2024
February
13
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

February 13, 2024
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TODAY’S INTRO

Shifts in Myanmar

This month marks three years since Myanmar’s military regime ousted a democratically elected leader. But it was the junta’s decision over the weekend to enforce the military draft that renewed focus on a conflict that has killed thousands and displaced millions.

The context for that move is the subject of our story today from Myanmar. Next week, you’ll hear from one rebel group about shifts toward greater cooperation within its ranks and with other rebels, as well as its sense of momentum. Both stories speak to a conflict that reaches beyond national borders as refugees seek safety and humanitarian needs deepen – and reminds us of the power of the drive for self-determination. 

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As Israel zeroes in on Rafah, its aims, and concerns, are clear

When Israel rescued two Hamas-held hostages from Rafah, the operation raised sharp concerns among Israel’s friends and partners that the long-signaled move into the overcrowded city had begun. Those concerns are adding to Israel’s own.

Mohammed Salem/Reuters
Palestinians leave Rafah, in fear of an Israeli military operation, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas in the southern Gaza Strip, Feb. 13, 2024.
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Over the past two weeks, in nearly every public statement, Israeli leaders have made their future target in the war in Gaza clear: Rafah.

Gaza’s southernmost city sits astride the frontier with Egypt and is, according to Israeli officials, Hamas’ last redoubt after more than four months of devastating conflict. The city is also now home to more than 1 million displaced Palestinians. Even world leaders deemed supportive of Israel have voiced their concerns.

U.S. President Joe Biden’s statement to reporters Monday was adamant: “The major military operation in Rafah should not proceed without a credible plan for ensuring the safety and support ... of the people sheltering there. They need to be protected!”

An especially sensitive consideration for Israel is its peaceful relationship with Egypt, which has sounded its own warnings.

“Rafah is more complicated now, and Egypt is reacting,” says Michael Milshtein, a former Israeli intelligence officer. “Israel is very concerned by Egypt’s reaction and is sensitive to it.”

For any such operation to move ahead, two Israeli officials said, a mass evacuation plan from Rafah would first have to be formulated and then implemented.

“There’s no reality that we don’t deal with Rafah,” says one senior Israeli military officer. “The question is how you deal with it.”

As Israel zeroes in on Rafah, its aims, and concerns, are clear

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Over the past two weeks, in nearly every public statement, Israeli leaders have made their future target in the war in Gaza clear: Rafah.

Gaza’s southernmost city sits astride the frontier with Egypt and is, according to Israeli officials, Hamas’ last redoubt after more than four months of devastating conflict that followed the militant organization’s Oct. 7 attack on Israel.

The city is also now home to more than 1 million displaced Palestinians, quadruple its prewar population, who fled from the shattered enclave’s north as Israeli ground forces moved in.

Even world leaders deemed supportive of Israel have voiced their concerns for Rafah and issued severe warnings to the Jewish state.

“We want Israel to stop and think very seriously before it takes any further action,” British Foreign Secretary David Cameron said Monday in an interview with Reuters. It is “impossible to see how you can fight a war amongst these people,” he said. “There’s nowhere for them to go.”

U.S. President Joe Biden’s statement to reporters Monday, during a joint appearance at the White House with King Abdullah of Jordan, was adamant.

“The major military operation in Rafah should not proceed without a credible plan for ensuring the safety and support ... of the people sheltering there. They need to be protected!” he said.

An especially sensitive consideration for Israel is its peaceful relationship with Egypt, an important intermediary with Hamas that often cooperates with Israel on Gaza security matters. In recent days, Egypt has reinforced its military presence along the border with Rafah and reiterated its longstanding position that people in Gaza should not be pressed into seeking refuge on its territory.

Hostages rescued in Rafah

Concerns for Palestinian civilians in Rafah were raised Sunday when Israeli special forces, backed by airstrikes, rescued two Israeli civilian hostages being held by Hamas militants in a building in Rafah.

More than 60 Palestinians were reported killed, including militants, in airstrikes that accompanied the rescue operation, but the Israeli forces withdrew. It was just a raid, not a prelude to the threatened incursion.

Israel Defense Forces/Reuters
Fernando Simon Marman (second from left) and Louis Hare (right) two Hamas-held hostages freed in an Israeli special forces operation in Rafah, reunite with loved ones at Sheba Medical Center in Ramat Gan, Israel, Feb. 12, 2024.

But Israeli officials, at least outwardly, are adamant that the launch of a large-scale operation is only a matter of time, and inevitable.

“Those who say that under no circumstances should we enter Rafah are basically saying lose the war, keep Hamas there. And Hamas has promised to do the Oct. 7 massacre over and over and over again,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told ABC News in an interview Sunday.

And yet, in a nod to international concerns, the long-serving Israeli leader added that he was working on a “detailed plan” to evacuate civilians “out of harm’s way” to unspecified areas in Gaza north of Rafah that the Israeli military has already cleared.

According to several Israeli officials, the focus on Rafah is not mere grandstanding, but a central military objective. The Israeli war plan called for an initial mass ground invasion of the northern Gaza Strip, followed by a southward push into the territory’s central regions and the city of Khan Yunis, just north of Rafah.

Now after dismantling over 18 of Hamas’ 24 battalions, according to Israeli estimates, much of the militant group’s remaining fighting force – four battalions – is in Rafah. As it is the last major population center still controlled by Hamas, the group’s senior leadership, including Yahya Sinwar, may be sheltering among, or in tunnels below, the masses of displaced civilians.

