sibility, and even the desirability, of turn-
   l1is partly German ancestry and Brussels          for Poland-and for Europe. •                    ing around an umbrella organisation built
   connections, appealed only to its core                                                            on corru ption and favour from its very ear-
   voters. Pis also attacked Confederation, its                                                      ly days. When the Soviet Union broke up in
   only potential coalition partner. Many            Ukraine's arms industry                         1991, Ukraine inherited one of the world's
   Confederation supporters switched to                                                              largest military complexes: shipbuilding,
   rnírc Way, according to Marcin Palade, a          From corruption                                 tanks, aviation, missiles. Over the next two
   pollster=thus aiding the opposition.                                                              years Ukraine created three agencies that,
       By con trast, the opposition's broad          to production                                   with the help of poor and corrupt officers,
   spread of parties drew in newvoters. So did                                                       siphoned off whatever they could on the
   clevertactics. Lukasz Litewka, a new MP for                                                       black markets, Ukraine stopped making
                                                     KYIV
   the Left, was given the lowest position on                                                        ammunition. Factories stood idle. The
                                                     How a 31-year-old hopes to fix
   his party's regional list, but won nearly                                                         most advanced products were refashioned
                                                     Ul<raine's state-owned defence giant
   twice as many votes as the party leader                                                           for the export market.
   after he used his electoral posters to adver-       N MARCH Ul(RAINE abruptly rebooted its            In 1996, with the government clase to
   tise dogs up for adoption ata local shelter,
   Social-media campaigns helped raise turn-
                                                     I defence-industry team. Oleksandr Ka-
                                                     myshin, a hyperactive manager with a re-
                                                                                                     bankruptcy, the three agencies were taken
                                                                                                     over by a new enterprise with close con-
   out among those aged 18-29 to a rernark-          formist pedigree, was appointed to head a       nections to Russia's security services. (The
   able 69o/o, according toan exit poll bylpsos,     beefed-u p stra tegic-ind ustries ministry.     two countries' defence industries were
   up from 46% in 2019. Pis carne last among         He has previously turned around the rail-       then closely integrated.) A successor struc-
   these voters. The opposition's upbeat cam-        ways and has the confidence of the presi-       ture carne into existence in 2010. The new
   paign in the final weeks went down well           dent's inner circle. Still more surprising is   company, Ukroboronprom, was supposed
   with voters tired of polarisation.                the recent appointment of Herman Smeta-         to be about synergy, but in reality it was
       It may be sorne time befare Mr Tusk           nin, a little-known jr-year-old. to run the     about personal enrichment. "Ukroboron-
   gets to form a coalition. The president,          state defence consortium popularly              prom was dead at birth," says a source who
   Andrzej Duda, comes from Pis, and may             known as Ukroboronprorn. He is to sort          worked in the company at the time.
   give that party a (futile) first shot. That       out the sprawling, inefficient and notori-          When war carne in 2014, and full-scale
   could delay the transition until mid-De-                                                          invasion in 2022, Ukroboronprorn mobil-
   cember. Negotiations will not be easy: the                                                        ised but struggled. There were notable suc-
   opposition's three groupings are made up                                                          cesses, though, Perhaps half a dozen of
   of nine sharply different parties. After the                                                      what were overa hundred operating units
   election Wladyslaw Kosiniak-Karnysz,                                                              were still able to produce competitive pro-
   who leads an agrarian party within Third                                                          ducts. The Pavlohrad chemical plant, for
   Way, said he opposes including "ideologi-                                                         instance, delivered gunpowder, a com-
   cal issues" (such as liberalising abortion)                                                       modity most in demand in any war. The
   in the coalition agreement. Anna Maria Zu-                                                        Luch Design Bureau in Kyiv produced Stug-
   kowska, a Left MP, said that in that case                                                         na anti-tank guided missiles that l1elped
   "farrner issues" would be treated similarly.                                                      stop Russia's march on Kyiv, and the Nep-
       Once it forms a government, the oppo-                                                         tune cruise missiles that famously sank
   sition has pledged to undo r is's efforts to                                                      Russia's Black Sea flagship, the Mosl<va.
   turn Poland into a copy of Viktor Orban's                                                             But it has been private enterprise, inde-
   Hungary. This will be hard. Returning in-                                                         pendent of state-owned Ukroboronprom,
   dependence to the state media and state-                                                          that has set the pace in this war. strike
   owned companies will require removing                                                             drones, the new addition to a conflict that
   the cronies whom Pis has installed, which                                                         otherwise often resembles the first world
   could degenera te into its own form of ero-                                                       war, are almost all produced privately. The
   nyism. Re-establishing an independentju-                                                          new drone entrepreneurs believe it is they
   diciary will mean undoing r ís's politicisa-                                                      who now represent the new face of Ukrai-
   tion of the body that nominates judges.                                                           nian defence innovation. "I see it as my
   That will need legislation, which could be        Can Smetanin turn it around?                    mission to resurrect previous glories," says ��
  The Economist October zist 2023                                                                                                       Europe     47
� Vitaliy Kolesnichenko, the director of Air-     his supporters and to haunt Vladimir Pu-
  Logix, a Kyiv-based drone developer.            tin, whose thugs tried to poison him in
      Making Ukroboronprom exciting, well         2020 and then subjected him to torturous
  paid but less loss-rnaking is one of the co-    conditions in jail when he returned to Rus-
  nundrums facing Mr Smetanin. He says his        sia the following year after being treated in
  focus is on keeping things simple: increas-     Germany. Mr Navalny's rare appearances in
  ing production, restructuring the business      courts (mostly via video link) have turned
  and tackling corruption. There is already       into political speeches, and visits by his
  progress on the first, he reports. Shell pro-   lawyers have kept him in touch with the
  duction is up by anything between iooss to      outside world. "His voice from behind bars
  1,000% in the few months he l1as been in        sounded unbearably loud for Putin," Leo-
  charge, depending on the precise type.          nid Volkov, Mr Navalny's chief of staff,
  Weapon production in every category is in-      wrote on X (formerly Twitter) from Vilnius,
  creasing, despite constant Russian attacks.     Lithuania's capital.
  Reform of the governing structure will in-           So Mr Putin decided to turn down the
  troduce new subholding clusters of com-         volume, and to deprive Mr Navalny of his
  panies, which will be organised around          last channel of communication. On Octo-
  specialisation: armoured vehicles, avia-        ber 13tl1 three of Mr Navalny's lawyers-Va-
  tion, shipbuilding and so on. The 34 of 66      dim Kobzev, Alexei Liptser and Igor Sergu-
  units still organised as state companies        nin-were arrested and accused of "partic-
  will soon be turned into limited-liability      i pa tion in an extremist community"; that
  companies or joint-stock companies with         is, of passing Mr Navalny's words to the
  su pervisory boards. Appointments of fac-       outside world. Olga Mikhailova, another of       Europe's populists
  tory directors, a major source of corruption    his lawyers, had left the country by the
  in the past, will henceforth be done by an      time l1er offices were raided.                   Greater danger
  independent commission.                              Mr Navalny learned the news from a
      A candid ministerial insider suggests       journalist during one of his appeal hear-
  that public-private partnership may be the      ings. "I don't understand what's going on.
  only hope for Ukroboronprom and its team        My lawyer is not here, All the other lawyers
                                                                                                   PARIS
  of young reformers. "Can you turn around        are not l1ere. Nobody is allowed to visit me.
                                                                                                   Marine Le Pen poses a greater threat
  so-odd underfunded, corrupt factories? I        I am isolated and cut off from any informa-
                                                                                                   to Europe than Giorgia Meloni
  don't think so. But can you use thern as        tion," he told the judge. Even the radio in
  platforms for private development? May-         his cell has been turned off, he said, to                HEN GIORGIA MELONI     took overas It-
  be." A high-level government source agrees
  that Mr Smetanin will find the job of rescu-
                                                  plunge hirn into complete silence. Shortly
                                                  after that, news carne that Mr Navalny's
                                                                                                   W      aly's prime minister in October 2022,
                                                                                                   Europe's liberals trembled. Her party, the
  ing Ukraine's slumbering defence giant          fifth lawyer, who was supposed to attend         Brothers of Italy, has roots in post-war neo-
  hard going. "Logically, he has no hope. Bu t    the appeal hearing, had fled the country.        fascism, and her electoral pitch, promising
  we do live in a country called Ukraine, so           The practice of jailing not only dissi-     a clampdown on illegal immigration,
  he does have a chance." •                       dents but also their lawyers has been tried      promised uncompromisingly hard-right
                                                  and tested in Belarus, but is relatively new     politics. Ayearon, the pragmatic Ms Mel-
                                                  in Russia. Sorne 200 Russian defence law-        oni has not turned out to be the disruptive
 Russia                                           yers have signed a peti tion denouncing the      force sorne feared. Which rnakes centrists
                                                  climate of fear in which they operate, and       in neighbouring France worry that this
 Alexei Navalny                                   calling for a strike. Two volunteers have        could help Marine Le Pen.
                                                  now come forward to help Mr Navalny.                 France is not due to hold a presidential
 loses bis lawyers                                     Having no legal representation and no       vote until 2027. Bu t Ms Le Pen has twice
                                                  contact with the outside world makes Mr          made it to the run-off, each time to be beat-
                                                  Navalny especially vulnerable, as he has         en by Emmanuel Macron. The constitution
                                                  been awaiting a transfer to one of Russia's      forbids him from standing for a third con-
 Vladimir Putin's latest attack
                                                  toughest prisons for a year. ("I feel like a     secutive term. Already, between 2017 and
 on his enemy
                                                  tired rock star on the verge of depression.      2022, Ms Le Pen increased her run-off vote
     LEXEI NAVALNY,     Russia's best-known       I've reached the top of the charts and           from 34 % to 41°/o. Under France's central-
 A    opposition leader, has been in captivi-
 ty for more than 1,000 days, and in solitary
                                                  thcrc's nothing more to strive for," he joked
                                                  when he heard of his transfer order.)
                                                                                                   ised presidency, the possibility of a Le Pen
                                                                                                   victory raises particular concern.
 confinement for 224 of them. He was de-              All this is part of the Kremlin's prepara-       Ms Meloni and Ms Le Pen share more
 nied medica! treatment when ill, has been        tion for next March's presidential election,     than hard-right rhetoric. Like Ms Meloni,
 refused visits by his family for more than a     which is sure to be farcical. Mr Pu tin will     Ms Le Pen has tried to distance her party,
 year and is not allowed to make telephone        aim to demonstrate total political control       now called National Rally (RN), from the
 calls. Yet Mr Navalny, ever stoical, has de-     and to keep his opponents demoralised. A         thuggish discourse of its former self: in her
 scribed his imprisonment not as martyr-          few hours after losing his lawyers, Mr Na-       case, the National Front. Unsavoury char-
 dom, bu tas a nuisance anda challenge that       valny somehow managed to convey that by          acters still move in her circle. Bu t Ms Le
 needs to be overcome.                            January 15th he will produce his strategy        Pen has promoted the more respectable-
     The challenges continue to mount. In         for how best to tackle Mr Putin's election,      Iooking among them, notably Jordan Bar-
 August Mr Navalnywas sentenced toan ad-          though i t is not clear how he will now be       della, a zs-year-old Euro-deputy who now
 ditional 19 years in prison for "extrernism''    able to communicate it. "Prison exists only      runs her party. She has also ditched sorne
 on top of the eleven-and-a-half years he         in your mind," Mr Navalny wrote in one of        of the party's most Eurosceptic positions,
 was already serving for "fraud", But even        his early posts. If so, he remains the freest    including a past promise to take France out
 then he continued to communicate with            man in Russia. •                                 of the euro, which proved un popular.          ��
48        Europe                                                                                                   The Economist October zist 2023
     �       Ms Le Pen has worked hard to normalise       ruling coalition. On September rzth Ms Le       budget rules and energy policies.
         the party too. Her suit-wearing deputies         Pen was guest of honour at his party's an-          The visi t seemed to go well. The tandem
         heckle far less than do members of the           nual jamboree in Lombardy, a stronghold.        even made progress on perhaps the most
         other main parliamentary opposition bloc,        Launching her party's campaign for next         tricky dossier, a reform of the EU electricity
         NUPES, a left-wing alliance. The party           june's elections to the European Parlia-        market that is meant to ease the burden of
         wants to show that it is not there just to       ment there, she vowed to "put Europe back       price spikes for European households and
         rant and block, but is ready=Iíke Ms Mel-        in its place". Polis suggest the RN will beat   businesses and to bolster Europe's com-
         oni in Rome-to govern.                           Mr Macron's centrists into second place.        peti ti veness against America and China.
