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Latest updated at: 2025-01-18T07:08:35.217+08:00
View Stat
1.
A protest against America’s TikTok ban is mired in contradiction
2.
Can you breathe stress away?
3.
TikTok’s time is up. Can Donald Trump save it?
4.
China meets its official growth target. Not everyone is convinced
5.
The Economist’s science and technology internship
6.
A better understanding of Huntington’s disease brings hope
7.
Peter Fenwick became the world expert on near-death experiences
8.
Inside the Houthi’s moneymaking machine
9.
An outrage that even China’s supine media has called out
10.
Why foreign law firms are leaving China
11.
An initiative so feared that China has stopped saying its name
12.
Can Donald Trump maintain Joe Biden’s network of Asian alliances?
13.
West African booze is becoming a luxury product
14.
Canada has adopted assisted dying faster than anywhere on Earth
15.
Tether’s move to El Salvador is a win for President Nayib Bukele
16.
How Joe Biden wound up serving Donald Trump
17.
How bad will the smoke be for Angelenos’ health?
18.
Can the good ship Europe weather the Trumpnado?
19.
Spain’s proposed house tax on foreigners will not fix its shortage
20.
A French-sponsored Ukrainian army brigade has been badly botched
21.
A TV dramatisation of Mussolini’s life inflames Italy
22.
France’s new prime minister is trying to court the left
23.
How the AfD got its swagger back
24.
Has the Royal Navy become too timid?
25.
A plan to reorganise local government in England runs into opposition
26.
David Lammy’s plan to shake up Britain’s Foreign Office
27.
Britain’s government has spooked markets and riled businesses
28.
The right in Congress and the courts will reshape Donald Trump’s agenda
29.
The UFC, Dana White and the rise of bloodsport entertainment
30.
The year ahead: a message from the CEO
31.
Germany is going nuts for Dubai chocolate
32.
Will Elon Musk scrap his plan to invest in a gigafactory in Mexico?
33.
One of the biggest energy IPOs in a decade could be around the corner
34.
Can the Gulf states become tech superpowers?
35.
How to improve clinical trials
36.
Houthi Inc: the pirates who weaponised globalisation
37.
2025-01-16 The World this Week - The weekly cartoon
38.
2025-01-16 The World this Week - Business
39.
2025-01-16 The World this Week - Politics
40.
First, the ceasefire. Next the Trump effect could upend the Middle East
41.
2025-01-16 The World this Week - This week’s cover
42.
Donald Trump will upend 80 years of American foreign policy
43.
Ethiopia gets a stockmarket. Now it just needs some firms to list
44.
Are big cities overrated?
45.
Why catastrophe bonds are failing to cover disaster damage
46.
Rising bond yields should spur governments to go for growth
47.
“The Traitors”, a reality TV show, offers a useful economics lesson
48.
Should you have to prove your age before watching porn?
49.
After 15 months of hell, Israel and Hamas sign a ceasefire deal
50.
Labour’s credibility trap
51.
Tulsi Gabbard, Sean Penn and the hunt for an American hostage
52.
Much of the damage from the LA fires could have been averted
53.
Is obesity a disease?
54.
Volunteers with Down’s syndrome could help find Alzheimer’s drugs
55.
Will Donald Trump unleash Wall Street?
56.
A short history of Syria, in maps
57.
What North Korea gains by sending troops to fight for Russia
58.
Is Arkadag the world’s greatest football team?
59.
After the president’s arrest, what next for South Korea?
60.
Is Javier Milei’s economic gamble working?
61.
Marco Rubio will find China is hard to beat in Latin America
62.
Why elite MBA graduates are struggling to find jobs
63.
From Greenland to Panama and Mexico, leaders are in shock
64.
A hidden refuge in Sudan that the internet, banks—and war—can’t reach
65.
How flush Americans feel depends on their views of Donald Trump
66.
Blighty newsletter: Britain’s advantage in the AI race
67.
Britain is becoming a well-mannered but deceitful society
68.
Violent Jihadists are getting frustrated by the new Syria
69.
Iran is vulnerable to a Trumpian all-out economic assault
70.
India’s Faustian pact with Russia is strengthening
71.
Homelessness in England has risen by 26% in the past five years
72.