Focus on Egyptian border

But the biggest objective, from the Israeli point of view, is severing Hamas’ control over the border crossing and frontier with Egypt that is the enclave’s commercial and humanitarian lifeline.

Since Hamas’ violent takeover of Gaza in 2007, the group has been able to easily smuggle in arms above and below ground, as well as tax goods entering from Egypt.

“To achieve your war aims, you have to take care of Rafah. It’s the main source that turned Hamas from a nuisance into a monster,” says Michael Milshtein, a former Israeli intelligence officer and expert on Palestinian affairs. “Without Rafah you haven’t done anything.”

Ibraheem Abu Mustafa/Reuters
Palestinians wait to receive food cooked by a charity kitchen amid shortages of food supplies, in the overcrowded Egypt-Gaza border city of Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip, Feb. 13, 2024.

And yet with 60% of Gaza’s 2.2 million people crammed into homes, tents, and makeshift shelters, “Rafah is more complicated now, and Egypt is reacting,” adds Dr. Milshtein. “Israel is very concerned by Egypt’s reaction and is sensitive to it.”

Egypt has warned that any Israeli move into Rafah could see desperate Palestinians try to breach the border wall and flee into its territory – a scenario Cairo has warned would be a “red line” which could shake the foundations of the 1979 peace treaty it signed with the Jewish state.

President Biden, on Monday, reiterated his staunch opposition to “any forced displacement of Palestinians from Gaza.”

For these reasons, and despite the tough public rhetoric, one person familiar with Israeli deliberations said there was as yet no plan to launch a major ground operation in Rafah.

“The [Israelis] don’t know what they want to do, and there’s lots of confusion surrounding Rafah,” the person added, alluding to the grave concerns cited by both the United States and Egypt.

For any such operation to move ahead, two Israeli officials said, a mass evacuation plan from Rafah would first have to be formulated and then implemented.

“There’s no reality that we don’t deal with Rafah, since we need to make sure the [Hamas] military wing doesn’t go back to what it was, and that they’re demilitarized,” says one senior Israeli military officer. “The question is how you deal with it.”

Today’s news briefs

• Senate aid package: The Senate passed an emergency spending package early Feb. 13 that would provide military aid to Ukraine and Israel, replenish U.S. weapons systems, and provide humanitarian aid to civilians in Gaza. The bill also includes about $1.9 billion in weapons aid to Taiwan and about $3.3 billion to build more submarines in support of a security partnership with Australia and the United Kingdom. 
• In Gaza, hope for peace: Officials from the United States, Egypt, Israel, and Qatar met in Cairo Feb. 13 to seek a truce in Gaza. The talks ended without a breakthrough. Israeli tanks shelled the eastern sector of Rafah city overnight, residents said, although the anticipated ground offensive did not appear to have started.
• Stalemate in Pakistan: Pakistan’s two largest political parties have been wrangling over who will be prime minister. An inconclusive vote last week forced them to join forces and try to form a coalition in a parliament dominated by independents.
• Indonesian polls: Indonesians will cast their votes Feb. 14 for a new president in one of the world’s biggest elections. The stakes will be high for the U.S. and China.

Read these news briefs.

Dislocated by war, Gazans struggle to find shelter

With Gazans crowded into fewer and fewer places that offer only negligible refuge, thousands of families are consumed with the search for shelter, that most basic of human needs. In winter, donated waterproof tents are a prized possession.

Ghada Abdulfattah
An encampment of displaced Gaza families in the Zawaideh area of Deir al-Balah, central Gaza Strip, Feb. 4, 2024.
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From her tent in Rafah, Mirvat Alsaid learned the fate of her home. Watching an Al Jazeera broadcast from Gaza City on her phone, she recognized the very street where her family’s apartment building once stood. The camera revealed a pile of concrete and steel.

Now she and her nine children and grandchildren share a makeshift nylon tent on a dusty patch in Rafah that is “cold, dry, and unwelcoming,” she says. After being displaced nine times in less than 100 days, she cannot imagine relocating again.

As panic grips Rafah over Israel’s declared plans for a military offensive there, the Alsaid family – and tens of thousands like them – has nowhere left to go.

Shelter has become the top, urgent need. The prospect of a homeless postwar future looms. The United Nations estimates that nearly one-third of Gaza residents would have no home to return to should the war end today.

Dalia Nahhal, a mother of four, has evacuated six times, from Gaza City to Deir al-Balah to Khan Yunis, and finally to Rafah.

“Every moment I wonder: What more I will lose? I lost my house, my memories, the sense of safety,” Ms. Nahhal says. “I fear a ground invasion. I don’t know where to go.”

Dislocated by war, Gazans struggle to find shelter

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From her tent in Rafah, Mirvat Alsaid learned the fate of her Gaza City home.

Watching an Al Jazeera broadcast from northern Gaza City on her phone two weeks ago, she recognized the neighborhood and the very street where her family’s Al Malish No. 9 apartment building once stood.

The camera panned to its location, revealing a pile of concrete and steel. The family’s home had been reduced to ruins by an Israeli missile. They had five years left on the 12-year loan they took to buy the apartment.

