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数据来源: 该页面支持的版本: 该页面支持的语言: 订阅地址: 社交媒体: 最后更新于: 2025-02-20T23:30:55.251+08:00   查看统计
  Bean there, done that (www.economist.com)
  Chinese authorities try to stop parents gaming the exam system (again) (www.economist.com)
  China’s alarming sex imbalance (www.economist.com)
  Singapore’s leader of the opposition is convicted of lying (www.economist.com)
  Only Asia can help America counter China’s shipbuilding prowess (www.economist.com)
  Syria’s next steps towards a new order (www.economist.com)
  Egypt and Jordan are struggling to make themselves useful to Donald Trump (www.economist.com)
  Rwanda tightens its grip over eastern Congo (www.economist.com)
  Sudan’s national army is on the brink of retaking the capital (www.economist.com)
  Africa’s young “generation hustle” hits the big time (www.economist.com)
  Why so many children in America have ADHD (www.economist.com)
  In Texas, vaccine-choice activists are ascendant (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump’s foreign-aid cuts threaten his rural voters (www.economist.com)
  DOGE attacks a bastion of Republican internationalism (www.economist.com)
  Germany’s mind-bending electoral maths (www.economist.com)
  Right-wing Britons are turning to e-petitions (www.economist.com)
  Britain’s government can ignore objections to its asylum policies (www.economist.com)
  Hollywood’s Trump-baiting Oscars (www.economist.com)
  Leaving the seat of power (www.economist.com)
  Europe is set to start cutting red tape—lightly (www.economist.com)
  Xi Jinping wants the private sector to thrive again (www.economist.com)
  How to help young Africans thrive (www.economist.com)
  Why Britain has so far dodged Donald Trump’s tariffs (www.economist.com)
  The US-Russia dogfight to sell India fighter jets (www.economist.com)
  Why American credit-card delinquencies have suddenly shot up (www.economist.com)
  Javier Milei’s crypto misadventure (www.economist.com)
  China’s leaders look to have blinked in their property face-off (www.economist.com)
  An Oscar-nominated film sparks a reckoning with Brazil’s dictatorship (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump’s reciprocal tariffs are absurd (www.economist.com)
  Shein attempts to mend its public image before its London debut (www.economist.com)
  India’s other, little-known infrastructure revolution (www.economist.com)
  For Donald Trump, the resignations are the point (www.economist.com)
  To spend big, Germany’s next government may need EU help (www.economist.com)
  Investors fear inflation is coming back. They may be right (www.economist.com)
  Should all knives with pointed ends be banned? (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump is a reckless president, but not yet a lawless one (www.economist.com)
  A moment of great peril for Ukraine and Europe (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump: the would-be king (www.economist.com)
  Elon Musk spells danger for Accenture, McKinsey and their rivals (www.economist.com)
  Can Europe withstand four years of Trumpian assault? (www.economist.com)
  How Britons became happy hawks on Russia (www.economist.com)
  Reciprocal tariffs really mean chaos for global trade (www.economist.com)
  Another win for geology’s Theory of Everything (www.economist.com)
  How the Trump administration wants to reshape American science (www.economist.com)
  Behind DeepSeek lies a dazzling Chinese university (www.economist.com)
  Team Trump wants to get rid of Volodymyr Zelensky (www.economist.com)
  Do lonely people have shorter lives? (www.economist.com)
  New research uncovers polygamy and intermarriage in ancient Eurasia (www.economist.com)
  Which countries provide the most, and least, support to Ukraine? (www.economist.com)
  Australia prepares for a lonelier, harsher world (www.economist.com)
  Is Elon Musk’s war on fraud just cover for a power grab? (www.economist.com)
  American inflation looks increasingly worrying (www.economist.com)
  How Vladimir Putin plans to play Donald Trump (www.economist.com)
  Blighty newsletter: Luxury beliefs (Kemi Badenoch edition) (www.economist.com)
  The nightmare of a Trump-Putin deal leaves Europe in shock (www.economist.com)
  Why Xi Jinping is making nice with China’s tech billionaires (www.economist.com)
