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Latest updated at: 2025-09-06T04:03:53.040+08:00
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1.
Do hangover supplements work?
2.
2025-09-05 The World this Week - Cover newsletter: How we chose the cover image
3.
After a tax scandal, Britain’s government gets a shake-up
4.
Steve Shirley countered sexism by founding her own company
5.
The world’s surprise boomtown: Baghdad
6.
2025-09-04 The World this Week - Politics
7.
How Israel’s arms exports have made it sanctions-proof
8.
The weird and wacky life hacks of China’s youth
9.
China’s urban planners could determine the future of city life
10.
A lesson in Trump-charming
11.
The rules for defending democracy under Donald Trump
12.
Five Republican factions jostle for the president’s favour
13.
Vladimir Putin is building a super-app
14.
Bayrou on the brink
15.
Fires, earthquakes and inflation are putting tourists off Turkey
16.
Robotaxis will be the Sputnik Moment for a declining Europe
17.
Why nuclear is now a booming industry
18.
How Lululemon fell out of fashion
19.
Morocco is now a trade and manufacturing powerhouse
20.
Broken workflows—and how to fix them
21.
What the splinternet means for big tech
22.
Indonesia could be on the brink of something nasty
23.
A terrifying synthetic-drug surge in Africa
24.
A new frontier for skyscrapers
25.
Luring partners and yet more debt: Mexico’s energy plan
26.
What is missing from a plan to tackle Haiti’s gangs
27.
Will British shipbuilders rule the waves again?
28.
How the M&S strawberries-and-cream sandwich went viral
29.
2025-09-04 The World this Week - Business
30.
2025-09-04 The World this Week - The weekly cartoon
31.
Iran’s imminent nuclear dilemma
32.
How America’s Democrats might win back power
33.
The Farage power project
34.
All eyes on China’s massive military parade
35.
Chinese migrants risked their lives to reach America. For what?
36.
Banning smartphones in classrooms helps students
37.
Mexico fears the United States will stop the flow of natural gas
38.
Sri Lanka is still reeling from its economic collapse
39.
Donald Trump is unpopular. Why is it so hard to stand up to him?
40.
What if artificial intelligence is just a “normal” technology?
41.
How Europe’s hard right threatens the economy
42.
India is retiring its most celebrated warplane
43.
Bond vigilantes take aim at France
44.
The hard right’s plans for Europe’s economy
45.
Rampant and relentless: Israel’s settlers make their move
46.
Schools should banish smartphones from the classroom
47.
Our Fed tracker: how much will its independence be compromised?
48.
Why supply shocks are a trap for commodity investors
49.
The dubious legality of killing drug suspects at sea
50.
Burying nuclear reactors might make them cleaner and cheaper
51.
How to study people who are very drunk
52.
How to take over a government via PDFs
53.
Putin’s petrostate faces a kamikaze petrol crisis
54.
Blighty newsletter: It’s immigration, stupid!
55.
Google and Apple dodge an antitrust bullet
56.
In Chicago violent crime is down
57.
Who is winning in AI—China or America?
58.
China turns crypto-curious
59.
Scientists are discovering a powerful new way to prevent cancer
60.
The Economist is hiring a science and technology correspondent
61.
Xi Jinping’s anti-American party
62.
Protests test Indonesia’s democracy
63.
America is escaping its office crisis
64.
The threat of deflation stalks Asia’s economies
65.
What Finland could teach Ukraine about war and peace
66.
Britain’s jobs market has a slow puncture
67.
How can a middle power compete in artificial intelligence?
68.
Donald Trump comes for America’s public universities
69.
Meet the world’s hottest upstart weapons dealers
70.
How Trump’s migrant crackdown threatens America Inc
71.
2025-08-30 The World this Week - Cover Story newsletter: How we chose the cover image
72.
Trump’s tariffs suffer a legal setback
73.
The truth about seed oils
74.
A cyber-attack isn’t enough to halt Marks & Spencer’s turnaround
75.
Lisa Cook, the Fed governor Donald Trump is trying to fire
76.
