Global Briefing

Concise updates on markets, politics, technology, and regulation.

Top takeaways

Markets & global economy

Iran conflict and Wall Street rally

On Tuesday, March 31, 2026, hopes for a diplomatic breakthrough in the Iran war triggered the strongest rally on Wall Street since the conflict began. The S&P 500 and Dow posted their best gains of the period, helped by expectations that easing energy prices could allow the Federal Reserve to pause or even cut interest rates later this year.

Inflation effects of the Iran war

Eurozone inflation rose to 2.5% in March, up from 1.9% in February, as the Iran war pushed fuel costs sharply higher and increased expectations of further European Central Bank rate hikes. Analysts also warn the conflict is likely to jolt U.S. inflation in coming months as higher energy and transport costs work their way into consumer prices.

OECD global growth outlook

Despite the economic shock from the Iran conflict, the OECD projects global GDP growth of about 2.9% in 2026, down from 3.3% in 2025. The organization notes that this outlook depends heavily on how energy prices evolve and how long hostilities in the Persian Gulf persist.

U.S. politics & public opinion

Voter concerns and views of the economy

A Harvard CAPS / Harris poll carried out March 25–26, 2026 finds that inflation and immigration remain the top concerns for U.S. voters, with terrorism and national security rising in importance this month. A majority of respondents (62%) attribute the current state of the economy more to the Trump administration than to the Biden years.

Asia–Pacific budgets & security

Japan’s provisional budget

Japan’s ruling Liberal Democratic Party did not pass the full fiscal 2026 budget by March 31 and instead approved a provisional ¥8.6 trillion budget to cover the first 11 days of April.

Taiwan defense funding delays

In Taiwan, a large defense budget and payment for U.S.-supplied HIMARS have been delayed amid a domestic budget impasse. U.S. lawmakers are pressuring Taipei to move forward as regional security concerns grow.

Technology, AI & regulation

State-level AI rules debate in the U.S.

In the United States, debate is intensifying over whether states should be allowed to set their own AI regulations. Representative Deborah Ross argues that the Constitution should protect robust state-level AI rules, rather than replacing them with a single weaker federal standard.

EU AI Act enters operational phase

European authorities have launched an EU AI Act Compliance Platform to help companies interpret and meet the obligations of the EU AI Act, which entered into force in August 2024. The platform marks a shift to a more operational phase of AI regulation across the bloc.

“Pro‑Human” AI safety declaration

A broad coalition of technologists, researchers, and public figures has published a “Pro‑Human AI Declaration” in March 2026. It calls for independent oversight of highly autonomous AI systems, strong safety standards, and mechanisms to halt or override systems that pose unacceptable risks, arguing that industry self‑regulation is not sufficient.

Social media & youth safety

Australia probes platforms over under‑16 ban

On March 31, 2026, the Australian government announced a formal investigation into major social media platforms—including Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat, TikTok, and YouTube—for possible violations of the country’s ban on social media use by children under 16. The move adds to growing global pressure on platforms over youth safety.