Bright spots: why 2024 hasn't been as bad as it seems

亮点:为何2024年并没有看上去那么糟糕

Editor's Picks from The Economist

2024-12-23

8 分钟
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A handpicked article read aloud from the latest issue of The Economist. This year has been marked by conflict and suffering—there have been wars on three continents and natural disasters around the world. But there has also been cause for hope. Listen to what matters most, from global politics and business to science and technology—subscribe to Economist Podcasts+
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  • The Economist. Hi, it's Alice Su.

  • I co-host Drum Tower, our weekly podcast on China.

  • Here's an article handpicked from the latest edition of The Economist read out loud.

  • I thought you might enjoy it.

  • Our pages have been full of suffering in 2024.

  • War has raged on three continents.

  • The world watched Gaza, Lebanon and Ukraine most closely.

  • But the fighting in Sudan was the most deadly.

  • Storms, tempests, floods and fires have ruined lives and taken them.

  • All the while,

  • the rivalry between countries siding with China and the American-led Western alliance has deepened.

  • Even as America has chosen as president a man whose commitment to that alliance is in doubt.

  • At first sight, therefore,

  • 2024 has amplified a growing sense that the multilateral order which emerged from the Second World War is coming apart.

  • Increasingly, governments act as if might is right.

  • Autocrats flout the rules and the Western powers that preach them are accused of double standards.

  • However, take a wider view and 2024 holds a more hopeful message.

  • It affirmed the resilience of capitalist democracies, including America's.

  • At the same time, it laid bare some of the weaknesses of autocracies, including China.

  • There is no easy road back to the old order.