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Latest updated at: 2025-07-26T01:41:32.418+08:00
View Stat
1.
Why Emmanuel Macron has decided to recognise a Palestinian state
2.
Can you overcome an allergy?
3.
Vladimir Medinsky, Putin’s negotiator with a warped worldview
4.
Catholics are more liberal than you might think
5.
Why Thai fighter jets have attacked Cambodia
6.
The world court joins the fight over climate change
7.
The looming deadline for the Panama Canal ports deal
8.
“Comrade” is making a comeback in China
9.
Conservationists have rescued the world’s last truly wild horse
10.
“Gated communities” are flourishing in India
11.
A bloody week in Syria may have ripple effects in Lebanon
12.
Somalia’s state-building project is in tatters
13.
Ugandan intervention in Congo risks stoking ethnic violence
14.
As Gaza starves, Israel fights on
15.
The year of the women’s-sports bar
16.
A little poetic justice for Donald Trump
17.
Cuts to food stamps are about to hit in America
18.
A year after Britain’s riots, things have deteriorated
19.
Seven in ten Britons expect more riots
20.
Why Britain’s police hardly solve any crimes
21.
Peace in Turkey must not become a smokescreen for repression
22.
2025-07-24 The World this Week - Politics
23.
Rethinking the war on AIDS
24.
Trump’s astonishing battering of Brazil
25.
A new paradise for crypto
26.
Macron was right about strategic autonomy
27.
Kurds and Turks are closer than ever to peace
28.
Cigarettes, booze and petrol bankroll Europe’s welfare empire
29.
Could Europe be the next big coffee producer?
30.
Trump’s tariff mayhem has been a blessing for shippers
31.
The Gulf’s oil giants risk becoming sprawling conglomerates
32.
The rail mega-merger that could transform American supply chains
33.
Can Grab and GoTo forge a South-East Asian tech champion?
34.
2025-07-24 The World this Week - Business
35.
2025-07-24 The World this Week - The weekly cartoon
36.
The continuation of the war in Gaza disgraces Israel
37.
“Bangla Teslas” give Musk a run for his money
38.
The new private jet pecking order
39.
Fauja Singh took up running somewhat late in life
40.
What economics can teach foreign-policy types
41.
Where will be the Detroit of electric vehicles?
42.
The world should follow Trump’s lead on stablecoins
43.
The economics of superintelligence
44.
What if AI made the world’s economic growth explode?
45.
AI labs’ all-or-nothing race leaves no time to fuss about safety
46.
The dark horse of AI labs
47.
Vindication for two bankers. Questions for Britain’s legal system
48.
Inside the top-secret labs that build America’s nuclear weapons
49.
Crypto’s big bang will revolutionise finance
50.
Fragmentary Latin inscriptions can be completed with AI
51.
Why 24/7 trading is a bad idea
52.
Ukraine’s leader, Volodymyr Zelensky, should junk a very bad bill
53.
What does it take to make a nuclear weapon?
54.
The peril of trying to please people
55.
The surprising lessons of a secret cold-war nuclear programme
56.
Outrage in Ukraine as the government attacks anti-corruption watchdogs
57.
Epstein’s ghost haunts the Trump-Murdoch alliance
58.
Blighty newsletter: Can electoral reform fix Britain’s growth?
59.
Russian sabotage attacks surged across Europe in 2024
60.
Why are British doctors so radical?
61.
Airlines’ favourite new pricing trick
62.
Want higher pay? Stay in your job
63.
Underground with America’s nuclear-missile crews
64.
China’s smartphone champion has triumphed where Apple failed
65.
The War Room newsletter: Three new books on espionage
66.
Britain’s water watchdog is to be put down
67.
Populism and polarisation come to Japan
68.
The Houthis shatter European pretensions to naval power
69.
Is Xi Jinping in trouble?
70.
How far off is dollar doom?
71.
Tamaki Yuichiro, Japan’s populist upstart who wants to be prime minister
72.
Too many British universities are obsessed with being world-class
73.
The Epstein files and Donald Trump
74.
What is the richest country in the world in 2025?
75.
2025-07-18 The World this Week - Cover Story newsletter: How we chose the cover image
76.
