Tuesday, August 06, 2024

How Bad Was the July Jobs Report?

 
 August 6, 2024
Facebook



After arguing for over a year that it was time for the Fed to start lowering rates to avoid an economic slowdown, I feel a need to give a bit of pushback against all the folks who are now rushing to agree with me. To be clear, I absolutely think the Fed should lower rates, and the sooner the better (a between meetings reduction would be fine by me), but the talk of an economic collapse and impending recession are more than a bit over the top.

First, let’s catch a breath and look at the actual numbers. The unemployment rate for July was 4.3 percent (4.25 percent going to the next decimal). That is still low by historical standards, but it is up by nearly a percentage point from the 3.4 percent rate hit last April. More importantly, it is up from a rate 3.7 percent in January. An increase in the unemployment rate of 0.6 percentage points in six months is definitely cause for concern.

But there is reason to believe that weather may have played some role in this increase. While a note from BLS said that there did not find clear evidence of a weather effect from Hurricane Beryl in response rates, that doesn’t mean that the hurricane had no effect on the data. Most obviously, 461,000 people reported that they had a job but were unable to work due to the weather. That compares to 83,000 in June and 55,000 in July of 2023.

Another 1,089,000 reported they worked fewer hours than normal. That compares to 206,000 in June and 164,000 last July. In a similar vein, the number of people who reported being on temporary layoff increased by 249,000 in July, accounting for more than 70 percent of the reported rise in unemployment. This would support the view that the hurricane played a considerable role in the rise in unemployment in July.

It’s also worth noting that not everything in the household survey for July was not bad. Most importantly, the employment to population ratio (EPOP) for prime age workers (ages 25 to 54) actually rose 0.1 pp in the month to 80.9 percent, tying the peak for the recovery. We don’t usually see EPOPs for this group of workers rising in a recession.

The data from the establishment survey is also mixed rather than uniformly bad. The 114,000 jobs created for the month is low compared to what we have been seeing, but it’s not clear that it is much lower what we should be expecting. The last economic projections from the Congressional Budget Office before the pandemic showed job growth of just 250,000 a year from 2023 to 2025, as the retirement of the baby boomers was expected to sharply limit job growth.

Even the projections from June of this year show the economy adding just 1.8 million jobs, or 150,000 a month, between the second quarter of this year and the second quarter of 2025. The July figure is obviously somewhat below this number, but the 170,000 average for the last three months is comfortably above it.

These qualifications of the bad news in the July report should not be taken as questioning whether the labor market is weakening. It clearly is, and that is supported by a large amount of other data, such as the drop in the job opening, hiring, and quit rates in the JOLTS data. We also have private data sources such as Indeed and ADP that tell a similar story. And, we know that wage growth has slowed almost back to the pre-pandemic pace in the Average Hourly Earnings series, the Employment Cost Index, and the Indeed Wage Tracker.

A Weaker Labor Market Is Not a Recession

However, it is important to distinguish between saying we are seeing a weaker labor market and we are on the cusp of a recession. The economy is still creating jobs at a respectable pace, even if it may not be rapid enough to keep the unemployment rate from rising. It is especially worth noting that the two most cyclical sectors, construction and manufacturing, are still adding jobs, although very slowly in the latter case. In prior recessions, these sectors began losing jobs before the official start of the recession.

The two sectors together lost 110,000 jobs in the six months prior to the 1990 recession,  237,000 jobs in six months before the 2001 recession, and 360,000 jobs in the six months leading up to the Great Recession. In the last six months, these sectors have added 133,000 jobs. If we are on the edge of a recession, it clearly is going to look very different from prior recessions.

It is also worth noting that this is not just an issue of correlation. There is a logic whereby job loss in these sectors led to a recession. These sectors tend to pay more than the overall average, both at an hourly rate (this is less true today for manufacturing, as the wage premium has been seriously eroded) and also because these jobs have considerably longer average workweeks.

When there is substantial job loss in these sectors, it translates into less purchasing power in the economy, leading to the sort of cascading effect that gives us recessions. We are clearly not on this path at present.

