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  What it means to have an American on the throne of St Peter (www.economist.com)
  Trump’s trade deal with Britain will worry allies and rivals alike (www.economist.com)
  Xi Jinping glorifies hard work, but the young are not so sure (www.economist.com)
  China intensifies its campaign against exiled Hong Kong dissidents (www.economist.com)
  The men’s and women’s world snooker champions are now both Chinese (www.economist.com)
  Xi Jinping tries to press China’s advantage in South America (www.economist.com)
  A Mexican pharmacy chain revolutionised health care at home (www.economist.com)
  A glimpse inside Putin’s secret arms empire (www.economist.com)
  Alice Tan Ridley knew how to make New York’s subways ring (www.economist.com)
  Taiwan’s other war (www.economist.com)
  Australia is no longer lucky (www.economist.com)
  Trade tensions help Singapore’s prime minister to a big win (www.economist.com)
  How many people have died in Gaza? (www.economist.com)
  MAGA meets MBS (www.economist.com)
  Nigeria has more people without electricity than any other country (www.economist.com)
  A Faustian pact with the Houthis (www.economist.com)
  The fight for Sudan’s skies (www.economist.com)
  A social history of America in a warehouse (www.economist.com)
  One of the most controversial executive orders will shortly land at SCOTUS (www.economist.com)
  Harvard has more problems than Donald Trump (www.economist.com)
  Berlin’s culture bosses must become more commercial (www.economist.com)
  Portugal heads to the polls for the third time in barely three years (www.economist.com)
  To grasp Europe’s fragmentations, look to a 31-year treasure hunt (www.economist.com)
  Nigel Farage’s economic plans are a disaster (www.economist.com)
  Young British men are turning to Catholicism in surprising numbers (www.economist.com)
  The Church of England is dying out and selling up (www.economist.com)
  Aberdeen shows why the UK’s clean-energy transition will be messy (www.economist.com)
  Britain’s veterans are dying out (www.economist.com)
  The war in Gaza must end (www.economist.com)
  Huawei and other Chinese chip firms are catching up fast (www.economist.com)
  What is behind the staggering ascent of Palantir? (www.economist.com)
  Why so many IT projects go so horribly wrong (www.economist.com)
  How should India promote Hindi? By doing nothing (www.economist.com)
  The president has deleted a key tenet of American civil-rights law (www.economist.com)
  Why Gen X is the real loser generation (www.economist.com)
  Saudi society has changed drastically. Can the economy change, too? (www.economist.com)
  Saudi Arabia is pulling off an astonishing transformation (www.economist.com)
  What Putin wants—and how Europe should thwart him (www.economist.com)
  Global turmoil has at least one beneficiary: currency traders (www.economist.com)
  Trouble at home threatens Friedrich Merz’s global ambitions (www.economist.com)
  Would Vladimir Putin attack NATO? (www.economist.com)
  How Saudi Arabia is cranking up the pressure on its OPEC allies (www.economist.com)
  Trump is a threat to Asia’s giant insurers (www.economist.com)
  What happens when a hegemon falls? (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump is right to ditch Joe Biden’s chip-export rules (www.economist.com)
  Russia’s military parades have become a sign of weakness (www.economist.com)
  Eli Lilly looks set to steal Novo Nordisk’s weight-loss crown (www.economist.com)
  Luck stands between de-escalation and disaster for India and Pakistan (www.economist.com)
  Companies have plans to build robotic horses (www.economist.com)
  Compressed music might be harmful to the ears (www.economist.com)
  How to build strong magnets without rare-earth metals (www.economist.com)
  Killer gangs are inches from ruling all of Haiti (www.economist.com)
  America and China prepare for an Alpine trade clash (www.economist.com)
  Bosses beware: the tariff shock is not like covid-19 (www.economist.com)
  American cities are criminalising homelessness. Will that help? (www.economist.com)
  The Britain-India trade deal is a sign of things to come (www.economist.com)
