There are plenty of things that could set off political risk around the world this year.
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Follow Us [Get the newsletter]( Welcome to a new year, where there will be plenty of politics to chew over from around the world. To kick things off, here are 12 things to watch in 2022 â for now at least â when it comes to political risk. BORDER ALERT: Tensions are high on the Ukrainian border as Russian President Vladimir Putin maintains an elevated troop presence and demands that NATO reduce its footprint in the region. As the muddy ground freezes, the prospect of a Russian invasion may rise. Three separate sets of talks start from Sunday to try and de-escalate the situation. Key Reading - [Why Russia-Ukraine Tensions Are So Hard to Defuse](
- [Biden Reasserts Warning as Putin Signals Satisfaction With Call]( MIDTERM MOMENT: U.S. President Joe Biden faces a referendum on his performance with elections in November for the House and more than half of the seats in the Senate. His popularity has been on a downswing as he battles to get his overarching economic plans through Congress. Does this open the door for Republicans and even potentially Donald Trump in 2024? Key reading: - [Democrats Limp to 2022 Fighting History, Bidenâs Low Ratings]( - [More Americans Say Violence Against Government Can Be Justified]( RISING CHINA: President Xi Jinping is seeking an unprecedented third term at a leadership meeting this year, further cementing his hold on the worldâs second biggest economy. Xi has been cracking down in both China and Hong Kong, while pushing his mantra of âcommon prosperity,â reining in the countryâs big companies and billionaires. What does this all mean for still-strained U.S. ties, and for Taiwan, an island democracy that Beijing considers its territory? Key reading: - [Chinaâs Xi Vows to Tackle Risks as Pivotal Political Year Begins]( - [How Will China Change in 10 Years Under Xiâs Prosperity Push?]( FAIR SHOT: The pandemic is still with us, though omicron thankfully appears a milder (if much more contagious) version of Covid-19. Governments remain challenged by populations tired of restrictions but still vulnerable to the virus. Even as Israel starts to roll out a fourth inoculation, many poorer countries are still struggling to get people double vaccinated. Until the world as a whole has greater protection, variants will keep coming. Key reading: - [Biden Vaccine Rule Fights Prompt Clashing Calls to High Court]( - [What We Know About Omicron, the New Covid Virus Variant]( BALLOT BOX: Itâs not just the U.S. that has elections this year. Watch for votes in countries including France (where President Emmanuel Macron faces multiple challengers from the center and far-right), Brazil (where President Jair Bolsonaro is battling falling popularity), Hungary (where Viktor Orban is hoping to cement his âilliberal democracyâ) and Australia (Scott Morrison is hoping that walling Australia off during the pandemic will play well at home). Key reading: - [Macron Likely to Face Pecresse in French Runoff, Poll Shows]( - [How Populist Rodrigo Duterte Keeps Shaking Up the Philippines]( COMING DUE: Even as the pandemic continues, countries face tough decisions on when, and how, to wind down Covid-19 aid for businesses and workers. As debt piles up, governments will face pressure to start turning off the spigot and potentially raise taxes. At the same time, some of them are touting lofty green goals that will require both spending and structural economic change. Can they manage it all? Key reading: - [This Year Is Forecast to Be One of the Warmest on Record]( - [France, Italy Call for EU Fiscal Reform to Boost Investment]( A climate change protest outside the White House in October. Photographer: Al Drago/Bloomberg SELF-SUFFICIENCY: 2021 saw countries push for greater self-reliance when it came to things like semiconductors. Broad supply bottlenecks may persist, accelerating plans to build domestic industry and shield national champions from overseas buyers, leading to rising protectionism. Itâs not just chips that are at stake: There are renewed questions about energy dependence, for example. Key reading: - [U.S. Natural Gas Faces Wild 2022 as Foreign Crises Exert Pull]( - [The Year Chip Shortages Changed the World]( PARTIAL THAW: Things have improved between Saudi Arabia and other Middle East powers, including Israel, Qatar and the U.A.E., opening the door to more trade and investment. Will it last? Saudi Arabiaâs Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman is pushing change both at home and abroad, but that papers over many years of mistrust and conflict. Then thereâs the wildcard of Iran, which is bogged down in talks to renew its 2015 nuclear accord with a harder-line administration in power. Key reading: - [Giant Rave in Saudi Desert Pushes Kingdomâs Changing Boundaries]( - [What to Know About UAEâs Shift to a Monday-Friday Working Week]( PRESSURE COOKER: There are specific things to watch with Turkey that could spill into the broader arena. President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is still dabbling in unorthodox monetary policies even as he takes steps to try and shore up the lira, the worldâs worst-performing emerging market currency in 2021. With elections on the horizon, Erdogan needs to bolster support at home. That could make him more erratic offshore, including in the Mediterranean, with NATO and with Russia. Key reading: - [Erdoganâs Push for Low Rates Backfires as Borrowing Costs Soar]( - [Turkeyâs Erdogan Is Losing Support Where He Can Least Afford It]( NEW ERA: Olaf Scholz has taken over as chancellor in Germany after 16 years of Angela Merkelâs rule. That will raise questions not just about domestic policies and the economy but broader European stability without Merkel at the tiller. Does this open the door to Macron? To European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen? Can they manage talks