We also can look at weekly filings for unemployment insurance. These always rise sharply before the start of a recession, as shown below. (I have not included the pandemic recession because it would wreck the scale of the graph.)

There has been a modest rise in the number of weekly claims since the lows hit in 2022, but the most recent four-week average of 238,000 is still low by historical levels and even below levels hit last summer. In short, it is hard to look at these data and see an economy on the brink of recession.

The Fed Should Still Lower

As Chair Powell has repeatedly noted, the Fed has a dual mandate for stable prices and full employment. It seems as though the Fed has maintained a single-minded focus on the price stability part of the mandate for the last year, even as inflation has slowed sharply and the labor market has weakened. At this point it is hard to justify a 5.25 percent federal funds rate.

Expectations of inflation are now slightly above 2.0 percent, which means that the real federal funds rate is over 3.0 percent. That is seriously contractionary. Through most of the period prior to the pandemic, the real rate was close to zero and often negative.

An excessively contractionary policy from the Fed may not push us into recession any time soon, but it could mean hundreds of thousands of people are being denied jobs due to a weak labor market. And millions of people who might otherwise leave jobs for better ones, or push for higher pay at their current job, are being denied this opportunity. And high mortgage rates continue to take a huge toll on the housing market.

We don’t have to start yelling that the sky is falling. None of the data supports that story. But the labor market is clearly weaker than it has to be, and the Fed can help to turn it around with an aggressive set of rate cuts in the second half of this year.

This first appeared on Dean Baker’s Beat the Press blog.

Dean Baker is the senior economist at the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington, DC. 

UK
Three water firms face £168m fine for excessive sewage spillsOfwat discovered the firms caused harm to the environment and customers

Thames Water, Yorkshire Water and Northumbrian Water


By Harry Wise
Updated: 6 August 2024


Three English water companies face fines totalling £168million after an investigation found them guilty of sewage discharge failures.

Ofwat is proposing fines of £104million for Thames Water, £47million for Yorkshire Water and £17million for Northumbrian Water after the watchdog's biggest-ever probe.

The water industry regulator found the firms had caused harm to the environment and their customers by regularly releasing sewage into rivers and seas rather than in 'exceptional circumstances' as the law allows.


Mess: Thames Water, Yorkshire Water and Northumbrian Water could end up being fined £168million in total for failures over sewage discharges

It also found a failure to sufficiently upgrade assets to meet changing local needs and said they were 'slow to understand' the extent of their duties to limit pollution from storm overflows.

Ofwat suggested they did not properly operate and maintain their wastewater treatment works, given the 'strong correlation' between the steep spill levels and operational concerns at wastewater treatment sites.

The regulator will consult on the size of the fines before ordering the water businesses to pay them, as well as enforcement orders requiring each of them to deal with the problems it has uncovered.

Debt-riddled Thames Water's fine equates to 9 per cent of its annual turnover, while the figures for Yorkshire Water and Northumbrian Water are 7 and 5 per cent, respectively.

David Black said: 'The level of penalties we intend to impose signals both the severity of the failings and our determination to take action to ensure water companies do more to deliver cleaner rivers and seas.

'These companies need to move at pace to put things right and meet their obligations to protect customers and the environment.

'They also need to transform how they look after the environment and to focus on doing better in the future.

Britain's water sector has faced immense criticism from politicians and environmental campaigners in recent years amid growing instances of sewage spills.

According to the Environment Agency, water companies were responsible for spills in England more than doubling from 1.75 million hours in 2022 to 3.6 million hours last year.

Water UK, the trade association for the UK's water industry, blamed the increase on higher rainfall, which is the primary driver of storm overflows.

However, the Environment Agency said this 'does not affect water companies' responsibility to manage storm overflows in line with legal requirements.'

To clean up the country's rivers and waterways, Ofwat ruled in July that English and Welsh water firms could spend £88billion between 2025 and 2030 on infrastructure upgrades.

Funding for these improvements will come from hiking household water bills by an average of £94 over the five years, excluding inflation.