  Will it be Ukraine today, Taiwan tomorrow? (www.economist.com)
  Rachel Reeves is not alone in inflating her résumé (www.economist.com)
  Team Trump’s shakedown diplomacy (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump’s assault on Europe (www.economist.com)
  It’s not just AI. China’s medicines are surprising the world, too (www.economist.com)
  Will Europe return to Putin’s gas? (www.economist.com)
  Javier Milei is betting big on an Argentine oil gusher (www.economist.com)
  So far, mass deportation has been more rhetoric than reality (www.economist.com)
  Checks and Balance newsletter: Donald Trump’s pick-and-choose federalism (www.economist.com)
  Alice Weidel, Germany’s most vilified—and powerful—female politician (www.economist.com)
  How will the German election be decided? (www.economist.com)
  Do bans on smartphones in schools improve mental health? (www.economist.com)
  Donald Shoup knew how to get cities going (www.economist.com)
  Panama symbolises the Sino-American struggle for influence (www.economist.com)
  Hail China’s new “ice-and-snow economy” (www.economist.com)
  Tensions with the West are fuelling China’s anxiety about food supplies (www.economist.com)
  Can Indonesia make its Top Gun dreams a reality? (www.economist.com)
  New Zealand and the Cook Islands fall out over China (www.economist.com)
  South-East Asian producers are being hammered by Chinese imports (www.economist.com)
  Hizbullah’s decline is a boon for Lebanon’s new government (www.economist.com)
  Israel mounts an attack on Palestinian intellectual life (www.economist.com)
  Homs’s troubles show the challenges facing Syria’s leaders (www.economist.com)
  How to go from fish lover to fish farmer (www.economist.com)
  For Donald Trump, South Africa is DEI in the form of a country (www.economist.com)
  Javier Milei’s liberal reforms are hurting yerba mate growers (www.economist.com)
  Most Latin American migrants no longer go to the United States (www.economist.com)
  How Bob Dylan broke free (www.economist.com)
  Elon Musk has been pushed out of the Treasury (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump wants states and cities to do as they are told (www.economist.com)
  Is France’s Le Chat in fact a cat? (www.economist.com)
  A new crackdown is gathering strength in Turkey (www.economist.com)
  Robert Fico’s pleas for cheap Russian gas bring Slovaks onto the street (www.economist.com)
  Valentine’s Day may need to adjust to the times (www.economist.com)
  A British incubator of businesses often bound for the Bay Area (www.economist.com)
  Parliament is advertising for a new Black Rod (www.economist.com)
  Britain’s review body for criminal convictions is struggling (www.economist.com)
  Defence tech is blowing up Silicon Valley’s beliefs (www.economist.com)
  How to get people to resign (www.economist.com)
  Could a German startup disrupt Europe’s arms industry? (www.economist.com)
  Chinese cars are taking over the global south (www.economist.com)
  The Lucy Letby case shows systemic failure and a national malaise (www.economist.com)
  Countering China’s diplomatic coup (www.economist.com)
  London is ageing twice as quickly as the rest of England (www.economist.com)
  Cheap solar power is sending electrical grids into a death spiral (www.economist.com)
  Russian inflation is too high. Does that matter? (www.economist.com)
  Why you should repay your mortgage early (www.economist.com)
  How AI will divide the best from the rest (www.economist.com)
  The danger of relying on OpenAI’s Deep Research (www.economist.com)
  How India became an unexpected role model for Europe (www.economist.com)
  America’s military supremacy is in jeopardy (www.economist.com)
  Will Donald Trump and Elon Musk wreck or reform the Pentagon? (www.economist.com)
  Can Friedrich Merz save Germany—and Europe? (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump and the art of the quid pro quo (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump starts “immediate” talks with Vladimir Putin on Ukraine (www.economist.com)
  After DeepSeek, America and the EU are getting AI wrong (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump’s first 100 days (www.economist.com)
  Instead of luxury condos, Gaza faces a resumption of war (www.economist.com)
