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Latest updated at: 2025-03-22T21:06:58.681+08:00
View Stat
1.
Checks and Balance newsletter: Which past is MAGA promising to revive?
2.
Six charts show the impact of Obamacare
3.
Armin Papperger: the German arms boss Russia wants dead
4.
How harmful are electronic cigarettes?
5.
Why don’t seals drown?
6.
Richard Fortey remade the world with fossils
7.
The right way to fight nativists
8.
China is developing some startling new kit in its quest to reclaim Taiwan
9.
Ageism is rampant in Chinese companies
10.
Why China hates the Panama Canal deal, but still may not block it
11.
China’s cynicism offensive in Asia
12.
Taiwan’s president takes on alleged Chinese infiltration
13.
North Korea is remarkably entrenched in global supply chains
14.
The success of Ivory Coast is Africa’s best-kept secret
15.
Nigerian politics is a nasty place for women
16.
A coup attempt in Tigray raises tensions in the Horn
17.
America’s strikes on the Houthis could whip up a regional tempest
18.
How Cuba competes with Uncle Sam in the Caribbean islands
19.
Donald Trump has reshaped one of the world’s most important migration routes
20.
Will Donald Trump shape the Mexican president’s domestic agenda?
21.
Donald Trump is testing more than America’s Constitution
22.
What a Christian theatre town can teach Trump’s Kennedy Centre
23.
Why America has not passed a law to treat addiction better
24.
Cambridge yimbies
25.
The American and Russian right are aligning
26.
Europe needs to spend more on defence, not just pretend to
27.
The Bundestag approves the biggest fiscal expansion in post-war history
28.
Europe’s arms makers have ramped up capacity
29.
Why apprenticeships are so rare in Britain
30.
A Northern Irish factory has a deal to make missiles for Ukraine
31.
Comparing apples and oranges. And also small caged mammals
32.
ZOE, a British personal-nutrition app, is growing fast
33.
The thinking behind Labour’s benefits cuts
34.
Should BHP, Rio Tinto and Vale learn from Chinese rivals?
35.
The horrors of shared docs
36.
The luxury industry is poised for a deal wave
37.
How hospitals inflate America’s giant health-care bill
38.
East Asia’s arms-makers are on the rise
39.
The judges Trump scorns should stand their ground
40.
2025-03-20 The World this Week - The weekly cartoon
41.
2025-03-20 The World this Week - Business
42.
2025-03-20 The World this Week - Politics
43.
2025-03-20 The World this Week - This week’s cover
44.
Dreams of improving the human race are no longer science fiction
45.
How to enhance humans
46.
Even the Trumpiest stocks are suffering
47.
India is obsessed with giving its people “unique IDs”
48.
Why the Indian diaspora has not yet embraced Donald Trump
49.
If you can’t find a place to rent, blame the government
50.
Lessons from the happiest countries in the world
51.
Erdogan arrests the candidate who could beat him
52.
Donald Trump shoots his own global mouthpiece
53.
Beneath investors’ feet, the ground is shifting
54.
The British state has a bad case of long covid
55.
The trap Vladimir Putin set for Donald Trump
56.
The Economist is seeking three Audience fellows
57.
The Economist is hiring an Audience Editor
58.
Rumours on social media could cause sick people to feel worse
59.
Why are North Korean hackers such good crypto-thieves?
60.
Can people be persuaded not to believe disinformation?
61.
The Trump administration is playing a dangerous stockmarket game
62.
Why British spooks are reaching out to the private sector
63.
Putin woos Trump with a partial ceasefire and big geopolitical deal
64.
Britain at last takes aim at worklessness
65.
America’s Democrats would be wise to embrace “abundance liberalism”
66.
Blighty newsletter: Why are so many Britons not working?
67.
Where will be the next electric-vehicle superpower?
68.
Israel’s strikes may be only the start of a new offensive in Gaza
69.
Did Donald Trump willfully defy a court order?
70.
The pandemic hit pupils hardest in America’s Democrat-leaning states
71.
Binyamin Netanyahu is leading Israel into (another) crisis
72.
Can anything get China’s shoppers to spend?
73.
Will Trump’s tariffs turbocharge foreign investment in America?