Charlie Kirk, pied piper of the American right
77.
Do probiotics work?
78.
Looking to stash a few million away? Try a British military base
79.
America might soon relax its drinking guidelines
80.
Britain’s bankrupt universities are hunting for cheaper models
81.
Britain and Germany sign a historic treaty
82.
How to solve the backlog in England’s courts
83.
Simon Groot scattered better plant seeds across the world
84.
The rise and rise of women’s sport
85.
Mexico’s handouts do a bit for the poor and lots for Morena
86.
Sand, sun and stench
87.
Justice for Haiti’s murdered president is messy
88.
The spectacular folly of Donald Trump’s copper tariffs
89.
America throws big money at a small rare-earths mine
90.
Kraft Heinz is not the only food giant in trouble
91.
Move over, Tim Cook. Jensen Huang is America Inc’s new China envoy
92.
Are superstars as good when they move jobs?
93.
Why a fling with a foreigner insults China’s “national dignity”
94.
China’s exporters shrug off the trade war—for now
95.
Meet the most important voice in Australian foreign policy
96.
Welcome to Asia’s secret Silicon island
97.
A first-hand look at Gaza’s controversial food-distribution sites
98.
As the Houthis sink two ships in one week, the world shrugs
99.
The dark side of Ethiopia’s liberalisation
100.
Quantifying Trumpcare
101.
Why Superman is the least relevant superhero
102.
Ukrainian drones are killing ever more soldiers
103.
Germany’s “memory culture” prevents it from coping with Gaza
104.
Albania’s tourism boom is a boon for Jared Kushner
105.
Switzerland is ticking towards a tighter deal with the EU
106.
To survive the AI age, the web needs a new business model
107.
2025-07-17 The World this Week - Business
108.
2025-07-17 The World this Week - Politics
109.
2025-07-17 The World this Week - The weekly cartoon
110.
The British people have been kept in the dark for two years
111.
Bit by bit, the world economy’s resilience is being worn away
112.
The hottest new travel destination for hotel brands: India
113.
The world is making impressive progress averting cancer
114.
The world is winning the war on cancer
115.
Why is AI so slow to spread? Economics can explain
116.
Despite enormous challenges, the EU sticks with its puny budget
117.
Trump’s real threat: industry-specific tariffs
118.
Americans can still get a 2% mortgage
119.
Why did Israel strike Damascus?
120.
Operation Rubific, the portrait of failure
121.
Stablecoins should cut America’s debt payments. But at what cost?
122.
How did Pakistan shoot down India’s fighter jets?
123.
Why do people sleep? A new study points to the brain
124.
The meaning of Trumpcare
125.
Trump’s U-turn on Russia is utterly cynical—and welcome
126.
Does AI make you more stupid?
127.
Our Big Mac index will sadden America’s burger-lovers
128.
Cynical realism won’t save India from Donald Trump
129.
Five charts explain Trump’s cuts to foreign aid
130.
China and Europe’s savage squabble
131.
Blighty newsletter: Rachel Reeves’s big night out
132.
Britain has a rare opportunity to lure American talent
133.
How the economy evades every crisis
134.
Americans are catching on to the joys of British food. Yes, really
135.
Fed up with Putin, Trump offers Ukraine arms and tariffs
136.
Muhammadu Buhari failed to build a better Nigeria, twice
137.
AI is killing the web. Can anything save it?
138.
What if America’s red states are about to lose their cheap-housing advantage?
139.
Japan’s politics is entering a messy new era
140.
The Economist is hiring journalists to work in Washington
141.
Meet Nvidia’s big new customers: governments
142.
Ukraine’s front-line farms battle Russians and weather
143.
Iran is losing its stranglehold over Iraq
144.
British bats are a conservation success story
145.
2025-07-11 The World this Week - Cover Story newsletter: How we chose the cover image
146.
Gianni Infantino, FIFA’s strongman-loving boss
147.
Wyoming gets a MAGA makeover
148.
Should you take creatine?
149.
Putin’s war in Ukraine may cost him control of the south Caucasus
150.
China’s local governments are approaching a fiscal black hole
151.