 

Gunmen kill New Zealand helicopter pilot in attack in Indonesia’s Papua region

Gunmen kill New Zealand helicopter pilot in attack in Indonesia’s Papua region
Bayu Suseno, spokesman for the Cartenz 2024 Peace Task Force, holds a portrait of Glen Malcolm Conning, a pilot for Indonesian aviation company PT Intan Angkasa Air Service, during a press conference in Timika, Indonesia (AP)

Gunmen stormed a helicopter and killed its New Zealand pilot shortly after it landed in Indonesia’s restive Papua region, police have said.

The gunmen released two health workers and two children the helicopter was carrying on Monday.

Glen Malcolm Conning was a pilot for Indonesian aviation company PT Intan Angkasa Air Service.

We have released warnings several times that the area is under our restricted zone, an armed conflict area that is prohibited for any civilian aircraft to land

He was shot dead by gunmen allegedly with the West Papua Liberation Army, the armed wing of the Free Papua Movement, after landing in Alama, a remote village in the Mimika district of Central Papua province, said Faizal Ramadhani, a National Police member who heads the joint security peace force in Papua.

The gunmen released the Indigenous Papuan passengers and set fire to the aircraft, he said.

“All passengers were safe because they were local residents of Alama village,” said Mr Ramadhani, adding that the village is in a mountainous district that can be reached only by helicopter.

A joint security force was deployed to search for the attackers, who ran into the dense jungle.

New Zealand’s Foreign Ministry confirmed late on Tuesday that Mr Conning had been killed.

Consular officials in Jakarta were working with authorities to “understand more about the circumstances” surrounding the helicopter pilot’s death, the ministry said in a statement.

West Papua Liberation Army spokesman Sebby Sambom told The Associated Press he had not received any reports from fighters on the ground about the killing.

“But, if that happens, it was his own fault for entering our forbidden territory,” Sambom said.

“We have released warnings several times that the area is under our restricted zone, an armed conflict area that is prohibited for any civilian aircraft to land.”

Sambom called on Indonesian authorities to stop all development in Papua until the government is willing to negotiate with the rebels, and “if anyone disobeys, they must bear the risk themselves.”

Conflict has spiked in the past year, with dozens of rebels, security forces and civilians killed.

Monday’s killing was the latest violence against New Zealand nationals in the Papua region.

In February 2023, Egianus Kogoya, a regional commander in the Free Papua Movement, abducted Philip Mark Mehrtens, a pilot from Christchurch who was working for Indonesian aviation company Susi Air.

Kogoya and his troops stormed a single-engine plane shortly after it landed on a small runway in a mountainous village.

Planning to use the pilot to negotiate, Kogoya has said they will not release Mr Mehrtens unless Indonesia frees Papua as a sovereign country.

In 2020, seven employees of PT Freeport Indonesia, including a New Zealand miner, Graeme Thomas Wall from Ngaruawahia, were attacked by gunmen in a parking area in Tembagapura, a mining town.

Mr Wall was shot in his chest and died.

Papua was incorporated into Indonesia in 1969 after a UN-sponsored ballot that was widely seen as a sham.

Since then, a low-level insurgency has simmered in the mineral-rich region, which is divided into six provinces.


'Our hearts are broken': Family of helicopter

 pilot Glen Conning, killed in Papua, speak

 out


The family of the New Zealand helicopter pilot who was killed in the Indonesian region of Papua say he was the most caring and loving husband and dad.

Glen Malcolm Conning, 50, was killed by a pro-independence group known as Free Papua Organisation (OPM) when rebels rounded up those on board the helicopter, including four passengers, after they landed in an isolated area in the Central Papua province. The passengers are reported to be safe.

In a statement released on Tuesday by Natasha Conning on behalf of his family, they say he is truly loved by his family and friends, who he cherished spending time with when he wasn't flying or being in the outdoors.

"Our hearts are broken from this devastating loss."

They say they appreciate the love and support they have received, but ask for privacy at this time.

Conning was shuttling passengers for a private company.

