‘No tax, no spend’ | the economy with senior economics commentator Aditya Chakrabortty Economically speaking, “it’s going to be even worse than last year”, Aditya says, which is a comforting start to the conversation. He’s not just putting his finger to the wind either: the forecasts by the Office for Budget Responsibility said growth would be about 0.7%. “To give context to how bad that is, when I started working as an economic journalist at the tail end of the 90s, Gordon Brown, who was chancellor, was talking about Britain hitting economic growth of about 3% a year,” Aditya says. All of this means that we could well be heading into a recession next year. The big economic word this year will be “growth”, Aditya says, for both Labour and Conservatives. Their strategies to achieve it look pretty similar, too: “The main lines will be, not spending more and certainly not taxing more because everyone is too scared to mention tax ahead of an election, but instead focusing on the private sector. Both parties want investors to weigh in and start pumping money into crucial infrastructure projects.” In terms of what to expect in an election year, Aditya says: “When an economy is growing at something just above 0% it leads to zero sum politics.” So expect a divisive, fractious political landscape. Rumour has it there could be a spring election, so the year could start with a bang. This all sounds pretty gloomy. So for some hopeful further reading, Aditya recommends When Nothing Works: From Cost of Living to Foundational Liveability, a constructive book that tries to give solutions to some of the biggest problems we are facing. ‘Highly anticipated’ film and TV | culture with arts editor Alex Needham Expect 2024 to be full of highly anticipated films and TV. At the very start of the year Andrew Haigh’s All of Us Strangers is going to hit the big screen – the film has already won seven awards at the British Independent Film Awards, with Paul Mescal taking best supporting performance. “It’s kind of a ghost story, but it’s also a really moving meditation on grief and loss and what it means to be a middle aged, gay person, so it really spoke to me,” says Alex. There is also a lot of buzz around Jonathan Glazer’s new film The Zone of Interest: “it’s meant to be really ambitious stylistically and very challenging in terms of the moral quandary it throws up,” Alex says. And for those who loved Parasite, Bong Joon-ho is back with a mega budget sci-fi film called Mickey 17, which stars Robert Pattinson. In terms of TV, the makers of Game of Thrones are releasing a new Netflix sci-fi series called 3 Body Problem. (Think big budget fantasia with lots of high concept CGI). “There’s been a lot of talk about how we have passed peak TV. I imagine that this might be a bit of a bellwether as to whether Netflix still has these big TV moments, because presumably, if it doesn’t do that well, it’s going to be quite an expensive mistake,” Alex says. If you want to get out of the house though, there is plenty going on in the real world. “I’m looking forward to Matt Smith in An Enemy of the People by Thomas Ostermeier. He’s a very radical German director who has been on before although not with a star attached,” Alex notes. There is also the Mike Kelley exhibition at the Tate Modern, in London, and, of course, Glastonbury (though Alex says he’s not going this year). In terms of aesthetics and more ephemeral phenomena that might make a comeback, Alex floats the idea that we have reached peak Y2K saturation and the 80s could be on their way back in: “It’s all cyclical, so that’s my prediction. Maybe it’ll be all nouvelle cuisine off of square plates.” Sounds fun. ‘Record-breaking temperatures’ | the climate crisis with environment editor Fiona Harvey “With temperatures breaking global records in 2023 – the hottest year yet recorded – it is highly likely that 2024 will be even hotter. That means there is a good chance that average global temperatures for the year will break through the crucial threshold of 1.5C above pre-industrial levels, taking the climate into uncharted territory. “The 1.5C limit, the lower of the two set in the 2015 Paris agreement, is vital because scientists have shown that beyond that threshold we are likely to reach tipping points in the climate that could have disastrous impacts. Some of these, such as melting ice at the poles, are likely to become irreversible. “One year breaching the 1.5C limit is not enough to invalidate the Paris accord, nor is it likely to set off a cascade of tipping points immediately. But it shows how close the world is coming to irretrievable climate breakdown, with potentially catastrophic impacts. “Nations have agreed to avoid allowing temperatures to permanently surpass the 1.5C limit. But where is the action to back that up? Policy responses are still too weak, and greenhouse gas emissions rose to their highest ever annual amount in 2023. “There are promising signs, in the rapid build-out of renewable energy in countries such as China and India, in the take-up of electric vehicles, and in the resolution at Cop28 to ‘transition away’ from fossil fuels – flawed and late, but still strategically important. If fossil fuel demand can be made to fall in 2024 – as some are predicting – that could at last mark the turning point the world desperately needs.” ‘Sustainability and quiet luxury’ | lifestyle with acting fashion and lifestyle editor Ellie Violet Bramley |