How will calamity change Los Angeles?
73.
Russia is being set aflame by hundreds of arson attacks
74.
Why global bond markets are convulsing
75.
How hard is it to run the Pentagon?
76.
Checks and Balance: Fires, Greenland and the systematic organisation of hatreds
77.
Time could be running out for TikTok
78.
How to make sense of 2024’s wild temperatures
79.
The Los Angeles fires will be extraordinarily expensive
80.
Should you start lifting weights?
81.
Herbert Kickl, Austria’s hard-right ideologue who played the long game
82.
Why have Britain’s bond yields jumped sharply?
83.
Chiung Yao taught the Chinese all about romantic love
84.
A big earthquake causes destruction in Tibet
85.
A pay rise for government workers sparks anger and envy in China
86.
Militant Uyghurs in Syria threaten the Chinese government
87.
Does China have the fiscal firepower to rescue its economy?
88.
Joe Biden’s mixed legacy on Japan
89.
AUKUS enters its fifth year. How is the pact faring?
90.
Indonesia nearly has a monopoly on nickel. What next?
91.
America concludes genocide has been committed in Sudan—again
92.
The West is making a muddle of its Syria sanctions
93.
Lebanon tries yet again to elect a new president
94.
Canada and America have been fighting about timber for 40 years
95.
Most Americans think moderate drinking is fine
96.
When treating snakebites, American hospitals turn to zoos
97.
Mike Johnson has his old job back, for now
98.
America’s bet on industrial policy starts to pay off for semiconductors
99.
A dispute over old war crimes strains Polish-Ukrainian relations
100.
Spain’s government marks 50 years since Franco died
101.
Europe has lots of lithium, but struggles to get it out of the ground
102.
Olaf Scholz still thinks he can win re-election as chancellor
103.
Austria could soon have a first far-right leader since 1945
104.
The phenomenon of sexual strangulation in Britain
105.
The decline in remote working hits Britain’s housing market
106.
Britons are keener than ever to bring back lost and rare species
107.
A much-praised British scheme to help disabled workers is failing them
108.
Rolls-Royce cars pushes the pedal on customisation
109.
What Elon Musk’s tweets about sex abuse reveal about British politics
110.
Meet the ambitious wolf cubs of Wall Street
111.
The signals of workplace submissiveness
112.
What next for US Steel?
113.
Foxconn and other gadget-makers are expanding their empires
114.
Health warnings about alcohol give only half the story
115.
Pete Hegseth’s culture war will weaken America’s armed forces
116.
2025-01-09 The World this Week - The weekly cartoon
117.
2025-01-09 The World this Week - Business
118.
2025-01-09 The World this Week - Politics
119.
2025-01-09 The World this Week - This week’s covers
120.
Europe could be torn apart by new divisions
121.
How corporate bonds fell out of fashion
122.
America’s internet giants are being outplayed in the global south
123.
The capitalist revolution Africa needs
124.
What a 472-year-old corpse reveals about India
125.
Pakistan’s army puts a former intelligence chief on trial
126.
Just because Indonesia has nickel, doesn’t mean it should make EVs
127.
Donald the Deporter
128.
How far will Donald Trump go to get rid of illegal immigrants?
129.
Alawites formed Syria’s elite. Now they are terrified
130.
From inside an obliterated Gaza, gunfire not a ceasefire
131.
Mark Zuckerberg’s U-turn on fact-checking is craven—but correct
132.
An American purchase of Greenland could be the deal of the century
133.
Does melatonin work for jet lag?
134.
Training AI models might not need enormous data centres
135.
Will Mark Zuckerberg’s Trump gamble pay off?
136.
How means conquered ends
137.
Los Angeles is burning
138.
Team Trump is getting handover hints from Team Biden
139.
How the Gulf’s rulers want to harness the power of science
140.
What New York’s congestion charge could teach the rest of America
141.
Jean-Marie Le Pen revived extremist politics in France
142.
Mozambique’s opposition leader flies home into chaos
143.
The Putinisation of central Europe
144.
Blighty newsletter: What Westminster gets wrong about Elon Musk
145.
Chinese markets suffer a dismal start to the year
146.
