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用中文瀏覽經濟學人最新報道

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  The moral of “The Salt Path”, an embellished bestseller (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump’s gift to Vladimir Putin (www.economist.com)
  What might Trumpian meddling mean for Intel? (www.economist.com)
  Should you use a standing desk? (www.economist.com)
  Which are the deadliest European cities in a heatwave? (www.economist.com)
  How to make sense of Donald Trump’s bizarre tariff rates (www.economist.com)
  Must Europe choose between “strategic autonomy” and August off? (www.economist.com)
  Razia Jan insisted on educating Afghanistan’s girls (www.economist.com)
  America’s new plan to fight a war with China (www.economist.com)
  The end of the second world war (www.economist.com)
  China’s planned Turkish EV factories have yet to power up (www.economist.com)
  The colourful civic groups that hold Germany together (www.economist.com)
  Africa is undergoing social change without economic transformation (www.economist.com)
  Hong Kong is super superstitious (www.economist.com)
  China claims to want women to have children and a career (www.economist.com)
  Liberal Uruguay and the right to die (www.economist.com)
  A martyr in the making? (www.economist.com)
  Bolivia’s crazy kingdom of coca (www.economist.com)
  Why the Trump administration excites some personal-injury lawyers (www.economist.com)
  Texas’s renegade Democrats prepare for a glorious defeat (www.economist.com)
  A 400-year-old Chinese cough syrup is winning over Westerners (www.economist.com)
  Japan’s carmakers are trying to tinker their way out of tariff pain (www.economist.com)
  Italian bosses want Giorgia Meloni to hurry up with reform (www.economist.com)
  A new wave of clean-energy innovation is building (www.economist.com)
  Should you trust that five-star rating on Airbnb? (www.economist.com)
  America and its Asian allies need to spend more to deter China (www.economist.com)
  The shutdown of ocean currents could freeze Europe (www.economist.com)
  Why South Africa should scrap Black Economic Empowerment (www.economist.com)
  America’s biggest ask in Asia (www.economist.com)
  Indonesia’s new president has daddy issues (www.economist.com)
  What Sara Duterte’s comeback means for the Philippines (www.economist.com)
  Ivory Coast’s president is overstaying his welcome (www.economist.com)
  Lebanon’s government is taking on a weakened Hizbullah (www.economist.com)
  The world’s hardest makeover: Hamas (www.economist.com)
  The killing of journalists in Gaza (www.economist.com)
  The Fantasy Premier League is changing Britain’s favourite sport (www.economist.com)
  Asian tourists are returning to Britain. But they look different (www.economist.com)
  The real collusion between Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin (www.economist.com)
  How to win at foreign policy (www.economist.com)
  Growth-loving authoritarians are failing on their own terms (www.economist.com)
  What 630,000 paintings say about the world economy (www.economist.com)
  Where will win from Trump’s tariffs? (www.economist.com)
  To sell Fannie and Freddie, Trump must answer a 7trn question (www.economist.com)
  China’s power over rare earths is not as great as it seems (www.economist.com)
  Trump wants to command bosses like Xi. He is failing (www.economist.com)
  Trump 2 is pushing environmentalists to rethink their approach (www.economist.com)
  Drones could soon become more intrusive than ever (www.economist.com)
  Smoke from boreal wildfires could cool the Arctic (www.economist.com)
  Earth’s climate is approaching irreversible tipping points (www.economist.com)
  Ivy League universities are on a debt binge (www.economist.com)
  What Putin wants from Trump in Alaska (www.economist.com)
  Aux barricades, boomers! (www.economist.com)
  Xi Jinping’s weaponisation of rare-earth elements will ultimately backfire (www.economist.com)
  Vaccinations to prevent cervical cancer have plummeted in Britain (www.economist.com)
  Nerves are on a knife-edge ahead of the Trump-Putin summit (www.economist.com)
  How scared should you be of “the China squeeze”? (www.economist.com)
  How many pythons could you catch in ten days? (www.economist.com)
  Race, power and money in South Africa (www.economist.com)
  The looming military threat in the Arctic (www.economist.com)
  Blighty newsletter: The Tories go cold on the gig economy (www.economist.com)
  Palantir might be the most over-valued firm of all time (www.economist.com)
  Britain is a global gaming superpower (www.economist.com)
  Why Donald Trump is wrong to take over the DC police (www.economist.com)
  How AI could create the first one-person unicorn (www.economist.com)
  The Russian-run town squatting on NATO territory (www.economist.com)
  Cow’s milk, as well as Russian oil, fuels the US-India trade war (www.economist.com)
  The War Room newsletter: Seven of the best books on the Pacific war (www.economist.com)
  America’s drug regulator is in turmoil (www.economist.com)
  America’s housing market is shuddering (www.economist.com)
  Instead of sanctions, Donald Trump announces a summit with Russia (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump brokers a peace plan in the Caucasus (www.economist.com)
  Still want to be a London cabbie? (www.economist.com)