             The chief reason to think that Ms Le Pen         It could be that, as Ms Meloni runs into    Yet behind the scenes France and Germany
         poses a far greater threat is geopolitical. Ms   domestic difficulty, particularly over eco-     continued to argue. That went on until the
         Meloni is no friend of Russia's Vladimir         nomic management, this will rub off on Ms       very day of a meeting of EU energy minis-
         Putin. Ms Le Pen's party, by contrast, took a    Le Pen too. On immigration, argues Domi-        ters on October rzth. And even though they
         €9m loan from a Kremlin-linked bank              nique Reynié, head of Fondapol, a think-        managed to strike a compromise, there is
         (which i t has just paid back). During her       tank, "Meloni demonstrates the impotence        plenty of bad blood. Paris sees the deal as a
         presidential campaign in 2022 Ms Le Pen          of populists." The number of migrants ar-       French victory; the Germans insist that
         briefly used a photo of her next to Mr Putin     riving in Italy has surged on her watch. For    their views largely prevailed.
         in a flyer, pu blished befo re he sent the       now, though, Ms Meloni is also showing              The core of the row is over how EU
         tanks into Ukraine. Although she de-             that the populist right can run a big Euro-     members can subsidise their industries in
         nounced the invasion, ata parliamentary          pean country. That is enough to make            the face of the hefty increases in energy
         hearing in May this year Ms Le Pen contin-       French centrists shudder. •                     prices that followed Russia's invasion of
         ued to defend the referéndum held in Cri-                                                        Ukraine. France wants to extend to all its 56
         mea after Russia annexed the Ukrainian                                                           nuclear power plants instruments called
         territory in 2014.                               EU energy market                                "contracts for difference" ( cfn). These are
             Moreover, in office Ms Meloni has been                                                       guarantees issued by the government that
         a firm backer of NATO, and of arming Uk-         High tension                                    oblige it to stump up for the difference if
         raine. Ms Le Pen, on the other hand, not                                                         market prices turn out lower than an
         only wants to pull France out of NATO's in-                                                      agreed "strike price", but let it pocket the
         tegrated military command. She has also                                                          extra if the market price is higher. Berlin
         argued against the alliance's expansion                                                          wants cfns to be an incentive for invest-
                                                          BERLIN
         evento Sweden and Finland, let alone Uk-                                                         ment in renewable energy that should be
                                                          Paris and Berlin compromise on
         raine. She thinks "Russian paranoia" abou t                                                      applied only to new plants. It worries that
                                                          reform of the electricity market
         NATO on its borders should be "taken into                                                        their use for France's nuclear fleet will de-
         account", lifting an argument straight from            HEN EMMANUEL MACRON and Olaf              ter investment in renewables.
         the Moscow script, and has cri ticised
         France for sending heavy weaponry to Uk-
                                                          W     Scholz met for a cou ple of days of
                                                          talks along with their top ministers in
                                                                                                              The compromise struck in the small
                                                                                                          hours of October rsth says that govern-
         raine. Ms Meloni, says an RN official disap-     Hamburg earlier this month, the French          ments can apply cfns to investments
         provingly, is "very Atlanticist".                president and the German chancellor tried       aimed at "substantially" upgrading exist-
             Ms Meloni has so far played by EU rules,     to presenta united front. They munched          ing plants to increase their capacity or to
         but Ms Le Pen still vows to overturn them.       Fiscnbrotchen (fish sandwiches) with their      prolong their lifetime. But any revenue
         Her scherne is to lean on like-minded gov-       wives and took a tour of Hamburg harbour.       gleaned must not distort competition and
         ernments-in Hungary and Slovakia,                The two-day meeting was meant to reset          trade in the interna! market. It should
         though not for much longer in Poland-to          the most important bilateral relationship       therefore go to consumers, and to ind ustry
         transform the EU from within into an "allí-      within the EU, one that had beco me             only under tight restrictions.
         ance of nations", She wants to hold a refer-     increasingly troubled owing to a host of ac-        "This was absolutely nota German cru-
         endum to amend the Prench constitution           rimonious disagreements on defence, EU          sade against nuclear energy," says Sven
         in arder to entrench its "superiority" over                                                      Giegold, a state secretary at Germany's
         EU law. And she vows to reduce France's                                                          economy ministry. Germany's opposition
         contribution to the EU budget. If others do                                                      to the Prench proposal was sim ply to en-
         not co-operate, insists Jean-Philippe Tan-                                                       sure a leve! playing field. By extending eros
         guy, an RN deputy who helped run Ms Le                                                           to its entire nuclear fleet, France hoped
         Pen's presidential campaign, "we would                                                           that a low strike price fixed with EDF, the
         force their hand", for instance by refusing                                                      state-owned electricity firm, would allow
         to pay. Anything of the sort would begin to                                                      the government to pocket the extra rev-
         pull the EU apart.                                                                               enue from high market prices that it could
             such is the talk. Whether a French pres-                                                     then pass back to ind ustry. This would give
         ident could enact such changes is another                                                        French industry an unfair advantage.
         matter. Even were Ms Le Pen to win the                                                               The compromise will still need to go
         presidency, her party would not by itself                                                        through the EU parliament. Moreover, lots
         secure a parliamentary majority. Any con-                                                        of the detail is unresolved. The mutual irri-
         stitutional change has to be approved ei-                                                        tation is unlikely to subside in the coming
         ther by referendum or by a three-fifths ma-                                                      months. "Both countries are increasingly
         jority in a joint sitting of both houses. Par-                                                   committed to an energy strategy that is
         liament also has to approve any nomina-                                                          viewed by the other as doomed to fail,"
         tion to the Constitutional Council.                                                              writes Shahin Vallée of the German Coun-
             A good measure of Ms Le Pen's distance                                                       cil on Foreign Relations. France will con-
         from Ms Meloni is the fact that her real ally                                                    tinue to double down on nuclear energy;
         in Italy is not the prime minister but Mat-                                                      Germany instead is betting the country's
         teo Salvini, a more populist member of the       The electron wars                               energy future on its renewables. •
 The Economist October zist 2023                                                                                                       Europe       49
The eti's incoherent response to the crisis in Israel has exposed the limits of its geopolitical heft
                                                                          cians have instead looked within: a virtual meeting of 27 national
                                                                          leaders was arranged on October rzth to get everyone on the same
                                                                          page, which was not Mrs von der Leyen's, A fraught personal rela-
                                                                          tionship between her and Charles Michel, who as European Coun-
                                                                          cil president chairs meetings of EU leaders, used to be the stuff of
                                                                          the Brussels cocktail circuit. Now it looks as if it made the bloc
                                                          ((              even more impotent than it might otherwise have been.
                                                                              The episode is damaging for Mrs von der Leyen, who since the
                                                                          war in Ukraine had been the face of a more forceful, geopolitical
                                                                          Europe. Her influence-and that of the EU-seemed to extend be-
                                                                          yond Ukraine, A speech she gave in March calling for a "de-risk-
                                                                          ing" rather than a "decoupling" of economic relations with China
                                                                          had set a new tone in the relationship there; she has worked close-
                                                                          ly with America, too. N ew buzz phrases like "strategic autonorny"
                                                                          and "Tearn Europe" had hinted at the bloc playing its full part in
                                                                          geopolitics, a third power in a bipolar world.
                                                                              But in trying to project a similarly forceful EU in the Middle
                                                                          East, the unity that underpinned Europe's previous efforts was
                                                                          lacking. Sorne countries in Europe, notably Mrs von der Leyen's
                                                                          native Germany, align instinctively with Israel, and emphasise its
                                                                          right to defend itself. But others, such as Spain and Ireland, are
                                                                          more closely attuned to the plight of Palestinians, and warn of an
N
    OTHING SCREAMS      "great power" like an aircraft-carrier. And so    impending humanitarian disaster. Many simply felt the dispute
     on October ioth Thierry Breton, the European commissioner            was beyond the paygrade of the EU's central institutions. Ukraine
hailing from France, raised the idea of the EU availing i tself of such   united the continent: European leaders jointly visited Kyiv after
a seafaring airbase. Alas, even before the merits of a floating jet-      the city beat bacl< Russian attackers last year. This latest crisis di-
launcher for a bloc with neither navy nor air force could be consi-       vides it. This week the German chancellor, Olaf Scholz, travelled to
dered, the EU's geopolitical ambitions fared as poorly as a plane         Israel alone. France's Emmanuel Macron is considering a later tri p.
lurching off the deck and into the drink. In the days around Mr               Mrs von der Leyen might have sensed that conflict in the Mid-
Breton's flight of fancy, a fumbled response to the terrorist attacks     dle East was always going to be uniquely polarising. Israel is both
in Israel on October 7th left Europe looking muddled. A union that        close enough for Europe tocare about-its scientists benefit from
had found its foreign-policy voice over Ukraine has rediscovered          EU funding schemes, Israelí football teams play in European com-
its penchant for cacophony. A bout of chaotic diplomacy and in-           petitions and its crooners participate in the Eurovision Song Con-
terna! squabbling has set back the cause of a "geopolitical EU" to        test-yet too remote for a conflagration there to feel directly
match China and America.                                                  threatening. Every EU country has its own relationship with the
    Europe's response to the crisis started off badly and got steadily    region, coloured by their Muslim and J ewish populations. Most
worse. Beyond the usual lighting-up of buildings in the colours of        fear a spillover of the violence onto their own streets. Anti-Semi tic
whichever country is mourning its dead, the first reaction of note        incidents in Europe have flared since the Ramas strike: France and
to come out of Europe was the announcement that the EU would              Belgium have both endured terrorist attacks. Otl1ers fret that a re-
suspend ali development aid to Palestinians-a serious move,               gional conflagration could result in a new wave of migration to
considering the bloc is their largest donor. The policy was re-           Europe, as happened after wars in syria and Afghanistan.
versed the very same day amid rising concerns in national capitals
about the living conditions of innocent Gazans caught up in the           Eyeless in Gaza
fighting. Later in the week, on October ijth, the cornmission's           Divided or otherwise, it is unlikely Europe would have had much
boss, Ursula von der Leyen, travelled to Israel. The message she de-      sway on Israel's response to being attacked. But its impotence is
livered there was dutifully sympathetic. But national capitals            starting to look serial. The EU for years painted itself as a mediator
fumed that she had failed to emphasise their concern that any re-         in a territorial dispute pitting Azerbaijan against Armenia, yet
sponse from the Israelí side needs to keep within the boundaries          could do little but meekly protest when Azerbaijan turfed tens of
of international law. Government after government briefed that            thousands of Armenians out of a disputed enclave last month. A
she was speaking not for the EU, merely for herself. As the furo re       deal with Tunisia to help cut migration across the Mediterranean
mounted, Mrs von der Leyen's team speedily announced that the             has floundered: Tunisia returned €6om ($63m) the EU had paid it
EU's humanitarian aid to Gaza was to be tripled.                          to seal the agreement. Even closer to home, disorder reigns as Kos-
    The war in Ukraine had given the EU a measure of geopolitical         ovo and Serbia keep tussling despite entreaties from Brussels.
swagger. In the face of war, the club had found new means to be               The ru's fans hoped that its impressive response to Russia's in-
relevant, for example by paying for arms to be sent to hit back at        vasion of Ukraine had exorcised a set of demons which have long
Russian invaders. That kind of unified resolve now looks like a           haunted it: that it is a construct perfectly adept at standardising
one-off. Attempts at forging a cohercnt response to a crisis just be-     phone chargers and making farmers rich, but one that scarcely
yond its shores have been caught up in bickering between nation-          matters when it comes to high poli tics. A fortnight of disunion has
al capitals and even between different EU institutions in Brussels.       made the EU look as plodding as ever: a club that does not shape
Far from projecting power to the outside world, European poli ti-         geopolitics so muchas endure its effects. •
so
Perky manufacturing
                        •        •
                            :>
 � dustry and Security (BIS), America's ex-               Various national regimes diverge in        European Union. For now individual EU
   port-control agency, publishes an "entíty          other meaningful ways. American allies in      members retain discretion over export
   list" of thousands of companies, including         Europe and Asia have not sough t to copy       controls related to their national security.
   plenty of Chinese ones, that are barred            the extensive, extraterritorial reach of       But given the bloc's single market in goods,
   from being sold certain types of technolo-         American sanctions. As a result, Asían and     which lets technology flow across borders
   gy. Japan has no such public entity list. In-      European companies that wish to continue       unimpeded, Eurocrats in Brussels want a
   stead, it has announced a list of 23 specific      selling technology to Chinese customers        greater say.
   types of product which require an export           can in theory establish subsidiaries in           On October jrd the European Commis-
   licence. The Japanese government has as-           places without strict export controls (at      sion presented a list of areas deemed criti-
   siduously avoided mentioning China spe-            least as long as these firms do not rely on    ca! to the bloc's economic security. It
   cifically, for fear of sparking the ire of a big   American inputs).                              would like the ability to impose EU-wide
   trading partner. The Netherlands' controls,            The situation in Europe is complicated     export controls in these areas, which in-
   too, are "country-neutral" and applied to a        further by the division of responsibilities    elude advanced chips, quantum comput-
   handful of p rod ucts.                             between national governments and the           ing and artificial intelligence. It is unclear ��
Fortune tells
� how long it will take the 27 EU members to        lndian plutocracy                                                  and health care. Alkern Laboratories, a
  reach the consensus required to grant the                                                                            maker of generic drugs, helped elevate 11
  commission such powers-if it can be               Wealth                                                             people onto the list, the most of any com-
  reached at all.                                                                                                      pany. Asian Paints lifted ten, Tube Invest-
      Things get blurrier still when it comes       distribution                                                       ments of India, which expanded from pro-
  to enforcing the rules. In most countries                                                                            ducing bicycle parts to various other com-
  the bureaucratic capacity to police export-                                                                          ponents, eight, and Pidilite Industries, a
                                                    MUMBAI
  control regimes is limited. America's BIS,                                                                           maker of adhesives, seven.