By resisting arrest, South Korea’s president challenges democracy
147.
Can America’s economy cope with mass deportations?
148.
Women warriors and the war on woke
149.
Alcohol-free booze is becoming big business
150.
Justin Trudeau steps down, leaving a wrecked party and divided Canada
151.
The Africa gap
152.
Africa is undergoing social change without economic transformation
153.
Africa could reduce the economic gap between it and the rest of the world
154.
African elites should align themselves with their countries’ needs
155.
Africa has too many businesses, too little business
156.
The economic gap between Africa and the rest of the world is getting wider
157.
The African investment environment is less benign than for many years
158.
A new electricity supercycle is under way
159.
Does made in Mexico mean made by China?
160.
The US Army needs less good, cheaper drones to compete
161.
Trump has faced down Republican dissidents in Congress
162.
Ten years after the Charlie Hebdo massacre, satire is under siege
163.
Checks and Balance newsletter: Can the tech elite and MAGA come together?
164.
Russ Vought: Donald Trump’s holy warrior
165.
The secret to one of Europe’s best-performing stockmarkets
166.
Young customers in developing countries propel a boom in plastic surgery
167.
Young people are having less fun
168.
Why people over the age of 55 are the new problem generation
169.
2025-01-02 The World this Week - The weekly cartoon
170.
2025-01-02 The World this Week - The world this week
171.
China approves the world’s most expensive infrastructure project
172.
The fate of minorities in post-Assad Syria
173.
Eastern Congo is as wretched as ever
174.
The era of multilateral peacekeeping draws to an unhappy close
175.
Failure to prepare for climate change is costing Honduras dear
176.
Venezuela’s Nicolás Maduro looks set to take the throne
177.
Jimmy Carter reshaped his home town
178.
Why Canada should join the EU
179.
Serbia and its neighbours are still far from joining the EU
180.
Elon Musk’s praise for the far right infuriates most of Germany
181.
MAGA’s war on talent frightens CEOs—and angers Elon Musk
182.
Beware the dangers of data
183.
Meet Silicon Valley’s shrewdest talent spotters
184.
Netflix has big ambitions for live sport
185.
To see what European business could become, look to the Nordics
186.
2025-01-02 The World this Week - This week’s cover
187.
Syria’s new rulers have inherited an economic disaster
188.
Smarter incentives would help India adapt to climate change
189.
How 1.4bn Indians are adapting to climate change
190.
Why Spanish firms have cooled towards Latin America
191.
Economic bright spots are getting harder to find in Thailand
192.
Would an artificial-intelligence bubble be so bad?
193.
Will Elon Musk dominate President Trump’s economic policy?
194.
Tech is coming to Washington. Prepare for a clash of cultures
195.
Is Islamic State on the rise again?
196.
The Starmer government looks a poor guardian of England’s improving schools
197.
Finland’s seizure of a tanker shows how to fight Russian sabotage
198.
Duelling arguments take shape in the TikTok-ban case
199.
The four worst words in British politics
200.
Another accidental aircraft shootdown is a matter of when, not if
201.
America’s marijuana industry is wilting
202.
Cancer vaccines are showing promise at last
203.
New firefighting tech is being trialled in Sardinia’s ancient forests
204.
The other billionaire space company
205.
What investors expect from President Trump
206.
China is catching up with America in quantum technology
207.
Homelessness rises to a record level in America
208.
Finland seizes a tanker, getting tough on hybrid warfare
209.
A Prague-Berlin train loses its old-world dining cars
210.
Xi Jinping has much to worry about in 2025
211.
RFK junior is half right about American health care
212.
Why are Nordic companies so successful?
213.
Inflation in Britain looks irritatingly persistent
214.
Jimmy Carter was perhaps the most virtuous of all America’s presidents
215.
China’s firms are taking flight, worrying its rulers
216.
Labour lacks good ideas for improving Britain’s schools
217.
Manmohan Singh was India’s economic freedom fighter
218.
Why some doctors are reassessing hypnosis
219.
What should companies do to keep bosses safe?
220.
Why you’re not on holiday in India right now
221.
Why fine wine and fancy art have slumped this year
222.
Britons brace themselves for more floods
223.
Who was the best CEO of 2024?
224.
