2023
June
14
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

June 14, 2023
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Whitney Eulich
Latin America Editor

I was thrilled to report in Barbados last month for all the expected reasons (weather, beaches, food) and a slightly less conventional one: This would be my first time reporting a story entirely in English in more than a decade.

In the lead-up to the trip, as my anxiety grew over driving on the left side of the road and making sure I had all my interviews confirmed, I comforted myself with the notion that doing something in one’s native language inherently makes it easier.

Of course, I was wrong.

Between Britishisms and Bajanisms, I frequently found myself asking, “What?” There were interviews where I even considered inquiring if the person spoke some Spanish.

But, like any language, it only took a strong dose of humility – and tuning my ear to what was initially a linguistic puzzle. When I was told, “That would be right,” it wasn’t a use of the conditional as I first understood it, but somehow a gentler way of telling me something was correct. I learned to love local turns of phrase, like “yes, please,” which was doled out in situations where a simple affirmative just wouldn’t do. 

“Is the restroom over there?” “Yes, please!”

“Are you Bob?” “Yes, please!” “ ... But, ARE you Bob?”

Now back in my adoptive home of Mexico, I’ve finished writing my stories from Barbados, one of which you can read in today’s Daily about the innovative and growing sport of road tennis. Next time I travel to an English-speaking country to report, I know my expectations won’t be so idealized. But given the chance to return to Barbados? Yes, please!


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

The U.S. has sent a staggering amount of military aid to Ukraine. This has significantly diminished American stockpiles. Replenishing them is not merely a matter of turning a crank.

Pelagiya Tikhonova/Moscow News Agency/Reuters
Russian service members take part in a military parade on Victory Day, which marks the 78th anniversary of the victory over Nazi Germany in World War II, in Red Square in Moscow, May 9, 2023.

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine initially shook many of its neighbors into looking for other geopolitical partners. But economic and geographical necessity is returning them to Moscow’s orbit.

Who defines “development”? A village’s enduring resistance against a massive steelworks project highlights gaps in India’s environmental protections and human rights.

Karen Norris/Staff
Carlos Mureithi
Ezekiel Akwach, a South Sudanese who fled the conflict in Sudan, helps gather health data on his fellow refugees for authorities managing a camp in Malakal, South Sudan.

As conflict threatens to derail Sudan and the region – already triggering a stream of refugees to neighboring countries burdened with their own crises – ordinary citizens have resolved to step in and support each other.

Whitney Eulich
Anthony "Baku" Simmons (left) transformed his mechanic workshop in Bridgetown, Barbados, into a neighborhood road tennis court and training center in the late 1990s.

The rise, fall, and revival of road tennis in Barbados is a testament to the island nation’s resilience and sense of community, and its recent push for equality and innovation.

Book review

In this rich epic saga, the journey of a mechanical tiger symbolizes the painful legacy of colonialism and the pursuit of self-determination. 


The Monitor's View

Turkey has the world’s 19th-largest economy and a leader, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, who has been in power for 20 years. As a pivotal state between Europe and the Middle East, it enjoys a commanding perch in geopolitics, able to call in financial favors from wealthy nations. Yet after President Erdoğan won reelection on May 28, he appointed an economic czar who promises to re-create the Turkish economy almost from scratch, as if Turkey itself had to be reborn.

From now on, said Mehmet Şimşek, a former Merrill Lynch economist appointed as finance minister, the government’s principles in guiding the economy will be “transparency, consistency, predictability, and compliance with international norms.” He promised to bring accountability, “rules-based” policymaking, and a “return to rationality.”

Not only that, but Mr. Erdoğan’s choice to head the central bank, Hafize Gaye Erkan, took office with an international reputation for grounding her decisions in economic reality. “Data is indisputable,” she stated in a biography based on her high-level experience at Goldman Sachs and First Republic Bank, as well as an education from Princeton, Stanford, and Harvard.

These two respected appointees may indeed reflect a new direction for Turkey. At the least, they signal a possible epiphany for Mr. Erdoğan on how an economy should run. His very unorthodox ideas on economic management have led to a financial crisis and high inflation that almost cost him the election. (He won with 52%.)

The president has “effectively accepted the invalidity of his macroeconomic theory that ‘high interest rates cause inflation,’ though he has not said so publicly,” wrote Turkish American economist Timur Kuran on Twitter. Mr. Erdoğan sees high interest rates as un-Islamic, calling them the “mother and father of all evil.”

To ensure interest rates stayed low in the run-up to the election, he had to effectively take control of the central bank. He appointed four central bank governors in four years and placed his son-in-law as finance minister. The result was inflation at 85% last year and a critical depletion of foreign reserves to prop up the value of a much-diminished Turkish currency.

Now foreign analysts are watching to see if Ms. Erkan will raise interest rates by up to 25% to tame inflation and win back foreign investors. More importantly, they wait to see if she will be fired by the president if the economy slows too much for his party to prevail in local elections next year. According to a report by Middle East Eye, the new finance minister was able to present economic numbers to the president that persuaded him to support a credible approach on interest rates.

“You have to see all the data and understand what is going on yourself,” Mr. Şimşek supposedly told the president. Or as the finance minister told the people of Turkey, the country needs a “return to rationality.”


A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

Each weekday, the Monitor includes one clearly labeled religious article offering spiritual insight on contemporary issues, including the news. The publication – in its various forms – is produced for anyone who cares about the progress of the human endeavor around the world and seeks news reported with compassion, intelligence, and an essentially constructive lens. For many, that caring has religious roots. For many, it does not. The Monitor has always embraced both audiences. The Monitor is owned by a church – The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston – whose founder was concerned with both the state of the world and the quality of available news.

We are empowered by God to express grace and strength at every moment – even when the pull of frustration threatens.


Viewfinder

Lucas Peltier/USA Today/Sports/NPSTrans/toppic
Members of the Vegas Golden Knights team celebrate their win over the Florida Panthers in game five of hockey’s Stanley Cup Final in Las Vegas, June 13, 2023. It is the first Stanley Cup championship for the young franchise, which is just 6 years old. The Knights had another win as well: They are one of only six franchises to capture the storied Stanley Cup in six or fewer seasons.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us today. We hope you’ll come back tomorrow when we mark Father’s Day – this Sunday in the United States – a little early. We have two lovely stories on the uniquely powerful impact a father can have on families and the world.  

More issues

2023
June
14
Wednesday

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