                                                    A new survey of the ultra-rich provides
  widely considered to be better endowed                                                                                   The demography and geography of In-
                                                    a window into a changing economy
  than similar agencies in other countries,                                                                            dian wealth is broadening, too. The 20-
                                                    I
  has fewer than 600 em ployees and an an-              NDIAN PLUTOCRACY       can seem set in                         year-old founder of Zepto, a delivery firm,
  nual budget of just over $2oom-a modest              stone. The top two spots in the annual                          makes an appearance, as does, for the first
  figure given the outñt's global remit. Its        rich list compiled by Hurun, which tracks                          time, the 94-year-old founder of Precision
  Asian and European counterparts must              such things, invariably go to the Ambani                           Wires India, a maker of electrical cabling.
  make do wi th far less.                           and Adani clans. This year is no different.                        Most of India's rich still hail from Mumbai
      The relevant agencies often lack the ex-      Mukesh Ambani carne in first, with a for-                          (328), Delhi (199) and Bangalore (100), In-
  pertise to assess exporters' req uests for ali-   tune of $98bn. He displaced Gautam Ada-                            dia's commercial, political and tech capi-
  cence to sell products abroad. That re-           ni, a rival industrialist and last year's win-                     tals, respectively. But 21 other cities made
  quires an understanding of how a particu-         ner, whose riches clocked in at $58bn. Peer                        the cut this year, bringing the total number
  lar piece of equipment could be used. It is       lower down the ranking, though, and the                            of places plutocrats call home to 95.
  almost impossible to tell how such equip-         story is one of change.                                                And although plenty of rich lndians are
  ment will actually be employed once it ar-             First, the ranks of India's ultra-wealthy                     still based abroad, most of the new money
  rives in China. This year the BIS set aside a     are growing. Hurun's lastest list identifies                       is at home. Most of it is also the product of
  relatively piddling sum of $6m for inspec-        1,319 fortunes of $12om or more (its bench-                        the real economy rather than of financia!
  tions to be conducted abroad-and little if        mark for inclusion). rnar is 216 more than                         engineering. Only one private-equity bar-
  any of this is likely to be spent on the Chi-     last year. The main sources of affluence are                       on made the list=Manish l(ejriwal, foun-
  nese mainland, where American inspec-             not wha t you might consider the tradition-                        der of Kedaara Capital, and his family is
  tors are not exactly welcorned with open          al routes to riches, such as industry, fi-                         worth $36om. The biggest rewards in India
  arms. Many of the srs's poorer cousins in         nance and information technology. In-                              still accrue to the builders rather than to
  other countries depend wholly on the ex-          stead they are consumer goods, materials                           the moneyrnen. •
  porting businesses themselves to deter-
  mine the actual end-use of their products,
  something the companies cannot know for
                                                        -
                                                        Crore principals
  sure either,                                          India, Hurun rich list*, August 30th 2023
      The result is a mishmash of opaque
  rules and fitful enforcement actions.                 Top ten members                                                 Wealth by sector, $bn                  Number on rich list
  Manufacturers of sensitive technologies
                                                        Rank, name                        Wealth t, $bn                 o           100              200                300
  are left guessing about what business they
                                                         (1)       Mukesh Ambani           98.0                                                                                     305
  can and cannot do with Chinese firms.
  Four      Taiwanese      firms=Cica-Huntek                                                                                                                                        248
                                                         (2)       Gautam Adani            57.5
  Chemical Technology Taiwan, L&I< Engi-                                                                                                                                            165
                                                         (3)       Cyrus Poonawalla        33.8
  neering, Topeo Scientific and United Inte-                                                                                                                                         7
                                                         (4) Shiv Nadar                    27.7
  grated Services-recently found thern-                                                                                                    lnformation technology                   96
  selves under investigation by Taiwan's                 (5)       Gopichand Hinduja       21.4                                        Financials                                   107
  government after reports surfaced that                 (6)       Dilip Shanghvi          19.9                                     Energy                                          11
  they were involved in building a new net-                                                                                         lndustrials                                     140
                                                                                                                                                                               •e
                                                         (7)       LN Mittal               19.7
  work of chip factories in China. The tour                                                                                        Real estate                                      52
  companies ali deny that they have broken               (8)       Radhakishan Damani      17.4
                                                                                                                               Consumer staples                                     84
                                                                                                I
                                                                                                                                                                               ••
  any sanctions.                                         (9)       Kumar Mangalam Birla 15.2
                                                                                                                              Capital goods                                         71
      Lack of co-ordination may also explain
                                                         (1 O) Niraj Bajaj                 14.6 I                            Communication services                                 33
  why the system is not keeping high tech
  out of China as in tended. In South Korea,
  SI< Hynix is looking into how sorne of its            Wealth by age group, $bn                 Number on rich list    Wealth by state, $bn
  older memory chips ended up in the latest
  smartphone made by Huawei. SI< Hynix
                                                               2        91      552      597             77
  denies doing business with the Chinese te-
  lecoms giant. The Huawei smartphone in                                                                         800
  question, the Mate 60 Pro, also sported ad-
                                                                                                                 600
  vanced microprocessors furnished by
  SMIC, China's biggest chip manufacturer.                                                                       400                              ,___:...._ Maharashtra
  Both Huawei and SMIC feature on the srs's                                                                              Gujarat                             525
  entity list and were thought incapable of                                                                      200     126
  such chipmaking feats. Export comptrol-
  lers in America and its allies are still trying         0.4                                                      o
  to work out how exactly the two companies             25 and        26-45    46-65    66 and        Unknown
                                                                                                                                                       5     1O    50         100
                                                        under                            o ver
  pulled them off. This is unlikely to be the
                                                        *Wealth above 1,000 erare rupees ($120m) tshared with family
                                                                                                                                                        _1-1-1
  last China-related surprise they have to              Sources: Hurun India¡ The Economist
                                                                                                                         f- Overseas 169                   No entries
  contend with. •
56    Business                                                                                                The Economist October zist 2023
     Chipmaking                                      highly standardised in order to minimise        by America's export controls from buying
                                                     the share of chips that turn out faulty.        ASML's EUV machines, since they all rely on
     Lithography                                     Since ASML has long been the only game in       bits and bobs of American origin (see earli-
                                                     town for cutting-edge chips, that standar-      er article). It has also struggled to develop
     les so ns                                       disation means that fabs are being de-          lithography machines of its own. The cur-
                                                     signed around its machines, which are the       rent American restrictions do not, how-
                                                     size of a double-decker bus. The fabs that      ever, explicitly cover nanoimprint tech-
                                                     chipmakers are currently busy putting up        nology. That leaves Canon free to sell it to
     Canon tries to crack ASML's dominance
                                                     around the world will not suddenly switch       customers across the Sea of Japan-at least
     of circuit-etching tools
                                                     to nanoimprint lithography. It may take         for the time being and perhaps for longer.
        -
        Bad and worse
                                                                                                       business spending. As charities run so
                                                                                                       many of the strip's schools and hospitals,
                                                                                                       and the PA keeps the lights on, Hamas is
        GDP per person, 2015 prices, Ql 2000=100                                                       a ble to spend lavishly elsewhere.
                                                                                                 200       It finances its spending with an adroit
                                                                                                       tax system. Though Gaza gets no imports
                                                                                                 150   from Israel, it does get them from Egypt,
                                                                                                 100
                                                                                                       from which trade had recen tly increased,
                                                                                                       and the West Bank, Ha mas taxes food and
                                                                                 Gaza
                                                                                           i i
                                                                                                  50   fuel crossing the Egyptian border; picks up
         1   1   1   1    1   1        1    1    1     1    1    1           1    1    1
� should now have little trouble meeting the                      Thus fatigue and frustration should not       growth target in sight, policymakers may
  government's growth target of "around                       give way to complacency. At the IMF's an-         now be tempted to wai t and see how the re-
  5°/o" for this year. UBS, a bank, raised its                nual meeting, Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas,          covery evolves before pursuing further
  forecast for 2023 from 4.8o/o to 5.2%.                      the fund's chief economist, called for            stimulus. In the tace of a hostile America
      The source of the growth was also en-                   "forceful action" from China's government         and turbulent geopolitics, it appears keen
  couraging. Consumption contributed al-                      to restructure struggling property develop-       to keep its fiscal powder dry.
  most 95°/o of it, noted Sheng Laiyun of Chi-                ers, contain financia! dangers and rede-              Still, it is hard to see how deflation
  na's National Bureau of Statistics. There                   ploy fiscal measures to help households.          strengthens China's position. The IMF now
  are signs that the country's beleaguered                        The government has taken sorne steps.         thinks that China's prices, as measured by
  households may be coming out of their                       It has allowed a growing number of local          its GDP deflator, will fall this year com-
  shells. Demand for longer-term loans is                     governments to issue "refinancing bonds",         pared with last. Combined with the yuan's
  growing; the saving rate, adjusted for the                  whích will help clear late payments to sup-       weakness, G DP could shrink in do llar
  season, tell below 30% of disposable in-                    pliers and replace the more expensive debt        terms. Indeed, China's economy will gain
  come for the first time since the pandemic,                 owed by local-government financing vehi-          little ground on America's in the next five
  according to Yi Xiong of Deutsche Bank,                     eles, The authorities seem keen to prevent        years, according to the fund (see chart 2).
      One reason for this may be improve-                     any of these vehicles from defaulting.                The contrast with the IMF's April fore-
  ments in the job market. Urban unemploy-                        But preserving financia! stability is not     cast is stark. In the space of six months, the
  ment tell to 5% in September from 5.2°/o in                 the same as reviving growth. The govern-          fund has shorn off more than $15trn, in to-
  the previous month and the average work-                    ment's efforts to stimulate demand have so        day's dollars, from China's cumulative GDP
  week lengthened. Household debt burdens                     far been both piecerneal and grudging. Its        for the years from 2023 to 2028. Few econo-
  have also eased a little. Chinese policymak-                fear of doing too mucl1 seems to ou tweigh        mies can match China's scale. And that in-
  ers have instructed banks to cut the inter-                 its fear of doing too little. With the official   eludes the scale of its disappointments. •
  est rate on outstanding mortgages in line
  with the lower rates available for new ones.
  On October 13tl1 the central bank an-                       Financial threats
  nounced that the interest rate on existing
  mortgages, worth zi.ztrn yuan ($3trn), l1ad                 The hangover worsens
  been lowered by 0.73 percentage points,
  which should free up over ioobn yuan of
  spending power ayear.
      But the good news for households was
  not matched by good news for houses. The
                                                              SHANGHAI
  property rnarket remains dangerously
                                                              China's banks may be loaded up with hidden bad loans
  weak, The amount of residential floor
  space sold by property developers in Sep-                         HEN JINZHOU BANI(,         in north-east-   it is possible that a large portion of Jin-
  tember was 21 % below that sold last year.