How China turns members of its diaspora into spies
225.
Matt Gaetz vs the ethics committee
226.
Inside Ukraine’s secret missile programme
227.
At the state level, democracy in America is fracturing
228.
A horrific Christmas attack in Germany is weirder than expected
229.
Just how frothy is America’s stockmarket?
230.
Why Congress is so dysfunctional
231.
Drones spotted on America’s east coast highlight a bigger problem
232.
A year of our visual journalism
233.
Brother Harold Palmer lived alone in the wilds by choice
234.
2024-12-19 The World this Week - This week’s cover
235.
2024-12-19 The World this Week - The World Ahead 2025
236.
Why warriors should welcome laws of war
237.
Is the age of American air superiority coming to an end?
238.
Singapore’s government is determined to keep hawker centres alive
239.
South Sudan’s economic crisis threatens its fragile peace
240.
Ethiopia and Somalia claim to have settled a dangerous feud
241.
Israel and Hamas look close to some kind of deal
242.
Everyone wants to meet Syria’s new rulers
243.
How the Democrats wandered away from America’s workers
244.
Donald Trump’s DEI assessment
245.
The Biden administration pursued a mistaken policy on LNG exports
246.
Why meal-replacement drinks are shaking up the British lunch
247.
Meet the most ruthless CEO in the trillion-dollar tech club
248.
The business of nicknames
249.
Can Lego remain the world’s coolest toymaker?
250.
The Economist’s country of the year for 2024
251.
Global warming is speeding up. Another reason to think about geoengineering
252.
2024-12-19 The World this Week - The weekly cartoon
253.
2024-12-19 The World this Week - The world this year 2024
254.
What to make of 2024
255.
How to get a free meal in China
256.
Don’t count on monetary policy to make housing affordable
257.
Why Brazil’s currency is plunging
258.
The search for the world’s most efficient charities
259.
Conflict is remaking the Middle East’s economic order
260.
Dommaraju Gukesh’s win will accelerate India’s chess ambitions
261.
How to give money to good causes
262.
We need to talk about Europe’s Kevins
263.
Police brutality is not stopping Georgia’s protests
264.
France’s new prime minister faces a looming mess
265.
German politicians are talking tough, but offering little
266.
Keep the Caucasus safe from Russia
267.
A tie-up between Honda and Nissan will not fix their problems
268.
Ukraine is winning the economic war against Russia
269.
Latin Americans are worryingly comfortable with authoritarianism
270.
Academic writing is getting harder to read—the humanities most of all
271.
Giving children the wrong (or not enough) toys may doom a society
272.
The eternal Bossman
273.
Off the Charts newsletter: Why R is the best coding language for data journalism
274.
Off the Charts newsletter: Why Python is the best coding language for data journalism
275.
One of Assad’s mass graves is found, with as many as 100,000 bodies
276.
How to get money from Ebenezer Scrooge
277.
Workers love Donald Trump. Unions should fear him
278.
Blighty newsletter: The great status shuffle
279.
China’s economy is in for another rough year
280.
The killing of a Russian general shows Ukraine’s spies remain lethal
281.
Britain’s government plans drastic changes to local democracy
282.
A crushing blow for the Justin Trudeau show
283.
Why Louis Vuitton is struggling but Hermès is not
284.
The secret talks between Syria’s new leaders and the Kremlin
285.
Ukrainian troops celebrate a grim Christmas in Kursk
286.
Earth is warming faster. Scientists are closing in on why
287.
Britain’s Labour government is keen on deporting illegal migrants
288.
Protests threaten Georgia’s Kremlin-friendly government
289.
Britain prepares for its third defence review in four years
290.
Is the opioid epidemic finally burning out?
291.
Checks and Balance newsletter: America’s health-care paradox
292.
South Korea’s president is impeached
293.
What to expect after Germany’s confidence vote
294.
Tulsi Gabbard delights in provocation
295.
An interview with the military commander of Syria’s new masters
296.
Emmanuel Macron has yet another stab at finding a prime minister
297.
Humans and Neanderthals met often, but only one event matters
298.
What has four stomachs and could change the world?
299.
China cracks down on Karate-chopping cleaning ladies
300.
Why China is losing interest in English
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