America is coming after Chinese it accuses of hacking
152.
Hamas looks close to defeat
153.
What goes on in America’s immigration courts
154.
The Big Beautiful Bill will kill one profession
155.
Epstein conspiracies
156.
What Donald Trump owes William F. Buckley
157.
The global asylum system is falling apart
158.
Sex hormones could be mental-health drugs too
159.
After another leader is brought low, Thailand’s voters need a real choice
160.
Jimmy Swaggart tripped up on his progress to Heaven
161.
Osaka’s World Expo is winning over grumpy Japanese
162.
Mahathir Mohamad, the leader who transformed Malaysia, turns 100
163.
Got an enemy? Hire a killer
164.
Congo’s football diplomacy
165.
Viktor Orban’s economic luck runs out
166.
Austria’s leader is striving to fend off the hard right
167.
More European countries want to send their prisoners to other countries
168.
Iceland has no armed forces, but that could change
169.
Denmark’s left defied the consensus on migration. Has it worked?
170.
Britain’s public finances are bad. Their future looks worse
171.
British stocks and bonds look like a bargain
172.
British labour is a bargain
173.
David Lipsey, former Bagehot columnist, died on July 1st
174.
Ancient proteins could transform palaeontology
175.
Could hormones help treat some forms anxiety and depression?
176.
Silicon Valley is racing to build the first 1trn unicorn
177.
Can a 9bn deal sustain CoreWeave’s stunning growth?
178.
America’s broken construction industry is a big problem for Trump
179.
A CEO’s summer guide to protecting profits
180.
2025-07-10 The World this Week - Politics
181.
2025-07-10 The World this Week - Business
182.
2025-07-10 The World this Week - The weekly cartoon
183.
Pity France’s cognac-makers
184.
How to ease pollution, gridlock and honking on India’s roads
185.
Scrap the asylum system—and build something better
186.
Britain is cheap, and should learn to love it
187.
Want to be a good explorer? Study economics
188.
Jane Street is chucked out of India. Other firms should be nervous
189.
Japan has been hit by investing fever
190.
Jeffrey Epstein is still causing trouble for Donald Trump
191.
Linda Yaccarino goes from X CEO to ex-CEO
192.
What went wrong in the Texas floods?
193.
Don’t invest through the rearview mirror
194.
America cannot dodge the consequences of rising tariffs forever
195.
An interstellar object is cruising through the solar system
196.
Where are all the briefcase wankers?
197.
Is Thailand heading for another coup?
198.
Russia’s summer Ukraine offensive looks like its deadliest yet
199.
The court that could thwart Wimbledon’s ambitions to grow
200.
Brazil is bashing its patron saint of the environment
201.
The 19th century is a terrible guide to modern statecraft
202.
How Trump’s trade deals take aim at China
203.
Blighty newsletter: Sir Keir goes back to the future
204.
Donald Trump’s approach to Africa is very, well, African
205.
American men are hungry for injectable testosterone
206.
Trump embarrasses the Pentagon with a U-turn on Ukraine
207.
The great dealmaker is conspicuously short of trade deals
208.
ICE’s big payday makes mass deportation possible
209.
Does working from home kill company culture?
210.
Why so many Chinese are drowning in debt
211.
Australia’s mushroom murderess is found guilty
212.
The Economist is hiring a Seoul-based researcher/reporter
213.
Why was the flooding in Texas so deadly?
214.
The War Room newsletter: Why America is denying Ukraine weapons
215.
On Lego, love and friendship
216.
Can Donald Trump force a ceasefire in Gaza?
217.
What becomes of Republicans who cross King Donald?
218.
Struggling with the trade war? Amateur football might help
219.
How America’s economy is dodging disaster
220.
Ukraine’s political infighting gets nasty
221.
Inside the secret military dialogue between Britain and Argentina
222.
2025-07-04 The World this Week - Cover Story newsletter: How we chose the cover image
223.
Leung Kwok-hung, Hong Kong’s shaggy agitator for democracy
224.
RFK junior wants to ban an ingredient in vaccines. Is he right?
225.
Macron will beat Trump to London
226.
John Robbins had serious doubts about the family business
227.