  Increasingly, China's developers must ac-
                                                              W      ern China, showed signs of distress
                                                              at the start of the year, state media suggest-
                                                                                                                zhou's lending book is unrecognised bad
                                                                                                                debt. The bank has said almost nothing
  tually finish buildings before they can sell                ed that a billionaire named Li Hejun might        about its condition since earlier this year.
  thern. Completed buildings accounted for                    be to blame. Mr Li, a solar-panel tycoon,             If hidden bad debts such as these lurk at
  almost a quarter of sales in September,                     was once China's richest man. His firm was        Jinzhou Bank, they may lurk elsewhere,
  compared with less than 13% in 2021.                        known to have tigh t Iinks to the bank. And       too. This is worrying, for Chinese finance
      The threat of deflation lingers, too. Chi-              it was not long after word spread that he         is already in a mess. Local governments are
  na's annual nominal growth, which in-                       had been arrested that [inzhou Bank sus-          struggling to repay lenders at least 65trn
  eludes inflation, was 3.5% in the third                     pended trading in its shares and told inves-      yuan ($9trn) in off-balance-sheet debts.
  quarter, lower than the real, inflation-ad-                 tors it would restructure its operations.         Many of the country's big property devel-
  justed figure. This suggests that prices of                     Oddly, the bank's finances look to have       opers have already defaulted on offshore
  goods and services fell by almost 1.4 %, the                been in good shape, The firm's overall bad-       bonds and owe trillions of yuan-worth of
  second drop in a row (see chart on previous                 debt level was low in the first half of 2022,     unbuilt homes to local residents. China's
  page), which makes the currentperiod Chi-                   the last period for which detailed informa-       largest wealth-rnanagement firms have
  na's worst deflationary spell since 2009.                   tion is available. Although one concerning        started to default on payments owed to in-
                                                              figure sticks out-more than 50% of its            vestors. Given that the type of hidden debts
   -
   Second thoughts
                                                              personal-business loans had become non-
                                                              performing-this type of loan comprised
                                                                                                                possibly on [inzhou's balance-sheet have
                                                                                                                so far received little attention, the bank's
   China's G DP relative to America's, 0/o                    just iss of its total. Srnall- and micro-enter-   troubles ought to come as a warning.
   At market exchange rates                                   prise loans, which make up about half of              Problems with loans to the smallest
                                                         90   the bank's loan book, appeared normal,            firms began with covíd-io. As China shut
                              April 2023 forecast
                                                              with only 3% having gone sour.                    down, the central bank put a moratorium
                                                         80       But was this the whole story? In theory,      on the repayment of loans for small- and
                                                              there is no meaningful distinction be-            micro-enterprises until June 2020 in order
                                                         70
                                                              tween personal-business loans and small-          to halt a wave of defaults. After less than
                 Actual              October 2023        60   and micro-enterprise loans, says Jason            three months, officials estimated that
                                     forecast                 Bedford, a veteran banking analyst. The           7oobn yuan in payments had been de-
                                                         50
                                                              two types are used in similar ways and            ferred. The moratorium has been extended
                                                         40   should offer similar risk. In practice,           several times since then, with officials cit-
                                                              though, there is a crucial difference: small-     ing the continued impact of covid. No esti-
   2010           15           20            25     28        and micro-enterprise loans remain co-             ma te for the total amount of unpaid loans
   Source: IMF
                                                              vered by a covid-era moratorium allowing          exists and banks will not be required to
                                                              banks to avoid recognising bad debts. Thus        disclose them publicly until next year.       ��
62        Finance & economics                                                                                          The Economist October zist 2023
     �       The moratorium has also coincided                                                                 wunderkind, and cz was his shadowy foil.
         with another state initiative. In order to                                                            Keen to avoid being pinned down by na-
         stimulate the economy, the central govern-                                                            tional laws, his exchange was based "no-
         ment has leant on banks to extend loans to                                                            where", Binance had long been under in-
         the smallest firms, and to do so at the low-                                                          vestigation for possible money-laundering
         est possible interest rates. Although such                                                            and criminal-sanctions violations by
         policies have been attempted for years,                                                               America's justice department. cz had in-
         banks have been resistant, preferring to                                                              vested in FTX befare the two turned on
         lend to the large, often state-owned com-                                                             each other. Then SBF publicly goaded cz
         panies with which they have relationships                                                             about his legal problems, anda tweet by cz
         already. This time the policy has worked,                                                             probably helped set off the run on FTX.
         however. A crackdown on the banking in-                                                                   Now, with FTX out of the picture and
         dustry, culminating in the arrest of the                                                              SBF on trial, charged with various kinds of
         president of one of China's largest com-                                                              fraud, which he denies, cz looks a lot like
         mercial banks last year, has made bosses                                                              the last man standing in crypto. Binance
         more willing to follow official edicts.                                                               utterly dominates crypto trading (see
             As a result, at the beginning of the year                                                         chart). A whopping 40-50% of it by volume
         about 28o/o of all loans in China had been                                                            takes place on the platform. The big ques-
         given to small- and micro-enterprises, up                                                             tion, which cz discussed in an interview
         from 24 % at the end of 2019. Many of these                                                           with The Economist in Bahrain on October
         loans represent simply the renewal of old-                                                            nth, is how Binance will now evolve.
         er, unpaid debts. It is well known that                                                                   Por as long as crypto exchanges have ex-
         small firms struggled during the pandem-                                                              isted, financial laws have been ill-suited to
         ic. Despite this, there has hardly been an        Crypto's future                                     them. Given the nature of the assets that
         uptick in non-performing loans, notes Ali-                                                            are traded, they are in effect hybrids of ex-
         cia Garcia Herrero of Natixis, a bank.            Rivals crushed                                      changes, brokers and settlement firms. If
             Another result has been what sorne                                                                crypto exchanges were largely unregulated
         view as a catastrophic mispricing of assets.                                                          that was at least partly because few laws
         Small firms are usually judged to pose the                                                            had been wri tten to govern thern.
         greatest risks, but loans to small- and mi-                                                               But, in the wake of FTX's collapse, the
                                                           ZALLAQ
         cro-enterprises have nevertheless been                                                                situation is starting to change. Legislators
                                                           After rrx's implosion, will Binance
         provided at rock-bottorn interest rates.                                                              and regulators around the world are rush-
                                                           come over to the light side?
         Banks have offered them at an average of                                                              ing to pen new laws or crack down on the
         4 % annual interest, down from 6% or so in        ''THE LUI<E SI<YWALI<ER        and the Darth        ind ustry. This l1as two big implications for
         2019. To make matters worse, a recent                   Vader of crypto." That is how Michael         exchanges. First, regulators want to make
         surge in long-term deposits, which are re-        Lewis, author of "Going Infinite", a recent         sure that they are not mishandling or im-
         munerated at higher rates, means banks'           book about the rise and fall of Sam Bank-           properly using customer funds, as FTX did.
         margins have been sq ueezed even tigh ter.        man-Fried, founder of FTX, a now-bank-              Second, they want to ensure that exchang-
             Only a few lenders have hinted at the         rupt crypto exchange, is supposed to have           es are not facilitating financia! crimes.
         amount of loans they have deferred. Min-          described the intense rivalry between his               cz insists that customers can trust his
         sheng Bank, one of China's largest, said in       subject and Changpeng Zhao (pictured),              exchange. "There are so many ways" Bi-
         its mid-term report last year that it had         the boss of Binance, a rival firm.                  nance is structured differently to FTX, he
         provided 212bn yuan in renewed loans and              Until Mr Bankman-Fried's exchange               says. rnc firm has met heavy redemption
         deferred payments in the previous six             collapsed with an $8bn hole in its balance-         requests from clients, including in choppy
         months, equivalent to 9º/0 or so of its entire    sheet, the analogy seemed apt. The two              rnarkets. He points out that the Securities
         corporate loan book. Since then, it l1as de-      men controlled the two largest crypto ex-           and Exchange Commission (ssc), Ameri-
         clined to make similar disclosures. The           changes in the world. Both were known by            ca's financia! regulator, spent a long time
         central bank is providing funds to banks,         acronyms: "sBF" and "cz". Young, talented           investigating Binance for this kind of mis-
         which can be used to support specific parts       and seemingly in favour of playing nice             cond uct. The regulator could provide "zero
         of the economy. In a recent report it said        with regulators, SBF was something of a             evidence" that Binance was commingling
         that it had handed out z.ztrn yuan in loans                                                           user funds, says cz, "which actually helps
         for small firms in the first half of this year.
             Any loan moratorium comes with a
                                                            -
                                                            CZ-peasy
                                                                                                               us to prove that we don't do it." Other com-
                                                                                                               plaints by the SEC, including that the com-
         gamble: that a period of forgiveness will al-      Eight biggest centralised crypto exchanges         pany issued securities without a licence,
         low struggling companies to get back on            by trading volume, June 2023, $bn                  are still to be heard in court.
         their feet after a shock. The initial decision                  o        50   100   150   200   250       Yet it is the second requirement that
         may have saved tens of thousands of firms                                                             might turn out to be trickier for Binance. In
                                                            Binan ce
         and even a few banks from going under.                                                                December Reuters, a news service, report-
         N ow the fate of the pile of debt-however          Upbit                                              ed that prosecutors at America's justice de-
         big it may be-depends on China's eco-              OKX                                                partment were split on whether or not to
         nomic fortunes over the coming months.             Coinbase                                           charge the firm with money-laundering or
         Although the purchasing-managers' index                                                               sanctions violations. According to Bloom-
                                                            Bybit
         for manufacturers shows that the outlook                                                              berg, another news service, Binance with-
         for large companies has improved slightly,         Kucoin                                             drew its application to become a licensed
         the one for small and medium-sized com-            Bitget                                             exchange in Singapore in 2021, where it
         panies has continued to contraer. The eco-         MEXC                                               was based at the time, in part owing to its
         nomic hangover from the covid era has lin-         Sou rce: Coi nGecko
                                                                                                               inability to comply with strict anti-money
         gered. It could now be about to intensify. •                                                          laundering rules. The SEC quotes evidence ��
  The Economist October zist 2023                                                                                      Finance & economics       63
� from a former employee, who admitted            zen "the small number of accounts" solic-       in addition to such policies, a full licence
  that the company thought it was an "unli-       i ting donations in support of Hamas, to        means that authorities look at "your wallet
  censed securities exchange" and "did not        comply with international sanctions laws.       infrastructure, your security, your custom-
  want to be regulated, ever"                          The test for the firm now will be in       er support policies, your refund policy.
     cz dismisses this as "priva te chat by an    Europe. America is cracking down on cryp-       They look at your whole business."
  ex-employee", and adds it "was not the          to, and is unlikely to pass new laws soon.          A crypto exchange can no longer argue
  right thing by far". He notes that Binance is   By contrast, European legislators have          that it cannot comply with national rules
  "the most licensed crypto firm in the           written a "Markets in Crypto-Assets" or         because they do not exist. Failing to meet
  world", with permission to operate in 18        "MicA" frarnework, which entered into           Europe's standards would revea! that Bi-
  countries across Asia, Europe and the Mid-      force in June. Exchanges can keep operat-       nance does notwant, or is unable, to follow
  dle East (its American arm operares in 44       ing under existing licences until 2026, un-     even clear laws. In "Star Wars", Yoda warns
  states). Binance now appears to be playing      less refused under MiCA, which will re-         Luke Skywalker that it is easier to amass or
  nice with various authorities. A spokesper-     quire strong policies against money-laun-       wield power by turning to the Dark Side. It
  son confirms that in recent days it has fro-    dering and terrorist financing. cz says that,   is harder to operate in the light. •
The red metal no longer tells investors much about the global economy
a reas, local socioeconomic growth, and building women's capacity in                                       Permodalan Nasional Madani
leadership roles.