around pandemic aid for Europe, tensions in Europeâs east, find a way to deal with China and keep leaders like Erdogan in check? Key reading: - [Scholz Becomes Chancellor as Germany Faces Covid, Russia Risks]( - [German Christian Democrats Pick Merkel Foe to Lead Revival]( TRICKY WATERS: Countries are waking up to the fact that cryptocurrencies are here to stay. There are upsides to crypto but also murky downsides, especially when it comes to money laundering, trafficking and terrorism funding. As everyone from El Salvador to major football clubs gets in on the action, governments will find themselves grappling with the question of how, or whether, to regulate. Key reading: - [El Salvadorâs Leader Loved by Crypto Faithful, Not by Bondholders]( - [Iran Orders Crypto-Mining Ban to Save Power During Winter Crunch]( Technicians install ethernet and power cables for new mining rigs at the Minto cryptocurrency mining center in Nadvoitsy, Russia, on Dec. 17. Photographer: Andrey Rudakov/Bloomberg TIME BOMB: With the focus in 2021 on countries like China and Russia, things were oddly quiet in North Korea. Kim Jong Un restrained himself to short-range missile tests and some propaganda bursts against America. Heâs busy dealing with food shortages at home, but how long will he stay out of the limelight he seemingly adores? Is this the year Pyongyang muscles its way back onto the global stage for attention? Key reading: - [Kim Jong Un Places Food Crisis Above Nuclear Talks in 2022]( - [A Growing Army of Hackers Helps Keep Kim Jong Un in Power]( A protest against Covid-19 restrictions in Brussels on Dec. 19. Photographer: Valeria Mongelli/Bloomberg [Click here]( to follow Bloomberg Politics on Facebook and share this newsletter with others too. They can sign up [here](. Global Headlines Covid surge | A record 10 million people were diagnosed with Covid-19 in the seven days through yesterday, almost [double]( the previous high. At the same time, as omicron swamps many parts of the globe, weekly deaths continued to drop, falling to the lowest level in more than a year. - U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin said he tested [positive]( and plans to quarantine at home for five days.
- China reported 101 new cases, of which 90 were in Xiâan, where some residents [complained]( on social media about a lack of access to food and censorship on the matter. Closing doors | A third Hong Kong news outlet announced it would shut as the city installed a legislature vetted for loyalty to the Communist Party, a stark illustration of Beijingâs success in [silencing]( the local opposition. Citizen News briefed reporters on its decision to close at midnight at the same time as dozens of pro-establishment lawmakers were sworn-in one by one in front of the red and gold Chinese national flag. Chinaâs property developers have rising bills to pay in January and [shrinking]( options to raise funds. The industry will need to find at least $197 billion to cover maturing bonds, coupons, trust products and deferred wages to millions of migrant workers, according to Bloomberg calculations and analyst estimates. Beijing has urged builders to meet payrolls to avoid the risk of social unrest. Deepening crisis | Sudanese Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok resigned yesterday, saying the failure of power sharing between the military and civilians has put the North African country in [jeopardy]( of sliding into chaos. His decision leaves the transitional government almost entirely in the hands of the armed forces amid deadly protests against Octoberâs coup. Best of Bloomberg Opinion - [A Second Drone Age Is Here and Itâs a Free-For-All: Ruth Pollard](
- [Biden and EU Wonât Stop Putinâs Ukraine Invasion: Niall Ferguson](
- [Americaâs Hunger Pandemic Is Still Getting Worse: Adam Minter]( Another push | U.S. Democrats begin the year needing to [re-imagine]( their $2 trillion tax, climate and spending package if they are to revive Bidenâs economic agenda. West Virginia Senator Joe Manchin remains a major roadblock, and the bill will need to be slimmed down to have any chance of passing before midterm election campaigns begin. 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](.
News to Note - Bolsonaro was [admitted]( to a hospital in Sao Paulo after spending his holidays at a beach. - Biden [reaffirmed]( U.S. support for Ukraineâs sovereignty yesterday in a call with President Volodymyr Zelenskiy. - South Koreaâs Moon Jae-in vowed to make another [push]( for peace with North Korea in his final months as president, despite signs Kim has little interest in reciprocating. - Twitter has permanently [banned]( the personal account of Republican Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene for repeated violations of its prohibition against spreading misinformation about Covid-19. - Talks to restart the nuclear deal between Iran and world powers [resume]( today with diplomats contemplating outcomes that fall short of fully reviving the accord. - Richard Leakey, a Kenyan conservationist and paleontologist whose discoveries of fossils including âTurkana Boyâ helped transform views on human [evolution]( and its roots in Africa, has died. He was 77. Thanks to the 33 readers who answered our quiz on Dec. 17 and congratulations to Rebecca Rich, who was the first to name South Africa as the nation whose leader tested positive for Covid-19 that week. And finally ... The pre-Christmas extradition of a Russian tech tycoon has delivered the [highest-level]( Kremlin insider into U.S. custody in recent memory. Vladislav Klyushin, a medal of honor recipient who had access to sensitive intelligence documents, could potentially provide American law enforcement officials with their closest view yet of Russiaâs efforts to manipulate the 2016 U.S. election. Klyushinâs Russian Defense Ministry ID. Source: Bloomberg 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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