A spokesperson for the police special operation in Papua, Bayu Suseno, claimed his body was taken to the helicopter and then burned along with the aircraft in Alama District, which can only by accessed by helicopter.

OPM spokesman Sambom told the BBC that despite being unable to verify the claims, "if it was true, then the pilot is a spy because we have declared that the area is a war zone".


New Zealand pilot Philip Mehrtens was photographed with his rebel captors in Indonesia's Papua region. Photo: Supplied/TPNPB

In February 2023, separatist fighters in Indonesia's Papua region took another New Zealand pilot hostage. Phillip Mehrtens, 37, was captured shortly after landing his plane in the remote mountainous area of Nduga to drop off passengers.

Since then, Mehrtens has been held captive by West Papua National Liberation Army fighters (TPNPB) - the armed wing of the OPM - who also attacked a number of Indonesian troops sent to rescue him, killing at least one.

These hostile acts come in the context of a long-running, often brutally violent conflict between the Indonesian government and West Papua's indigenous people.

Papuan rebels have been seeking independence from Indonesia for decades, and have previously issued threats and attacked aircraft which they believe are carrying personnel and supplies for Jakarta, the country's capital.

The region is divided into six provinces and is separate from independent Papua New Guinea.

Previously a Dutch colony, West Papua declared independence in 1961. However, Indonesia took over two years later and was formally given control in a UN-supervised vote in 1969.

The UN vote is widely considered illegitimate as only about 1,000 Papuans took part in it. A pro-independence movement began shortly afterwards, which continues to this day.


17,000 Tajik Migrant Workers Deported From Russia In Past 6 Months

Tajik citizens stranded at Moscow's Vnukovo airport earlier this year.

 August 06, 2024

Tajik Labor Minister Gulnora Hasanzoda said on August 6 that Russia had deported 17,000 Tajik citizens over the past six months. According to Hasanzoda, the deportations have been mostly linked to violations of Russian law. Last month, Tajik officials said some 3,400 Tajik migrant workers had been returned to Tajikistan from Russian airports in the previous six months. Since Russia arrested several Tajik nationals suspected of being involved in a terrorist attack near Moscow in late March that left more than 140 people dead, Tajik migrant workers have faced increased restrictions inside Russia and when traveling to Russia.


Russia needs Central Asian migrants to do the work that there aren’t Russians to do – but it’s driving them out

Russia needs Central Asian migrants to do the work that there aren’t Russians to do – but it’s driving them out
Former Russian president Dmitry Medvedev at an onion stall run by Uzbek workers. / Kremlin.ruFacebook
By bne IntelliNews August 4, 2024

It’s a puzzling reality, but one that’s become increasingly undeniable in recent months—Russia, despite acute labour shortages that even threaten to undermine its “war economy” factories, is driving away the valuable resource that is Central Asian migrants.

A watershed moment came with the Crocus City Hall Islamist terrorist atrocity in March that was allegedly committed by four Tajik gunmen. After that, reason appeared to go out the window as a wave of xenophobia took over.

Even before Crocus—as indicated by a Bruce Pannier piece for bne IntelliNews published in February telling how Russia was losing out to the wider world of migrant work opening up to Uzbek citizens—the appeal of Russia as a work destination was dissolving for many Central Asians, several million of whom traditionally play an important role in the Russian economy year after year through seasonal work or in full-time roles.

Galiya Ibragimova, an Uzbekistan-born journalist and researcher, on August 1 observed in an analysis for the Carnegie Russia Eurasia Center in Berlin that “just a few years ago it would have been impossible to imagine hundreds of thousands of Central Asians seeking work in Asia, or tens of thousands going to Europe [as is happening now]. Russia is unmistakably losing its allure for Central Asian migrants: yet another unexpected consequence of the war in Ukraine”.

Since April, noted Ibragimova, the number of job seekers from Tajikistan in St Petersburg has fallen 60%, while the number from Uzbekistan dropped 40%. Moreover, she added, more than a dozen Russian regions have tightened labour restrictions.

