U.S. economic growth accelerated in the first quarter as a rush of consumer spending helped bring total output almost to its pre-pandemic level. Gross domestic product expanded at a 6.4% annualized rate, according to the Biden administration. Personal consumption, the biggest part of the economy, surged by an annualized 10.7%, the second-fastest since the 1960s. —David E. Rovella Bloomberg is tracking the progress of coronavirus vaccines while mapping the pandemic globally and across America. Here are today’s top stories A small French biotech firm has a potential weapon for the long-term war against rapidly spreading, potentially more deadly coronavirus mutations. The company, Valneva, has a vaccine that could be more variant-proof, giving it an edge over other shots in what may be an annual campaign against a disease that’s killed more than 3 million people. The healthcare implications in a post-Covid world are huge. And for Valneva, with a $100 million listing planned on Nasdaq this year, the financial stakes are high. As horrific as India’s pandemic suffering is right now, with bodies piling up at crematoriums and burial grounds, its ferocious new Covid wave may actually be worse than the government has acknowledged. And the implications are global: Brazil surpassed 400,000 dead while its access to vaccines is hindered by the crisis in India and the U.S. told its citizens to leave as soon as possible. Coronavirus mutations are also wreaking havoc in America, still the world leader in total confirmed infections and deaths. Meanwhile, the European Union sealed a deal for shots from Pfizer-BioNTech, as the vaccination campaign there gathers steam. Here is the latest on the pandemic. At his international climate summit last week, President Joe Biden vowed to cut U.S. greenhouse gas emissions in half by 2030. The goal requires sweeping changes in the power generation, transportation and manufacturing sectors. It also requires a tremendous amount of land. Turbines at a wind farm near Highway 12 in Rio Vista, California Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg Biden’s proposed income tax increases for the wealthy, to begin next year if passed by Congress, would apply to individuals who make more than $452,700 and married couples who make more than $509,300. The new top 39.6% tax bracket, up from 37%, would thus only affect (mostly, anyway) America’s famous 1%. French President Emmanuel Macron’s allies have been talking up the supposed incompetence of far-right leader Marine Le Pen for months, but they’re starting to get worried. Le Pen has studied the lessons of her defeat in the last presidential election, when Macron exposed her ignorance of policy detail and her extreme views. But if she were to defeat him, it would be a shock to the bloc on par with what hit the U.S. in 2016, when a real estate developer from Queens won the Electoral College. Marine Le Pen Photographer: Francesca Volpi/Bloomberg Amazon reported a big increase in sales and gave a bullish forecast, continuing a streak of rapid growth even as vaccine rollouts raised the prospect of a return to pre-pandemic shopping habits in the U.S. Dassault Aviation is poised to announce its largest-ever Falcon corporate jet next week, stepping up a push to compete with the swankiest offerings from Bombardier and Gulfstream. The industry is already abuzz with speculation that the plane, yet to be unveiled, will match or surpass rival jets in size, speed and range. Visitors board a Dassault Falcon 8X aircraft during the Singapore Airshow 2020 at the Changi Exhibition Center. Photographer: Suhaimi Abdullah/Getty Images AsiaPac What you’ll need to know tomorrow Stocks climb in volatile trading. Here’s your markets wrap. White House is urged to address a surge in ransomware attacks. The global chip drought is hitting BMW, Apple and Ford. The shortage helped send Ford stock plummeting by almost 10%. Colleges are being urged to make Covid vaccination mandatory. New York City’s “full reopening” has one really big problem. A small Italian island is set to win big in Europe’s post-Covid revival.What you’ll want to read in Bloomberg PursuitsThe streets of big cities in North America have been slowly but surely filling back up as coronavirus vaccinations accelerate and employers gently push workers to return to the office. But still, with variants and high infection rates, an air of caution remains. If you feel comfortable being a tourist in a U.S. city, but want to avoid anything approaching high density, these midsize metropolises offer lots of comfort, decadence, and enlightening experiences. 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