  Dogs really do look and act just like their owners (www.economist.com)
  India strikes Pakistan to avenge a terrorist attack (www.economist.com)
  Pete Hegseth is purging both weapons and generals (www.economist.com)
  Buy the dip: the trend that keeps stocks from crashing (www.economist.com)
  Kemi Badenoch is simply too interesting for Downing Street (www.economist.com)
  OpenAI’s flip-flop will not get Elon Musk off its back (www.economist.com)
  Blighty newsletter: Italians are not so hot on Britain (www.economist.com)
  Friedrich Merz becomes Germany’s chancellor—after a painful defeat (www.economist.com)
  Which countries have the best, and worst, living standards? (www.economist.com)
  Intrigue and attacks as the papal conclave begins (www.economist.com)
  Israel’s radical new course in Gaza (www.economist.com)
  Where the Trump administration has science on its side (www.economist.com)
  How new drones are sneaking past jammers on Ukraine’s front lines (www.economist.com)
  The War Room newsletter: Six must-read books on the second world war (www.economist.com)
  Inside the shadowy business of AI-chip smuggling (www.economist.com)
  Our papal tracker: would you bet money on the next pope? (www.economist.com)
  A pro-MAGA Romanian leads in round one of presidential elections (www.economist.com)
  China’s secret weapon in the trade war (www.economist.com)
  Warren Buffett has created a 348bn question for his successor (www.economist.com)
  Australia’s voters reject right-wing politics (www.economist.com)
  Checks and Balance newsletter: Why do people join the Trump administration? (www.economist.com)
  The judge losing his patience with the Trump administration (www.economist.com)
  Is your hay fever getting worse? (www.economist.com)
  Video producer/editor (podcasts) (www.economist.com)
  The fallout from Reform UK’s big win in local elections (www.economist.com)
  Our Carrie Bradshaw index shows Australia’s housing is in crisis (www.economist.com)
  Mike Waltz’s demotion is a loss for defence hawks (www.economist.com)
  Martin Graham was determined to see his dream come true (www.economist.com)
  The UN could run out of cash within months (www.economist.com)
  Is China justified in still calling itself a developing country? (www.economist.com)
  Edible rats are China’s latest live-streaming stars (www.economist.com)
  Aussies are doing a political pivot (www.economist.com)
  Iran’s leader hopes America can save his faltering regime (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump’s Syria policy is still a work in progress (www.economist.com)
  Africa’s charcoal economy (www.economist.com)
  What a wrecked ferry reveals about war in South Sudan (www.economist.com)
  Ivory Coast is gearing up for an unfair election (www.economist.com)
  Mark Carney’s plan for Canada (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump is creating chaos at the IRS (www.economist.com)
  How has one Ivy League university avoided the president’s wrath? (www.economist.com)
  How Donald Trump could rescue John Roberts (www.economist.com)
  Why does America have birthright citizenship? (www.economist.com)
  Germany’s staid-seeming new chancellor has a mercurial streak (www.economist.com)
  The unbearable self-indulgence of Europe (www.economist.com)
  Broken windows and pockmarked roads (www.economist.com)
  Britain’s Poles now earn more than the natives (www.economist.com)
  Why building anything in London is so hard (www.economist.com)
  Scotland’s outdated land laws threaten the future of rural towns (www.economist.com)
  Women win legal clarity—but Britain’s gender wars intensify (www.economist.com)
  Chinese military exercises foreshadow a blockade of Taiwan (www.economist.com)
  Can China sap a divided and isolated Taiwan of its will to resist? (www.economist.com)
  Any Chinese curbs on Taiwan’s trade would carry big economic costs (www.economist.com)
  When can AI book my summer holiday? (www.economist.com)
  For media companies, news is becoming a toxic asset (www.economist.com)
  Your AI meeting notes are ready (www.economist.com)
  Will the trade war capsize shipbuilders? (www.economist.com)
