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Graphic Truth: Inflation plunges in Argentina

Argentina’s president Javier Milei inherited inflation that was over 200%, but after 18 consecutive months of it falling, it now stands at just 31%. While that is still one of the world’s highest, it is an impressive improvement. It comes as the US has sought to prop up Argentina’s economy, recently giving nearly $1 billion of its International Monetary Fund reserves to help Argentina make a critical debt payment to the IMF. The transaction follows the US recently providing Argentina with a $20 billion currency swap to stabilize the peso.

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What We’re Watching: More political chaos in South Sudan, Tehran runs dry

South Sudan’s president fires another VP

President Salva Kiir continued to take a wrecking ball to his country’s leadership structure this week, firing Benjamin Bol Mel, who was one of his vice presidents. He also sacked the central bank governor and the head of the revenue authority without giving reasons for the removals. The move comes after President Kiir in March put then-Vice President Rick Machar under house arrest, before charging him with murder in September – Kiir and Machar had entered a power-sharing agreement to end the civil war. Experts are concerned that Kiir’s moves will pull the sub-Saharan state back into civil war, only five years after it ended.

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Viewpoint: When Chinese robots replace service jobs

Imagine sitting down at a restaurant, speaking your order into your menu, and immediately watching a robot arrive with your food. Imagine the food being made quickly, precisely — and without a human involved, because the entire restaurant is fully roboticized.

Imagine those robots were made in China, powered by the next generation of AI.

This is all quite plausible. According to the International Federation of Robotics, global sales of professional service robots reached almost 200,000 units in 2024. More than one-fifth of those units were deployed in hospitality and service roles, including front-desk assistants and food-and-beverage delivery. One cafe in Beijing is now fully staffed with autonomous robots, which can talk to customers, take orders, and deliver drinks entirely on their own. The future of AI is physical, as Ian Bremmer recently noted.

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Hard Numbers: Japan’s PM organizes 3 a.m. meeting, Exam day for South Korea’s students, US government shutdown ends, & More

3: Japan’s Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi has taken her country’s difficult work culture to a new level, organizing a meeting last Friday at 3 o’clock – in the morning. Takaichi herself has a reputation as a workaholic, though it was still a surprise to see her leaving her residence just after 3 a.m. to convene a meeting that lasted three hours.

550,000: South Korea will come to a standstill today as 550,000 students, the most in seven years, will sit down to take the country’s infamously-long college entrance exam. For most students, the exam – which could determine their education and future job prospects – will last roughly eight hours. Blind students receive extra time, though, meaning they can spend up to 13 hours in the exam room. If you’re anything like us, that thought provokes cold chills.

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What spies can teach us about persuasion

Forget the fancy cars, futuristic gadgets, and martinis “shaken, not stirred.” In his book "Sell Like a Spy: The Art of Persuasion from the World of Espionage", Jeremy Hurewitz argues that intelligence officers are a lot more like therapists than James Bond-style action heroes.
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Calm down about Zohran Mamdani

Last Tuesday, a self-identified democratic socialist who ran on making New York affordable for the 99% won the city’s mayoral race in a landslide, defeating former Governor Andrew Cuomo. And the reactions have been predictably hysterical.

Some critics are claiming that Mamdani will impose Sharia law and turn New York into Venezuela. Business leaders and billionaires are warning about a mass exodus. The Washington Post editorial board sees "class warfare" on the horizon. And President Trump, never one to waste an opportunity for confrontation, is threatening to cut federal funding to the city.

Everyone needs to take a breath. Yes, a 34-year-old Muslim who's never managed anything bigger than a state assembly office with five staffers just won the most powerful mayoral job in America on a platform of free buses, rent freezes, universal childcare, and soaking the rich. But most of that isn’t going to happen. Why? Because the mayor of New York City, for all the pomp and circumstance of the office, has remarkably little unilateral power to do... well, almost anything.

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Is the UK’s prime minister heading for the exit?

Just 18 months after Sir Keir Starmer’s Labour Party won a 174-seat majority in Parliament, he’s now clinging to power, with reports that he could be removed when he announces the budget in two weeks’ time. His allies say he will fight any attempts from within the party to oust him. Why is Starmer struggling? The economy is stagnant, he can’t unite his party, and he hasn’t crafted a clear vision for the country amid pressure from both the left and the right. To initiate the removal process, though, 20% of Labour MPs must nominate a challenger. Will any of Starmer’s allies turn on him and run against the PM?

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As a fourth winter of war approaches, Russia is destroying Ukraine’s energy grid faster than it can be rebuilt. “We lost everything we were restoring,” Centrenergo, one of Ukraine's largest power operators, said on Facebook following a devastating weekend assault that reduced the country's energy capacity to “zero.”