  OpenAI’s latest step towards advanced artificial intelligence (www.economist.com)
  Are nightmares bad for your health? (www.economist.com)
  Pascal Soriot, the pharma titan tiring of Britain (www.economist.com)
  How to greet people at work (www.economist.com)
  McDonald’s secret sauce—plus a pickle or two (www.economist.com)
  Shanxi province is struggling to diversify away from coal (www.economist.com)
  McKinsey and its peers need a strategic rethink (www.economist.com)
  Will an astronomical anomaly challenge the idea of scientific revolutions? (www.economist.com)
  Islamist parties are gaining ground in Malaysia (www.economist.com)
  How climate change could spread malaria (www.economist.com)
  Why it’s a pain to take a plane in Africa (www.economist.com)
  Israeli sentiment on the war in Gaza is shifting (www.economist.com)
  As the world focuses on Gaza, starvation also looms in Sudan (www.economist.com)
  Panama brings lawfare to the canal ports saga (www.economist.com)
  How is Donald Trump putting America first by bashing Brazil? (www.economist.com)
  British authorities are cracking down on strip clubs (www.economist.com)
  Is Britain’s Green Party too nice to emulate Reform UK? (www.economist.com)
  What’s Britain good at? (www.economist.com)
  Israel on trial: can the country police its own war crimes? (www.economist.com)
  Albania’s new anti-corruption unit is taking down bigwigs (www.economist.com)
  Europe’s top court nixes Italy’s plan to expel migrants, for now (www.economist.com)
  Moldova’s election will test its resistance to Russia (www.economist.com)
  Europe’s Hogwarts has a new Dumbledore (www.economist.com)
  Why the Germans are falling out of love with beer (www.economist.com)
  The Elon Musk theory of pay (www.economist.com)
  Uber is readying itself for the driverless age—again (www.economist.com)
  South America is fast becoming the world’s hottest oil patch (www.economist.com)
  Wanted: a junior motion-graphics designer for our video department (www.economist.com)
  Xi Jinping’s city of the future is coming to life (www.economist.com)
  An economist’s guide to big life decisions (www.economist.com)
  Why Israel must hold itself to account (www.economist.com)
  Buy now, pay later gets a bad rap. But it could be genuinely useful (www.economist.com)
  How much of Gaza is left standing? (www.economist.com)
  Want better returns? Forget risk. Focus on fear (www.economist.com)
  If America goes after India’s oil trade, China will benefit (www.economist.com)
  The long-term effects of hunger in Gaza (www.economist.com)
  How loyalty programmes are keeping America’s airlines aloft (www.economist.com)
  Fraudulent scientific papers are booming (www.economist.com)
  Microphones can spot radar-evading hypersonic missiles (www.economist.com)
  Astronomers cannot agree on how fast the universe is expanding (www.economist.com)
  Stella Rimington battled communists, terrorists and literary critics (www.economist.com)
  Starmer versus the burrito taxi (www.economist.com)
  Nuclear nightmares are back (www.economist.com)
  Alligator Alcatraz is an exercise in performative cruelty (www.economist.com)
  Blighty newsletter: Are 100m Britons too many? (www.economist.com)
  MAGA’s disenchantment with Israel (www.economist.com)
  How to write laws of war for a wicked world (www.economist.com)
  Why the laws of war are widely ignored (www.economist.com)
  Six months after DeepSeek’s breakthrough, China speeds on with AI (www.economist.com)
  America’s fertility crash reaches a new low (www.economist.com)
  Democrats are likely to lose the redistricting war (www.economist.com)
  Do consultants make good CEOs? (www.economist.com)
  Narendra Modi and Donald Trump go head-to-head (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump escalates his war on numbers (www.economist.com)
  On Ukraine’s front lines the kill zone is getting deeper (www.economist.com)
  Buy now, pay later is taking over the world. Good (www.economist.com)
  Deadheads hope to “make America grateful again” (www.economist.com)
  America’s tariff avalanche catches Switzerland unawares (www.economist.com)
  The War Room newsletter: How receiving aid became fatal in Gaza (www.economist.com)
  The National Park Service is in disarray (www.economist.com)
  AstraZeneca’s falling out with Britain (www.economist.com)
  Savvy staff are moving from China’s nurseries to its care homes (www.economist.com)
  Pakistan’s army chief is cozying up to Donald Trump (www.economist.com)
  Nayib Bukele could now rule El Salvador for life (www.economist.com)
  Trump will not let the world move on from tariffs (www.economist.com)
  American businesses are running out of ways to avoid tariff pain (www.economist.com)
  Should you take collagen? (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump thinks he’s winning on trade, but America will lose (www.economist.com)
  Parliament restores independence to Ukraine’s corruption-fighters (www.economist.com)
  Álvaro Uribe, a former president of Colombia, is convicted (www.economist.com)
  How to build a ship for interstellar travel (www.economist.com)
  Scientists want to sequence all animals, fungi and plants on Earth (www.economist.com)
  Tom Lehrer found matter worth roasting everywhere he looked (www.economist.com)
  Could AI tilt the outcome of elections? (www.economist.com)
  Can pensioners rescue China’s economy? (www.economist.com)