The factions jostling for Donald Trump’s favour
77.
Sen Genshitsu spread peace through sipping
78.
Donald Trump is waging war on woke AI
79.
On parade in China: Putin, the PLA and purges
80.
Something is amiss in China’s foreign-affairs leadership
81.
Israel’s prevaricator-in-chief
82.
The indecorous fight over a dead president’s body
83.
No one is satisfied with Egypt’s role in Gaza
84.
A haunting new view of Assad’s brutality in Syria
85.
A 19bn industry is about to pay its workforce for the first time
86.
Have foreign tourists really avoided America this year?
87.
New York is turning 400 and no one cares
88.
Hansard shows what it takes to put democracy on the record
89.
France’s government is on the brink of collapse, again
90.
Don’t forget the downsides of China’s innovation push
91.
Peru’s cartoonish presidential front-runner
92.
Time for some Merz-Macron magic
93.
Why Poland is becoming less central European and more Baltic
94.
After a year of chaos, the Dutch hope to return to real issues
95.
Ten years later, “Wir schaffen das” has proved a pyrrhic victory
96.
Service stations are receiving a glow-up
97.
How much trouble is the world’s biggest offshore-wind developer in?
98.
Feuds, grudges and revenge
99.
How a power shortage could short-circuit Nvidia’s rise
100.
2025-08-28 The World this Week - Politics
101.
2025-08-28 The World this Week - Business
102.
2025-08-28 The World this Week - The weekly cartoon
103.
The market for startup shares is getting even weirder
104.
A defining test looms for India
105.
Will a harsher world accelerate India’s reforms?
106.
Narendra Modi’s secret weapon: the Indian consumer
107.
Trump’s interest-rate crusade will be self-defeating
108.
Gambling or investing? In America, the line is increasingly blurred
109.
How Trump’s war on the Federal Reserve could do serious damage
110.
Brazil offers America a lesson in democratic maturity
111.
Jair Bolsonaro’s trial offers Brazil a way out from polarisation and stagnation
112.
Assessing the case against Lisa Cook
113.
Why you should buy your employer’s shares
114.
The rise of beer made by AI
115.
The middle-aged are no longer the most miserable
116.
Humiliation, vindication—and a giant test for India
117.
How much danger is America’s central bank in?
118.
The polycrisis theory of Brexit
119.
A successful test flight puts Musk’s Starship back on track
120.
Quietly, Britain is moving closer to EU rules
121.
The Economist’s finance and economics internship
122.
Putin’s botched African adventure
123.
Even as China’s economy suffers, stocks soar. What’s going on?
124.
Ukraine shows off a deadly new cruise missile
125.
Donald Trump, friend of the EV?
126.
The wrong way to end a war
127.
A surprise US Navy surge in the Caribbean
128.
Have foreign tourists really avoided America this year?
129.
The Democrat who calls Trump a child of God
130.
A Chinese lab starts to tackle a giant mystery in particle physics
131.
Blighty newsletter: Beware the mob
132.
France is in big trouble, again
133.
The War Room newsletter: Archive 1945 comes to a close
134.
Trump “fires” Lisa Cook, escalating his war on the Federal Reserve
135.
Trump’s interest-rate crusade will be self-defeating
136.
Chinese courts can bar even those not accused of crimes from leaving the country
137.
How China became an innovation powerhouse
138.
How Ukraine’s naval drones hold Russia’s warships at bay
139.
India’s government bans fantasy sports games
140.
Zohran Mamdani is promising lots of things he can’t actually do
141.
The world’s oldest daily radio serial on England’s new rural life
142.
In some ways, rural Britain is changing faster than its cities
143.
Fear the deficit-populism doom loop
144.
The choices facing Britain’s next MI6 chief
145.
The evolution of famine in Gaza, in maps and charts
146.
Are saunas actually good for you?
147.
2025-08-22 The World this Week - Cover Story newsletter: How we chose the cover image
148.
Donald Trump has purged one of the CIA’s most senior Russia analysts
149.
2025-08-21 The World this Week - Politics
150.
2025-08-21 The World this Week - Business
151.