  Which goods are most vulnerable to American tariffs on China? (www.economist.com)
  Elon Musk is failing to cut American spending (www.economist.com)
  AI is being used to model football matches (www.economist.com)
  A neutrino telescope spots the signs of something cataclysmic (www.economist.com)
  How artificial intelligence is changing baseball (www.economist.com)
  Is Sir Keir Starmer a chump? (www.economist.com)
  Ukraine’s president fears Donald Trump is keeping him out of the loop (www.economist.com)
  Transcript: An interview with Volodymyr Zelensky (www.economist.com)
  Forget DeepSeek. Large language models are getting cheaper still (www.economist.com)
  Elon Musk’s 97bn offer is a nuisance for Sam Altman’s OpenAI (www.economist.com)
  BP is underperforming and under pressure (www.economist.com)
  Is MAGA great for India? (www.economist.com)
  Inside the world’s most famous aeroplane boneyard (www.economist.com)
  Blighty newsletter: A country trapped in zero-sum thinking (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump’s Super Bowl tariffs are an act of self-harm (www.economist.com)
  It increasingly looks as if Lucy Letby’s conviction was unsafe (www.economist.com)
  Germany’s “business model is gone”, warns Friedrich Merz (www.economist.com)
  Avian flu in America is a political problem and a health threat (www.economist.com)
  German business is being suffocated by high costs and red tape (www.economist.com)
  China’s stunning new campaign to turn the world against Taiwan (www.economist.com)
  What is Elon Musk getting up to with America’s payment system? (www.economist.com)
  Checks and Balance newsletter: Donald Trump’s scheming is costing America (www.economist.com)
  Guatemala is grappling with a globetrotting Jewish “cult” (www.economist.com)
  What can the world’s most walkable cities teach other places? (www.economist.com)
  Does intermittent fasting work? (www.economist.com)
  Marianne Faithfull battled labels all her life (www.economist.com)
  Xi Jinping swings his “assassin’s mace” of economic warfare (www.economist.com)
  Cuts in American aid are crippling groups promoting rights in China (www.economist.com)
  China is infiltrating Taiwan’s armed forces (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump and Japan’s Ishiba Shigeru make for an odd couple (www.economist.com)
  Pakistan is furious with the Afghan Taliban (www.economist.com)
  Japan could finally face its own #MeToo crisis (www.economist.com)
  India’s attempt to save the tiger has been a remarkable success (www.economist.com)
  A leader of Congo’s rebels vows to fight on (www.economist.com)
  Why Islamists in the Arab world speak the language of free markets (www.economist.com)
  Ecuador chooses a leader amid murder, blackouts and stagnation (www.economist.com)
  How Mexico and Canada handled Trump’s tariff threat (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump is turning payback into policy (www.economist.com)
  New York City commits to involuntary commitment (www.economist.com)
  Florida comes to Washington, DC (www.economist.com)
  Can Europe afford to be the world’s last free-trader? (www.economist.com)
  Turkey is building a spaceport in Somalia (www.economist.com)
  Can Georgia’s shadowy despot survive? (www.economist.com)
  The added dangers of fighting in Ukraine when everything is visible (www.economist.com)
  British “equal value” lawsuits have become an absurd denial of markets (www.economist.com)
  Britain’s plan to shake up school inspections pleases no one (www.economist.com)
  Worries about Britain’s construction crunch are overdone (www.economist.com)
  Milton Keynes shows the rest of Britain how to grow (www.economist.com)
  Oxford and Cambridge are too small (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump loves big oil. Does big oil love him back? (www.economist.com)
  An encounter with the reception desk (www.economist.com)
  Shein and Temu are in Donald Trump’s cross-hairs (www.economist.com)
  How Labour can unshackle Britain’s most innovative region (www.economist.com)
  The meaning of Donald Trump’s war on woke workers (www.economist.com)
  Why Donald Trump’s protectionist zeal has only grown (www.economist.com)
  Narendra Modi is struggling to boost Indian growth (www.economist.com)
