Good morning.
We’re covering Omicron’s effect on the pandemic and the continuing costs of
Brexit. |
Dr. Anthony Fauci said the evolution of the pandemic was still unclear.Salvatore Di Nolfi/EPA, via Shutterstock |
Will Omicron
bring an end to the pandemic? |
Speaking at the
online World Economic Forum, Dr. Anthony Fauci, President Biden’s top medical
adviser for Covid, said it was too soon to say how the Omicron variant would
change the course of the pandemic. The sheer volume of cases could have a
meaningful effect on collective immunity, he said, but the evolution of the
pandemic was still unclear. |
“It is an open
question as to whether or not Omicron is going to be the live virus
vaccination that everyone is hoping for,” he said, adding: “That would only
be the case if we don’t get another variant that eludes the immune response.” |
Here are the latest updates and maps of the pandemic. |
In other
developments: |
·
China
scrapped plans to sell tickets to the public for the Winter Olympics,
less than two days after health authorities reported Beijing’s first case of the Omicron variant. ·
The tennis star Novak Djokovic returned to Serbia
after his deportation from Australia over his vaccination status. |
·
Australia will recognize Russia’s Sputnik V vaccine for
incoming travelers. ·
Health
officials in the U.S. are figuring out how to convey a tough message to the
public: that the science is incomplete, and that this is our best advice
for now. |
Maltby & Greek, a specialty importer at Spa Terminus in London. Andrew Testa for The New York Times |
European
products and British headaches |
For British
companies that depend on fast, small deliveries from Europe, the costs of new Brexit trade rules are mounting. They
now have to contend with additional forms, customs charges and health safety
checks for goods to cross Britain’s border. |
After a yearlong
delay, on Jan. 1, Britain stepped up its enforcement of customs requirements
for goods coming from the E.U., which in 2020 accounted for half of all
imports into the country. Now, the goods must be accompanied by customs
declarations, and businesses importing animal and plant products must notify
the government of shipments in advance. |
For food
importers, this is a particular problem. Some British businesses are taking
on the export costs of their European suppliers to avoid losing them. Others
are just importing less, reducing the choices for customers. Still others are
restricting purchases to bulk orders and forgoing trying new products. |
Analysis: “We are past the point of having wild
shortages,” said David Henig, a trade policy expert in London, who compared
the damage to a “slow-boiling frog.” The extra costs will eat away at Britain’s economy, with independent forecasts
indicating an eventual shortfall of about 4 percent of gross domestic
product. |
A newborn at a hospital in Danzhai, China, last year.Agence France-Presse — Getty Images |
China’s
looming demographic crisis |
China’s birthrate
plummeted for a fifth straight year in 2021, moving the world’s most populous
country closer to a demographic crisis that could undermine
its economy and even its political stability. The birthrate was lower even
than the most pessimistic estimates, experts said. |
Births fell to
10.6 million in 2021, compared with 12 million the year before. That was
fewer than in 1961, when the Great Leap Forward, Mao Zedong’s economic
policy, resulted in widespread famine and death. Growth in the last quarter
of 2021 slowed to 4 percent. |
China’s
population could soon begin to contract, something that would be hard to
reverse and might result in labor shortages. To counter the problem, the
Chinese Communist Party has loosened its notorious “one child” policy and
offered incentives to young families. But the changes come as social and
economic conditions have improved for women, an increasing number of whom
don’t want children. |
Quotable: “The year 2021 will go down in Chinese
history as the year that China last saw population growth in its long
history,” said Wang Feng, a professor of sociology at the University of
California, Irvine. |
THE LATEST
NEWS |
||
News From Europe
|
|
||
·
Éric
Zemmour, the anti-immigrant far-right pundit who is running in France’s
presidential elections, was fined 10,000 euros for inciting racial hatred and
making racially insulting comments. ·
Russian
