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Texas judge suspends anti-abortion law

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Plus: Spain is paying adults to leave their parents’ homes. Sponsored by Good morning, Quartz r

Plus: Spain is paying adults to leave their parents’ homes. [Quartz]( Sponsored by Good morning, Quartz readers! Was this newsletter forwarded to you? [Sign up here](. Forward to the friend who [you think is grrr-eat!]( Here’s what you need to know A judge in Texas temporarily suspended the anti-abortion law. But the US state immediately appealed the decision, which enables clinics to [resume the procedure]( until there’s a permanent solution. It could take years for the WHO-approved malaria vaccine to be deployed. But thousands of children would be saved each year, [mostly in Africa](, while [India could move a step closer]( to its goal of being malaria-free. Hackers targeted Twitch. [Massive amounts of data]( leaked from Amazon’s video game streaming platform, including source code and creator pay information, to the website 4chan. Facebook paused more products. Pushback from a whistleblower and US lawmakers, [which CEO Mark Zuckerberg rejects](, has put the brakes on work on existing projects because of “[reputational reviews](,” according to The Wall Street Journal. Bitcoin surged on a George Soros endorsement. The cryptocurrency [climbed 10%]( yesterday to about $55,000. The Nobel prize for literature is announced. The Swedish committee [reveals the award-winner]( at around 7am US eastern time. Sponsor content by University of Wisconsin Extended Campus An education for next-gen leaders. Learn how to build supportive workplaces and communities committed to social responsibility and reversing climate change with a sustainability degree or certificate from the University of Wisconsin. [Courses are 100% online and begin January 25.]( What to watch for The US economy added 235,000 jobs in August, far fewer than the 700,000 or so that economists expected. Experts will be watching the September employment report on Friday for clues to whether that surprise was a blip, or a sign of a deeper fracture in the job market. Economists still predict perky job growth. But another miss or two could force policymakers to do a major rethink, and cause them to wait longer to raise borrowing costs. If the economy is adding fewer than 300,000 jobs per month, that’s not the kind of steady growth that will quickly restore all the employment that was lost at the outset of the Covid-19 pandemic. [A bar chart showing the seasonally adjusted monthly change in US non-farm employment from Jan. 2018 to Aug. 2021. The most significant drop occurred in April 2020. Job growth in Aug. 2021 was much lower than economists had expected.] John Detrixhe has more on what to look for in the report, and [what it means for the US labor market](. Spain will help adults move out of their parents’ homes Spain’s prime minister Pedro Sánchez announced yesterday that his government plans to offer adults aged 18 to 35 [€250 ($290) a month to spend on rent]( for up to two years. Adults in Spain tend to move out of their families’ homes around age 30, nearly four years later than the EU average, according to Eurostat. In recent years, low housing supply coupled with high demand has caused rents to rise, making it harder for young people to save up enough to leave. 22.3%: Percentage of Spanish adults aged 20-34 who were not employed or enrolled in an education program in 2020 38%: Youth unemployment rate in the country currently 100,000: Number of new houses in Spain in 2018 850,000: Number of new houses in the country in 2006 €1 billion: Portion of Spain’s EU coronavirus recovery funds the government will invest in social housing China’s changing role in shrinking global inequality “Because 4.4 billion of the world’s 7.8 billion population now live in countries poorer than China, rapid growth in China will eventually be disequalizing.” —Nobel-winning economist Angus Deaton Global income inequality, as measured by the [Gini coefficient](, has been steadily declining over the years, mainly driven by rising incomes in India and China. But that may no longer hold so true as the world’s most populous country, China, has seen its income rise significantly. While officials’ recent push for “[common prosperity](” could reduce inequality within China, thereby continuing to decrease inequality globally, it could also result in downward mobility. Of course, as with pretty much all economic trends and predictions, the [pandemic made things a bit more complicated](. ✦ You know what’s not complicated? [Getting 40% off]( a Quartz membership with code QZEMAIL40. Quartz announcement Guardian Summit 2021 (Oct. 12) is pleased to welcome Special Guest Allyson Felix, 11x Olympic Medal Winner + Entrepreneur! The FREE virtual national convening will help build a coalition committed to using entrepreneurship, investing + innovation to build a more equitable future for the #NextInLine. Register + learn more at: [www.guardiansummit.com](. Handpicked Quartz 🔮 [Facebook is shutting down one of its most interesting experiments]( 👩‍⚕️ [Student nurses who refuse vaccination struggle to complete degrees]( ⚡️ [India is also staring at an energy crisis]( ⛔️ [A city at the heart of the UK auto sector has a new plan to edge out cars]( 💰 [Google announced a $50 million venture capital fund for growth-stage African startups]( 🦘 [The Tony the Tiger protest sign at a Kellogg’s plant could have featured a kangaroo, an elephant, or a gnu]( Surprising discoveries What’s cooler than being cool? [Thirty-eight trillionths of a degree away from absolute zero](! Good luck getting a pool before 2023. Fewer lockdown restrictions didn’t ease the boom in in-ground pool construction, and builders are [naming their prices](. The movie Cats prompted Andrew Lloyd Webber to buy a dog. The [legendary composer of the original show]( said his puppy was the only good thing to come out of the adaptation. The Earth is getting dimmer. Scientists can tell from measuring changes in how brightly our planet’s light [reflects off the moon](. The US has more monuments to mermaids than congresswomen. Guess women politicians still aren’t [part of that world](. SPREAD THE WORD Over 500k readers and counting. You already know why half a million people read the Daily Brief, so why not spread the word? [Share the Daily Brief today]( and get rewarded. Our best wishes for a productive day. Send any news, comments, les poissons, and consolation puppies to hi@qz.com. Get the most out of Quartz by [downloading our iOS app]( and [becoming a member](. Today’s Daily Brief was brought to you by Hasit Shah, John Detrixhe, Courtney Vinopal, Mary Hui, Morgan Haefner, Susan Howson, and Liz Webber. [facebook]( [twitter]( [external-link]( Enjoying Quartz Daily Brief? Forward it to a friend! They can [click here]( to sign up. If you’re looking to unsubscribe, [click here](. Quartz | 675 Avenue of the Americas, 4th Fl | New York, NY 10010 | United States Copyright © 2021 Quartz, All rights reserved.

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