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Latest updated at: 2025-11-12T06:50:51.732+08:00
View Stat
1.
The costs of dating your boss
2.
Democrats collapsed in the shutdown fight
3.
The promise and the perils of using AI for therapy
4.
Old folk are seized by stockmarket mania
5.
Beijing insiders’ plan to play Donald Trump
6.
Blighty newsletter: Labour retreats to its comfort zone
7.
Despite claims, foreign students have not yet been put off America
8.
Syria joins the American-led fight against Islamic State
9.
The War Room newsletter: Nuremberg 80 years on, a reckoning
10.
Mexico has become a less deadly place under Claudia Sheinbaum
11.
Recessions have become ultra-rare. That is storing up trouble
12.
How HR took over the world
13.
The BBC’s boss quits over a “doctored” Trump speech
14.
Acknowledgements
15.
A new project aims to predict how quickly AI will progress
16.
Four charts explain why Donald Trump is in trouble
17.
Georgia is dousing the last embers of democracy
18.
The mystery of America’s shutdown economy
19.
South Korea’s new president is fixing relations with America, Japan and China
20.
Checks and Balance newsletter: How Donald Trump became Joe Biden
21.
2025-11-07 The World this Week - Cover Story newsletter: The great relationship recession
22.
Elon Musk’s 1trn pay deal is a troubling display of corporate capture
23.
Can peptides give you superpowers?
24.
Zohran Mamdani lost in parts of NYC that look most like America
25.
Hemedti: warlord, power-broker and the new sultan of Darfur
26.
Climate Issue newsletter: China, the climate superpower
27.
Sources and acknowledgments
28.
America’s plans for a Golden Dome are dangerously obscure
29.
What a leaked transcript reveals about China’s muscular statecraft
30.
Hong Kongers support gay marriage. Their leaders, not so much
31.
America and China circle each other in the South China Sea
32.
Indonesia raids its rainy-day pot
33.
The death of Thailand’s queen mother reveals changing attitudes to the monarchy
34.
A Czech shift to the right is worrying news for Ukraine
35.
Ukraine’s valiant defence of Pokrovsk is nearing its end
36.
Why moderates are reclaiming Europe’s national flags
37.
Pope Leo XIV is infuriating MAGA Catholics
38.
Should facial analysis help determine whom companies hire?
39.
America’s furniture-makers exemplify the folly of tariffs
40.
China’s life-sciences industry is turning American
41.
2025-11-06 The World this Week - Politics
42.
2025-11-06 The World this Week - Business
43.
2025-11-06 The World this Week - The weekly cartoon
44.
Will anything—or anyone—stop the slaughter in Sudan?
45.
Tanzania has its Tiananmen moment
46.
Donald Trump says he may strike Nigeria to save Christians. Really?
47.
Iraq’s election may ensure stability but leave militias in control
48.
War looms in Venezuela as Trump tests an “Americas First” doctrine
49.
The rise and fall of America’s model mobile crisis service
50.
America’s health-care costs are shooting up
51.
Brand Britain has bounced back
52.
A British legal ruling about AI delights nobody
53.
Boom times in a British manufacturing town
54.
Nigel Farage’s newfound fiscal prudence is welcome, if unproven
55.
India’s women win the cricket World Cup
56.
South Asia’s water wars
57.
What explains India’s peculiar stability?
58.
Don’t blame AI for your job woes
59.
America should not push other countries to adopt the dollar
60.
A night of big wins for the Democrats
61.
China’s clean-energy revolution will reshape markets and politics
62.
The rise of singlehood is reshaping the world
63.
A new industry of AI companions is emerging
64.
All over the rich world, fewer people are hooking up and shacking up
65.
Dick Cheney divided Americans
66.
Donald Trump’s tariffs could soon be toast
67.
Why Palantir’s success will outlast the AI exuberance
68.
Golden Dome is one of the most ambitious military projects ever
69.
Universal child care can hurt children
70.
Investors are telling Britain to cheer up a bit
71.
If Labour cranks up income taxes, the left will boo loudest
72.
Was the Pacific Palisades blaze a “zombie fire”?
73.
Democrats risk drawing the wrong lessons from one good day
74.
Jordan Bardella starts to lay out his plans
75.
Tracking American drug-boat strikes off Venezuela’s coast
76.