“As a consequence,” reported Ibragimova, “the Krasnodar region, a leading producer of wheat, corn, sunflowers, and rice in Russia, is experiencing a shortage of agricultural workers. In the Ural Mountains, the same is true for factories, including those producing military equipment. In Yakutia in Russia’s far north, migrants have been banned from driving taxis and other transportation jobs. In Dagestan, there are not enough workers to dispose of the region’s waste.”

The observer might ask why the Kremlin, no doubt aware of the importance of Central Asian migrant workers to Russia, especially during a time beset by economic stresses related to the regearing of the economy to support the war effort, does not move decisively to stop the draining away of migrants.

“As a rule,” assessed Ibragimova, “the impetus for imposing restrictions on migrants comes from regional officials. They claim migrants have taken jobs from Russian citizens and depressed wages. In fact, the reverse is true: the economy faces such an acute shortage of workers that wages are rising rapidly. The war on migrants goes on, however, having clearly been accepted by the authorities as an expression of patriotism.

“Should the pressure continue, Russia’s labor shortage will only worsen. According to the Russian Academy of Sciences’ Institute of Economics, the country lacks about 4.8 million workers, with deficits particularly affecting industry, agriculture, trade, construction, and utilities: sectors that are generally staffed largely by migrants.

“But the appeal of Russia’s job market was already diminished prior to these restrictions. Now, Central Asian migrants are looking for job opportunities in other countries, including in Europe.”

The complaints from Tajikistan, Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan, in particular, about the post-Crocus crackdown that their work migrants are enduring in Russia and at the Russian border have grown steadily louder. After all, this is an important economic issue for these countries too—remittances provide up to 40% of Tajikistan’s GDP, and more than 20% of Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan’s. In 2023, remittances to Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan fell by 42%, 12% and 8%, respectively, pointed out Ibragimova.

Central Asian migrants now “faced constant document checks, workplace raids, firings, flight delays, and hours-long lines at the border with Kazakhstan. If they were detained by law enforcement officials, they could be subjected to torture, or given a choice between conscription and deportation,” she added.

Yet, as summed up by veteran Russia expert Mark Galeotti in the wake of the Crocus attack: “At the moment, Russia cannot afford to alienate and drive out these Central Asian workers—it needs them. It needs them to do the work that frankly, there aren't Russians to do, or that Russians don't want to do.

“[…] there is a labour crisis: Between the impact of the war and the need to have the defence factories running at full pelt, there is actually a shortage of labour. So, to actually exacerbate that by risking driving Central Asians out of the country—that would directly impact his [Russian President Vladimir Putin’s Ukraine] war effort and also have diplomatic implications with his relationships with the Central Asian countries, which are feeling much, much less intimidated by Moscow now, and which Moscow needs because these are crucial routes for sanctions-busting smuggling into Russia of all kinds of spare parts, materials, microchips, whatever, that the war effort needs.”


 

US federal judge rules Google violated antitrust law by monopolizing internet searches
US federal judge rules Google violated antitrust law by monopolizing internet searches
US District Court Judge Amit P. Mehta held that Google LLC violated section 2 of the Sherman Antitrust Act by maintaining an illegal monopoly over internet search and search advertising markets on Monday.

The ruling marks a significant victory for the US Department of Justice (DOJ) and State Attorneys General who have been challenging Google’s dominance for several years, with Mehta also concluding that Google engaged in unlawful practices to preserve its monopoly in the online search sector.

Section 2 of the Sherman Antitrust Act prohibits monopolization or attempts to monopolize and targets unfair practices to achieve monopoly power. Google was accused of employing an unfair strategy to stifle competition by paying billions of dollars to companies like Apple and Samsung to allow its search engine to be the default option on their devices and browsers. The ruling also found that Google’s monopoly enabled the undertaking to inflate prices for search ads, increasing its revenue to further entrench its dominant position.