  Europe has no escape from stagnation (www.economist.com)
  When will remote workers see their pay cut? (www.economist.com)
  Tariff uncertainty can be as ruinous as tariffs themselves (www.economist.com)
  Online scams may already be as big a scourge as illegal drugs (www.economist.com)
  Don’t propose with a diamond (www.economist.com)
  It’s not over: Donald Trump could still blow up global trade (www.economist.com)
  The vast, sophisticated and fast-growing global enterprise that is Scam Inc (www.economist.com)
  America’s scheme for Gaza contains much to regret (www.economist.com)
  Wanted: a Britain economics writer (www.economist.com)
  Must Leeds always lose? (www.economist.com)
  The data-centre investment spree shows no signs of stopping (www.economist.com)
  The clean-up after the LA fires is already revealing tensions (www.economist.com)
  How to invest like a MAGA bigwig (www.economist.com)
  Germany’s election campaign is creating a security risk (www.economist.com)
  Cryptocurrencies are spawning a new generation of private eyes (www.economist.com)
  Fine-tuned acoustic waves can knock drones out of the sky (www.economist.com)
  Fighting the war in Ukraine on the electromagnetic spectrum (www.economist.com)
  The Labour government’s choice of messengers reflects its caution (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump’s eye-popping plan to make Gaza American (www.economist.com)
  RFK junior and Tulsi Gabbard, set to sail through a cowed Senate (www.economist.com)
  Can Nintendo’s new console propel it to even greater heights? (www.economist.com)
  Why India isn’t winning the contest with China (www.economist.com)
  Allies will not appease Donald Trump forever (www.economist.com)
  Blighty newsletter: Inside Starmer’s Brexit reset (www.economist.com)
  Xi Jinping shows how he will return American fire (www.economist.com)
  The Trump tariff saga offers Canada’s Liberals a lifeline (www.economist.com)
  Binyamin Netanyahu is about to discover if Donald Trump is friend or foe (www.economist.com)
  Elon Musk is shredding America’s government like he did Twitter (www.economist.com)
  How Trump’s tariff turbulence will cause economic pain (www.economist.com)
  Speeches in Britain’s Parliament are getting shorter—and worse (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump’s tariffs defy geopolitical logic (www.economist.com)
  Warlord, jihadi or nation-builder? (www.economist.com)
  An interview with Ahmed al-Sharaa, Syria’s president (www.economist.com)
  Europe races to confront America’s trade war (www.economist.com)
  Canada, China, Mexico and the art of retaliation (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump’s new trade war on China is also an opioid war (www.economist.com)
  Corporate America’s diversity wars are just getting started (www.economist.com)
  Trump’s brutal tariffs far outstrip any he has imposed before (www.economist.com)
  France’s bitter retreat from west Africa (www.economist.com)
  Checks and Balance newsletter: What 1970s television reveals about America (www.economist.com)
  What Israel and Gaza can learn from past ceasefires (www.economist.com)
  Are ice baths good for you? (www.economist.com)
  How DeepSeek will upend the AI pecking order (www.economist.com)
  Mauro Morandi needed to abandon consumer society (www.economist.com)
  As adoptions collapse, demand for international surrogacy is soaring (www.economist.com)
  The bad side-effects of China’s campaign to cut drug costs (www.economist.com)
  China needs its frightened officials to save the economy (www.economist.com)
  Why Taiwanese youth complain of becoming “housing slaves” (www.economist.com)
  Is Cambodia slipping out of China’s orbit? (www.economist.com)
  Who is Lee Jae-myung, South Korea’s possible next president? (www.economist.com)
  Ahmed al-Sharaa declares himself president of Syria (www.economist.com)
  The fall of Goma heralds more bloodshed in eastern Congo (www.economist.com)
  Brazil’s ragged finances are holding back its green ambitions (www.economist.com)
  Armed groups are terrorising Colombia’s border with Venezuela (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump turns an angry gaze south (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump’s Defining Decade (www.economist.com)