Israel’s politicians are taking on its lawyers once again
77.
How much wealth would be destroyed by an AI stockmarket crash?
78.
Gerrymandering is now the wind beneath Gavin Newsom’s wings
79.
Democrats win big in New York, New Jersey and Virginia
80.
For the first time, climate models show the 1.5C goal is dead
81.
China places a Hong Kong-sized bet on Western decline
82.
First, Labubu’s grinning dolls. Now, a TV show and theme parks
83.
How the sheriff of St Louis ended up in jail
84.
Blighty newsletter: Is Farage more like Trump, Wilders or Meloni?
85.
Analysing Africa newsletter: Donald Trump is focusing on the wrong atrocities
86.
Nigel Farage bows to the bond market
87.
How Donald Trump can dodge a Supreme Court tariff block
88.
An EU-Mercosur trade deal looks close to ratification
89.
The mystery of China’s slumping investment
90.
Will AI make dating apps better—or even worse?
91.
War is blasting Ukraine’s border city of Kharkiv but boosting Lviv
92.
The rise and fall of Stacey Abrams’s political machine
93.
China’s air-quality improvements have hastened global warming
94.
How to clean up the world’s biggest polluter
95.
The boom boon
96.
The world’s renewable-energy superpower
97.
How China sparked a rooftop solar revolution in Pakistan
98.
Why climate change now threatens China’s future
99.
How a little Chinese island rose to global chemical dominance
100.
The War Room newsletter: Did a Russian weapon spook Trump?
101.
Woke football stickers are going viral in Britain
102.
Introducing our free newsletter on health and wellness
103.
Is Donald Trump as unpopular as he seems?
104.
How to beat the hard right, Netherlands edition
105.
China’s Belt and Road Initiative is booming
106.
Has Airbnb reached its peak?
107.
Why Wall Street won’t see the next crash coming
108.
2025-11-01 The World this Week - Cover Story newsletter: The battle for New York
109.
Donald Trump’s alarming muddle about nuclear-weapons testing
110.
Checks and Balance newsletter: Tear gas and Halloween in Chicago
111.
The War Room newsletter: The most successful amphibious invasion
112.
Curtis Sliwa’s tough-guy mien evokes an older New York
113.
Giorgia Meloni and Nigel Farage compared
114.
Can a dopamine detox reset your brain?
115.
How many people are already being killed by climate change?
116.
What a popular murderer reveals about Japan
117.
At long last, Timor-Leste joins ASEAN
118.
How East Asian pop culture is inspiring Gen Z protests
119.
Aid cuts are devastating health services in Africa
120.
The limits of Turkey’s influence in Syria are showing
121.
Darfur’s besieged capital falls to the Rapid Support Forces
122.
The next stage of the Trump peace plan for Gaza is stalling
123.
An Egyptian comedian makes a (virtual) comeback
124.
Jamaica’s nightmare comes true
125.
The Colombian left has chosen a successor to Gustavo Petro
126.
The data-centre backlash is brewing in America
127.
A basketball scandal highlights vulnerabilities in sports betting
128.
Crunching the numbers on every NYC marathon finisher since 2021
129.
Led by Nvidia, the AI industry has plans to reindustrialise America
130.
Trump 2028
131.
Sweden’s leading business dynasty prepares for succession
132.
LinkedIn and the art of self-promotion
133.
Porsche’s warning lights are flashing
134.
Google v Microsoft: the battle of AI business models
135.
The Trump administration’s approach to global health is flawed but fixable
136.
Against all odds, Peter Gurney loved his work
137.
Europe’s need for green electricity is blowing fuses
138.
France’s finance minister on how to pass a budget
139.
Turkey’s president is moving to eviscerate democracy
140.
The Finnish lifestyle philosophy that could save Europe
141.
A fresh approach to helping children with special educational needs
142.
A Welsh startup wants to make semiconductors in space
143.
2025-10-30 The World this Week - Politics
144.
2025-10-30 The World this Week - The weekly cartoon
145.
2025-10-30 The World this Week - Business
146.
Investors will help Jamaica recover from Hurricane Melissa
147.
The new globalisation paradox
148.
In their first meeting in six years, Trump and Xi agree a trade truce
149.
What will it cost to make Putin stop?
