π Top US-China economic officials pledge to cooperate
And: ErdogΜanβs election day change might help him win
Hi there Intriguer. When tech media publication CNET attempted to use AI to write articles recently, readers quickly spotted a series of very obvious mistakes made by the journo-bots. Reporter Paul Farhi described the AIβs writing as βserviceable but plodding, pocked by cliches, lacking humour or sass or anything resembling emotions or idiosyncrasiesβ. If you feel a little breeze, itβs just us breathing a sigh of relief… for now.
Todayβs briefing is a 5 min read:
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π€ A cautiously optimistic US-China story.
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πΉπ· Turkey is moving its election up a month.
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β Plus: France takes to the streets, how the papers are covering Jacinda Ardern's shock resignation, and some relaxing recommendations for your weekend.
– VC & EP
πΊοΈ AROUND THE WORLD

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πΊπΈ The US: The Biden Administration may send weapons to Ukraine that are capable of striking Crimea. Until now, the US has refused to endorse military action against Crimea.
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π³π¬ Nigeria: Nigeriaβs election commission chief has pledged not to delay next monthβs presidential election despite widespread and credible fears of electoral violence.
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π·π΄ Romania: Romania and Bulgaria plan to build two hydropower plants on the Danube River to boost their green energy supplies. Theyβll be operational within six years.
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πΉπ Thailand: Thai stocks are Southeast Asiaβs best value as Chinese tourists return to the country, according to JP Morgan Chase. The bank estimates Thailand will welcome 26 million visitors (about 65% of pre-pandemic levels) this year.
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π¦π² Armenia: Armenia will not host joint military exercises this year for the Collective Security Treaty Organization. Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has been increasingly critical of the Russian-led organisation.
π€ US & CHINA | DIPLOMACY
Chinese Vice Premier Liu He and US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen pose for a picture, with very odd results. Credits: Michael Buholzer/Keystone/AP
We (might) meet again: Yellen and Liu pledge to improve US-China economic communication
Briefly: We're relieved to report that the US and China are still on talking terms. On Wednesday (18 January), US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen met with Chinese vice-premier Liu He on the sidelines of the Davos summit for a βcandidβ conversation. The pair reportedly discussed trade, inflation, and Chinaβs sputtering real estate sector.
The face-to-face meeting was the first between senior American and Chinese economic officials in three years.
Beyond the readout: The three-hour meeting was light on βannounceablesβ, to use diplomatic slang. But both sides did hint at more meetings in the future: they pledged to maintain open lines of communication, and Yellen agreed to visit China later this year for advanced bilateral economic talks.
Intrigueβs take: As positive as Wednesdayβs talks may have been, we donβt expect US-China relations to improve much. China expert Bill Bishop points out that Taiwan remains a sticking point: βUS-China economic and diplomatic channels appear to be improving, though I still wonder how Beijing will react if/when the new Speaker of the House fulfils his promise to travel to Taiwan.β
Between the Russo-Ukraine War, Nancy Pelosiβs visit to Taiwan, and US semiconductor export controls, itβs been a rough 12 months for US-China relations. Still, as global economies stare down a recession, any warming between the worldβs superpowers is a good thing.
Also worth noting:
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While US-China economic talks move forward, military talks between the two superpowers have reportedly stalled.
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Total annual trade between China and the US decreased by 2.6% in 2022, highlighting just how intertwined the two economies remain.
π° GLOBAL PERSPECTIVES
How newspapers covered: New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardernβs shock resignation announcement earlier this week.

Links:Β NZ Herald, The Fiji Times, Channel NewsAsiaΒ
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πΉπ· TURKEY | POLITICS
Via: Giphy
ErdoΔanβs election day change might help him win another term
Briefly: President Recep Tayyip ErdoΔan wants to bring Turkeyβs election forward from 18 June to 14 May, pending approval from Turkeyβs Parliament and Election Council. Both bodies are expected to support the measure.
ErdoΔan is in the fight of his political life, with several of his top rivals running ahead of him in opinion polls. And itβs not hard to understand why: ErdoΔanβs highly unorthodox (if not entirely insane) monetary policy pushed inflation to 85% in October, the highest in 24 years. The Turkish lira depreciated nearly 30% against the US dollar in 2022.
But as Turkeyβs economy stumbles, ErdoΔanβs government has borrowed heavily to subsidise wage increases and guarantee early retirement for millions of workers.
Intrigueβs take: ErdoΔan has remade Turkeyβs courts and election system in his image during his two decades in power. Analysts have speculated that he wants to bring the election forward to sync it up with the delivery of his economic stimulus. ErdoΔan may be down, but it is never wise to count him out.
Also worth noting:
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A Turkish court may ban a top opposition party, the Peopleβs Democratic Party, ahead of the elections.
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Opposition leader Kemal KΔ±lΔ±Γ§daroΔlu is considered ErdoΔanβs most likely challenger after Istanbulβs popular mayor Ekrem Δ°mamoΔlu was sentenced to jail for calling members of Turkeyβs supreme election council βfoolsβ.
πΈ PHOTO OF THE DAY
Protestors in Marseille. Credits: Nicolas Tucat/AFP/Getty Images
To the barricades!
Few can rivalΒ the French for their love of protests and riots (except perhaps Philadelphia Eagles fans). But the latest round of protests over a plan to raise the retirement age from 62 to 64 is a broader warning sign for governments across the world.
The problem: pension funds are running dry. As birthrates decline and people live longer (looking at you, Sister AndrΓ©), the ratio of workers to retirees is decreasing. In the 1950s, for instance, there were four French workers for every retiree; today, that ratio is 1.7 to 1.
Not just a French problem:Β According to the World Economic Forum, βThe global gap between retirement savings and retirement income needs is projected to reach $400 trillion in three decades β more than five times the size of the global economy.β
Time to get a(nother) job, boomers!* π
*Just jokes; please donβt send us hate mail!
π EXTRA INTRIGUE
Here are a few tips for those of you in need of some R&R this weekend. If youβve got:
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10 mins: read the side-by-side comparison of The Hobbit in its original and revised forms.
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1 hour: bake this traditional Italian Caprese chocolate cake. It's fluffy, light and gluten-free!
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2.5 hours: stream the Royal Balletβs performance of βSwan Lake,β preferably while sipping some chilled white wine.
~ Valentina, senior editor and expert Italian
π³οΈ POLL TIME!
Which election are you most intrigued by this year? |
Yesterdayβs poll: Should Western governments cooperate with the Taliban?
π¨β¬οΈβ¬οΈβ¬οΈβ¬οΈβ¬οΈ π Yes, too many lives are at risk (22%)
π©π©π©π©π©π© π No, there's no cooperating with the Taliban (78%)
Your two cents:
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π B.C: βNo one should help regimes that support terrorist groups/activities – we should work to rescue Afghans left behind (in the poorly planned withdrawal) who helped US & NATO forces but avoid any support (even symbolic) for the Taliban regime.β
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π P.R: βThe history of noncooperation between the West and Iran shows that it has failed to achieve the goal of bringing Iranβs regime down, and we ought to expect the same in Afghanistan… Besides, has anyone got a better idea? How else can we hope to gain compromises with the Taliban?β