  An alternative theory to explain America’s murder spike in 2020 (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump revives ideas of a Star Wars-like missile shield (www.economist.com)
  Meet Europe’s Gaullists, Atlanticists, denialists and Putinists (www.economist.com)
  The EU is worried about sensitive exports to competitors and foes (www.economist.com)
  Inside Europe, border checks are creeping back (www.economist.com)
  Many Britons are waiting 12 hours at A&E (www.economist.com)
  Is British justice too secretive? (www.economist.com)
  Britain’s oldest newspaper is a treasure trove of trivia (www.economist.com)
  Even in India, bureaucracy is being curtailed (www.economist.com)
  Why carbon monoxide could appeal to the discerning doper (www.economist.com)
  What Elon Musk should learn from Larry Ellison (www.economist.com)
  The allure of the company town (www.economist.com)
  From cribs to carriers, high-end baby products are in vogue (www.economist.com)
  Football clubs are making more money than ever. Players not so much (www.economist.com)
  No one gains from American tariffs on cars from Mexico and Canada (www.economist.com)
  Despite fears of a global tax war, Donald Trump has a chance to make peace (www.economist.com)
  The Quad finally gets serious on security (www.economist.com)
  How to use “maximum pressure” to stop an Iranian bomb (www.economist.com)
  Why your portfolio is less diversified than you might think (www.economist.com)
  Can Germany’s economy stage an unexpected recovery? (www.economist.com)
  Georgia Meloni has grand banking ambitions (www.economist.com)
  Tech tycoons have got the Jevons paradox wrong (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump’s economic warfare has a new front (www.economist.com)
  Many governments talk about cutting regulation but few manage to (www.economist.com)
  Around the world, an anti-red-tape revolution is taking hold (www.economist.com)
  By cutting off assistance to foreigners, America hurts itself (www.economist.com)
  America’s foreign aid pause puts lives at risk (www.economist.com)
  The real meaning of the DeepSeek drama (www.economist.com)
  A day of drama in the Bundestag (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump goes to war with his employees (www.economist.com)
  The rise of the Net-Zero Dad (www.economist.com)
  DeepSeek poses a challenge to Beijing as much as to Silicon Valley (www.economist.com)
  Backing Heathrow expansion suggests Labour is serious about boosting growth (www.economist.com)
  A sophisticated civilisation once flourished in the Amazon basin (www.economist.com)
  Don’t let Donald Trump see our Big Mac index (www.economist.com)
  Hamas talks a big game but is in chaos (www.economist.com)
  Kash Patel is a crackpot (www.economist.com)
  A big, beautiful Trump deal with China? (www.economist.com)
  Could supersonic air travel make a comeback? (www.economist.com)
  How covid contributed to a crisis of trust in America (www.economist.com)
  Nvidia is in danger of losing its monopoly-like margins (www.economist.com)
  Iran’s alarming nuclear dash will soon test Donald Trump (www.economist.com)
  America and China are talking. But much gets lost in translation (www.economist.com)
  Blighty newsletter: Why Trump’s tariffs might spare Britain (www.economist.com)
  Rwanda does a Putin in Congo (www.economist.com)
  What the rise of bubble tea says about British high streets (www.economist.com)
  DeepSeek sends a shockwave through markets (www.economist.com)
  Syria’s new rulers say they are keen to integrate foreign fighters (www.economist.com)
  The White House has been fluid on gender for a decade (www.economist.com)
  Rwanda’s reckless plan to redraw the map of Africa (www.economist.com)
  Why Britain has fallen behind on road safety (www.economist.com)
  Amid talk of a ceasefire, Ukraine’s front line is crumbling (www.economist.com)
  A controversial idea to hand even more power to the president (www.economist.com)
  Will America’s crypto frenzy end in disaster? (www.economist.com)
  François Hollande hopes to make the French left electable again (www.economist.com)
  Checks and Balance newsletter: Trump revives McKinley’s imperial legacy (www.economist.com)
  Tom Homan, unleashed (www.economist.com)