News from Around the World

Media Title
STR/EPA-EFE/REX/SHUTTERSTOCK

Second Jobs and Tightened Belts: The Arab Middle Class Cuts Back


CAIRO—A wave of economic austerity is squeezing the Arab world’s middle class, pushing a segment of society that is key to growth and stability into making painful cutbacks and fueling discontent.

Egyptians say they are taking second jobs and dining out less often. Jordanians trying to make ends meet are pulling children from private schools. In Tunisia, hundreds of thousands of civil servants staged a one-day strike last month to demand a pay increase.

Students of Laboratoria, a Peru-based nonprofit that trains young women from low-income backgrounds to become software developers in the tech sector. Photo by: Laboratoria

Silicon Valley's role in shifting the education sector from access to outcomes


SAN FRANCISCO — There has been a growing emphasis on the need to frame success in education around learning rather than attendance. But if you ask some entrepreneurs and investors in Silicon Valley, there is still too much emphasis on butts in seats, and not enough attention paid to whether kids are learning.

Amena Yahia Ahmed Dwally, technical manager for Solar Power Station, and Huda Salah, finance manager for Solar Power Station in Abs, Yemen. Photo by: Social Development Foundation

Solar power sales help women avoid food insecurity in Yemen


WASHINGTON — Solar panels are providing women in Yemen access to energy and a way to escape famine conditions that continue to threaten the country.

UN.org

Solutions to the Big Data Challenge at the UN World Data Forum


DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Big data offers promises to better support and facilitate the delivery of the Sustainable Development Goals. And Robert Kirkpatrick, the director of United Nations Global Pulse, believes big data is what governments will need to achieve the SDGs.

economist

Spain’s Socialists win the election, but need to find allies


BACK LAST May when he filed the censure motion that brought him into office, Pedro Sánchez brushed off demands for an immediate election.

REUTERS

Sri Lanka stocks, rupee fall; budget, IMF talks outcome awaited


COLOMBO, Feb 25 (Reuters) - ** Sri Lankan shares and the rupee closed weaker on Monday, with investors awaiting cues from next week’s budget and the outcome of talks between government authorities and the IMF, market source said. **

Stocks tank as another recession warning surfaces


U.S. stocks tumbled at open Wednesday after the inverted yield curve, one of the most reliable indicators of a recession, sparked a new wave of investor fears, erasing the short-lived bump from Tuesday’s trade easing.

SEONGJOON CHO/BLOOMBERG NEWS

Strong Dollar Hits China’s Foreign-Exchange Reserves


China’s foreign-exchange reserves saw its biggest monthly drop in October in nearly two years, hit by a strong U.S. dollar that hurt the value of other holdings and likely prompted government intervention to shore up the yuan.

October’s decrease of $33.93 billion was the largest since December 2016 when Beijing was battling capital flight and burned through $1 trillion to defend the yuan.

DAVID GOLDMAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS

Tame Inflation Keeps Fed on Track


WASHINGTON—A closely watched price index suggested Monday that, for now, inflation poses little threat to the economy.

The personal-consumption expenditures price index rose 0.1% in September from August, the Commerce Department said Monday. That marked the fourth straight month in which the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge fell short of the 0.165% monthly pace needed to meet its 2% annual target.

PHOTO: DAVID MAUNG/EPA/SHUTTERSTOCK

Tariff Dispute Complicates U.S. Ties With Mexico


President Trump’s threat to impose tariffs on Mexico was averted by an immigration deal late Friday, but scrambles anew the already-delicate relationship between two neighbors struggling to resolve the trade and border issues that are top priorities for the White House.