74.
The War Room newsletter: The fraying nuclear umbrella
75.
Ukraine’s army escapes from Kursk by the skin of its teeth
76.
Could antivirals treat Alzheimer’s?
77.
Trump v the spies of Five Eyes
78.
America is facing a beef deficit
79.
Why rents are out of control
80.
Checks and Balance newsletter: Elon Musk’s low opinion of the Democrats—and America
81.
Ten indicators explain what’s going on with America’s economy
82.
What is the best way to keep your teeth healthy?
83.
Time is running out for Syria’s president
84.
Athol Fugard spoke truth to apartheid South Africa
85.
Trump’s whims are overriding the national interest
86.
Could Europe replace Starlink if America pulls the plug?
87.
American politics prompt some Chinese to explore historical taboos
88.
Hong Kong’s taxi drivers are told to smile more
89.
China’s super-smart Tesla-killers
90.
How dangerous would Asian security be without America?
91.
Another civil war looms in South Sudan
92.
Abiy Ahmed’s agricultural revolution is too good to be true
93.
Binyamin Netanyahu likens himself to Donald Trump
94.
After the bloodshed, can Syria’s president unite his country?
95.
Panama’s giveaway game
96.
Donald Trump is setting new boundaries for political speech
97.
Jared Isaacman, the high-school dropout who will lead NASA
98.
The education department is halved overnight
99.
Donald Trump has pushed Europe back into “whatever it takes” mode
100.
The struggle to defeat Russian censorship and propaganda
101.
Spain’s terrible record on defence spending
102.
Europe’s other front: peaceniks vs hawks
103.
Dessert cafés are a symbol of modern Britain
104.
Ships crash in the North Sea
105.
British women thrived under remote working
106.
Britain’s worklessness disaster
107.
America First may be a boon for Walmart’s Mexican business
108.
The race to elect the next head of the Olympics is heating up
109.
7-Eleven is still struggling to fend off its Canadian suitor
110.
The importance of repetition in the workplace
111.
Western companies are experimenting with DeepSeek
112.
With Manus, AI experimentation has burst into the open
113.
2025-03-13 The World this Week - The weekly cartoon
114.
2025-03-13 The World this Week - Business
115.
2025-03-13 The World this Week - Politics
116.
2025-03-13 The World this Week - This week’s cover
117.
A selection of emails received by employees of the CDC
118.
Can Europe cope with a free-spending Germany?
119.
More testosterone means higher pay—for some men
120.
Why “labour shortages” don’t really exist
121.
The new economics of immigration
122.
Your guide to the new anti-immigration argument
123.
America’s bullied allies need to toughen up
124.
If it comes to a stand-off, Europe has leverage over America
125.
India is benefiting from Trump 2.0
126.
Are these the world’s most beautiful airports?
127.
Europe thinks the unthinkable on a nuclear bomb
128.
Is Zelensky a disliked dictator or a popular hero?
129.
What sparks an investing revolution?
130.
America’s trade hawks fear the gaps in Trump’s tariff wall
131.
Canada’s security complex has woken up to Trump’s menace
132.
How Labour learned to love rearmament
133.
Ukraine’s embrace of drone warfare has paid off
134.
The race is on to build the world’s most complex machine
135.
Want even tinier chips? Use a particle accelerator
136.
DOGE comes to England’s health service
137.
Elon Musk’s antics are not the only problem for Tesla
138.
Will Vladimir Putin really agree to stop his killing machine?
139.
Trump’s erratic policy is harming the reputation of American assets
140.
NATO’s race against Russia to re-arm
141.
Ukraine hopes its ceasefire offer will turn the tables on Russia
142.
Young Americans are getting happier
143.
Which countries are most vulnerable to Donald Trump’s aid cuts?
144.
Will America’s stockmarket convulsions spread?
145.
Discord erupts in Nigel Farage’s Reform UK
146.
The global importance of Rodrigo Duterte’s arrest
147.
Trump’s metals tariffs will cost American industry dearly
148.
The budget that will determine South Africa’s future
149.
China’s AI boom is reaching astonishing proportions
150.
How Trump provoked a stockmarket sell-off
151.