Since Sunday, most of Ukraine has been plunged into intermittent darkness as the government schedules rolling blackouts to preserve what little power remains. Russian drones and missiles have pummeled power plants, substations, and gas infrastructure in a relentless campaign that has intensified as temperatures drop. Further complicating the situation, Ukrainian authorities charged senior energy officials with a $100 million kickback scheme – which has outraged the public and raised concerns that graft could ward off desperately needed energy assistance from the European Union.

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Visit: The Gabriele Münter exhibition. If you’re in New York City any time before next April, head to the Guggenheim Museum to see two floors of the artwork of the brilliant Gabriele Münter. A German artist of the early 20th century, Münter’s ever-evolving work demonstrated a commitment to portraiture, landscapes, and still life that defied a broader European movement toward impersonal abstraction. Her paintings (and photographs!) reveal a deep humanism and a clarity of artistic vision that remains a too-well-kept secret. – Willis

Watch:Nobody Wants This.” The Netflix show about a gentile podcaster (Kristen Bell) who starts dating a rabbi (Adam Brody) has entered its second season, and it's a hit again. Based on creator Erin Foster’s own experiences, the series is funny, heartbreaking, and – especially for those in the Jewish community – all too real. And it’s all fused with “Gen Z” references that keep it current. Enjoy! – Zac

Watch: “Licorice Pizza.” If you need another Paul Thomas Anderson fix after seeing “One Battle After Another.” The film takes place in 1973 Los Angeles, with all the waterbeds, oil crises, and neon lights to match. Alana Haim could give Leonardo DiCaprio a run for his money with her performance in this film – and not just because her character has a love story with a much younger man. – Riley

Read: “The Serpent and the Rainbow.” If you love a good non-fiction book that reads like a fiction adventure tale, look no further. Ethnobotanist and author Wade Davis ventured to Haiti in the 1980s to investigate a strange report: a local man who had been pronounced dead by a doctor – and buried in front of several witnesses – suddenly wandered into his home village twenty years later. With his bereaved family and superstitious locals refusing to interact with the former dead man, our author investigates the secret religious societies of Haiti and the science behind their rituals. Readers will soon discover this case of Haiti’s real-life “zombie” is neither an isolated incident nor a supernatural miracle. – Ted

Go to the edge, in Iran. Influencers do lots of crazy things, sure, but the things done by Milad Karami are not like the others. Karami, a Kurdish mountaineer and guide from western Iran, has amassed a following of millions for videos where he films himself with a selfie-stick, calmy chatting (in Farsi) while he clambers along sheer rock faces hundreds of feet above the floor of the soaring canyon complexes of his region. His stunts would make a mountain goat faint: sometimes he shoots in the rain, or in flip-flops slathered with dish soap, or in rollerblades, or in a full-leg cast, or with a bicycle. Once, he nearly died while filming a cliffside video in a rocking chair. I don’t understand Farsi – but you don’t need to. Not for the faint of heart. – Alex K

4: Israeli police arrested four Jewish nationalists Tuesday after dozens of them attacked Palestinians and set fire to property in the West Bank. The issue of settler violence in the region has grown over the last two years – in tandem with the war in Gaza – but has spiked further in recent weeks, as Palestinians have been taking to the fields to harvest olives.

54: Who wouldn’t enjoy an almost eight-week break? Well that’s just what members of the US House of Representatives have had, but they are finally returning from their 54-day recess to vote on a continuing resolution that will end the government shutdown. Expect a vote later today.

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Small businesses are holding their ground, but with less job creation and slower deposit growth, resilience is being tested. As payments slow and debt creeps up, how will they adjust in a shifting economy?

Subscribe to Bank of America Institute today for small business trends.

Walmart’s $350 billion commitment to American manufacturing means two-thirds of the products we buy come straight from our backyard to yours. From New Jersey hot sauce to grills made in Tennessee, Walmart is stocking the shelves with products rooted in local communities. The impact? Over 750,000 American jobs - putting more people to work and keeping communities strong.

Learn more here.

In this Ask Ian, Ian Bremmer breaks down why the longest government shutdown in US history is likely coming to an end.
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Last week, Microsoft committed $15.2 billion to the UAE. This strategic investment expands cloud and AI infrastructure in the Middle East. It aims to boost regional innovation, economic diversification, and digital resilience. The move underscores tech’s role in shaping global competitiveness and security. A milestone for the UAE — and a signal of where the digital future is headed.

Read the full blog here.

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