                                                                                                                                                67
     � turned out to belong to texts wri tten by a      soon increased that to over sim. To get the       ons the spur of competition means the
       Greel< philosopher called Philodemus of          ball rolling, an initial challenge was posted     equivalent of ten years' worth of research
       Gadara. Until then, they had been known          on Kaggle, a website that hosts data-sci-         has been done in the past three months.
       only from mentions in other works. (Cíce-        ence contests, to improve the ink-detec-              An active community of volunteers is
       ro, though, was a fan of his poetry.)            tion model developed by Dr Parsons.               now applying the new tools to the two
           Around 500 scrolls remain unopened.               More than 1,200 teams entered. Many          scanned scrolls. Mr Friedman thinks there
       Given the damage it does, physical unroll-       competed in subsequent challenges to im-          is a 75°/o chance that someone will claim
       ing is no longer attempted. Instead the fo-      prove the tools for ink detection and "seg-       the grand prize of $700,000, for identify-
       cus has shifted towards finding ways to un-      mentation", as the process of transforming        ing four separate passages of at least 140
       wrap them virtually, by using 30 scans of        the 30 scans into 20 images of the scroll's       characters, by the end of the year. "It's a
       the rolled-up scrolls to produce a series of     surface is known. Scru tinising segmented         race now," he says. "We will be reading en-
       legible 20 images. The pioneer of this ap-       images from Banana Boy, Dr Handmer real-          tire books next year."
       proach is W. Brent Seales, a computer sci-       ised that the crackle pattern signified the           Being able toread Banana Boy would in-
       entist at the University of Kentucky, In         presence of ink. Mr Farritor used this find-      deed just be the beginning. Only a small
       2009 he arranged for Banana Boy, andan-          ing to fine-tune a machine-learning model         fraction of Greek and Roman literature has
       other scroll known as Fat Bastard, to be         to find more crackles, then used those            survived into modern times. Bu t if the
       scanned in a computerised tomography             crackles to further optimise his model, un-       hundreds of other scrolls recovered from
       ( CT) x-ray machine, of the sort usually used    til eventually it revealed legible words.         the villa could be scanned and read using
       for medica! scans. This prod uced detailed            Mr Nader used a different approach,          the same tools, i t would drama tically ex-
       images of their interna! structures for the      starting with "unsupervised pretraining"          pand the number of texts from antiquity.
       first time. But the ink within the scrolls       on the segmented images, asking a mach-           Dr Seales says he hopes the Herculaneum
       could not be made out.                           ine-learning system to find whatever pat-         scrolls will contain "a completely new, pre-
           In 2015 Dr Seales analysed a different       terns it could, with no externa! hints. He        viously unknown text" Mr Friedman is
       carbonised scroll found in 1970 at En-Gedi,      tweaked the resulting model using the             hoping for one of the lost Homeric epic po-
       near the Dead Sea in Israel. It had been         winning entries from the Kaggle ink-de-           ems in particular.
       written using a metal-rich ink, which            tection challenge. After seeing Mr Farri-             Even more important, ali this might in
       stood out strongly from the papyrus in x-        tor's early results, he applied this model to     turn revive interest in excavating the villa
       ray images. (The text turned out to be the       the same segment of Banana Boy, and               more fully, says Mr Friedman. The existing
       Book of Leviticus.) This confirmed that, in      found what appeared to be sorne letters. He       scrolls were recovered from a single corner
       the right circumstances, digitally unroll-       then iterated, repeatedly refining his mod-       of what scholars believe is a much larger li-
       ing a carbonised scroll and reading the          el using the found letters. Slowly but surely     brary spread across severa! floors. If so, it
       contents could indeed be done.                   its ability to find more letters increased. All   might contain thousands of scrolls in
           The next step was to combine the exist-      the results were assessed by papyrologists        Greel< and Latín.
       ing approaches into a new one. In 2019 Dr        befare the prizes were awarded.                       One reason that classical texts are so
       Seales arranged for Banana Boy, Fat Bastard                                                        scarce is that the papyrus upon which they
       and four fragments of other scrolls to be        Multae manos onus levius reddunt                  were written does not survive well in
       scanned at high resolution using the Dia-        No less important than the technology is          Europe's temperate, rainy climate. So it is a
       mond Light Source in Britain, a particle ac-     the way the effort has been organised. It is,     delicious irony, notes Dr Seales, that the
       celerator that can produce much more po-         in effect, the application of the open-           carbonisation of the scrolls, which rnakes
       werful x-ray light than a CT scanner. He         source software-development method, Mr            thern so difficult toread, is also what pre-
       then paired infrared images of the frag-         Friedrnan's area of expertise, to an archae-      served thern for posterity-and that frag-
       ments, in which the ink can be readily           ological puzzle. "It's a unique collaboration     ments of scrolls that disintegrated when
       seen, with x-ray scans of the same frag-         between tech founders and academics to            they were unrolled physically would even-
       ments in which it cannot.                        bring the past into the present using the         tually provide the key to unrolling the rest
           Earlier this year Stephen Parsons, a         tools of the future," l1e says. Dr Seales reck-   of them virtually. •
       graduate student working with Dr Seales,
       fed the two sets of images into a machine-
       learning model, which used the infrared
       scans to teach i tself how to recognise the
       faint signs of ink in the x-ray ones. By ap-
       plying the resulting model to x-ray images
       from the rolled-up scrolls it would be pos-
       sible to reveal their contents. At this point,
       deciphering the scrolls had, in theory, been
       reduced to a very complex software pro-
       blem. But that software still needed to be
       improved and scaled up.
           Enter Nat Friedman, a technology exec-
       utive and investor with an interest in an-
       cient Rome. Mr Friedman offered to help
       fund Dr Seales's work. Overa whisky, they
       decided that the best way to accelerate
       things was to organise a contest, with priz-
       es handed out for completing various
       tasks. Mr Friedman and Daniel Gross, an-
       other entrepreneur, launched the Vesuvius
       Challenge in March, with a prize fund of
       $250,000. Other tech-industry donors             Purple prose
 The Economist October zist 2023                                                                                      Science & technology     69
Theweather
underground
What a Serbian cave can tell you about
the weather 2,500 years ago
I
    F YOU LIVE  in northern Europe or Nortl1
  America, your weather depends partly
on what the northern polar jet stream is up
to.Jet streams are powerful and persistent
winds that snake around the Earth from
west to east, severa! miles above the sur-
face. The meanderings of the northern po-
lar jet stream can bring cold air down from
the Arctic over the American Midwest, or
send waves of Atlan tic storms crashing
into Ireland or Scandinavia.
    As with most sorts of weather, scien-
tists suspect that the flow of the jet streams
is being affected by climate change. Data        A record, if you know how to look
from the past century and a half suggest
that the northern jet stream has become          ment's eigh t pro to ns are joined by ten neu-   northern Canada almost as far as the west-
stronger over that time. But a century is not    tro ns instead of the usual eight. Water         ern coast of Ireland. It is thought to be
all that long in climatic terms, and it is not   from the Atlantic has less. By examining         caused by the melting of Greenland's ice
entirely clear whether the strengthening is      the proportions of that isotope in the sta-      sheets and the weakening of the great oce-
a natural phenomenon.                            lagrnite's layers, the researchers hoped to      anic conveyor belts that transport warmer
     In a paper published in Geology, Miaofa     be able to detect when Serbia had been ex-       water from the tropics into the higher
Li at Fujian Normal University and Slobo-        posed to more Atlantic storms or more            northern latitudes. Perhaps more data,
dan Markovic at University of Novi Sad, in       Mediterranean ones, and thus what the jet        gleaned from other stalagmites in other
Serbia, shed new light on that question.         stream had been doing.                           caves, might help unravel the mystery. •
Climate scientists routinely examine an-             Drs Li and Markovic and their col-
cient air trapped in polar ice to glean in-      leagues examined two stalagmites, one
sights into the state of the climate hun-        38omm specimen from Cerjanska and one            Evolutionary biology
dreds or even thousands of years ago. The        238mm one from Prekonoska. Using traces
researchers point out that something very        of two other elements, uranium and thori-        Why bedbugs are
similar can be accornplished by looking at       um, they were able to date both stalag-
the chernical makeup of rock formations          mites. The one from Cerjanska grew be-           everywhere
in a pair of Serbian caves.                      tween 434BC and 1913, while the one from
    As wíth many caves, the floors of both       Prekonoska Cave was formed between
Cerjanska Cave and Prekonoska Cave, both         798BC and 404. They then analysed 581
                                                                                                  Like bacteria, they have become
in Serbia's south-east, are dotted with thin     samples of an oxygen-containing mineral
                                                                                                  resistant to chemical attack
spires of rock called stalagmites. These are     called calcium carbonate.
formed, very slowly, by water as it drips            The researchers conclude that the                o ERNEST HEMINGWAY, Paris was a
down from the rock above. Each droplet
carries dissolved minerals. If water drips
                                                 North Atlantic jet stream seems to be
                                                 stronger today than it has been at any time
                                                                                                  T   movable feast. To a bedbug, so are Pari-
                                                                                                  sians. In videos on social media, the seats
onto the same spot over many years, asta-        during the past 2,500 years. And their con-      of the city's metro are seen swarming with
lagmite gradually forms as the minerals          fidence in their method was boosted when         bedbugs, tiny insects no bigger than an ap-
are deposited. Crucially, analysing the          they were able to see in the rocks the signa-    ple pip, which feed on human blood.
minerals from which the stalagmite is            tures of climatic events known to have               The health risk from bedbugs is minor:
made can reveal information about the wa-        happened from other sources, such as the         itchy bites and a small risk of allergies and
ter that made it.                                Roman Warm Period, which lasted be-              secondary infections. As the present panic
    The researchers were interested in Ser-      tween 300Bc and 200, and the Dark Ages           suggests, the bigger impact tends to be psy-
bia specifically beca use of how its location    Cold Period, which ran from roughly 300 to       chological, says Clive Boase, an entomolo-
affects its weather. The sort of rain the        700. Intriguingly, the data suggest the jet      gist and pest-control consultant. Mosqui-
country gets depends on the strength of          stream was stronger during cooler periods        toes, leeches and other parasites are un-
the northern polar jet stream. When it is        and weaker during warmer ones-the op-            pleasant, but do not colonise your home. If
blowing strongly, it tends to blow in clouds     posite of the trend being seen today.            a traveller brings bedbugs back from their
that formed over the Atlantic Ocean. When            Why the modern jet stream appears to         holidays, they can start an infestation that
it is weak, clouds tend to drift in from the     be doing the opposite is not yet clear. The      can be very difficult to shift.
Medi terranean instead.                          researchers raise as one possibility the at-         Schadenfreude among the non-French is
    Those two bodies of water have unique        mospheric influence of something called          unwise. The story is not so much one of
chemical signatures. Water from the Medi-        the North Atlantic Warming Hole. This is a       bad hygiene and dirty trains as i t is another
terranean has more of arare isotope of oxy-      persisten! blob of unusually cool water          cautionary tale of globalisation, climate
gen known as oxygen-is, in which that ele-       that stretches from the Hudson Strait in         change and evolutionary biology. Warm ��
70     Science & technology                                                                                                         The Economist October zist 2023
     � cities provide ideal environments for bed-                         invulnerable to at least sorne insecticides.     pores through which they breathe. Tem-
       bugs. Cheap travel helps them spread. And                              Tha t growing resistance has been            peratures above 45ºC are also fatal. Sorne
       after decades of widespread use, the chem-                         boosted by a depleting arsenal of cherni-        pest-control firms therefore offer to heat-
       ical insecticides used to kill them are los-                       cals to hurl against them. Fumigants such        treat affected furniture in insulated tents,
       ing their power.                                                   as hydrogen cyanide, sulphur dioxide and         or even to roast entire rooms. But such
           Bedbugs are resurgent everywhere. A                            DDT itself are now regarded in most places       treatments are expensive.
       decade ago New York went through a simi-                           as too toxic to use. Pyrethroids, which are          New insecticides, to which the bugs
       lar panic to Paris's today. Figures from                           the active ingredients in many commer-           lack resistance, could probably be invent-
       Switzerland's Pest Advisory Service, which                         cially available insecticide sprays, are saf-    ed. But for now at least, says Mr Boase, the
       maintains one of the few long-term data-                           er, but become less effective every year.        rnarket does not exist to justify much cor-
       sets about the insects, show that in the de-                           Exterminators are therefore turning to       porate research. And since the bugs do not
       cade to 2005, bedbug complaints in Zurich                          other avenues of attack. Diatomaceous            spread diseases, public-health bodies have
       numbered around 20 ayear. A decade la ter,                         earth, a white silicate powder, can kill the     more pressing priorities. If bedbugs con-
       they had sextupled (see chart). Numbers                            bugs by desiccating them. Polymer sprays         tinue to spread, though, those incentives
       fell during covid-io lockdowns, but they                           can trap thern: certain oils can block the       could start to shift. •
       have risen since. "There won't be a city
       without bedbugs," says Mr Boase.