How DOGE is driving America’s public-health guardians mad
152.
A horrific killing-spree shakes Syria
153.
Why Britons pay so much for electricity
154.
The War Room newsletter: “Be quiet, small man”—diplomacy, Musk style
155.
Mark Carney must keep an expansionist America at bay
156.
America and Ukraine prepare for brutal negotiations
157.
Does Trump really want a weaker dollar?
158.
Investors think the Russia-Ukraine war will end soon
159.
Checks and Balance newsletter: Depending on America is a vulnerability
160.
Mark Carney, the Liberal who may lead Canada
161.
Is butter bad for you?
162.
Two private companies reach the Moon within four days
163.
How do Ukrainian soldier fatalities compare with Russia’s?
164.
Donald Trump’s tariffs are a throwback to the 1930s
165.
Stitch by stitch, Rose Girone kept her family going
166.
America First is a contagious condition
167.
The tech bros selling drugs by drone
168.
A new film is breaking box-office records in China
169.
Chinese warships circumnavigate another island: Australia
170.
Why New Zealanders are emigrating in record numbers
171.
Indonesia’s shakedown of Apple comes to an end
172.
Lebanon’s new government must do three big things immediately
173.
Why some Africans see opportunity in foreign-aid cuts
174.
A new kind of Brazilian music is poised for a global boom
175.
Mexico claims US gunmakers sold weapons to cartels
176.
Canada’s Trumpian nightmare is the Liberal Party’s dream
177.
The women vying to make conservatism fashionable online
178.
Donald Trump deploys new tactics to manage the media
179.
DOGE shutters the government’s in-house tech consultancy
180.
Three principles are at play in the cases concerning DOGE
181.
Democrats are struggling to respond to Trump
182.
Romania is caught between Putin, Trump and Europe
183.
Kurdish rebels in Turkey declare a ceasefire
184.
Europe sounds increasingly French
185.
How Mumsnet changed Britain
186.
Jack Vettriano was a fantastic painter
187.
A thorny debate in Britain around the definition of “Islamophobia”
188.
Syria has got rid of Bashar al-Assad, but not sectarian tensions
189.
The world’s trustbusters hint that they want more deals
190.
The behaviour that annoys colleagues more than any other
191.
Mistral, Europe’s biggest AI startup, is blowing hot
192.
The pay gap between men and women won’t go away
193.
Catering to protein-rich diets is a tasty business
194.
As Germany’s defence stocks go ballistic, armsmakers are tooling up
195.
Lifting sanctions on Syria seems mad, until you consider the alternative
196.
2025-03-06 The World this Week - This week’s covers
197.
2025-03-06 The World this Week - The weekly cartoon
198.
2025-03-06 The World this Week - Business
199.
2025-03-06 The World this Week - Politics
200.
Syria’s economy, still strangled by sanctions, is on its knees
201.
Sir Keir Starmer finds a role
202.
Asian allies fear being dumped by Trump
203.
Donald Trump’s cuts to USAID will hurt Asia, too
204.
A new law targets India’s third-biggest landowner: Allah
205.
Aid cannot make poor countries rich
206.
It is not the economic impact of tariffs that is most worrying
207.
Britain’s leader has found purpose abroad. He needs it at home too
208.
The demise of foreign aid offers an opportunity
209.
Donald Trump’s economic delusions are already hurting America
210.
Trump’s tariffs are worse than anyone imagined
211.
The dangerous tension in Europe’s response to Trump
212.
China’s leaders reveal their plan to cope with 2025
213.
Why silver is the new gold
214.
A fantastic start for Friedrich Merz
215.
Can Friedrich Merz get Europe out of its funk?
216.
Keir Starmer and Emmanuel Macron are forging a tight link
217.
Satellites are polluting the stratosphere
218.
AI models are dreaming up the materials of the future
219.
The best, and worst, places to be a working woman in 2025
220.
Donald Trump’s Washington reaches a new partisan peak
221.
How Trump’s tariffs will crush American carmakers
222.
Britain’s government may be about to waste its best chance of success
223.
Canada’s Liberals are surging
224.
Can Europe keep Ukraine in the fight if America really has bailed?
225.