Mehta stated in the ruling that “[a]fter having carefully considered and weighed the witness testimony and evidence, the court reaches the following conclusion: Google is a monopolist, and it has acted as one to maintain its monopoly.” Attorney General Merrick B. Garland responded to the judgment in a press release referring to a “historic win for the American people.” He went on to emphasize “No company — no matter how large or influential — is above the law. The Justice Department will continue to vigorously enforce our antitrust laws.”

Google has announced plans to appeal the decision with the company’s president of global affairs, Kent Walker, highlighting parts of the judgment that acknowledged the company’s main argument during the proceedings, namely that its search engine was of superior quality over other competitors. Additionally, Google has contended that its search contracts with competitors were non-exclusionary in nature and thus should not incur liability. Mehta rejected this argument noting that search contracts would disincentivize phone manufacturers and developers of operating systems from working on their own search engines.

The decision comes in the wake of the DOJ filing a federal antitrust complaint in January 2023. The DOJ had filed similar civil antitrust complaints in 2020 and in April 2022, with Google facing another class action lawsuit over its Google Maps monopoly and acquisition of Waze. An additional federal trial is set to commence in Virginia later this year regarding the DOJ’s claims that Google’s advertising technology constitutes an illegal monopoly.

Australian state orders public servants to stop remote working after a newspaper campaign against it

Public employees in Australia's most populous state have been told to end remote working in a directive from the premier of New South Wales as he seeks to reverse work-from-home habits established during the pandemic


ByCHARLOTTE GRAHAM-MCLAY Associated Press
August 6, 2024

WELLINGTON, New Zealand -- The government of Australia’s most populous state ordered all public employees to work from their offices by default beginning Tuesday and urged stricter limits on remote work, after news outlets provoked a fraught debate about work-from-home habits established during the pandemic.

Chris Minns, the New South Wales premier, said in a notice to agencies Monday that jobs could be made flexible by means other than remote working, such as part-time positions and role sharing, and that “building and replenishing public institutions” required “being physically present.” His remarks were welcomed by business and real estate groups in the state's largest city, Sydney, who have decried falling office occupancy rates since 2020, but denounced by unions, who pledged to challenge the initiative if it was invoked unnecessarily.

The instruction made the state’s government, Australia’s largest employer with more than 400,000 staff, the latest among a growing number of firms and institutions worldwide to attempt a reversal of remote working arrangements introduced as the coronavirus spread. But it defied an embrace of remote work by the governments of some other Australian states, said some analysts, who suggested lobbying by a major newspaper prompted the change.

“It seems that the Rupert Murdoch-owned Daily Telegraph in Sydney has been trying to get the New South Wales government to mandate essentially that workers go back to the office,” said Chris F. Wright, an associate professor in the discipline of work at the University of Sydney. The newspaper cited prospective economic boons for struggling businesses.

The newspaper wrote Tuesday that the premier’s decision “ending the work from home era” followed its urging, although Minns did not name it as a factor.

But the union representing public servants said there was scant evidence for the change and warned the state government could struggle to fill positions.

“Throughout the New South Wales public sector, they’re trying to retain people,” said Stewart Little, the General Secretary of the Public Service Association. “In some critical agencies like child protection we’re looking at 20% vacancy rates, you’re talking about hundreds of jobs.”

Little added that government offices have shrunk since 2020 and agencies would be unable to physically accommodate every employee on site. Minns said the state would lease more space, according to the Daily Telegraph.

The change is a “game-changer” for languishing central city businesses, said Katie Stevenson, Executive Director of the Australian Property Council's NSW branch. “More workers mean more life, more investment, and more business for our cities."

Individual agencies could devise their own policies, the order added, but should ensure employees “spread attendance across all days of the working week.” Requests to work from home on some occasions should be formally approved for a limited period only and reasons for the request should be supplied, the directive saidMinns said workplace culture and opportunities for mentorship would improve, in remarks echoing other business leaders worldwide who have questioned the productivity of remote workers. Most public workers, such as teachers and nurses, could not work from home anyway, he added.

The order set New South Wales apart from other Australian states, one of which sought to capitalize on the move Tuesday. A spokesperson for Jacinta Allan, the premier of neighboring Victoria, told reporters the state’s remote work allowances would remain undisturbed and disgruntled NSW public servants should consider moving there.