150.
Why funding Ukraine is a giant opportunity for Europe
151.
Asia adapts to Donald Trump’s transactional diplomacy
152.
A fractious but working relationship
153.
The battle for New York
154.
As new jobs in finance dry up, New York City’s fiscal model is wilting
155.
Zohran Mamdani wants to make New York great again
156.
The Dutch choose optimism over anti-immigrant populism
157.
India’s IPO boom is good news for its economy
158.
A letter to investors from the White House Opportunities Fund
159.
Europe’s defence firms are flying. Now for the hard part
160.
A bloody police raid in Rio was the deadliest in Brazil’s history
161.
Scientists may have found a panacea for snake bites
162.
America is upgrading GPS to catch up with rivals
163.
Javier Milei’s chance to transform Argentina and teach the world
164.
The idolatry of victimhood
165.
Tear gas and Halloween costumes in America’s third largest city
166.
Britain’s overstretched prisons are releasing inmates by mistake
167.
Blighty newsletter: Boys and their toys
168.
The Economist is hiring a Britain political correspondent
169.
Hurricane Melissa is one of the strongest storms ever recorded
170.
Donald Trump’s trade power is vast, but self-defeating
171.
How pig organs may soon save lives
172.
What the Trump-Xi meeting can and can’t solve
173.
Weight-loss drugs are spreading across the world
174.
A political drama for the ages, opening soon in New York City
175.
China is backing Russia’s war to keep America distracted, says Kaja Kallas
176.
El Boletín newsletter: The fallout from Javier Milei’s big win
177.
Why big oil is missing out on the AI energy bonanza
178.
England’s broken system for meeting special educational needs
179.
Xi Jinping’s latest purge: paranoid or purposeful?
180.
The end of the rip-off economy
181.
The meaning of America’s vast military build-up off Venezuela
182.
Javier Milei has won a fresh mandate to remake Argentina
183.
The Kremlin’s blitz to make Ukraine “go dark”
184.
Xi Jinping is at his boldest and brashest. How will Donald Trump fare this week?
185.
China’s secret stockpiles have been a great success—so far
186.
The counterintuitive economics of smoking
187.
Checks and Balance newsletter: Rural America reckons with Donald Trump
188.
The East Wing demolition is a parable of the Trump presidency
189.
Parkrun has become an unwitting British public-health success
190.
Karina Milei, Argentina’s most powerful woman, faces a storm of criticism
191.
2025-10-24 The World this Week - Cover Story newsletter: How we chose the cover image
192.
The world has become surprisingly less grumpy
193.
Can you eat your way to lower cholesterol?
194.
Will America’s new sanctions on Russian oil force a peace deal?
195.
Meet the real screen addicts: the elderly
196.
What is Taiwan’s plan B?
197.
How to win prizes and lose influence
198.
America and Britain target Asia’s sprawling scam industry
199.
Colombia has finally drawn Donald Trump’s ire
200.
Javier Milei’s fate turns on an upcoming election. Can he win?
201.
The obvious economics of preserving the Amazon
202.
Labour is treating London shabbily
203.
Britain’s welfare system has grown sicker
204.
Parliament turns on Prince Andrew
205.
American big business faces a 1trn capex question
206.
To save the world’s tropical forests, learn from Brazil
207.
Why Hong Kong is going for gold
208.
China has a grave problem
209.
A Supreme Court case could help entrench Republican power
210.
How the Trump administration could make sensible rules for drones
211.
America’s gerrymander war is heating up
212.
In the race for Virginia governor, Democrats see boring as a plus
213.
Donald Trump has turned the war on drugs into a real war
214.
Turkey’s fabled textile industry is coming apart at the seams
215.
Western drones are underwhelming on the Ukrainian battlefield
216.
Poland refuses to extradite a Nord Stream suspect
217.
Germany’s much-ballyhooed “autumn of reforms” is a damp squib
218.
Can Ukraine get past the bouncer on the EU door?
219.
In South Korea a corporate-governance revolution is under way
220.
OpenAI and Anthropic v app developers: tech’s Cronos syndrome
221.
Sports leagues find that streaming pirates have their purposes
222.
Beware the “romance of leadership”
223.
2025-10-23 The World this Week - The weekly cartoon
224.