           Humans probably acquired bedbugs
       with their first addresses. DNA analysis
       suggests that the pests are descended from
                                                                                            How to predict a coin toss
       parasites that prey on bats, with which hu-
       mans shared caves, and on birds, which
                                                                                                      Coins are fair. Their tossers, less so
       may have nested in early thatched roofs. In
       evolutionary terms, that makes bedbugs a                               EGEND HOLDS     that the city of Portland,
       comparatively recent affliction. That may
       explain the one bit of good news about
                                                                           L   Oregon, was nearly called Boston. A
                                                                           coin toss in 1845 between Francis Petty-
       them. Mosquitoes spread malaria, dengue                             grove, who hailed from a different Por-
       fever and yellow fever. Bu t no human                               tland, in Maine, and Asa Lovejoy, from
       pathogen is known to use bedbugs as a vec-                          Boston (the one in Massachusetts) even-
       tor=-perhaps because there has not been                             tually decided the matter. But things
       time for one to evolve the ability.                                 might have turned out differently, per
           The insects thrive in warm environ-                             Frantisek Bartos, a graduate student at
       ments with plenty of dark places to hide.                           the University of Amsterdam, if people
       Cities, and crowded blocks of flats, are ide-                       were not such wobbly tossers.
       al. The bugs shelter in the crannies of fur-                            Mr Bartos was interested in a predic-
       ni ture, in mattress seams or in cracks in                          tion made by Persi Diaconis, Susan
       walls, coming out to feed at night. Warm,                           Holmes and Richard Montgomery, a
       centrally heated homes accelerate their                             group of American mathematicians. In
       life-cycles, making the problem worse-as                            2007 the trio analysed the physics of a
       does a warming climate.                                             flipping coin and noticed something
           The introduction and widespread use                             intriguing. Besides sending it somer-           We'II take any advantage we can get
       of insecticides such as DDT in the after-                           saulting end-over-end, most people
       math of the second world war carne close                            imparta slight rotation to a coin. That         mans' apparent inability to throw
       to eliminating the bugs from most rich-                             causes the axis about which the coin is         straight. Mr Bartos was not the first
       world houses. But that chernical assault ex-                        flipping to drift while it is in the air, a     person to collect statistics on coin tosses.
       erted a powerful evolutionary pressure on                           phenornenon called precession.                  But he is the first to have done so on a
       the insects to develop resistance to the poi-                           After crunching the numbers, the            scale large enough to detect the bias. (A
       sons. Just as bacteria have evolved resis-                          physicists concluded that a coin thrown         previous effort of 40,000 tosses, con-
       tance to many of the antibiotics once used                          by a human should exhibit a subtle but          ducted by two students at the University
       to kill them, modern bedbugs are almost                             persistent bias. There was about a 51o/o        of California, Berkeley, lacked the statis-
                                                                           chance that a coin would land the same          tical power to confirm the theory.)
        -
        Sleepless nights
                                                                           way upas it had been prior to being
                                                                           thrown. If it was heads-up in the throw-
                                                                                                                               A 50.8°/o chance is only very slightly
                                                                                                                           different from perfect fairness. But Mr
        Zurich, complaints about bedbugs                                   er's hand, in other words, it would be          Bartos points out that it is bigger than the
                                                                    175    slightly more likely to land heads-up too.      advantage enjoyed by a casino in most
                                                                           Or at least, that was the prediction.           varieties of blackjack, And in sorne situa-
                                                                    150        Enter Mr Bartos, and his admirable          tions it may matter. In 2019 Sue Cudilla
                                                                    125    dedication to empiricism. He convinced          became mayor of Araceli, a town in the
                                                                           48 volunteers to perform 350,707 coin           Philippines, on the toss of a coin after the
                                                                    100
                                                                           tosses, using everything from an Indian         election had been declared a dead heat.
                                                                    75     two-rupee piece to a Swiss two-franc            Even more importantly, a coin toss can
                                                                           coin. His data confirmed what the phys-         determine who bowls or bats first in
                                                                     50
                                                                           ics had predicted. The coins landed             cricket. Professional athletes spend
                                                                     25    same-side up 50.8% of the time.                 thousands of dollars and hours of train-
                                                                      o        The statistics revealed that the coins      ing in search of marginal gains. Perhaps
        1994      2000       05       10       15          22
                                                                           themselves showed no particular bias.           they should look to the loose change in
                                                                           The determining factor was indeed hu-           the umpire's pocket.
        Source: Health and Environment Department, City of Zurich
                                                                                                                                            71
     � norms of dernocracies" He has long been              Mr Lukianoff and Ms Schlott offer a cri-                          not cancellers. Teach them that life is nota
       concerned about the authoritarian right          tique of the left, pointing out how cancel                            battle between wholly good and bad peo-
       but says it is reasonably well understood        culture has eroded academic freedom at                                ple. Not every "harrn" that someone, some-
       ( democracy-deniers and all), whereas the        universities. But they are equally critica! of                        where calls out is really harmful. Educat-
       intellectual history of the authoritarian        the right. They note that sorne of Plorida's                          ing children about differences, rather than
       left is "oddly unexplored territory",            new education laws (including one that                                coddling and insulating thern, is essential.
           How did views that are unpopular with        bans certain subjects from being taught)                                  "The Cancelling of the American Mind"
       the general public become so influential?        are "without question unconstitutional".                              advises companies to foster an intellec-
       In Mr Mounk's telling, it starts with group          Both books are bold, timely and but-                              tually diverse workforce. Bosses should
       psychology. When Iike-rninded people de-         tressed by data. They also offer plausible                            make clear that a commitment to free
       bate political or moral questions, their         remedies. The far right can be defeated                               speech is a condition of employment. And
       conclusions become "more radical than            only by the right and the far left by the left.                       universities should scrap political litmus
       the beliefs of their individual members"         So left-of-centre people who can see what                             tests for tenure and get back to teaching
       he writes. This tendency is compounded           is happening should speak up but notvilify                            students how to debate ideas.
       when the group feels under threat, as pro-       those who disagree. (Political disagree-                                  The post-liberal right and post-liberal
       gressives did during Donald Trump's presi-       ment is not moral Iailure, Mr Mounk re-                               left are much closer to each other than
       dency. Dissent is suddenly seen as betray-       minds readers.) People should appeal to                               many people realise. Both are intolerant;
       al: hence the fury unleashed on anybody          the reasonable majority, he argues, since                             both prioritise the power of the state over
       who violates the group's unwritten and           most people are neither "woke" nor                                    individual liberty. They "see each other as
       shifting norms. More than three out of five      Trumpist. They should not let their indig-                            mortal enernies", but "feed on each other",
       Americans now say they avoid airing their        nation turn them into reactionaries.                                  Mr Mounk warns. That is why "everyone
       political views for fear of suffering adverse        Tl1e advice from Mr Lukianoff and Ms                              who cares about the survival of free societ-
       consequences; only a quarter of college          Schlott is more personal: raise kids who are                          ies should vow to fight both." •
       students say they are comfortable discuss-
       ing controversia! tapies with their peers.
           Students who imbibed what Mr Mounk           Film lengths
       rather clunkily calls "the identity synthe-
       sis" on campus went on "a short march            Movie marathons
       through the institutions" after they gradu-
       ated. Since about 2010 they have carried
       their new ideology into the workplace and,
       thanks to the power of social media to
       create hurricanes of outrage, intimidated
       bosses like no previous generation. Young
                                                        Why are new films so long?
       activists-cum-employees pushed the
       American Civil Liberties Union to scrap its              ANT TO I<NOW what is coming soon to                           director Martín Scorsese. At nearly three
       iron commitment to free speech and risk-
       averse corporate managers to sign off on
                                                        W     a cinema near you? Probably not an
                                                        hour-and-a-half-long movie, as in the old
                                                                                                                              and a half hours, i ts length is nearly dou ble
                                                                                                                              that of the average film last year. Even mov-
       sorne counter-productive "diversity, equ-        days. This year audiences have endured the                            ie buffs struggle to concéntrate for that
       ity and inclusion" training. A slide in a pre-   longest instalments yet in the "Indiana                               long. During the premiere at the Cannes
       sentation at Coca-Cola, for example, ex-         J ones", "Iohn Wick" and "Mission: Impos-                             Film Festival in May, sorne viewers dozed
       horted employees to "try to be less white",      sible" franchises. "Oppenheirner", Chnsto-                            off. Afterwards there was a mad dash (and
           Far from solving the real injustices that    pher Nolan's three-hour blockbuster, re-                              long queue) for the toilets. When did
       persist, this way of thinking and talking        quired 11 miles (iskm) of film stock for                              watching a film become such a slog?
       threatens to exacerbate them. And instead        IMAX showings.                                                            The Economist analysed over 100,000
       of bracing the country to withstand Mr               On October zoth comes "Killers of the                             feature films released internationally
       Trump's influence, it helps him, as Middle       Flower Moon" a grisly western from the                                since the 193os, the start of Hollywood's
       America leans right in response to the far                                                                             golden age, using data from IMDb, a movie
       left's excesses. Mr Mounk's answer is a re-
       turn to classical liberalism: a rediscovery
                                                         -
                                                         The long tale
                                                                                                                              database. The average length of produc-
                                                                                                                              tions has crept u p by around 24 o/o, from
       of universal values and neutral rules, al-        Film runtime, hours*                                                 one hour and 21 minutes in the 193os to one
       lowing people to make common cause                                                             Kil!ers of the          hour and 47 minutes in 2022 (see chart).
       with others of different beliefs and origins.       Most popular filrns!                      F!ower Moon              Blockbusters are the worst offenders. For
       People should live up to the ideals on                                                                    'u    3.5
                                                                                                                              the ten most-popular titles (measured by
       which liberal democracy is based rather                                          Avengers: Endgame                     how many reviewers rated the films on
       than abandoning them because they are so                                                               "-o7     3.0
                                                                                                                              IMDb) average lengths stretched to around
       difficult to achíeve, he says.                                                              Oppenheimer                two and a half hours in 2022, nearly 50%
                                                                                                                       2.5
           While Mr Mounk's message is global,            Trend for most
                                                                                                                              higher than in the 193os.
       Greg Lukianoff and Rikki Schlott focus on          popular films"                                                          Film-makers began churning out pro-
                                                                                                                       2.0
       America. "The Cancelling of the American                                                                               tracted pictures in the early 196os. Cinema
       Mind'' is a cri de coeur for both sides to                                                                             was booming and auteurs wanted to dis-
                                                                                                                        1.5
       reclaim "free-speech culture". (The authors                                                                            tinguish their art from television. Epics
       work for the Foundation for Individual                                                                                 graced the silver screen, including "Law-
       Rights and Expression, a free-speech                                                                                   rence of Arabia" (1962), which surpassed
       group.) When two sides cannot even agree          1930         50          70          90         201 O    23          the three-and-a-half hour mark, and "Cleo-
       on facts, "it undermines faith in all of the      *Excluding films less than 40 minutes in length or with fewer than   parra" (1963), which originally exceeded
                                                         100 ratings tTop ten in each year by numberof IMDb ratings
       institutions we rely on to understand the         Sources: IMDb; The Economist
                                                                                                                              four hours but was later cut down. Back
       world," they write.                                                                                                    then, audiences enjoyed an intermission ��
  The Economist October zist 2023                                                                                                      Culture    73
� while the projectionist prepared the reels       "Avengers: Endgame" Marvel's three-hour             Another explanation for longer films
  for the next act. Runtimes of popular films      superhero spree, was the highest-grossing       has to do with directors' growing clout.
  ebbed and flowed over subsequent decades         film in 2019. Last year long franchise mov-     Wl10 would dare tell the likes of Mr Nolan
  (and stretched long in sorne countries,          ies made up most of the highest-grossing        to trim his masterpieces? Streamers, which
  such as India, known for i ts Bollywood sa-      films in America.                               do not have to worry as much about conci-
  gas). But they have ballooned since 2018.            Anything that lures people off their        sion because viewers can pause whenever
      Franchises are one driver of this trend.     couches to see a film in theatres is good       they lil<e, may lure big names with deep
  Studios want to squeeze the most out of          news for cinemas. But protracted runtimes       pockets and promises of crea ti ve freedom.
  their costly in tellectual property, bu t they   also pose a "fundamental problern", com-        "Killers of the Flower Moon" will debut on
  are competing with streaming platforms           plains Clare Binns, managing director of        Apple TV+ after its theatrical run. Netflix
  for eyeballs. They hope that a spectacular,      Picturehouse, a British cinema grou p and       funded and released Mr scorsese's equally
  drawn-out "event" movie will tempt audi-         film distributor. Long movies can mean          long "The Irishman" in 2019, a film that
  ences away from the small screen and into        forgoing two showings per night, which          would have benefited from a decisive edi-
  cinemas. This approach has often paid off:       hurts ticket sales and profits.                 tor, Irish or otherwise. •
74    Culture                                                                                                   The Economist October zist 2023
     F
         OR DECADES    India has mostly runa cur-    lished "The Light of Asia", a 5,300-line nar-     waguru, or world teacher. India has never
         rent-account deficit, una ble to exportas   rative poem about the teachings and life of       been short of men who believe themselves
     much as the country imports to meet its         Buddha. The book went on to sell over im          chosen by God to lead the world. •
     needs. But in the accounting books of the       copies and ignited the first sparks of popu-
     heavens, India is a net exporter, on par        lar interest in India's religions in the West.
