đ South Korea just wants kids

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Hereâs what you need to know
South Korea will give families $770 a month to have a baby. The yearlong assistance is the countryâs latest attempt in a $200 billion-and-growing quest to increase its alarmingly low birth rate.
BYDâs profits got supercharged. Chinaâs largest electric vehicle maker sold a record number of cars in 2022, boosting its bottom line four times higher than it was in 2021.
US officials are on a charm offensive in Africa. Vice president Kamala Harris is just the latest US leader to visit the continent as competition increases with Russia and China for its resources.
French authorities raided five major banks. BNP Paribas and SociĂ©tĂ© GĂ©nĂ©rale are among the targets in connection with so-called âcum-cumâ trades used to evade taxes.
Nothing kills more American children than guns
More than a decade ago, a mass shooting killed 26 people at Sandy Hook elementary in Newtown, Connecticut, including 20 children.
As evidenced by Mondayâs mass shooting at an elementary school in Nashville, Tennesseeâthe 13th US school shooting in 2023 aloneâthings have gotten much, much worse. Gun deaths of children have surged 62% since Sandy Hook, and are now the top cause of mortality among American kids.

Alibaba took a page out of Alphabetâs corporate playbook
âAt 24 years of age, Alibaba is welcoming a new opportunity for growth. The market is the best litmus test, and each business group and company can pursue independent fundraising and IPOs when they are ready.â
â Alibaba CEO Daniel Zhang on why the Chinese internet giant is splitting its empire into six business divisions and getting a holding company, much like Alphabet did in 2015.
Early cherry blossoms are becoming the norm

For the fourth year in a row, DCers have witnessed the green buds of cherry trees burst into light pink foliage in March, even though it had long been an April affair. Tokyo, too, is feeling the blossom shift.
Quartzâs Clarisa Diaz explains in one chart how shorter winters and more frequent extreme weather events are affecting the trees in Washington.
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An Australian man found a $160,000 golden nugget with a cheap metal detector. Victoria goldfield diggers missed a big one in the 1800s rush.
Credit scores are a recent invention, but laws around credit are thousands of years old. We canât blame the 1750 BCE Code of Hammurabi for all of credit scoresâ wackiness. Scott Nover joins host Annalisa Merelli to talk about why in the last episode of the Quartz Obsession podcast, season four!
đ§ Listen on: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Google | Stitcher
đ Or: read the transcript!
Our best wishes for a productive day. Send any news, comments, Burberry bishops, and golden nuggets to [email protected]. Reader support makes Quartz available to allâbecome a member. Todayâs Daily Brief was brought to you by Morgan Haefner.