Now she and her nine children and grandchildren share a makeshift nylon tarp tent on a dusty patch in Rafah that is “cold, dry, and unwelcoming.” The winter storms “hit us harshly, especially at night,” says Ms. Alsaid. Her daughter Majd has fallen ill with a severe cough, fever, and fatigue.

After being displaced nine times in less than 100 days, Ms. Alsaid cannot imagine relocating once again.

As panic grips Rafah over Israel’s declared plans for a military offensive against Hamas in the southern city, the Alsaid family and tens of thousands like them have nowhere left to go. Tired, wary, ill, and broke, they say they cannot make the journey, even if they had safe passage to shelter in a new destination.

“I hope this is the last time I pack my tent,” Ms. Alsaid says. “I am so tired.”

With more than 75% of the 2.2 million Palestinians in Gaza displaced and the Israeli military offensive having damaged or destroyed 60% of housing in the besieged enclave, according to the United Nations, shelter has become the top, urgent need for Gaza residents.  

As families struggle with a lack of tents and winter clothing, the prospect of a homeless postwar future looms over their battle to survive in the present.

Ghada Abdulfattah
Children collect dirty well water in jerrycans to sell or boil and use at home in Deir al-Balah, central Gaza Strip, Feb. 8, 2024.

Tent economy

The U.N. estimates, as of press time, that a minimum of 650,000 Gaza residents, nearly one-third of the population, would have no home to return to should the Israel-Hamas war end today. 

Around 100,000 families across Gaza are in need of immediate shelter support, particularly winter tents, the U.N. said this week.

The U.N.’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said Monday that 28,000 tents are in the pipeline to be delivered to Gaza. But it remains unclear when they will arrive, how they will be distributed, and if they could reach families should an Israeli military operation commence in Rafah, the entry point for international aid.

The few standing apartment units available to rent – a rapidly decreasing commodity in Gaza – go for a minimum of $1,500 a month for 120 square meters, 10 times the prewar rate.

Waterproof tents donated by Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, and other countries are a prized possession.

Yet many of the fortunate few who receive these tents are forced to sell them for cash to pay for food, wood for cooking, and medicine. Once sold, the donated tents are hard to buy back.

At the market in Deir al-Balah, the central Gaza town that has become the second-largest evacuee epicenter, venders this week sold these donated waterproof tents for $2,000-$2,500 each. The price is rising week on week as the number of displaced people rises.

With each displacement, Gaza families are fleeing with less and less, leaving behind the last of their earthly possessions and using up their final reserves of cash.

Ghada Abdulfattah
Citizens, many displaced evacuees from Gaza City, browse for food, clothing, and raw materials to craft tents at the market in Deir al-Balah, in central Gaza, Feb. 8, 2024.

Dalia Nahhal, a mother of four and Gaza City native, has evacuated six times following Israeli military orders. She’s escaped encroaching Israeli artillery shells and airstrikes from Gaza City to Deir al-Balah to Khan Yunis, and finally to Rafah, where she is sharing a room with other families at the home of a distant relative.

Along the way, airstrikes destroyed her home and her car, and killed several family members.

In one hurried 1 a.m. evacuation from a Gaza neighborhood amid missile strikes, she forgot to take most of their belongings, grabbing only some light clothes for her and her children. 

“Every moment I wonder: What more I will lose? I lost my house, my memories, the sense of safety,” Ms. Nahhal says. “The feelings of displacement and anxiety never go away; it is difficult to sleep. The nightmares haunt us night and day.

“I fear a ground invasion,” she confides. “I don’t know where to go.”

Urgent Facebook appeals

Many Palestinians uprooted by recent Israeli offensives on Khan Yunis, a previously designated safe zone, are arriving in Rafah with nothing, and are finding no shelter. Even to assemble a tent, families need cash to buy used animal feed bags, tarps, and wood. 

Many resort to appeals on social media for tents and clothes from fellow Gazans.

On Facebook, mother Hanan Khashan wrote, “I need a tent for my family in Rafah. Who can help me in this matter? They have children and the situation is difficult.”

Days later she updated her post: “Thank you to the brave and kind people in Gaza. We have been helped.”

In the Facebook group Deir al-Balah Now, an anonymous poster from Gaza City who had been displaced from Khan Yunis wrote, “To the people of Rafah, I need someone to help us. Two days ago, the Red Crescent [hospital] was bombed overhead and we were injured and displaced to Rafah.

“We are currently in the streets, sleeping on sand, not even in a tent. We cannot find anyone to help us. We have no food or clothes to keep warm. I swear we are so tired.”

Ghada Abdulfattah
A former school for vocational training is now a shelter housing more than 2,000 evacuees from different areas in the Gaza Strip, in Deir al-Balah, in central Gaza, Feb. 4, 2024.

The few standing physical evacuee centers are overflowing.

Ruwaida al-Banna, her husband, two daughters, son, daughter-in-law, and grandchildren live in a small makeshift tent of nylon plastic sheets hung with rope, set among disused heavy machinery at a cramped vocational training center-turned-shelter in Deir al-Balah.

It is their fourth location since they left their Gaza City home in October, heeding Israeli military orders.

They share the center with 2,000 other people. There are long waits for water and to use the bathroom.

Even inside the center, there is a cold, damp chill. Ms. Banna wraps in her prayer rug for warmth; her husband curls atop a blanket on the bare floor.

“We spend our nights on the cold ground and our days in anxiety and uncertainty,” she says.

