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Todayâs Agenda
- South Africaâs government is [falling down]( on the job. Australian politicians are [falling down]( on the job. [Cuban]( and [U.S. political leaders]( are falling down on the job.
- Political leadership failures have [market risks](. The legal immunity deal for a Trump loyalist has grave [risks for the president](.Â
- A major U.S. university [fell down]( on the job.Â
- [Snail slime]( rules.Â
Do the Wrong Thing
There is no shortage of global crises that cry out for effective political leadership. But faced with hard decisions about hard problems, government officials in many countries are opting for easy rhetoric or actions that might make them popular in the short term but do little to help their citizens in the long run.
Look no further than South Africa, Bloombergâs editors write, for government officials that are hurting the very people theyâre claiming to help. There, the administration of President Cyril Ramaphosa is proposing a constitutional amendment that [panders to populists]( by permitting some private land to be seized by the government without compensation. The editors say itâs the wrong prescription for the countryâs serious problems of widespread unemployment, unequal distribution of agricultural land between whites and blacks, and political corruption.
David Fickling also blames political pandering in Australia, where prime ministers tend to have the short tenures of [Spinal Tap drummers](. He says the tumultuous ouster of Malcolm Turnbull is particularly ominous because it [reflects a policy realignment]( among Australiaâs right-of-center politicians toward inflammatory views on immigration and race, and a disregard for climate policy realities.Â
The risk of short-term thinking has financial as well as human consequences. Lionel Laurent writes that the prevalence of world leaders promising quick fixes [to score political points]( is eroding investor confidence and pushing up market volatility in countries already at risk.Â
Again in the category of failing leadership, Cuba risks [squandering]( a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for economic and social change by âbetting on policies to relax government constraints on the market just enough to goose growth but not so much as to jeopardize the command economy,â Mac Margolis says. Further north in the U.S., President Donald Trump is treating the [rule of law]( like a dogâs chew toy, Jonathan Bernstein laments. And so is the [presidentâs criminal lawyer](, according to Noah Feldman.Â
Bonus Trump reading: The revelation that Allen Weisselberg, the financial chief for the Trump Organization, cooperated with federal prosecutors in the recent case against Trumpâs fixer Michael Cohen âis [a potentially momentous turn of events for the president](,â writes Tim OâBrien. Weisselbergâs knowledge of the Trump Organization may lead special prosecutor Robert Mueller straight into the heart of the presidentâs business and financial dealings, Tim says.Â
Do the Wrong Thing (Redux)
If youâre looking for institutions that fail to uphold their values, major U.S. collegiate sports are a good place to start. Joe Nocera excoriates the light punishment meted out to Ohio State Universityâs head football coach, who [ignored allegations of domestic violence]( against one of his assistant coaches, failed to tell university officials about it, lied about what he knew and tried to cover up his lie. Ohio State compounded this leadership failure, Joe writes, with a university investigation that exonerated or excused the head coachâs actions.Â
Slime of a Different Sort
Would you pay $120 for a bottle of snail mucus to slather on your face? What if I told you that [South Korean soldiers]( love it?
The military conscripts are among the hordes buying snail extract and other products that [promise to make skin smoother](, better hydrated and less blotchy. Andrea Felsted and Sarah Halzack write that interest in skin-care products among both the affluent and mass-market shoppers has been a lift for makers of personal-care products at the end of a long bull market for makeup.Â
The origin of the skin-care mania was first South Korea and more recently Japan. In both countries, tourists from China â the world's biggest market for skin-care products, as for many other things â are snapping up items like pore-cleansing face masks to bring home. (Bonus: The face masks make you look like the villain in a horror film.)
Chart Attack
Italy should tread carefully as [it hunts for patrons]( to buy the countryâs debt, Marcus Ashworth advises. Even the suggestion that the U.S. might be that patron could alienate Italyâs best friend, the European central bank.
Quick Hits
The Federal Reserve chairman [channeled Alan Greenspan]( to defend a gradual approach to raising borrowing costs. â Daniel MossÂ
Chinaâs smaller banks are [courting risk]( by offering gambling-like products to attract savers. â Andy Mukherjee and Nisha Gopalan
Thereâs a reason [German workers]( have equal representation on corporate boards. â Justin Fox
Itâs misguided to oppose a congressional proposal that would let Americans [finance parental leave]( by delaying or reducing their Social Security benefits. â Ramesh Ponnuru
The hype is fading for IBMâs Watson artificial intelligence technology, but AI still should have an important [role in medicine](. â Faye Flam
Swiss industrial giant ABB Ltd. made a stunning [flip-flop](. â Chris Hughes
Social networks are [enabling U.S. election interference](. â Leonid Bershidsky
Two lawyers, one working for Trump and the other for Trumpâs former attorney, âare now facing off in the Super Bowl of [publicity hounds](.â â Albert Hunt
The composer Leonard Bernstein offers lessons [for contemporary America](. â Scott Duke Kominers
Venezuela [isnât proof]( that free-market governments are best. â Noah Smith
U.S. stock markets tend to [shrug off]( semi-anticipated events including presidential impeachments. â Barry Ritholtz
ICYMI
The U.S. [called off]( upcoming nuclear talks with North Korea. Senator John McCain [discontinued medical treatment]( for his brain cancer. [Shorting Tesla]( isnât cheap.Â
Kickers
People in the technology industry are [altered](.Â
Blockchain comes to [the bathroom](.Â
âFlorida candidate says [alien abduction]( doesn't define her.âÂ
Comedian Conan OâBrien is obsessed with the biographer-historian Robert Caro. [It is unrequited love](.Â
A changing of the guard, [for apples](.Â
[Lovers of fleece vests]( donât care that itâs August.Â
A [history of smells](.Â
Note: Itâs been fun sitting in for Mark Gongloff this week. Please send escargot ooze, suggestions and kicker ideas to Shira Ovide at sovide@bloomberg.net.
***
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