Blighty newsletter: Is Britain going cold on America?
226.
Mice have been genetically engineered to look like mammoths
227.
The lesson from Trump’s Ukrainian weapons embargo
228.
Trump’s new tariffs are set to be his most extreme ever
229.
Andrew Cuomo plots a comeback in New York City
230.
The War Room newsletter: After the White House debacle, what next?
231.
The brutal chokeholds Donald Trump could inflict on Ukraine
232.
Israel’s army adopts a high-stakes new strategy: more terrain
233.
Trump’s armed forces won’t look like Biden’s
234.
Europe vows to defend Ukraine, but prays for Trump’s support
235.
This week is a moment of truth for Xi Jinping on deflation
236.
El Salvador’s wild crypto experiment ends in failure
237.
America faces a Trumpian economic slowdown
238.
Western leaders must seize the moment to make Europe safe
239.
Ukraine confronts a future without America, and perhaps Zelensky
240.
Is posh moisturiser worth the money?
241.
A disaster in the White House for Volodymyr Zelensky—and for Ukraine
242.
Steve Witkoff, Donald Trump’s savvy dealmaker
243.
Hard-right parties are now Europe’s most popular
244.
One of the world’s longest conflicts may be ending
245.
Muhsin Hendricks fought homophobia with the Koran
246.
The AfD’s unusual China connection
247.
The election in Tajikistan is unlikely to be democratic
248.
Prabowo Subianto is drastically cutting Indonesia’s budget
249.
The sea is swallowing an African island
250.
In a dictator’s palace, Syrians debate a new constitution
251.
Could political upheaval hit Jordan next?
252.
Israel and Hamas have something in common
253.
The matadors’ last stand in Colombia
254.
The bravest woman in Latin America?
255.
America has never had state media like it does today
256.
America’s Gen Z has got religion
257.
Critics of Medicaid point to a rigorous study conducted 15 years ago
258.
To make their numbers work, Republicans must slash health spending
259.
Swedish businesses are being bombed
260.
Europe will need to pull all the levers to up its defence spending
261.
John Parker, one of The Economist’s finest correspondents, was a polymath journalist
262.
Anybody in Britain can call themselves a therapist
263.
Britain’s capital markets are waging a war on paper
264.
Paying teenagers to go to school was a bad idea
265.
Britain halves its foreign-aid budget
266.
The smiling new face of German big business
267.
The Economist’s office agony uncle is back
268.
The business of secondhand clothing is booming
269.
Airbus has not taken full advantage of Boeing’s weakness
270.
Prabowo Subianto takes a chainsaw to Indonesia’s budget
271.
2025-02-27 The World this Week - The weekly cartoon
272.
2025-02-27 The World this Week - Business
273.
2025-02-27 The World this Week - Politics
274.
The global democracy index: how did countries perform in 2024?
275.
2025-02-27 The World this Week - This week’s covers
276.
Zyn is giving investors a buzz—for now
277.
Who works where doing what in China
278.
How India escaped extreme poverty without an industrial miracle
279.
How to get rich in 2025
280.
Inheriting is becoming nearly as important as working
281.
How overt religiosity became cool in India
282.
The trouble with ancient Indians
283.
The transactional world Donald Trump seeks would harm not help America
284.
Donald Trump has begun a mafia-like struggle for global power
285.
Does Britain’s nuclear deterrent have a Trump-shaped problem?
286.
The trouble with MAGA’s chipmaking dreams
287.
He has battled race-conscious policy for decades. Now his time has come
288.
CRISPR technologies hold enormous promise for farming and medicine
289.
Could there be Chinese troops in Europe?
290.
How cheap can investing get?
291.
America’s self-isolating president
292.
Running the Liberal Democrats is the easiest job in British politics
293.
How artificial intelligence can make board games better
294.
The skyrocketing demand for minerals will require new technologies
295.
Ukraine hopes its minerals deal will dig it out of a hole with Trump
296.
Ukraine is scrambling to find fresh fighters
297.
Meet Trump’s fiercest opponent: the bond market
298.
Nvidia is fighting off two threats
299.
The spread of mariachi tells a very American story
300.
Which European should face off against Trump and Putin?
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