“Sabra, Rimal, Jalaa, Tal Hawa, Zaytoun, Shujaiya,” Samer, her son, rattles off the name of Gaza City’s neighborhoods. “All the Gaza neighborhoods have been destroyed. The impact is everywhere.”

Even when families in Gaza secure shelter and there is no immediate threat of a missile strike or an Israeli military ground invasion, unanswerable questions linger.

“Even if the war ends now, we have lost our homes and belongings,” says Ms. Nahhal from Rafah. “My family’s house is gone; all my friends have lost their homes, too. Even if we can return to Gaza City, where will we go?”

Myanmar’s civil war: Is the stalemate breaking?

With support for Myanmar’s military junta declining and rebels gaining ground through unprecedented cooperation, 2024 could prove a pivotal year in the country’s civil war.

Aakash Hassan
A group of rebel fighters with the Chin National Army trains during a morning parade with dummy guns, in the western Chin state of Myanmar, Dec. 14, 2023.
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As Myanmar’s civil war enters its fourth year, public criticism of the country’s military junta is at an all-time high. Authorities have activated a military draft and Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing, who spearheaded the February 2021 military coup that overthrew Myanmar’s elected government, faces calls to step down. The developments follow a wave of humiliating losses to allied resistance groups – namely, “Operation 1027,” in which three insurgent groups worked together to take on junta troops near the border with China.

That operation snowballed, with other armed groups launching attacks around their own areas of control, forcing the military to respond on multiple fronts. It marks a successful show of cooperation for a historically fractured resistance movement, and the junta has lost control of scores of periphery towns and military bases in recent months.

Analysts say hope for rebel victory – and postwar stability – rests on junta opponents’ ability to continue cooperating. 

“The resistance groups have never been so strong against the junta,” says Ram Kulh Cung, a Chin National Army commander. “There is some sort of coordination between the resistance groups, and we are working towards making it better and much stronger with one aim – to throw the junta out of power and restore democracy.”

Myanmar’s civil war: Is the stalemate breaking?

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To many outsiders, Myanmar appears to be locked in a bloody stalemate. The ongoing civil war has killed more than 4,000 people and left 2.6 million displaced within the country, according to United Nations estimates. Every third person – about 18.6 million people – now requires humanitarian aid, a nineteenfold increase since the February 2021 military coup that overthrew Myanmar’s elected government. 

But as the war enters its fourth year, there are signs of a shift. 

This weekend, the junta announced that it would start enforcing a 14-year-old compulsory military service law, effective immediately. The draft comes as Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing, the country’s military ruler and architect of the 2021 coup, faces calls to step down after a wave of humiliating losses to allied resistance groups.

Indeed, the military has lost control of scores of towns and military bases in recent months. These advances don’t necessarily spell victory for Myanmar rebels, but they are weighing on the junta – and reinvigorating the resistance.

Karen Norris/Staff

Where have the rebels made gains?

The junta faces many enemies, including pro-democracy groups formed by civilians after the coup and various armed ethnic groups that have long fought for autonomy. Historically, these different groups have fought alone, planning attacks and negotiating cease-fires in relative isolation. 

The status quo started to shift in October, when three insurgent groups known as the Three Brotherhood Alliance launched “Operation 1027” to take on junta troops in northern Shan state near the border with China. Analysts say the operation had tacit backing from Beijing, which wanted to punish the junta over its failure to curb online scams operating out of Myanmar. The campaign was incredibly successful. Within days, the alliance captured more than 50 junta bases and shut down major border crossings. 

Reuters/File
Myanmar's junta chief, Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing, who ousted the elected government in a coup on Feb. 1, 2021, presides at an army parade on Armed Forces Day in Naypyitaw, Myanmar, March 27, 2021. With Gen. Min Aung Hlaing at his weakest position since the coup, some speculate that he could be replaced with another senior military officer.

Other armed groups, including the Chin National Army, supported the operation by launching attacks around their own areas of control, forcing the junta to respond on multiple fronts. As the parallel offensives gained momentum, the junta witnessed some demoralizing defeats. In late January, hundreds of junta soldiers fled across the border to India, and many more have surrendered in the face of bold ground and drone attacks. 

The National Unity Government, an anti-junta body that oversees many of the newer civilian groups, claims that junta opponents now control 60% of the country. That control remains largely peripheral, with rebels failing to claim a single central city or major military infrastructure. 

What challenges do resistance groups face?

While resistance groups have demonstrated their ability to mount coordinated attacks, they are still fractured and lack a central command. Most work for their own goals, which do not necessarily resonate with other groups. 

“The resistance is faced with the difficult task of crafting a shared political vision,” says Angshuman Choudhury, a former associate fellow at the Centre for Policy Research in New Delhi. “This is not an easy task in a country with hundreds of ethnic groups and subgroups.”

On top of that, fighters continue to deal with ammunition and weapons shortages, whereas the junta has critical access to heavy weapons, mainly from Russian suppliers. Nevertheless, resistance leaders say there will be more surprise strikes against the junta this year. 

Jintamas Saksornchai/AP
A camp for people displaced within Myanmar is seen across the Moei River from Mae Sot in western Thailand, Feb. 8, 2024. Myanmar's civil war, now in its fourth year, has displaced millions.

“The resistance groups have never been so strong against the junta,” says Ram Kulh Cung, a Chin National Army commander. “There is some sort of coordination between the resistance groups, and we are working towards making it better and much stronger with one aim – to throw the junta out of power and restore democracy.”