  Britain’s social contract is fraying (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump is right to go after metals in the deep sea (www.economist.com)
  A superpower crunch over Taiwan is coming (www.economist.com)
  Don’t blame imports for the fall in America’s GDP (www.economist.com)
  A mineral deal with America points to a path ahead for Ukraine (www.economist.com)
  Why economists should like booze (www.economist.com)
  India’s new chip fab rises from the dust (www.economist.com)
  India and Pakistan are bracing for a military clash (www.economist.com)
  The risky world of private assets opens up to retail investors (www.economist.com)
  A takeover bid promises consolidation in Italian finance (www.economist.com)
  Why China has the upper hand in its trade war with America (www.economist.com)
  How a judge’s arrest explains Donald Trump’s deportation drive (www.economist.com)
  Can Starbucks be turned around? (www.economist.com)
  How a mortgage transforms your investment portfolio (www.economist.com)
  The strange success of snooker (www.economist.com)
  Can Shein and Temu survive Trump’s trade war? (www.economist.com)
  Are American stock investors right to shrug off the trade war? (www.economist.com)
  Canada’s new Conservative coalition resembles Donald Trump’s (www.economist.com)
  A landmark study of gender medicine is caught in an ethics row (www.economist.com)
  Rates of bowel cancer are rising among young people (www.economist.com)
  The great Iberian power cut need not spell disaster for renewables (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump picks the wrong trade fight with China (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump is proving disastrous for big tech (www.economist.com)
  America is just weeks away from a mighty economic shock (www.economist.com)
  Trump’s tariffs are starting to hammer Chinese exporters (www.economist.com)
  Blighty newsletter: Farage and the emigration nation (www.economist.com)
  Might the power of St Peter’s help close a deal for Ukraine? (www.economist.com)
  India must prove Pakistan’s guilt in the attack in Kashmir (www.economist.com)
  Mark Carney leads Canada’s Liberals to a remarkable victory (www.economist.com)
  The War Room: Is an India-Pakistan war coming? (www.economist.com)
  Which stockmarkets have benefited from the chaos on Wall Street? (www.economist.com)
  Europeans’ anti-Yank tantrums (www.economist.com)
  The trouble with MAGA’s manufacturing dream (www.economist.com)
  Wanted: a senior producer/editor for our Drum Tower podcast (www.economist.com)
  Water sommeliers say the simplest drink is the future of luxury (www.economist.com)
  Tensions soar as India weighs how to hit Pakistan (www.economist.com)
  Vladimir Putin’s money machine is sputtering (www.economist.com)
  Trump, trade and troops: South Korea’s nightmare (www.economist.com)
  Checks and Balance newsletter: Predictions for the Democrats’ future (www.economist.com)
  The Pope’s last coded message (www.economist.com)
  Lip-Bu Tan, the man trying to save Intel (www.economist.com)
  Ukraine’s fighters fear Russian attacks and Trump’s ceasefire (www.economist.com)
  Did international trade really kill American manufacturing? (www.economist.com)
  Why the Trump-shock is now going subsea (www.economist.com)
  With American credibility in doubt, minds go back to Saigon in 1975 (www.economist.com)
  Can at-home brain stimulators make you feel better? (www.economist.com)
  What’s wrong with democracy in Europe? (www.economist.com)
  America’s poster-in-chief is very, very online (www.economist.com)
  Learning to love the cluster bomb (www.economist.com)
  China’s fine diners switch from American to Aussie beef (www.economist.com)
  What’s at stake as Singapore goes to the polls (www.economist.com)
  Taiwan flogs America drones “not made in China” (www.economist.com)
  Why Ukraine is losing the war for African opinion (www.economist.com)
  The Mauritius miracle is losing its sheen (www.economist.com)
  The pope phoned a priest in Gaza every day (www.economist.com)
  The Druze’s influence outweighs their numbers (www.economist.com)
  Is Donald Trump about to bomb Iran or rebuild it? (www.economist.com)
  How Donald Trump caused a political earthquake in Canada (www.economist.com)