     with the Levantas a font of great religions.    In 1885 Arnold published "The Song Celes-         Unfinished art
     Hinduism, Buddhism, Sikhism and Jain-           tial", a translation of the Bhagavad Gita;
     ism sprang from its sacred geography. God       Mahatrna Gandhi credited it with intro-           (Sort of) by
     has repeatedly lured spiritual seekers to       ducing him to his own religion's most sa-
     the su bcontinent-from Xuanzang (a sev-         cred text. The two men would go on to be-         Sondheim
     enth-century Chinese monk who jour-             come friends.
     neyed to India in search of Buddhist texts)         Arnold's Indian analogue was Swami
     to Timothy Leary (an American charnpion         Vivekananda, a Hindu philosopher who
                                                                                                       After artists die, should their work
     of LSD). Leary memorably described Vara-        electrified the first gathering of the World 's
                                                                                                       be completed?
     nasi, Hinduism's most sacred place, as the      Parliament of Religions in 1893 with his
     "the site of a non-stop hippie festival for     speeches preaching Hinduism's message                              art can be arresting. Thinl<
                                                                                                       N
                                                                                                           ON-FINITO
     the last 5, ooo years",                         of universal acceptance. Arguing that "we              of a delicate sculpture protruding
         Those seeking to join the piety party       Hindus must believe that we are the teach-        from a monolith ora swathe of bare canvas
     first ventured from Asia, then from Europe      ers of the world," he founded spiritual cen-      in an otherwise detailed painting. Such
     (and especially Britain) during the colonial    tres in the West and acquired a devoted           artworks give the viewer pause. Did the
     era and later, after India's independence in    female following.                                 creator intend the effect or simply stop
     1947, from America. Indian swamis and gu-           Fantastic stories=packed with unlikely        halfway through?
     rus energetically promoted their teachings      figures, strange twists of fate and even the          "Here We Are" is one such puzzle. Ste-
     to new converts. It is these Western enthu-     occasional act of mind-reading-bring              phen sondheim, an American composer,
     siasts and their Indian idols who are the       readers of "Nirvana Express" on an enjoy-         had been working on the musical on and
     subject of "The Nirvana Express", an en-        able journey. Sorne of the colourful charac-      off for years alongside David Ives, a play-
     lightening new book by Mick Brown, a Brit-      ters include Paul Brunton, whose bestsell-        wright, and J oe Mantello, a director. In the
     ish music journalist with a sideline writing    ing "A Search in Secret India", a travelogue-     weeks befare his death in 2021, Sondheim
     about Asían religion.                           cum-spíritual-handbook published in 1934          gave a production the go-ahead. But then
         The first notable Western figures to take   (and still in print), would establish his         he said that it was not finished and had no
     an interest in Indian religions were not ex-    reputation as a sort-of guru figure himself       idea when itwould be.
     actly long-haired, por-smoking hippies. Sir     and Meher Baba, an actual guru obsessed              The work will have its premiere on Oc-��
  The Economist October zist 2023                                                                                                        Culture      75
� tober zznd in New York, The press team at                                                         achieve an independent state. The book is
  the Shed says that it is "very much the com-                                                      resonant with personal history and lays
  plete show" that sondheim "envisioned,                                                            out the barriers that obstructed Palestin-
  created and sanctioned", But those who                                                            ians' aspirations. It counts the poor deci-
  have seen the musical may wonder wheth-                                                           sion-rnaking of certain Palestinian leaders
  er that is the case. It is peculiar and unlike                                                    among its explanations, too.
  previous works, such as "Into the Woods".
       Inspired by two surrealist films by Luis                                                     Ramas. By Beverley Milton-Edwards and
  Buñuel, "Here We Are" has a typical Sond-                                                         Stephen Farrell. Wiley; 340 pages; $36.95.
  heimian premise: a group of friends riven                                                         Polity Press; E24.99
  with tensions (sexual and otherwise) l1as                                                         The militant organisation that rules the
  met up. In the first act, they cannot find                                                        Gaza Strip first emerged in 1987 during the
  somewhere to eat and wander from restau-                                                          first Palestinian intifada ("sl1al(ing off", or
  rant to restaurant. At a recent preview it                                                        uprising). In its first charter Hamas styled
  was dreamlike, filled with the kind of com-                                                       itself as the "Islarnic Resistance Move-
  plex harmonies, witticisms and interna!                                                           ment" and declared Israel illegitimate. In
  rhymes that Sondheim is known for.                                                                2006 Hamas became the first Islamist
       Then, in the second act, the tone shifts.                                                    movement to ascend to power in the
  The group finally has a meal but then is                                                          Middle East by winning an election. The
  trapped in the room. The music stops; the                                                         authors interviewed hundreds of people
  characters struggle to sing. Sondheim                                                             over three decades, including the group's
  seems to have left at the intermission. Mr                                                        leaders, fighters, opponents and victims.
  Mantello has said that he carne up with the      The lsrael-Palestine conflict                    This book explains the inception of the
  idea, based on the films but that Sondheim                                                        "largest, most influential and most deadly
  agreed with his assessment that "the ab-         Written in blood                                 Islamist organisation" and how it became
  sence of music was the score."                                                                    en trenched in Gaza.
       History is littered with Ieft-behind
  works-in-progress, Geoffrey Chaucer's pil-                                                        The Rise of the Israeli Right. By Col in
  grims never made it to their shrine. Gustav                                                       Shindler. Cambridge University Press; 440
  Klimt died in 1918 before l1e could finish
                                                   Six books that shed light on a century           pages; $38.99 and E29.99
  "The Bride", so sorne figures have the Aus-                                                       The righ t first carne to power in Israel
                                                   of violence in the Middle East
  trian artist's signature look and others are                                                      nearly five decades ago, but its current
  outlines. In neither case <loes it matter                                                         government maybe the most right-wing
  much. The stories in "The Canterbury             A Peace to End Ali Peace. By David From-         in the country's 75-year history, This richly
  Tales" stand alone. The gaps left by Klimt       kin. Holt, Henry & Company; 688 pages; $26       detailed book analyses with clarity and
  can be filled in by the imagination.             Tensions in the Middle East are a political      insight the political and philosophical
       Sorne find the Iack of closure unsatisfy-   inheritance of the dissolution of the Otto-      ideas that drive the right. The author, who
  ing, however, and attempt to finish a piece      man empire after the first world war and         is a professor at Cambridge, studies im-
  on an artist's behalf. Mozart died partway       the piecemeal settlements of 1922. This          portant thinkers and figures such as Ze'ev
  through writing a requiem; it was complet-       landrnark book, published in 1989 and            Iabotinsky (the founder of the Zionist
  ed first by a pupil and later by musicolo-       named as a finalist for the Pulitzer prize,      Right) and Binyamin Netanyahu (Israel's
  gists. (The results have divided listeners.)     provides a sweeping account of the period        prime minister).
  Artificial intelligence is also being used to    between 1914 and 1922, ranging from the
  fill the silence. When Beethoven died, his       Mediterranean to Afghanistan. It astutely        It's Easier to Reach Heaven than the
  Tenth symphony was just a collection of          traces the Allies' motivations for carving       End of the Street. By Emma Williams.
  sketches, A team from Rutgers University         up the Arab world and shows why the              Olive Branch Press; 412 pages; $16. Blooms
  trained an Al model on the maestro's work        West's imperial vision was doomed to fail.       bury; E8.99
  and extrapolated a composition.                                                                   In 2000 the author, a British doctor, ac-
       Financia! incentives can push unfin-        Enemies and Neighbours. By Ian Blacl<.           companied her husband, a UN official, and
  ished work to be released without the nec-       Atlantic Monthly Press; 608 pages; $30.          three small children to Israel. A month
  essary caveats. Before Harper Lee died in        Allen Lane; E25                                  later the second Palestinian intifada erupt-
  2016, "Go Set a Watchman", an early draft of     When, exactly, the Israel-Palestine conflict     ed. This moving memoir=which spans
  "To Kill a Mockingbird", was initially           began is hard to say. Many consider No-          three years-documents the events she
  passed off as a discrete novel. Others sug-      vember z nd 1917 to be the starting-point:       witnessed. She gave birth to a fourth child
  gest that artists would rather partial or        that is the date of the Balfour Declaration,     in a hospital in Bethlehem, which was
  abandoned pieces stay private. Yet perhaps       when the British government vowed to             shelled by the Israeli army. A Palestinian
  it is worse for the art never to be seen. Jane   use its "best endeavours" to create a "na-       suicide-bomber blew himself up near her
  Austen's "Sanditon" collected dust until         tional home" for the J ewish people in           children's school, with his head landing at
  1925, more than a century after her death.       Palestine, a territory it would take from        the foot of their teacher.