How is the junta responding?

Despite growing frustration among the ranks, the junta is not giving up. 

Militarily, its focus “has been to both reclaim fallen towns and degrade resistance assets,” says Mr. Choudhury. “It continues to rely on airstrikes and artillery offensives against civilian populations in order to cut them off from the resistance groups. It has also adopted an online counterpropaganda program to discredit the resistance among the masses.”

How the junta is responding internally is less clear. The junta has not addressed criticism directly, but it did activate the military draft and extend Myanmar’s state of emergency for another six months to restore “a normal state of stability and peace,” according to a military-run media outlet. This confers Gen. Min Aung Hlaing legislative, judicial, and executive powers and will further delay elections. Yet with Gen. Min Aung Hlaing at his weakest position since the coup, some speculate that he could be replaced with another senior military officer.

What is evident, say analysts, is that the junta is doing damage control, and hope for rebel victory – and postwar stability – rests on its opponents’ ability to continue cooperating.

Minimum wages rise: Here’s where changes matter most

The idea behind raising base pay closer to a “living wage” – pay that covers basic expenses – is that it builds better communities. But some businesses say the increases push them to the brink.

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
Courtney Cowan (left), founder of Milk Jar Cookies, greets a fan on the day both of her stores closed for good, in Los Angeles, Jan. 15, 2024. The store’s two locations closed partly due to the escalating costs of operation, including the rising minimum wage.
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Grace Champagne makes $18.50 an hour, plus a portion of tips, working as a host at a chain restaurant. That’s nearly $2 over minimum wage in San Diego, where she goes to school. In this tight California job market, the college student asked for the hourly bump, and got it. The extra bit goes into Ms. Champagne’s savings to eventually help repay college loans.

“It seems like a small difference, but it makes a really big difference,” says Ms. Champagne, who struggles to keep up with California’s high cost of living.

Across the United States, workers like Ms. Champagne are seeing an uptick in hourly wages. Twenty-two states raised their minimum wages last month, affecting nearly 10 million workers. Many of these increases were in the works years ago, as part of multiyear legislative packages. Some states tie the increases to inflation. Others, mostly in the South and Midwest, follow the federal minimum of $7.25 per hour, which hasn’t changed since 2009.

State minimum wages have risen faster than inflation for many workers since 2009, despite stagnation in federal policy. But across the country, minimum wages still fall consistently below what economists call living wages – the amount needed to meet a person’s, or family’s, basic needs.

Minimum wages rise: Here’s where changes matter most

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Grace Champagne makes $18.50 an hour, plus a portion of tips, working as a host at a chain restaurant. That’s nearly $2 over minimum wage in San Diego, where she goes to school. In this tight California job market, the college student asked for the hourly bump, and got it. The extra bit goes into Ms. Champagne’s savings  to eventually help repay college loans. 

“It seems like a small difference, but it makes a really big difference,” says Ms. Champagne, who struggles to keep up with California’s high cost of living.

Across the United States, workers like Ms. Champagne are seeing an uptick in hourly wages. Twenty-two states raised their minimum wages last month, affecting nearly 10 million workers. Many of these increases were in the works years ago, as part of multiyear legislative packages. Some states tie the increases to inflation. Others, mostly in the South and Midwest, follow the federal minimum of $7.25 per hour, which hasn’t changed since 2009. The wide variances create a cross-country picture that is at once mixed and nuanced.

The notion of having a minimum wage, say experts, is to have a pay floor that allows for a basic living standard. That living standard, however, varies from city to town and from state to state. Work philosophies and politics also come into play. 

“It really is a reflection of what the body politic in the jurisdiction feels is the minimum that they would like to see any worker in that jurisdiction be paid per hour,” points out economist Jerry Nickelsburg, director of the University of California, Los Angeles’ Anderson Forecast.

SOURCE:

Economic Policy Institute, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Living Wage Calculator 

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Jacob Turcotte/Staff

Closing the gap

State minimum wages have risen faster than inflation for many workers since 2009, despite stagnation in federal policy. But across the country, minimum wages still fall consistently below what economists call living wages – the amount needed to meet a person’s, or family’s, basic needs. 

While many minimum wage workers are unskilled teens, the vast majority of workers who benefit from minimum wage hikes are over the age of 20, according to research by the Economic Policy Institute

The living wage varies widely among jurisdictions, driven in large part by the cost of housing. The states where minimum wages are highest are the same states where, despite higher costs, the lowest wage earners are within reach of a living wage. Alternatively, the states with lower costs also tolerate the lowest minimum wages – and have the largest gap for low-wage workers to make up. 

“We still have large numbers of workers who do not earn enough to meet their family’s basic needs,” says Ken Jacobs, who co-chairs the University of California, Berkeley’s Labor Center. He adds, “The preponderance of academic research finds that minimum wage laws do what they’re intended to do. They improve low-wage workers’ earnings, which has a full range of positive impacts, both on workers and on society.” 

Connecticut has the narrowest gap between minimum and living wages: A single person with no children working full time at $15.69 per hour is 12% shy of a living wage. Georgia, where the minimum wage is $7.25 per hour, has the largest gap: 59%. In all states, the gaps are much bigger for workers with children. 

