What We’re Watching: China’s Lehman moment, Malians heart Russia, Tunisian dictator vibes

What We’re Watching: China’s Lehman moment, Malians heart Russia, Tunisian dictator vibesWhat We’re Watching: China’s Lehman moment, Malians heart Russia, Tunisian dictator vibes
A Chinese flag flutters in front of the logo of China Evergrande Group seen on the Evergrande Center in Shanghai, China September 22.
REUTERS/Aly Song

Will Evergrande be China's Lehman Bros? Chinese authorities are bracing for the increasingly likely default of Evergrande, the country's most indebted property developer. If Evergrande — a gargantuan corporation with properties in 200 cities across China — stiffs its creditors, that'll send shockwaves throughout the country's financial system, and the wider Chinese economy and society. The possible ripple effects on home buyers and countless companies and individuals that do business with or are owed money by Evergrande have invited comparisons with Lehman Brothers, the US investment bank whose 2008 collapse triggered an American financial crisis that quickly spread to the entire world. Although in principle authoritarian China has ways of containing the fallout, the potential for social unrest is real — and opacity could make it worse. More broadly, the demise of such a big player in the country's once-booming real estate market, which accounts for over 7 percent of GDP, would expose the shaky foundations of China's debt-driven economic growth model, eroding confidence in China both at home and abroad.

Et vous, Maliens? First Australia, is Mali next? France can't be happy about what's going on in Mali these days, as protesters have taken to the streets to demand that their government distance itself from Paris and boost ties with Russia instead. The upheaval comes in the wake of reports that Mali's transitional government was about to broker a security deal with the notorious Wagner Group, a Russian private military contractors cozy with the Kremlin. France, a former colonial power which keeps counterterrorism forces in Mali, has sharply criticized any tie-up with the Russian mercs, who have been accused of war crimes elsewhere. But Malians have mixed feelings about the presence of the French troops, who have made scant headway against Islamist insurgents in recent years. As the Franco-Russian competition for influence in Mali spills into the streets, it's a reminder that Moscow has been working hard in recent years to boost its standing in sub-Saharan Africa. Will it pay off in Mali?

Tunisian president to rule by decree: In his latest bid to fix Tunisia's dysfunctional political system, President Kais Saied now says he can pass laws himself and ignore parts of the constitution altogether. This is the same Saied who suspended parliament and sacked the entire government in the wake of mass street protests about the ailing economy and COVID two months ago. At the time, many Tunisians supported his actions as a way to fix the country's broken politics, even if his opponents called it a coup. But now as his emergency period drags on, Saied — a former constitutional law prof — is starting to give off more dictatorial vibes. He says he needs more time to tweak the constitution to make it work for ordinary Tunisians, but a lot of folks are wondering about the president's true intentions now. Tunisia was the only democracy to emerge from the Arab Spring. Is that over?

More from GZERO Media

Jess Frampton

Zohran Mamdani was a long shot. But the 33-year-old democratic socialist state assemblyman flew past former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo’s name recognition and money advantage to win the Democratic primary for New York mayor last week.

US President Donald Trump speaks to reporters aboard Air Force One after departing early from the the G7 summit in Canada to return to Washington, D.C., on June 17, 2025.
REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque

US President Donald Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariffs prompted warnings of high inflation, but it never materialized.

More than 60% of Walmart suppliers are small businesses.* Through a $350 billion investment in products made, grown, or assembled in the US, Walmart is helping these businesses expand, create jobs, and thrive. This effort is expected to support the creation of over 750,000 new American jobs by 2030, empowering companies like Athletic Brewing, Bon Appésweet, and Milo’s Tea to grow their teams, scale their production, and strengthen the communities they call home. Learn more about Walmart's commitment to US manufacturing. *See website for additional details.

Last month, Microsoft released its 2025 Responsible AI Transparency Report, demonstrating the company’s sustained commitment to earning trust at a pace that matches AI innovation. The report outlines new developments in how we build and deploy AI systems responsibly, how we support our customers, and how we learn, evolve, and grow. It highlights our strengthened incident response processes, enhanced risk assessments and mitigations, and proactive regulatory alignment. It also covers new tools and practices we offer our customers to support their AI risk governance efforts, as well as how we work with stakeholders around the world to work towards governance approaches that build trust. You can read the report here.

 
OSZAR »