Wright said the change not only overturned increased flexibility during the pandemic but also erased a decade of moves by Australia’s federal government encouraging remote working to reduce barriers to workforce participation, lower carbon emissions and reduce traffic jams.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has been broadly supportive of remote working. His government will enact a “right to disconnect” law later this month that will allow employees to refuse work communications outside their agreed hours.

 

US allocates $20.71 billion for Afghanistan, refugees over three years: SIGAR

Since the U.S. military withdrew from Afghanistan in August 2021, the United States has allocated $20.71 billion in assistance to Afghanistan and Afghan refugees, according to a report by the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR).

The SIGAR report, released on July 31, details that this amount includes nearly $2.97 billion in U.S. appropriations for humanitarian and development aid in Afghanistan. Additionally, $3.50 billion has been transferred to the Afghan Fund, which aims to protect macro-financial stability for the Afghan people and could potentially recapitalize Afghanistan’s central bank in the future.

Furthermore, $8.70 billion has been allocated to support Afghan evacuees resettling in the United States through the Operation Allies Welcome (OAW) program. Of this, the Department of Defense (DOD) has obligated $5.36 billion in Overseas Humanitarian, Disaster, and Civic Aid (OHDACA) appropriations and other funds. The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has obligated nearly $3.00 billion, and the Department of Homeland Security has obligated $284 million for OAW.

The report also highlights the creation of a new Department of State appropriations account, Enduring Welcome, mandated by the Further Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2024. In fiscal year 2023, the DOD transferred $3.00 billion in OHDACA funds to the State Department for Enduring Welcome, which, along with other appropriations totaling $5.53 billion, supports ongoing programming under the initiative.

This financial aid has faced criticism, with activists urging the cessation of U.S. weekly cash assistance to Afghanistan, which is currently unreported by the Taliban-run central bank. Critics argue that stopping this aid could pressure the Taliban government.

 

Nigerian protests fizzle out after deadly police crackdown


A woman holding a child uses a bullhorn, as Nigerians protest in the streets during anti-government demonstrations against bad governance and economic hardship, in Lagos, Nigeria August 5, 2024.
A woman holding a child uses a bullhorn, as Nigerians protest in the streets during anti-government demonstrations against bad governance and economic hardship, in Lagos, Nigeria August 5, 2024.
Image: REUTERS/ Francis Kokoroko

Protests in Nigeria over the soaring cost of living ebbed on Monday, with only a few hundred people turning out in major cities following a deadly crackdown by security forces since the demonstrations began last week.

Hundreds of thousands of people have taken to the streets in the capital Abuja, Lagos and other big cities during the protests against economic hardship and crime, which started on Thursday and were meant to continue until Aug. 10.

Amnesty International said at least 13 people have been killed in clashes with police since the start of the protests, which were dubbed "#10DaysOfRage”. Police put the death toll at seven, saying some of the fatalities were caused by accidents and an explosive device.

A tough police response and a call for a protest pause by President Bola Tinubu appeared to have dampened the demonstrations, which came weeks after data showed annual inflation hit a 28-year high of 34.19% in June.

In the commercial hub of Lagos, where demonstrations have been largely peaceful, about 100 people gathered at the protest venue singing and chanting “we are hungry”. In Abuja, there were no signs of protests at the main stadium where protesters have been gathering since Thursday.

In the north of the country, about 200 protesters were dispersed by armed security forces in Maiduguri, capital of Borno state, while in Katsina, security forces fired teargas at protesters who were chanting “hunger and insecurity are killing us”.

Curfews have been imposed in parts of the North, which has seen some of the largest and fiercest protests, and in the central state of Plateau.

On Sunday, Tinubu called for an end to violence and said he was always open to dialogue.

Tinubu, in office since May 2023, defended his economic reforms, which have included a partial end to costly petrol and electricity subsidies and devaluation of the naira, as necessary to reverse years of economic mismanagement.

Reuters