[Bloomberg]( Follow Us [Get the newsletter]( First it was [semiconductors](. Then food. Now itâs electricity. Companies, factories and households worldwide are being hit on all sides by supply crunches, and itâs leaving governments [scrambling]( for solutions. Shortages of bacon and milk (and the ubiquitous toilet paper) are one thing. But throw higher power bills on top and itâs a potentially explosive mix with voters. [Soaring]( gas and electricity prices, compounded by [unusually]( strong demand in Europe during the northern summer, could fuel inflation fears heading into winterâs even [greater]( demand. However much that actually feeds into price reality may not matter, if people simply believe their overall costs are rising. It could also further dampen the economic recovery from Covid-19 if factories are forced to cut output due to reduced energy access and transport bottlenecks. That includes China, the worldâs second-biggest economy and one if its largest industrial engines. In the U.S., a series of natural disasters has repeatedly highlighted the [parlous]( state of the countryâs electricity grid, with shortages and outages increasingly the norm. As politicians grapple for quick remedies they may be tempted to turn back to coal (even if that too is in short supply), leaving them [pushing]( against promises to green up their economies with speed. Firing up coal plants is not a good look for the U.K., for example, as it prepares to [host]( the COP26 summit from late October. The pandemic has widened inequality everywhere. Many people have scraped by on reduced pay, government handouts and tax breaks. They cannot [afford]( bigger grocery and power bills on top of rent increases (yes, housing is also in a supply squeeze). Governments equally canât keep subsidies and other spending unfettered forever. Any politician facing voters in the next 12 months will be feeling the heat on that. â [Rosalind Mathieson]( Workers weigh a sack of coal at a wholesale market in Mumbai, India. Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg Click [here]( to follow Bloomberg Politics on Twitter and tell us how weâre doing or what weâre missing at balancepower@bloomberg.net. Global Headlines Tightening grip | Police in Hong Kong [arrested]( four members of a group that organized an annual Tiananmen Square vigil, part of a broader push against pro-democracy activists. Chinaâs top agency in the city said their detention on accusations of failing to comply with national security legislation reflected the âfairness and justice of the law.â - [Read how]( the removal of the legislatureâs remaining directly elected opposition member completes the purge of the election system.
- Chinese artist and [dissident]( Ai Weiwei said Credit Suisse is closing his foundationâs account because of an alleged criminal record. Imminent threat | U.S. President Joe Biden [described]( the flooding in New York and New Jersey caused by Hurricane Ida as signs of worsening climate change and renewed his push for a $550 billion public works bill that he said would make communities more resilient. Speaking in New York yesterday, he said âthese disasters arenât going to stop.â - As the president prepares to address labor unions today, the administration plans to [distribute]( one-time $600 pandemic relief payments to meatpacking and farm workers. Bitcoin steadied somewhat today after [plunging]( on El Salvadorâs troubled rollout of the largest cryptocurrency as legal tender. The experiment with Bitcoin â the biggest test of the tokenâs real-world usefulness â had a rocky start due to technical glitches to the official digital wallet that later appeared resolved. President Nayib Bukele said on Twitter the country now holds 550 Bitcoins after buying when the price fell. Merkelâs despair | With her once-mighty Christian Democrats staring into the electoral [abyss](, Angela Merkel faces a bitter end to an illustrious career as German chancellor, [Patrick Donahue]( reports. The question that will dog her is whether an earlier intervention in the campaign would have salvaged the partyâs lackluster leader, Armin Laschet, as Social Democratic candidate Olaf Scholz gains momentum into the Sept. 26 vote. - Voters have heard little from Merkelâs potential successors about how theyâll reconcile their spending [ambitions]( for Europeâs biggest economy with the budget prudence that defined her chancellorship. Best of Bloomberg Opinion - [China Doesnât Like How Gen Z Is Spending Its Time: Adam Minter](
- [The Taliban Canât Print Cash, and Other Challenges: Ajmal Ahmady](
- [Vaccines Versus Covid and the Great Immunity Debate: Faye Flam]( Thorny lineup | The Taliban included the leader of a U.S.-designated [terrorist]( organization in a new Afghanistan government, as the West grapples with whether to recognize the administration. Sirajuddin Haqqani, who heads the Haqqani Network and is on the FBIâs most wanted list, will serve as acting interior minister, potentially [complicating]( any moves by Washington to cooperate with the group. - We explain why Taliban co-founder Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, the main public face of the group, is likely to find his job even [harder](.
- MTN is in talks with potential international [buyers]( for its wireless business in Afghanistan as it seeks to exit the country, sources say. Royal gains | Moroccoâs king is on the cusp of securing even greater [power]( over policy, as a parliamentary vote today may see a long-dominant Islamist party join regional peers on the sidelines. The Justice and Development Party has been criticized for failing to revive an economy that shrank 6% last year or tackle corruption, while King Mohammed VI received praise for his role in handling the pandemic. Bloomberg TV and Radio air Balance of Power with [David Westin]( weekdays from 12 to 1pm ET, with a second hour on Bloomberg Radio from 1 to 2pm ET. You can watch and listen on Bloomberg channels and online [here]( or check out prior episodes and guest clips [here](. What to Watch - A mysterious blast that shook a centrifuge workshop in Iran is still [reverberating]( among international nuclear monitors who now say some of their surveillance equipment went missing after the June incident. - Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro [rallied]( thousands of supporters in yesterdayâs marches but showed little sign of winning back moderates who propelled him to the top job. - The U.K. is set to take the lead among developed economies by [raising]( taxes to trim pandemic budget deficits, an issue thatâs likely to dominate policy debate across the world in the coming years. - U.S. lawmakers are [barreling]( ahead with legislation to change the way Apple runs its App Store, unconvinced by its recent moves to address antitrust complaints from developers and regulators around the world. - Former U.S. President Donald Trump frequently hints at but hasnât announced another presidential bid, a strategy that [leaves]( him with an unrivaled $102 million war chest that could dissuade Republican challengers. - A Colombian businessman close to Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro can be [extradited]( to the U.S., where he faces money laundering charges, the top court in the Atlantic Ocean island nation of Cape Verde ruled. And finally ... Turkeyâs decision to pull out of the Istanbul Convention, a European treaty to combat [violence]( against women, has raised concern about safety and female participation in the economy and is seen as another sign of a shift to a brand of conservatism out of sync with Western neighbors. As [Burhan Yuksekkas]( and [Donna Abu-Nasr]( report, the withdrawal sparked protests across Turkey, where stories of violence including honor killings of women have for years been front-page news. A protest in Istanbul on July 1 against Turkeyâs withdrawal from the Istanbul Convention. Photgrapher: Murad Sezer/Reuters  Like Balance of Power? [Get unlimited access to Bloomberg.com](, where you'll find trusted, data-based journalism in 120 countries around the world and expert analysis from exclusive daily newsletters. You received this message because you are subscribed to Bloomberg's Balance of Power newsletter.
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