2025-08-21 The World this Week - The weekly cartoon
152.
A burning threat to pregnant women
153.
Does it make sense for America to keep subsidising a sinking city?
154.
How Washington became Donald Trump’s chew toy
155.
Friedrich Merz cuts a good figure abroad but is struggling at home
156.
Why Turkey’s football clubs can pay more cash for talent
157.
Europe is ablaze
158.
Trump wants a Nobel prize. Europe can exploit that to help Ukraine
159.
Big chocolate has a growing taste for lab-grown cocoa
160.
China is quietly upstaging America with its open models
161.
China’s hottest new look: the facekini
162.
The last days of brainstorming
163.
Who will America’s president listen to next on Ukraine?
164.
Pregnant women need protecting from heatwaves
165.
Britain leads the world in a new global business—a criminal one
166.
Terence Stamp preferred philosophy to celebrity
167.
Hong Kong’s courtroom dramas
168.
A new twist in Syria: a political opposition
169.
What’s in a name in the Middle East?
170.
Gaza’s Gen-Z influencers
171.
Are east African governments colluding to stifle dissent?
172.
How Sierra Leone beat back mpox
173.
After 20 years in power, Bolivia’s socialists crash out of it
174.
The new fears of Cubans in Florida
175.
Climate change threatens an Andean ski boom
176.
Why Mexicans love Japan and Korea
177.
England’s white working class falls further behind at exams
178.
China’s mid-year economic wobble
179.
American tech’s split personalities
180.
Economists disagree about everything. Don’t they?
181.
The green transition has a surprising new home
182.
Can China cope with a deindustrialised future?
183.
To survive, Intel must break itself apart
184.
The world is learning to live with the Taliban
185.
Pakistan is critical in the fight against Islamic State terrorism
186.
How fair are India’s elections?
187.
TSMC could revolutionise rural Japan
188.
Japan storms back into the chip wars
189.
The world’s biggest chipmaker needs to move beyond Taiwan
190.
Donald Trump’s fantasy of home-grown chipmaking
191.
The McWages index: which countries earn the most Big Macs?
192.
A court ruling threatens to disrupt Britain’s asylum policy
193.
A new opposition could be a healthy sign for Syria
194.
The discovery of a gene for chronic pain could herald new treatments
195.
Old fossil-fuel plants are becoming green-energy hubs
196.
AI-powered robots can take your phone apart
197.
RFK Jr’s attack on mRNA technology endangers the world
198.
Marjorie Taylor Greene wants to stop them from making it rain
199.
What it means when Britain talks about “Bosh”
200.
Security “guarantees” for Ukraine are not clear enough
201.
Trump’s trade victims are shrugging off his attacks
202.
The Democrats who find abundance liberalism threatening
203.
Was globalisation ever a meritocracy?
204.
How AI-enhanced hackers are stealing billions
205.
The young American female soldiers of TikTok
206.
Putin’s desire to destroy Western unity rages on
207.
Blighty newsletter: How Britain became a theft capital
208.
Putin’s “land swap” is really a grab for Ukraine’s fortress belt
209.
Zelensky survives another episode of the Trump show
210.
In praise of complicated investing strategies
211.
How America’s AI boom is squeezing the rest of the economy
212.
The War Room newsletter: Why Putin’s peace plan is more like poison
213.
Gangs are using increasingly sophisticated kit to steal cars
214.
Why America can’t shake off inflation
215.
Life after death for Canada’s crushed Conservatives
216.
Welcome to the YIMBYest neighbourhood in America
217.
The new geography of stolen goods
218.
Fear and dread of a new Oval Office fiasco over Ukraine
219.
The nightmare of a Trump-Putin pact isn’t over
220.
The moral of “The Salt Path”, an embellished bestseller
221.
Donald Trump’s gift to Vladimir Putin
222.
What might Trumpian meddling mean for Intel?
223.
Should you use a standing desk?
224.
2025-08-15 The World this Week - Cover Story newsletter: How we chose the cover image
225.
Which are the deadliest European cities in a heatwave?
226.
