Morocco

AfricaNorthern AfricaBajo Riesgo

Índice global

28

Indicadores de Riesgo
28Bajo

Clusters activos

3

Intel relacionada

2

Datos Clave

Capital

Rabat

Población

37.3M

Inteligencia Relacionada

70economy

Cathay extends Middle East flight suspension as Gulf war pressures aviation costs and EU-backed security ties expand in Africa

Cathay Pacific’s extended suspension of Middle Eastern flights is expected to have a limited direct impact on its passenger operations because the airline is expanding European services to offset lost demand. However, aviation experts warn that the broader industry effects—especially higher costs from fuel and insurance pressures linked to the ongoing Gulf conflict—can still weigh on carriers’ margins even when route substitution is possible. Separately, Ghana signed a landmark security and defense partnership with the European Union, signaling deeper EU engagement in African security architecture. While not directly tied to the Gulf conflict militarily, the article highlights the wider economic and supply-chain spillovers of the war—particularly fertilizer import dependence on the Gulf—underscoring how Middle East instability can propagate into African food and input markets. A third item debunks a viral rumor about the AFCON trophy being hidden in a Senegal military base, which is largely non-geopolitical and does not materially affect security or markets.

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58political

Global South “Gen Z” protests: political elite pressure rises while policy outcomes remain uneven

Across Latin America and parts of the Global South, youth-led protest waves are sustaining pressure on political elites even as immediate outcomes diverge by country. The Americas Quarterly highlights how millions of students have mobilized across Latin America in recent years, building on earlier Chilean secondary-school demonstrations and expanding into broader university participation. France24 reports that “Gen Z” activists in Nepal, Bangladesh, Morocco, and Madagascar are still pushing for social justice roughly six months after an initial wave shook ruling establishments. While some movements have succeeded in toppling governments, the articles emphasize that translating street power into durable governance and credible political alternatives remains difficult. Strategically, these protests matter because they signal a generational shift in how legitimacy is contested, with youth framing demands around social justice, accountability, and inclusion rather than narrow sectoral grievances. The power dynamic is between entrenched political elites and a more networked, media-visible youth constituency that can rapidly coordinate and sustain attention. In markets and diplomacy, this raises the risk of policy volatility, coalition breakdowns, and faster cycles of reform-or-repression as governments respond to sustained mobilization. For external stakeholders, the main beneficiaries are not a single state actor but rather domestic reform coalitions that can leverage public momentum, while incumbents face reputational and fiscal constraints if they must concede under pressure. Economically, prolonged protests can affect credit conditions, sovereign risk premia, and the cost of capital through expectations of slower growth and higher administrative disruption. In the Latin American context, the Americas Quarterly’s focus on microfinance underscores that social policy and financial inclusion are central to how governments manage unrest, because excluded populations are more sensitive to shocks and perceived unfairness. Even when protests do not directly target financial institutions, uncertainty can tighten lending standards and reduce consumer confidence, especially in countries where microfinance and informal credit are significant. Market participants should therefore watch for widening spreads, currency volatility, and sectoral stress in retail, consumer services, and any industries dependent on stable domestic demand. The next phase to monitor is whether protest movements can institutionalize demands through elections, legislation, or credible interim governance arrangements, rather than remaining primarily street-led. Key indicators include changes in protest frequency and geographic spread, government concessions versus security crackdowns, and the emergence of organized political platforms that can negotiate policy. For investors, trigger points are shifts in fiscal commitments to social programs, signs of policy continuity after leadership changes, and measurable improvements in social-outcome metrics that activists cite. Over the coming weeks to months, escalation risk will hinge on whether authorities address underlying grievances fast enough to prevent renewed mobilization, particularly among youth cohorts with high expectations and limited patience for incremental reforms.

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