Conservatives circle around the movement founded by her father
228.
Goodbye, Lenin, hello Putin
229.
2025-07-03 The World this Week - Politics
230.
2025-07-03 The World this Week - The weekly cartoon
231.
2025-07-03 The World this Week - Business
232.
China’s growth targets cause headaches—even when met
233.
Hong Kong’s last functioning pro-democracy party disbands
234.
Beware tomes of Chinese political gossip!
235.
The Supreme Court keeps helping Donald Trump
236.
Support for gay marriage is declining in America
237.
Why Thomas Jefferson is rolling in his grave
238.
America needs an honest reckoning over its spy agencies
239.
Kim Kardashian, Ryan Reynolds and the age of the celebrity brand
240.
Would you pay 19 for a strawberry?
241.
Jeff Bezos 2.0: new wife, newish job, old vision
242.
Putin’s radioactive chokehold on the world
243.
China’s bid to influence the Philippines heats up
244.
North Korea’s Benidorm
245.
Israel’s weird war clock: 12 days for Iran, 21 months in Gaza
246.
Iran’s “axis of resistance” was meant to be the Shias’ NATO
247.
Kenya’s president is bad news for Kenya and Africa
248.
The Israel-Iran war has not yet transformed the Middle East
249.
Canada’s first concession
250.
Cuba’s leaders fiddle the figures
251.
A pragmatic amnesty for separatists benefits Catalonia
252.
The sleeping policeman at the heart of Europe
253.
An infestation of ticks menaces Istanbul
254.
Germany’s Bundestag bars AfD MPs from its football team
255.
Turkey’s strongman is becoming Donald Trump’s point man
256.
Britain’s draconian approach to pro-Gaza activism is likely to backfire
257.
Britain’s least controversial national treasure
258.
A quiet education revolution in England’s secondary cities
259.
Britain is already a hot country. It should act like it
260.
The obscure Senate functionary whose word is law
261.
China is building an entire empire on data
262.
William Ruto is taking Kenya to a dangerous place
263.
How A-listers are shaking up the consumer-goods business
264.
Brazil’s president is losing clout abroad and unpopular at home
265.
Why all Indians are rule-breakers
266.
Inside Iran’s war economy
267.
Vanguard will soon crush fees for even more investors
268.
Trumponomics 2.0 will erode the foundations of America’s prosperity
269.
How to strike a deal with Donald Trump
270.
Measuring Sir Keir Starmer by what people actually care about
271.
Labour is bungling its growth “mission”
272.
Starmer’s wasted first year
273.
Will bowing to Trump win Paramount its merger?
274.
Sir Keir Starmer is rapidly losing his authority
275.
America’s ominous new halt on weapons to Ukraine
276.
India’s Licence Raj offers America important lessons
277.
The big beautiful bill reveals the hollowness of Trumponomics
278.
Synthetic proteins are being built with the help of AI models
279.
A new project aims to synthesise a human chromosome
280.
How sea slugs give themselves superpowers
281.
A Wall Street wheeze makes a surprising comeback
282.
Ferrari is looking less like a carmaker and more like Hermès
283.
How South Africa could harness Donald Trump’s wrath
284.
Ten charts to explain Trump’s big, beautiful bill
285.
Blighty newsletter: Do Britons trust Keir Starmer?
286.
Can Trump end America’s 1.8trn student-debt nightmare?
287.
Superstar coders are raking it in. Others, not so much
288.
China’s giant new gamble with digital IDs
289.
In Putin’s Moscow a summer of death and distraction
290.
Should cities run their own supermarkets?
291.
The War Room newsletter: The daddy of all summits
292.
Xi Jinping’s futile war on price wars
293.
Are startup founders different?
294.
Brazil’s president is losing clout abroad and unpopular at home
295.
Big, beautiful budgets: not just an American problem
296.
America’s economic data are becoming murkier
297.
A peace agreement that will probably not bring peace
298.
The Supreme Court delivers a blow to judicial power and a win for Trump
299.
Zohran Mamdani, Trump’s “worst nightmare”, may in fact be a gift to him
300.
Is being bilingual good for your brain?
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