Damian Dovarganes/AP
Fast-food workers Angelica Hernandez (left) and Ronalda Alcazar Cruz celebrate Sept. 28, 2023, in Los Angeles after California Gov. Gavin Newsom signed the fast-food minimum wage increase legislation that takes effect April 1.

Intervention at the policy level, says Professor Jacobs, recognizes an ongoing, outsize power that employers hold in the workplace. The more workers earn, the more they spend in the local economy, “and that’s good overall, for our local economies, and it’s vital for workers to be able to meet their basic needs,” he says.

“Ready to give up”

California’s minimum wage is $16 per hour, with some cities raising it higher ($19.08 in West Hollywood). The state calls on specific industries, also, to raise their wages in the months and years ahead: In April, California’s fast-food workers go to $20 per hour, and by 2026, health care workers will make at least $25 per hour.  

Business owners here say that they are feeling squeezed. With the country’s low 3.7% unemployment rate, many businesses are already paying above minimum wage for jobs that historically fit that category. The increased labor cost, added to a jump in costs for goods, insurance, and other operational expenses, means that many employers are struggling to emerge from a pandemic slump that caused many to shut their doors for good.

Damian Dovarganes/AP
A customer picks up a meal bag at a McDonald's drive-thru window in Los Angeles, Sept. 28, 2023. California will raise the minimum wage for fast-food workers to $20 per hour next year, an acknowledgment that many in the low-pay workforce are primary earners for their households.

The landscape, in a word, is uncertain, according to John Kabatek, California director for the National Federation of Independent Business. 

“Small-business owners in California are frightened, scared, and frustrated that policymakers are doing next to nothing to help them emerge from that COVID hole,” says Mr. Kabatek. “Add to that the legislature’s inaction on retail theft and property crimes, and small-business owners have good reason to feel ... ready to give up.”

Lumber and hardware store owner Jeff Pardini says those minimum wage hikes translate to increased costs across the board. It’s “death by a thousand cuts,” he says.

Back in San Diego, Ms. Champagne says she and her friends are still having a tough time keeping up with expenses. Those who work in the fast-food industry, especially, are looking forward to the April pay raise. 

She says she needs her job – and would work at the lower rate, but the extra bit is a big help. “Before I was waiting on checks to be able to get gas and do other things,” she says. “But with this, I have a little extra wiggle room.”

SOURCE:

Economic Policy Institute, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Living Wage Calculator 

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Jacob Turcotte/Staff

Points of Progress

What's going right

Where school comes second and where bees come first

In our progress roundup, freedom to grow and thrive was given to pollinators in a Costa Rican town that calls itself “Sweet City.” And in three prefectures of Japan, families can take their kids out of school for three days of their choice.

Where school comes second and where bees come first

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Staff

1. Costa Rica

“Sweet City,” a neighborhood near Costa Rica’s capital, prioritized its pollinators to also benefit people. Curridabat, an eastern suburb of San José, in 2015 bestowed citizenship onto its pollinators, trees, and native plants, and has since embedded environmental design into every corner of the city also called “Ciudad Dulce.”

The city’s approach identifies pollinators as “prosperity agents” and acknowledges their impact on the economy and nature’s connection to residents’ health. Since the plan’s implementation, Curridabat has transformed its streets into pollinator corridors, covered the city with educational information about bees and plants, and reforested. Annual global food production worth between $235 billion and $577 billion relies on pollinators, according to the Food and Agriculture Organization in 2018.

Costa Rica, home to over 5% of the planet’s biodiversity, aims for total decarbonization by 2050.

“The main strength of the vision lies in the municipal officials who, with commitment and empathy, create a place that aspires to a form of governance based on satisfaction with life and nature,” wrote Huberth Méndez, an adviser to the mayor’s office, on LinkedIn.
Sources: Ciudad Dulce Plan, The Guardian, El País, Food and Agriculture Organization

2. United States

Bebeto Matthews/AP
The Park Slope Food Coop is a member-owned business. Members must work for 2 hours and 45 minutes every six weeks.

Worker cooperatives are enabling a new generation of business owners. Americans over age 55 own 2.9 million businesses, employing 32.1 million people. But as many baby boomer employers reach retirement age without a succession plan, employee ownership is becoming an important option that can ease the disruption to workers in businesses that would otherwise shutter their doors.

In places like Baltimore’s Hampden neighborhood, workers have banded together to transform these workplaces. The Common Ground cafe closed after its owner retired, but workers reopened the beloved coffee shop with broad support. The Baltimore Roundtable for Economic Democracy, the local cooperative incubator, provided guidance, while its partner nonprofit, Seed Commons, gave financial support in the form of a non-extractive loan: Borrowers are required to pay back the loan using only profits. And the Hampden community, which had patronized the coffee shop for 25 years, contributed $26,000 to a GoFundMe drive.

By putting decision-making in employee hands, cooperatives can lead to better pay, working conditions, and productivity. In the U.S., New York has invested more than $1 million a year in cooperatives over the past decade; 91 called the city home in 2022. The Bay Area and Greater Boston are also leading the way, with 60 and 25 co-ops, respectively.
Sources: Yes! Media, Fifty by Fifty, Project Equity

3. Malawi

Farmers in Malawi are collaborating with meteorologists to make weather information more useful. Traditional knowledge has long been used to predict the weather, for example by observing changes in birdsong or insect behavior. These can shift based on humidity, barometric pressure, or other metrics, which are also tracked by weather scientists.