  Bolivia’s wild politics are dragging it into the abyss (www.economist.com)
  Who will stop Donald Trump’s drive for unchecked power? (www.economist.com)
  How courts might stop Donald Trump’s attack on civil society (www.economist.com)
  How Donald Trump plans to ramp up deportations (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump hopes to become a one-man deregulator (www.economist.com)
  Expect more chaos in Donald Trump’s tariff policies (www.economist.com)
  France is a far healthier country than America (www.economist.com)
  Why Italy’s defence spending lags far behind (www.economist.com)
  Europe wants Sweden’s minerals. That’s more bad news for the Sami (www.economist.com)
  Europe’s reluctant reset with Turkey (www.economist.com)
  Can a six-year-old startup revive the world’s oldest Sunday newspaper? (www.economist.com)
  Ice cream and immigration at the Farage show (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump’s antics mean new boldness is needed in UK-EU links (www.economist.com)
  Why Britain’s police forces have taken to cultivating cannabis (www.economist.com)
  For Volkswagen, things go from bad to wurst (www.economist.com)
  How Donald Trump might steal Christmas (www.economist.com)
  Shopping malls are making a comeback in America (www.economist.com)
  The early lives of bosses (www.economist.com)
  Watch out, Elon Musk. Chinese robots are coming (www.economist.com)
  How Canada went from preachy to pragmatic (www.economist.com)
  Africans need jobs. The rest of the world needs workers (www.economist.com)
  How to keep AI models on the straight and narrow (www.economist.com)
  Emigration from Africa will change the world (www.economist.com)
  Economists don’t know what’s going on (www.economist.com)
  Nigel Farage leads a movement that is hungrier and better organised (www.economist.com)
  The man Britain cannot ignore (www.economist.com)
  Not just Trump: Asia has a trade problem of its own making (www.economist.com)
  Trump’s sovereign-wealth fund won’t make America richer (www.economist.com)
  What price cool? 31 a month, according to students (www.economist.com)
  How the global south forgot its own birthday (www.economist.com)
  Will China’s shoppers cushion the Trumpian blow? (www.economist.com)
  Trump is a revolutionary. Will he succeed? (www.economist.com)
  America is selling a Ukraine peace plan. No one is buying it yet (www.economist.com)
  President Trump’s attacks on the Fed are not over (www.economist.com)
  Britain’s 20-20-20-20 vision (www.economist.com)
  Should investors spend the trade war in India? (www.economist.com)
  Even Republicans are falling out of love with Tesla (www.economist.com)
  Australia’s dingoes are becoming a distinct species (www.economist.com)
  Lethal fungi are becoming drug-resistant—and spreading (www.economist.com)
  AI models can learn to conceal information from their users (www.economist.com)
  The Carthaginians weren’t who you think they were (www.economist.com)
  Why American tech stocks remain vulnerable (www.economist.com)
  “Captain Canada” Carney gains in the Maple Leaf v MAGA election (www.economist.com)
  We’re hiring a Technical Lead for our AI Lab (www.economist.com)
  Marco Rubio, MAGA and the State Department’s new look (www.economist.com)
  America won’t be able to bully the world into buying more gas (www.economist.com)
  India and Pakistan could come to blows over Kashmir (www.economist.com)
  Amid a trade war, Xi Jinping may be purging China’s military (www.economist.com)
  Blighty newsletter: A tale of bins, bankruptcy and Birmingham (www.economist.com)
  The ugly task of Putin-proofing your border (www.economist.com)
  Trump’s red-hot war on terror (www.economist.com)
  Trump fires at the Fed. America’s economy is collateral damage (www.economist.com)
  J.D. Vance flies into a giant trade storm in India (www.economist.com)
  Why Americans, Canadians and Britons love working from home (www.economist.com)
  The coming struggle to choose the next pope (www.economist.com)
  Pope Francis changed the Catholic church, but not as much as he hoped (www.economist.com)
  Putin’s Easter ceasefire gimmick bodes ill for Trump’s peace deal (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump wants a certain kind of immigrant: the uber-rich (www.economist.com)