How to make sense of Donald Trump’s bizarre tariff rates
227.
Must Europe choose between “strategic autonomy” and August off?
228.
Razia Jan insisted on educating Afghanistan’s girls
229.
America’s new plan to fight a war with China
230.
The end of the second world war
231.
China’s planned Turkish EV factories have yet to power up
232.
The colourful civic groups that hold Germany together
233.
Africa is undergoing social change without economic transformation
234.
Hong Kong is super superstitious
235.
China claims to want women to have children and a career
236.
Liberal Uruguay and the right to die
237.
A martyr in the making?
238.
Bolivia’s crazy kingdom of coca
239.
Why the Trump administration excites some personal-injury lawyers
240.
Texas’s renegade Democrats prepare for a glorious defeat
241.
A 400-year-old Chinese cough syrup is winning over Westerners
242.
Japan’s carmakers are trying to tinker their way out of tariff pain
243.
Italian bosses want Giorgia Meloni to hurry up with reform
244.
A new wave of clean-energy innovation is building
245.
Should you trust that five-star rating on Airbnb?
246.
America and its Asian allies need to spend more to deter China
247.
The shutdown of ocean currents could freeze Europe
248.
Why South Africa should scrap Black Economic Empowerment
249.
2025-08-14 The World this Week - Politics
250.
2025-08-14 The World this Week - Business
251.
2025-08-14 The World this Week - The weekly cartoon
252.
America’s biggest ask in Asia
253.
Indonesia’s new president has daddy issues
254.
What Sara Duterte’s comeback means for the Philippines
255.
Ivory Coast’s president is overstaying his welcome
256.
Lebanon’s government is taking on a weakened Hizbullah
257.
The world’s hardest makeover: Hamas
258.
The killing of journalists in Gaza
259.
The Fantasy Premier League is changing Britain’s favourite sport
260.
Asian tourists are returning to Britain. But they look different
261.
The real collusion between Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin
262.
How to win at foreign policy
263.
Growth-loving authoritarians are failing on their own terms
264.
What 630,000 paintings say about the world economy
265.
Where will win from Trump’s tariffs?
266.
To sell Fannie and Freddie, Trump must answer a 7trn question
267.
China’s power over rare earths is not as great as it seems
268.
Trump wants to command bosses like Xi. He is failing
269.
Trump 2 is pushing environmentalists to rethink their approach
270.
Drones could soon become more intrusive than ever
271.
Smoke from boreal wildfires could cool the Arctic
272.
Earth’s climate is approaching irreversible tipping points
273.
Ivy League universities are on a debt binge
274.
What Putin wants from Trump in Alaska
275.
Aux barricades, boomers!
276.
Xi Jinping’s weaponisation of rare-earth elements will ultimately backfire
277.
Vaccinations to prevent cervical cancer have plummeted in Britain
278.
Nerves are on a knife-edge ahead of the Trump-Putin summit
279.
How scared should you be of “the China squeeze”?
280.
How many pythons could you catch in ten days?
281.
Race, power and money in South Africa
282.
The looming military threat in the Arctic
283.
Blighty newsletter: The Tories go cold on the gig economy
284.
Palantir might be the most over-valued firm of all time
285.
Britain is a global gaming superpower
286.
Trump v DC
287.
Why Donald Trump is wrong to take over the DC police
288.
How AI could create the first one-person unicorn
289.
The Russian-run town squatting on NATO territory
290.
Cow’s milk, as well as Russian oil, fuels the US-India trade war
291.
The War Room newsletter: Seven of the best books on the Pacific war
292.
America’s drug regulator is in turmoil
293.
America’s housing market is shuddering
294.
Instead of sanctions, Donald Trump announces a summit with Russia
295.
Donald Trump brokers a peace plan in the Caucasus
296.
Still want to be a London cabbie?
297.
OpenAI’s latest step towards advanced artificial intelligence
298.
2025-08-08 The World this Week - Cover Story newsletter: How we chose the cover image
299.
Are nightmares bad for your health?
300.
Pascal Soriot, the pharma titan tiring of Britain
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