But climate change is producing weather that’s more erratic and harder to forecast, which makes it more difficult for farmers to know when to plant and harvest. So local leaders in Karonga, Malawi, implemented participatory scenario planning, which asks farmers to collaborate with conventional scientists to co-produce advice and communicate it effectively.  

Under this program, weather scientists share their forecasts with farmers, and farmers provide ground-level data to scientists, resulting in trust-building as much as a data collection collaboration.

Participatory scenario planning has not yet been adopted at the national level in Malawi, but it has spread to about 15 districts since its implementation in 2014. The framework has been in use in Kenya for about a decade and is making headway in Ghana, Ethiopia, Niger, and Zimbabwe.
Sources: Proximate, Sustainability Institute

4. Iraq

A television channel is helping to preserve Syriac, an ancient language spoken primarily by Christians in Iraq and Syria. Syriac is related to Aramaic – the original script of the Bible – and was widely used in religious texts, but it has increasingly disappeared. After public demand prompted funding from the Iraqi government, television channel al-Syriania hopes to help Syriac speakers remain connected to the language.

Saad Shalash/Reuters/File
In 2012, Christians in Baghdad opened a school to teach the Syriac language.

About 40 staff members create programming on everything from news to cinema. While news bulletins are in classical Syriac, cultural programs are in a colloquial dialect. “It’s important to have a television station that represents us,” said Mariam Albert, a newscaster who speaks Syriac at home.

Syriac was prominent before Arabic began to dominate the region between the seventh and 11th centuries. After the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003, persecution by the Islamic State precipitated a further decline in the number of Christians living in the country. But sources of Syriac survive: Najeeb Michaeel Moussa, archbishop of Mosul, rescued a collection of Syriac manuscripts before the city fell to the Islamic State in 2014. Many of them are now preserved at the Digital Center for Eastern Manuscripts in Erbil, Iraq.
Sources: The World, The Arab Weekly, Al Jazeera

5. Japan

Japanese schools are giving children days off to spend time with family. In three prefectures, local governments are encouraging kids to take off up to three days of their choice per year. The goal is to improve the work-life balance for families in Japan, where many adults work or are on call through the weekend. The health ministry for years has recorded a link between Japan’s long working hours and high rates of depression.

In the parts of Okinawa, Oita, and Aichi that are offering the option, the program has a practical application, too. The days off may encourage parents to take vacations with their children on non-peak weekends for tourist travel. They also give kids the opportunity to see relatives who may live far away.

Takuya Yoshino/Yomiuri Shimbun/AP/File
A family embraces before parting at a train station in Osaka prefecture, Jan. 3, 2019.

“Families and schools need to strike a balance between the opportunity for children to learn with their parents outside the classroom and the regular school hours missed due to such special time off,” said Makiko Nakamuro, a professor of education economics at Tokyo’s Keio University.

In Oita prefecture, 270 people applied to take part in the program in the first two months. One parent in Aichi prefecture used the time to take his child on a work trip. “Thanks to the program, I could show my son my work and have extra time with him,” said Shingo Horita, a civil servant.
Sources: The Asahi Shimbun, The Japan News, South China Morning Post

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Elections that spark joy

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Indonesia, the world’s third-largest democracy, holds an election Feb. 14 that will shape the future of the Southeast Asian giant. Yet for the average Indonesian, elections have long been useful for something else. They are an opportunity for joy, or what is known as pesta demokrasi (democracy fiesta). With a population spread over thousands of islands, Indonesia is well known for its diverse culture of performances – expressive dances, puppetry, dramas, music, and costumes. That doesn’t stop for elections. Campaigns are like theater or celebrations, with citizens as spectators.

The boisterous bounty of party fun serves a purpose. The current president, Joko “Jokowi” Widodo, who enjoys a huge popularity, says he does not want Indonesia’s democracy to become a war zone. A country so big and diverse cannot afford ugly identity politics, divisive disinformation, or campaign violence. Ensuring joy in campaigns is part of an antidote to all that.

“We cannot afford to let the candidates have good relations, while their supporters, including those in regions, are still fighting each other,” he said last year. An election, he added, “is a festival for the people, an occasion that is supposed to bring joy rather than anxiety.”

Elections that spark joy

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Dancers perform during a campaign rally for Ganjar Pranowo, presidential candidate of the ruling Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P), in Semarang, Central Java province, Indonesia, Feb. 10.

Indonesia, the world’s third-largest democracy, holds an election Feb. 14 that will shape the future of the Southeast Asian giant. The stakes are as serious as ever. Three candidates are vying to become president and have engaged in the usual hard knocks of politics. Yet for the average Indonesian, election campaigns have long been useful for something else.

They are an opportunity for joy, or what is known as pesta demokrasi (democracy fiesta). With a population spread over thousands of islands, Indonesia is well known for its diverse culture of performances – expressive dances, puppetry, dramas, music, and costumes. That doesn’t stop for elections. Campaigns are like theater or celebrations, with citizens as spectators.

Take, for example, the leading presidential candidate, Prabowo Subianto, a former army general who once suppressed pro-democracy activists under a former dictator. He has gained popularity with young people by dancing on a stage like a silly grandfather. Another candidate, Anies Baswedan, a former governor of Jakarta, caters to fans of K-pop by using TikTok to reveal details of his personal life.