  Peter Thiel doubles down on patriotism in the Trump era (www.economist.com)
  Checks and Balance newsletter: The Democrats’ future is up for grabs (www.economist.com)
  Searching for the Catholic Church’s centre of gravity (www.economist.com)
  How to form good habits, and break bad ones: trick your brain (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump’s approval rating is dropping (www.economist.com)
  Brazil’s Supreme Court is on trial (www.economist.com)
  Plastics are greener than they seem (www.economist.com)
  Microplastics have not yet earned their bad reputation (www.economist.com)
  Scientists are getting to grips with ice (www.economist.com)
  AI models could help negotiators secure peace deals (www.economist.com)
  Chinese officials are encouraging office workers not to work so hard (www.economist.com)
  China’s propagandists preach defiance in the trade war with America (www.economist.com)
  Nayib Bukele provides Donald Trump with a legal black hole (www.economist.com)
  The judge who would rule the internet (www.economist.com)
  Daniel Noboa wins another term as Ecuador’s murder rate soars (www.economist.com)
  America’s progressives should love standardised tests (www.economist.com)
  Tracking Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown (www.economist.com)
  Can Progressives learn to make progress again? (www.economist.com)
  Young men in Spain love the hardline Vox (www.economist.com)
  Europe’s streets are alive with the sound of protests (www.economist.com)
  The threat to free speech in Germany (www.economist.com)
  A new way to recycle plastic is here (www.economist.com)
  How to swerve Donald Trump’s tariffs (www.economist.com)
  Spanish business thrives while bigger European economies stall (www.economist.com)
  LinkedIn’s unlikely role in the AI race (www.economist.com)
  The trade war may reverse Hong Kong’s commercial decline (www.economist.com)
  Reclaiming the office lunch (www.economist.com)
  The lesson of Birmingham’s striking binmen (www.economist.com)
  Don’t overlook the many benefits of plastics (www.economist.com)
  Why Christianity is taking an Asian turn (www.economist.com)
  The UAE preaches unity at home but pursues division abroad (www.economist.com)
  Populism meets reality in Senegal (www.economist.com)
  A new smash and grab for Red Sea ports (www.economist.com)
  When does opposition become treason in east Africa? (www.economist.com)
  Britain’s government has entered the steel industry with no plan (www.economist.com)
  Birmingham’s bin strikes reveal local problems—and a national one (www.economist.com)
  The splintering of British politics (www.economist.com)
  Are hits like “Adolescence” good or bad for Britain? (www.economist.com)
  How Britain decides which drugs to buy (www.economist.com)
  In praise of flag-shagging (www.economist.com)
  America is turning away China’s goods. Where will they go instead? (www.economist.com)
  Stockmarkets do not reward firms for investing in Trump’s America (www.economist.com)
  What is a woman? Britain’s Supreme Court gives its answer (www.economist.com)
  Can the euro go global? (www.economist.com)
  Poor countries would miss King Dollar (www.economist.com)
  Hell is other people’s currencies (www.economist.com)
  How Trump might topple the dollar (www.economist.com)
  Power is being monopolised in Ukraine (www.economist.com)
  Indians are losing big on the stockmarket (www.economist.com)
  Why Narendra Modi has embraced an anti-caste icon (www.economist.com)
  How a dollar crisis would unfold (www.economist.com)
  Guatemala’s indigenous people grow impatient with their champion (www.economist.com)
  Zuckerberg on trial: why Meta deserves to win (www.economist.com)
  In its pursuit of a policy, Donald Trump’s government is content to destroy a man (www.economist.com)
  Pity American firms in China. Xi Jinping is hitting back (www.economist.com)
  Tracking Donald Trump’s immigration policy in charts (www.economist.com)
  Binyamin Netanyahu’s other war (www.economist.com)
  China hawks are losing influence in Trumpworld, despite the trade war (www.economist.com)