diplomats have been told to prepare to leave Ukraine, in a possible clue to Vladimir Putin’s next move. ·
Ukraine’s
former president and a leading opposition figure, Petro Poroshenko, returned to Kyiv, where he faced possible
arrest — adding turmoil to the threat of a Russian invasion. ·
Eastern
Europe has become a fertile ground for new forms of censorship using
subtle tools. |
Stories From
the U.S. |
·
Relatives
of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. marched on Washington, calling for the
Senate to pass voting rights legislation. ·
Officials
are investigating whether Malik Faisal Akram, the Texas synagogue attacker,
was motivated by the case of Aafia Siddiqui, who has spent
almost 12 years in prison on terrorism charges. ·
The
rabbi who was held hostage at the synagogue said he and two other
hostages escaped by throwing a chair at the gunman and then
fleeing. |
Around the
World
|
||
|
·
Overseas
Tongans were anxiously waiting to hear from loved ones after a huge undersea
volcanic eruption severed communications lines two days ago. |
·
North
Korea fired two short-range ballistic missiles off its east
coast yesterday, its fourth weapons test in a month. ·
The
Houthi militia in Yemen attacked Abu Dhabi in an apparent drone strike that
blew up several fuel tankers and killed three people. |
A Morning Read
|
||
Bidzina
Ivanishvili, an eccentric billionaire and the former prime minister of
Georgia, may officially be retired, but many Georgians believe he still
wields substantial political power behind the scenes. |
One particular
eccentricity is his infatuation with trees, a love so great that some have
ruminated that he may be a druid who worships them. This fondness comes
through particularly in Ivanishvili’s personal park, which was opened to the
public in 2020 and which is home to more than 200 transplanted trees, each
personally vetted by him. |
ARTS AND IDEAS
|
Fuller views
of motherhood |
Mainstream films
and TV shows often paint motherhood in broad strokes: A mother is endlessly
devoted to her children, or her absence serves as fodder for a protagonist’s
origin story, as Amanda Hess writes in The Times. But some recent
productions are challenging those notions with complex portrayals. |
In “The Lost
Daughter,” Leda (played by Olivia Colman), an academic, leaves her young
daughters to pursue her career, as many deadbeat fathers have done before
her. “Children are a crushing responsibility,” she tells a pregnant
character. Yet the movie withholds judgment and depicts Leda as a human
being, not a monster. “We can dislike her, but we are never permitted to
revile her,” Jeannette Catsoulis writes in a review. |
There’s also
Penélope Cruz’s character, in “Parallel Mothers,” a pregnant 40-year-old who
befriends a teenage mother-to-be and makes an immoral decision about their
newborns. “Instead of reassuring audiences that mommy is always a bastion of
safety, these filmmakers have created mother heroines who are unpredictable,
erratic and even a little bit frightening,” Emily Gould writes in Vanity Fair. |
Even “And Just
Like That …,” the “Sex and the City” reboot, is part of the trend. At one
point, Miranda — a mother to a hormonal teenager — tells a character who is
considering having children that there are many nights she wishes she could
“go home to an empty house.” |
These works, Gould
writes, “present their mothers as full human beings, even when their needs
are structurally opposed to those of their children.” |
PLAY, WATCH,
EAT |
What to Cook
|
||
Somewhere between
a soup and a stew, this Iranian dish is a comforting dinner for a cold day. |
What to Read |
An “important new book” reopens the cold case of who
alerted the Nazis to Anne Frank’s whereabouts, our critic writes. |
Virtual Travel |
Experience the
lunar nothingness of the Skeleton Coast in Namibia. |
Now Time to
Play |
Here’s today’s Mini Crossword, and a clue: Greek sandwiches
(five letters). |
And here is the Spelling Bee. |
That’s it
for today’s briefing. See you next time. — Natasha |
P.S. Here’s the process behind a recent Times Magazine cover story on
the sex lives of people over 70. |
There is no new
episode of “The Daily” today. On the Book Review podcast, Robert Gottlieb and Carl
Bernstein discuss their new books. |
Sanam Yar
wrote today’s Arts and Ideas. You can reach Natasha and the team at briefing@nytimes.com. |
| ||
Credit: Natasha
Frost | NYT |
|
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