In past elections, local officials have spruced up voting booths with themes, such as a spooky house, to help increase voter turnout. For this election, the exuberance of campaigning – especially in the number of banners, posters, and flags – has been so vast that local officials have been told to recycle campaign props, not dump them as waste in landfills.

The boisterous bounty of party fun serves a purpose. The current president, Joko “Jokowi” Widodo, who enjoys a huge popularity, says he does not want Indonesia’s democracy to become a war zone. A country so big and diverse cannot afford ugly identity politics, divisive disinformation, or campaign violence. Ensuring joy in campaigns is part of an antidote to all that.

“The pesta demokrasi (fiesta of democracy) is a cause for celebration not only for Indonesia, but also for democracy and forces for peace all over the globe,” India’s ambassador to Indonesia, Sandeep Chakravorty, wrote in The Jakarta Post.

This election, in which some 204 million voters will choose more than 20,000 representatives, is one of the world’s most complex. For the sake of national harmony, elections must be a “consolidating event,” Jokowi said.

“We cannot afford to let the candidates have good relations, while their supporters, including those in regions, are still fighting each other,” he said last year. An election, he added, “is a festival for the people, an occasion that is supposed to bring joy rather than anxiety.”

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.

Weather is not my god

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We’re benefited by knowing that nothing but God, who is good, truly has power over us.

Weather is not my god

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Today's Christian Science Perspective audio edition

It has become so commonplace in social situations to talk about the weather as an ice breaker or as a way to change the topic when someone feels uncomfortable or doesn’t know what to say.

Thoughts about weather can be subtle mental whispers, such as “I’m too hot” (or too cold). Or they can become loud “voices” in the physical form of floods, hurricanes, or tornados. How we think about weather can sharply affect our experiences. Are we letting weather dictate what we say, what we do, or even how we feel? I’ve found it important to ask myself, “Have I let weather become a personal god?”

In the Bible we learn about Elijah’s experience when “the Lord passed by, and a great and strong wind rent the mountains, and brake in pieces the rocks before the Lord; but the Lord was not in the wind: and after the wind an earthquake; but the Lord was not in the earthquake: and after the earthquake a fire; but the Lord was not in the fire: and after the fire a still small voice” (I Kings 19:11, 12). I have come to understand that listening for God’s “still small voice” – thoughts from God – silences any voice that may be shouting about the weather and the suffering it may cause.

At one point, on one of those hot summer days where heat-index warnings were being broadcast, I was helping my husband with a project and doing some manual labor outside. Before I knew it, I had aggressive symptoms of being overheated.

I usually make a concerted effort to filter limiting human thoughts from divine thoughts, or Truth. I’ve learned in Christian Science that thoughts that do not represent Truth must be corrected, not ignored. In this case, I had heard the “loud voice” of the warnings that were being broadcast on the news, but I had not corrected in my own thought the notion that I or anyone could be negatively affected by the weather.

The discoverer of Christian Science, Mary Baker Eddy, writes, “Suffering is the supposition of another intelligence than God; a belief in self-existent evil, opposed to good; and in whatever seems to punish man for doing good, – by saying he has overworked, suffered from inclement weather, or violated a law of matter in doing good, therefore he must suffer for it” (“Miscellaneous Writings 1883-1896,” p. 198). There is only one Mind, one God, in whom is all intelligence, all wisdom, and all action. This Mind could never create an intelligence apart from itself that could cause suffering.

I have learned that God is the source of all good. Created in God’s image and likeness (see Genesis 1:26, 27), we are entirely spiritual and reflect the good God bestows. We cannot recreate that which God has already created, nor can we destroy or damage what God has bestowed. Therefore nothing, including weather, can alter this divine goodness.

What we can do is express the good that flows constantly in our lives like uninterrupted light passing through a windowpane. This is a joyous task, and we can go about our work feeling love and harmony. When we understand that our source of strength is God, we cannot lack the strength we need to do our work.

When I began to feel the symptoms of heat exhaustion, I naturally turned to God in prayer, and was led to ponder this verse from Job: “The spirit of God hath made me, and the breath of the Almighty hath given me life” (33:4). How wonderful to think about everything that means, including that in my God-created, spiritual being I am pure, perfect, strong, and solid. I cannot be anything less than whole. God could never make me defective. My life, my very being, is the reflection of God.

Listening to the voice of God, I came to understand that I could reflect God’s goodness without suffering. I was quickly healed of all symptoms, and was able to continue working on the project with my husband, seeing it through to a successful conclusion.

It is important to pay attention to the thoughts that cross our path. How wonderful it is to know we have a choice and can actively listen to and follow God alone. Whether the day is hot, cold, sunny, or rainy, it’s a blessing to know we can hear God’s “still small voice” above it all and watch goodness unfold every day.

Adapted from an article published in the March 23, 2020, issue of the Christian Science Sentinel.

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Schoolchildren take part in youth races prior to the annual pancake race in the town of Olney, England, Feb. 13, 2024. Every year, clad in aprons and scarves, women from Olney and the city of Liberal, Kansas, run their respective legs of the race with pancakes in their pans. According to legend, the Olney race started in 1445, when a distracted housewife arrived at church on Shrove Tuesday (the day before Lent) still clutching her frying pan with a pancake in it.

A look ahead

Thanks for reading the Monitor today. Tomorrow, join us as senior economics writer Laurent Belsie looks at why confidence in the economy is slowly returning. 

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