Investors Look for Openings Under New Prime Minister

Investors are seeking clearer indications of the pace and extent of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's push to revive economic growth in the world's second-most-populous country.

Since coming to power in May Mr. Modi has moved cautiously, focusing on streamlining government, tackling corruption and removing bureaucratic hurdles to business.

His finance minister has pledged overhauls that could include opening more sectors to foreign investment and broader policy shifts--such as allowing private companies to mine coal and streamlining tax policies--in a bid to bolster Mr. Modi's campaign to make the country a manufacturing hub. His advisers counsel patience, saying fixing India will take time.

Niharika Mandhana

New VA Head Faces Balky Computers, Tardy Projects

Bob McDonald, a former Procter & Gamble Co. chief executive who took charge of the Department of Veterans Affairs in July, won early plaudits from Congress and veterans groups for efforts to rebuild trust at the embattled agency.

In the new year, a number of programs the West Point graduate put in place should begin to take hold. But the agency still suffers from an unreliable computer system, over-budget and delayed construction projects and concern that it isn't moving fast enough to take care of veterans seeking medical appointments at its hospitals.

Ben Kesling

Price Plunge Aids Consumers But Could Harm Oil Patch

Consumers are seeing a boost to their wallets from the sharp drop in gasoline prices. But energy-producing states, which benefited from the drilling boom brought about by hydraulic fracturing, are bracing for a potential decline in jobs and tax revenue from falling oil prices.

Though analysts caution that it is too early to predict how much lower prices could affect regional economies, a prolonged dip would certainly hit states such as Texas, where the oil and gas sector made up 13.5% of economic activity in 2013, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas. An energy-industry retrenchment also could slow down North Dakota, which has seen a surge in housing prices and jobs in stores and restaurants that serve oil and gas workers, in addition to direct energy employment.

Miguel Bustillo

Alleged Creator of Silk Road Drug Website Set for Trial

The criminal trial of Ross Ulbricht, the alleged mastermind of the online drug market Silk Road, is slated to begin this month. Prosecutors say Silk Road users were able to buy everything from narcotics to forged passports on the site. They accuse Mr. Ulbricht of conspiring to have six people killed to stop them from becoming witnesses against him.

There is no evidence any of the killings took place, according to prosecutors. Mr. Ulbricht, who has pleaded not guilty, faces decades in prison if convicted.

Christopher M. Matthews

Afghanistan and Pakistan Vow to Fight Militants

A rampage by Pakistani Taliban militants that claimed the lives of 132 schoolchildren in December spurred the governments of Afghanistan and Pakistan to vow decisive action against terrorism.

For that pledge to gain traction, the neighbors must overcome years of distrust. During Afghan President Hamid Karzai's 13 years in office, relations between Kabul and Islamabad were often poisonous.

New Afghan President Ashraf Ghani was elected on a pledge to bring the Taliban to the negotiating table and lift his country out of its crippling dependence on foreign aid. For that, he will need Pakistan's support.

The Afghan Taliban have long sought refuge across the border in Pakistan. Islamabad, in turn, blames Kabul for allowing the Pakistani Taliban to flourish in Afghan territory.

Nathan Hodge

Improved Relations With U.S. Could Take Time to Pay Off

Cuba's leaders face a challenge in tempering hopes among residents that better relations with the U.S. will translate into greater wealth and freedom.

As Washington and Havana move to normalize ties after 54 years of hostility, the Cuban government will be wary of any challenge to the tight control it holds over citizens.

In January, the two nations are set to start talks to establish embassies in each other's countries. The formal U.S. embargo on most trade and investment in Cuba--whose revocation depends on congressional action--is expected to remain in place for now.

José de Córdoba

States struggle to Roll Out Common Core Standards

States likely will keep struggling with the Common Core academic standards, and the accompanying changes in curricula and testing.

The standards have been adopted by 45 states, with financial incentives from the Obama administration. This spring, many students across the country will take Common Core-aligned state tests for the first time.

Some parents, educators and elected officials have pushed back, complaining the standards de-emphasize the classics, overemphasize math and word problems and intensify a culture of test-taking. But the handful of states that have dropped the standards find there is no easy replacement. South Carolina is hustling to implement its own state-written standards by the fall, but some teachers say the new guidelines are a mishmash and inferior to Common Core.

Valerie Bauerlein

Pope Francis

to Make First Visit To U.S.

U.S. Roman Catholics are preparing for the first visit by Pope Francis in September. The trip, expected to draw millions of people, has just one confirmed stop so far, Philadelphia, but the pope has suggested he also will visit Washington, New York and Mexico.

Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter has said the papal appearance could be the largest event in his city's modern history. With 1.4 million Catholics, Philadelphia is one of the largest archdioceses in the U.S.

The last papal visit to the U.S. was in 2008, when Pope Benedict visited New York and Washington.

The pope's trip will come as the American church is grappling internally with the more inclusive direction Francis is attempting to set, and externally with the Obama administration over the federal health-care mandate.

Scott Calvert

GOP Gains Might Lead To More Abortion Curbs

Republican gains in state legislatures in the 2014 midterm elections are likely to spark a fresh wave of attempts to curb abortion.

States passed 231 laws restricting abortion between 2011 and 2014, more than in the entire previous decade, according to the Guttmacher Institute.

The new year could keep that pace going, now that the GOP has increased the number of legislative chambers it controls to 68 from 57, while Democratic-led chambers have decreased to 30 from 41.

Abortion-rights organizations are gearing up to fight measures that already have been introduced, including one in Tennessee that would require doctors to display or describe an ultrasound to a woman seeking an abortion.

Arian Campo-Flores

President Could Face Pushback in Overhaul Plans

Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto is set to face resistance to his economic overhaul this coming year following scandals over influence peddling and the presumed killing of 43 missing students that have galvanized his opponents.

At stake isn't only the government's efforts to attract $50 billion in private energy investments over the next four years as it opens that industry after more than seven decades, but also its progress in the development of key infrastructure projects. Those include a $9 billion airport for the country's capital and a $3.7 billion high-speed train line between Mexico City and the central city of Querétaro.

Santiago Pérez

Gov. Brown Starts Fourth Term, Pushes Rail Project

California Gov. Jerry Brown will be inaugurated in January to an unprecedented fourth term. The 76-year-old Democrat has said his ambitions for his final term include seeing through priorities of the term just ending, including reworking how state money is distributed to schools and building the nation's first true high-speed rail line.

Though it has been in planning for years, the rail system will have a groundbreaking ceremony Jan. 6 to signal the start of sustained construction.

The system has been a topic of hot debate--and lawsuits by opponents--but Mr. Brown has won billions in state funding for the line from Los Angeles to San Francisco, and said he plans to move forward without additional federal commitments.

Alejandro Lazo

Nation Seeks 'Black Zero' Of a Balanced Budget

If all goes according to plan, Germany this year will balance its federal budget for the first time since 1969. The goal has acquired such totemic significance in the debt-averse country that it has a nickname, "the Black Zero"--German bookkeeper-speak for a small surplus. Leaders of both major parties--joined in a unity government by a chancellor, Angela Merkel, whose fiscal prudence contributes to her broad domestic appeal--hail it as a landmark achievement.

Adopted by Parliament in November, the balanced budget is now law. But whether it becomes reality remains uncertain. An international chorus--including Washington and the International Monetary Fund--wants Germany to use its solid financial position to spend more on its infrastructure to support the European economy.

Anton Troianovski

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