2025-10-23 The World this Week - Politics
225.
2025-10-23 The World this Week - Business
226.
Kanchha Sherpa had mixed emotions about Everest
227.
How to preserve Africa’s natural riches for everyone
228.
Qatar is a crossroads at a crossroads
229.
Two flawed elections show the dangers of one-party rule
230.
Never mind your children’s screen time. Worry about your parents’
231.
India’s poorest and youngest electorate prepares for polls
232.
The US in brief: The war on drugs hits the Pacific
233.
China is being fuelled by inspiration, not perspiration
234.
Can AI make the poor world richer?
235.
Trumponomics is warping the world’s copper markets
236.
The migration schemes even populists love
237.
Why China is winning the trade war
238.
China is winning Donald Trump’s trade war
239.
What locals think of Birmingham’s ban on Israeli football fans
240.
Why investors still don’t believe in Argentina
241.
How the persecution of sparrows killed 2m people
242.
AI models ace their predictions of India’s monsoon rains
243.
America’s government shutdown is its weirdest yet
244.
Buckaroo! The British government’s favourite game
245.
How to make immigration palatable in a populist age
246.
After Gaza, Israeli politics are even less predictable
247.
China’s chipmakers are cleverly innovating around America’s limits
248.
Wanted: a new finance writer
249.
The US in brief: Putting the pay in payback
250.
New “amenity buildings” are luring Americans back to the office
251.
Outlandish as it sounds, Brussels feels like a city preparing for war
252.
Is the mercenary business on the brink of another boom?
253.
Javier Milei faces his most dangerous moment yet
254.
Blighty newsletter: Labour, at last, goes for bold
255.
Why are American women leaving the labour force?
256.
How sumo wrestling became a hit in Britain
257.
Takaichi Sanae becomes Japan’s first female prime minister
258.
Despite abstemious Gen Zs, the booze industry is going strong
259.
France puts a former president, Nicolas Sarkozy, behind bars
260.
Why Gaza’s “eternal” ceasefire is holding—for now
261.
The War Room newsletter: Three lessons from a spy scandal
262.
Charles the Not-so-bad deals with Andrew the Ghastly
263.
The world economy shrugs off both the trade war and AI fears
264.
The toxic tragedy of US-China trade talks
265.
Savage drone warfare engulfs Ukraine’s front line
266.
Why Wall Street is fearful of more lending blow-ups
267.
Drum Tower newsletter: The uncomfortable embrace between China and America
268.
Question 1: why are questionnaires in trouble?
269.
Checks and Balance newsletter: The Pentagon’s last reporters
270.
Russia’s latest big Ukraine offensive gains next to nothing, again
271.
Can bright light banish winter depression?
272.
2025-10-17 The World this Week - Cover Story newsletter: Governments are going broke
273.
The leader of the cult-like Moonies is engulfed in scandal
274.
The criminal case against John Bolton looks serious
275.
How powerful is your passport?
276.
Saul Zabar was king of the Upper West Side
277.
The secret fuel powering China’s self-driving cars
278.
How Xi Jinping’s war on corruption has driven more of it
279.
China is rounding up Christian leaders
280.
After 20 years of left-wing rule, Bolivia is about to swing right
281.
Utahns are fighting for fair maps
282.
The Department of Revenge
283.
Donald Trump should love Ken Burns’s new documentary on the American revolution
284.
Giorgia Meloni marks her third anniversary in great political shape
285.
The high costs of Spain’s renewables revolution
286.
Grid operators in the Baltics and Poland are preparing for Russian attacks
287.
The traffickers are winning the war on drugs
288.
The Dutch seize control of Nexperia from its Chinese owner
289.
The remarkable rise of AppLovin
290.
TED gets new bosses and changes direction
291.
Why bosses need to wake up to dark patterns
292.
Sloponomics: who wins and loses in the AI-content flood?
293.
Australia’s ambitious new push to counter China
294.
Takaichi Sanae’s path to power in Japan grows more complex
295.
Japan’s wartime history causes contemporary problems
296.
Why Ghana is safe from jihadists, for now
297.
The new players who could run Gaza
298.
Sudan’s remarkable mutual-aid groups
299.
Brute force is no match for today’s high-tech drug-runners
300.
First Brands is a painful but necessary warning for Wall Street
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