  Although it stops in the middle of a chap-       the Ottomans. This balanced book, praised
  ter, betrothals still to be secured, the novel   by Palestinian and Israeli historians alike,     The Economist's journalists have also
  contains sorne of Austen's sharpest lines.       offers a tour of the past century of conflict.   written books about the conflict. Anton La
       What about "Here We Are"? Strange                                                            Guardia, our diplomatic editor, is the
  though it is, fans may still be pleased to       The Iron Cage. By Rashid Khalidi, Beacon         author of "Holy Land, Unholy War", Gregg
  hear it. The first act, at least, proves that    Press; 288 pages; $19.95. Oneworld Publica      Carlstrom, our Middle East correspon-
  Sondheim's strengths remained potent. He         tions; E34.99                                    dent, wrote "How Long Will Israel Sur-
  was a master of wordplay, ambition and           An eminent Palestinian-American histori-         vive?". Anshel Pfeffer, our Israel corre-
  emotional complexity to the end. •               an explains why Palestinians failed to           spondent, is the author of "Bibi", •
16   Courses
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                 Northwestern
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                 Northv,estern University • Evanston. lllinois 60208
                 nemmers.northwestern.edu
Economic & financial indicators                                                                                                                                               The Economist October zist 2023 77
Economic data
                    Gross domestic product                       Consumer prices           Unemployment            Current-account            Budget                I nterest rates                          Currency units
                    ºlo change on year ago                       ºlo change on year ago    rate                    balance                    balance               10-yr gov't bonds cha nge on             per $      ºlo cha nge
                    latest       quarter* 2023t                  la test          2023t    ºlo                     o/o of GDP, 2023t          ºlo of GDP, 2023t     latest,0lo       year ago, bp            Oct 18th on year ago
 United States         2.4   Q2      2.1         2.0                3.7    Sep      4.1       3.8       Sep           -2.9                      -5.7                    4.9                  90.0
 China                 4.9   Q3      5.3         5.2                 nil   Sep      0.7       5.0       Sep*§          1.8                     -3.2                     2.6 §§                13.0              7.31           -1.5
 Japan                 1.6   Q2      4.8         2.0                3.1    Aug      2.9       2.7       Aug            2.9                      -5.2                    0.8                   55.0               150           -0.5
 Britain               0.6   Q2      0.8         0.4                6.7    Sep      6.8       4.3       Juntt         -2.5                     -3.9                     4.5                     7.0             0.82            7.3
 Ca nada               1.1   Q2    -0.2          1.1                3.8    Sep      4.1       5.5       Sep           -0.4                     -1.4                     4.1                   75.0              1.37            0.7
 Euro area             0.5   Q2      0.5         0.7                4.3    Sep      5.6       6.4       Aug            2.2                      -3.4                    2.9                   63.0              0.95            7.4
 Austria              -1.3   Q2    -3.0*        -0.2                5.7    Sep      7.9       5.3       Aug            2.4                     -2.4                     3.6                   56.0              0.95            7.4
 Belgium               0.9   Q2      0.6         1.0                0.7    Sep      2.6       5.5       Aug           -0.7                     -4.6                     3.6                   59.0              0.95            7.4
 France                1.0   Q2      2.1         0.8                5.7    Sep      5.7       7.3       Aug           -1.1                     -5.0                     3.4                  47.0               0.95            7.4
 Germany              -0.1   Q2      0.1        -0.3                4.3    Sep      6.1       3.0       Aug            5.2                     -2.4                     2.9                   63.0              0.95            7.4
 Greece                2.9   Q2      5.1         2.4                2.4    Sep      3.8      10.9       Aug           -6.3                     -2.1                     4.5                 -55.0               0.95            7.4
 ltaly                 0.3   Q2     -1.5         0.9                5.6    Sep      6.3       7.3       Aug            1.0                      -5.3                    5.0                   37.0              0.95            7.4
 Netherlands          -0.2   Q2    -0.9          0.2              -0.3     Sep      4.5       3.6       Aug            8.2                     -1.9                     3.3                   68.0              0.95            7.4
 Spain                 2.2   Q2      2.1         2.4                3.3    Sep      3.4      11.5       Aug            1.6                      -4.1                    3.9                   52.0              0.95            7.4
 Czech Republic       -1.1   02    -0.1           nil               6.9    Sep    10.4        2.6       Aug*          -1.1                      -3.8                    4.8                  -101               23.4            6.3
 Denmark               0.6   Q2    - 1.4         2.0                0.9    Sep      4.0       2.9       Aug          10.5                        1.5                    3.2                   51.0              7.08            6.6
 Norway                0.7   Q2      0.1         1.4                3.3    Sep      5.8       3.5       JuJ#         17.1                      10.8                     1.4                   76.0              11.1           -4.5
 Poland               -0.6   Q2    -8.5         -0.1                8.2    Sep    11.4        5.0       Aug§           0.7                      -4.8                    5.8                  -240               4.22          14.9
 Russia                4.9   02       na        -0.5                6.0    Sep      6.5       3.0       Aug§           1.8                      -3.8                  12.3                     214              97.5         -36.1
 Sweden               -0.8   Q2    -3.3         -0.6                6.5    Sep      6.0          7 .7   Aug§           4.1                     -0.3                     3.1                  92.0               11.0            0.7
 Switzerland           0.5   Q2      0.1         0.8                1.7    Sep      2.2       2.1       Sep            6.8                      -0.7                    1.1                 -21.0               0.90          10.0
 Turkey                3.8   Q2    14.6          3.1              61 .5    Sep    5 3 .1      9.2       Aug§          -4.4                     -5.0                   26.3                 1,603                28.0         -33.7
 Australia             2.1   Q2      1.4         1.6                6.0    Q2       5.6       3.6       Sep            1.7                       0.3                    4.6                   72.0              1.58            0.6
 Hong Kong             1.5   Q2    -5.2          2.9                1.7    Aug      1.9       2.8       Aug**          8.4                     -1.7                     4.4                   52.0              7.83            0.3
 India                 7.8   Q2    11.0          6.5                5.0    Sep      5.7       8.1       Apr           -1.3                      -5.9                    7.3                    -8.0             83.3           -1.1
 Indonesia             5.2   Q2       na         5.0                2.3    Sep      3.8       5.5       Q1§            0.7                      -2.4                    6.8                 -59.0            15,730            -1.7
 Malaysia              2.9   Q2       na         4.0                2.0    Aug      2.7       3.4       Aug§           1.8                      -5.0                    4.1                 -33.0               4.74           -0.4
 Pakistan              1.7   2023** na           1.7              31.4     Sep    32.2        6.3       2021          -1.7                      -7.7                  16.0 ttt                 322               280         -21.5
 Philippines           4.3   Q2    -3.6          4.1                6.1    Sep      5.7       4.8       Q3§           -4.6                      -7.0                    6.6                 -57.0               56.7            3.6
 Singapore             0.7   Q3      4.0         1.0                4.0    Aug      4.7       1.9       Q2           18.9                       -0.7                    3.4                 -17.0               1.37            3.6
 South Korea           0.9   Q2      2.5         1.3                3.7    Sep      3.3       2.3       Sep§           1.9                      -2.7                    4.3                     2.0           1,350             5.4
 Taiwan                1.4   Q2      5.6         0.8                2.9    Sep      2.2       3.4       Aug          12.5                       -0.4                    1.3                 -49.0               32.3           -1.0
 Thailand              1.8   Q2      0.7         2.8                0.3    Sep      1.6       1.0       Aug§           1.1                      -2.7                    2.8                 -37.0               36.3            5.0
 Argentina            -4.9   Q2 -10.9           -2.8               138     Sep   129.9        6.2       Q2§           -2.8                      -4.2                     na                      na              350         -56.3
 Brazil                3.4   Q2      3.7         3.1                5.2    Sep      4.7       7.8       Aug§*-*       -1.8                      -7.6                  11.7                  -11.0               5.07            3.9
 Chile                -1.1   Q2     -1.2        -0.2                5.1    Sep      7.5       9.0       Aug§t.;       -4.3                      -3.0                    6.5                     3.0              938            3.8
 Colombia              0.3   Q2    -4.1          1.6              11.0     Sep    11.5        9.3       Aug§          -4.0                      -4.2                  11.7                   -240             4,237           11.8
 Mexico                3.6   Q2      3.4         3.2                4.5    Sep      5.5       2.7       Aug           -1.8                      -3.8                  1 O.O                   13.0              18.3            9.4
 Peru                 -0.5   Q2      1.5         0.1                5.0    Sep      6.5       6.3       Sep§          -1.3                      -2.9                    7.5                  -124               3.86            3.1
 Egypt                 3.9   01       na         4.0              37.9     Sep    36.8        7.0       Q2§           -2.6                      -6.7                     na                      na             30.9         -36.4
 Israel                3.4   Q2      3.1         3.1                3.8    Sep      4.4       3.2       Sep            4.5                      -2.0                    4.3                  90.0               4.03         -12.7
 Saudi Arabia          8.7   2022     na         0.1                1.7    Sep      2.3       4.9       Q2             3.0                      -0.8                     na                      na             3.75            0.3
 South Africa          1.6   Q2      2.4         0.5                5.5    Sep      5.7      32.6       Q2§           -1.8                      -5.7                  10.8                      2.0             19.1           -5.0
Source: Haver Analytics. *ºlo change on previous quarter, annual rate. tThe Economist lntelligence Unit estimate/forecast. §Not seasonally adjusted. +New series. **Year endingJune. ttLatest 3 months. ++3-month moving
average. §§S-year yield. tttoollar-denominated bonds. Note: Euro area consumer prices are harmonised.
                                                                            Negev, though so near Gaza, was not all Hamas and shooting. It
                                                                            was a hard case to make. Hamas rockets hit the Iron Dome right
                                                                            overhead, and pieces fell everywhere; the ground around was full
                                                                            of improvised bombs. In 2018, youths in Gaza tied incendiary de-
                                                                            vices to kites and balloons and sent them floating across, where he
                                                                            watched with sick horror as trees, crops and gardens exploded in
                                                                            flames. In May 2021 rockets fell on Sha'ar HaN egev for 11 straight
                                                                            days. Des pite the fact that everyone in Kfar Aza had steel-and-con-
                                                                            crete safe-rooms in their houses, in 2022 he sent the mothers and
                                                                            children away to the north. A study had found that most of the lo-
                                                                            cal chíldren had post-trauma tic stress.
                                                                                Yet he insisted those scary times were rare. That was just life on
                                                                            the edge: 5°/o hell, but 95°/o paradise. His main Facebook picture
                                                                            showed a view of lush, rolling, improbably green hills dotted with
                                                                            trees. In those fields grew wheat, barley, vines, melons, avocados,
                                                                            cotton, almonds and olives. The desert soil was watered with a
                                                                            huge network of irrigation pipes. And that was not all that grew
                                                                            there. Increasingly he was pinning his hopes on tech startups, and
                                                                            in the five years l1e had been mayor 40 companies had arrived in
                                                                            his new enterprise zone. Among the single-storey white houses,
                                                                            shaded with palms and lively with children (including four boys
                                                                            of his own), there were now glass-walled offices in which go-
                                                                            ahead tech types networked and hatched their ideas.
                                                                                He also looked abroad for help. rne Californian city of San Die-
                                                                            go twinned itself with Sl1a'ar HaNegev, and the [ewish Federation
                                                                            there provided seed money for a tech incubator; the Jewish Na-
                                                                            tional Fund in Australia helped wíth u fortified kindergartens and
    Life on the edge                                                        an "Innovation Campus". Since 2013 the region's population had
                                                                            doubled. That spelled better protection, through sheer numbers,
                                                                            of the western border. He was keeping the land of Israel.
                                                                                As a l<ibbutznil<, living in I(far Aza or Kfar Neter for most of his
                                                                            life, his devotion to Israel was total. Bu t he was less a Zionist than a
                                                                            socialist and communitarian, as the first kibbutz-builders had
    Ofir Libstein, mayor of Sha'ar HaNegev, was killed in the
                                                                            been. Besides, his dreams for the region went far beyond mere de-
    Ramas attacks on October 7th, aged 50
                                                                            fensive hunkering down. His vision was "spatial": if there was
         HENEVER HE WALI<ED round his patch of the northern Ne-             good in a place, it should benefit the whole diverse human mosaic
    W      gev, Ofir Libstein fairly buzzed with ideas. Sha'ar HaNegev
    was not large, just 180 square kilornetres, three kilornetres from
                                                                            there. Prosperity had to involve everyone. He was sure that most
                                                                            Gazans wanted what Israelis did: peace, well-paid jobs, care for
    the Gaza Strip, with around 6,000 people living in ten kibbutzim        their families. He set out to provide thern.
    and one communal farrn. But he had power, as mayor, to make it              It was hard to deal directly with Palestinians, since the border
    work as well as possible. Sorting out the traffic on the main road,     was almost entirely sealed. But in partnership with the Israeli city
    for example, by replacing the multiple intersections wíth round-        of Sderot, which lay less than a kilornetre from the fence, he
    abouts. Encouraging his Facebook followers to eat at local restau-      planned an industrial zone called Arazim around the Erez cross-
    rants, like Iulie's amazing Chinese in hís own kibbutz, Kfar Aza,       ing. This could draw up to 10,000 Gazans to work in Israel every
    that were still struggling after covid. And putting all available       day. There would also be a training hub for thern, education pro-
    buildings to new use. Whenever he saw a disused mess hall, a de-        grammes anda medica! centre. He envisaged so many Gazans with
    serted factory, even an old cowshed, he wanted to fill thern with       a stake in Arazim that they would never think to attack it, or allow
    entrepreneurs working on exciting things.                               Hamas to. That, in his view, was how Israel could properly protect
        He was an entrepreneur himself, starting young. When his un-        itself. Even l1e admitted that this was quite a stretch, but the resi-
    ele ran the kiosk in Kfar Neter he opened a branch at school. When      dents of Sha'ar HaNegev did not seem to object. In the regional
    his father did wheelchair repairs for the nursing home where his        election for mayor in zois=when his rival had been Israel's first
    mother worked, he went into a motorised wheelchair business             female brigade commander, promising more security-he, known
    with him. From there he moved, with relatives, into office equip-       mostly for anemones, won with almost zoss of the vote.
    ment, then into online coaching, then into agritech, the mainstay           That margin, and his ten-year term, inspired him. He could do
    of Sl1a'ar HaNegev. The Libstein pot was always bubbling and, al-       a lot in all that time. Airead y, for example, he had incorporated the
    most always, successfully.                                              poorly treated Bedouin into his anemone festival, and was chair-
        His most popular idea, though, was to leverage flowers. In 2007     man of a museum where their culture was celebrated. Perhaps Pal-
    he and his wife Vered founded the Darom Adom ("Red south") fes-         estinians could become involved in Sha'ar HaNegev in the same
    tival to celebrate the anemones which, for a brief few weeks in ear-    way, once the two sides had learned to respect each other. Perhaps
    ly spring, spread scarlet through the woods and fields. This won-       the share of life there that was paradise could rise to 100%.
    der drew in visitors from far and wide, but he had noticed that             But the factories of Arazim were not yet built when, early in the
    there was nothing, besides marvelling, for them to do. So he intro-     morning on October zth. swarms of Hamas terrorists broke
    duced country lodging, walkíng trails, bike tours, jugglers and ac-     through the border fence. The residents of Kfar Aza had already
    robats, craft fairs and farrners' markets, more everyyear. The festi-   been warned by text not to go outside, but he disobeyed his own
    val bloomed and boomed. His Facebook page showed him lying              order, answering fire with fire. He rushed out to defend both his
    among anemones, smiling broadly in appreciation.                        kibbutz and his dreams-including those lovely, leveraged anem-
        He founded the festival largely to prove that life in Sha'ar Ha-    ones that dyed the dry ground red. •
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