  Everyone loses in the rage of China’s delivery wars (www.economist.com)
  Why did Thailand and Cambodia fight a senseless border war? (www.economist.com)
  Ziad Rahbani held a mirror to Lebanese society (www.economist.com)
  Famine in Gaza shows the failure of Israel’s strategy (www.economist.com)
  Helen Zille wants to save South Africa, starting in Johannesburg (www.economist.com)
  Can a home-grown telecoms firm connect South Sudan to the world? (www.economist.com)
  Modular homes are helping LA’s wildfire survivors rebuild (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump’s redistricting ploy is politics at its most cynical (www.economist.com)
  The German politicians who want to bar the AfD from government jobs (www.economist.com)
  France’s top general says Russia could attack in five years (www.economist.com)
  Why Italy’s next cultural capital looks like a disaster zone (www.economist.com)
  Ever more Ukrainian women are joining the army (www.economist.com)
  Britain presses on with its tilt to the Indo-Pacific (www.economist.com)
  Lessons from the last nuclear power plant in Scotland (www.economist.com)
  In Britain, same-sex marriages are more common for women than men (www.economist.com)
  England’s women’s soccer team bring it home (www.economist.com)
  America’s ailing health insurers (www.economist.com)
  Who will pay for the trillion-dollar AI boom? (www.economist.com)
  Hello Kitty’s owner is purring contentedly (www.economist.com)
  The world needs a better way to share genetic information (www.economist.com)
  Spain’s scandal-plagued prime minister should step down (www.economist.com)
  America is easing chip-export controls at exactly the wrong time (www.economist.com)
  Uncovering the secret food trade that corrupts Iran’s neighbours (www.economist.com)
  The climate needs a politics of the possible (www.economist.com)
  The humbling of green Europe (www.economist.com)
  The trade deal with America shows the limits of the EU’s power (www.economist.com)
  Is Britain’s net-zero push to blame for its high energy prices? (www.economist.com)
  America is slashing its climate research (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump’s war on renewables (www.economist.com)
  Japan’s dealmaking machine revs up (www.economist.com)
  The deeper reason for banking’s retreat (www.economist.com)
  Why Indians suffer from a colonial mindset (www.economist.com)
  South Asian women will be hurt by the trade war (www.economist.com)
  Indian firms aim to gorge on weight-loss drugs (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump’s unprecedented attack on Brazil’s judiciary (www.economist.com)
  The Federal Reserve sees a rare double dissent (www.economist.com)
  What opponents of the EU-US trade deal get wrong (www.economist.com)
  Starmer’s Palestine problem (www.economist.com)
  What Donald Trump is teaching Harvard (www.economist.com)
  Iran’s supreme leader is fading into the shadows (www.economist.com)
  What pro wrestlers in Chicago say about America (www.economist.com)
  In recognising Palestine, Britain and France won’t advance peace (www.economist.com)
  Even the sight of an infection can trigger an immune response (www.economist.com)
  The remarkable rise of “greenhushing” (www.economist.com)
  How spy agencies are experimenting with the newest AI models (www.economist.com)
  Can interceptor drones stop Russia’s terror bombing? (www.economist.com)
  Panamanian farmers versus global shipping—and Donald Trump (www.economist.com)
  Blighty: Why Corbyn’s comeback matters (www.economist.com)
  A fresh retail-trading frenzy is reshaping financial markets (www.economist.com)
  What the World Snail Racing Championships say about rural England (www.economist.com)
  Can China save South Africa from Donald Trump? (www.economist.com)
  South-East Asia makes an AI power grab (www.economist.com)
  American governors split over how to handle Donald Trump (www.economist.com)
  How big tech plans to feed AI’s voracious appetite for power (www.economist.com)
  America is remaking its disaster-relief system (www.economist.com)
  Satellite images show how receiving aid in Gaza became so deadly (www.economist.com)
  Look inside The Economist’s summer issue for 2025 (www.economist.com)
  Can Peronists, Argentina’s former masters, stop Javier Milei? (www.economist.com)
  Europe seeks to end its Trumpian trade nightmare (www.economist.com)
  How US Space Command is preparing for satellite-on-satellite combat (www.economist.com)
  Who is paying for Donald Trump’s tariffs? (www.economist.com)
  Can Bernard Arnault steer LVMH out of crisis? (www.economist.com)
  Pedro Sánchez is fighting for his political life (www.economist.com)
  Why Emmanuel Macron has decided to recognise a Palestinian state (www.economist.com)
  Can you overcome an allergy? (www.economist.com)
  Vladimir Medinsky, Putin’s negotiator with a warped worldview (www.economist.com)
  Catholics are more liberal than you might think (www.economist.com)
  Why Thai fighter jets have attacked Cambodia (www.economist.com)
  The world court joins the fight over climate change (www.economist.com)
  The looming deadline for the Panama Canal ports deal (www.economist.com)
  “Comrade” is making a comeback in China (www.economist.com)
  Conservationists have rescued the world’s last truly wild horse (www.economist.com)
  “Gated communities” are flourishing in India (www.economist.com)
  A bloody week in Syria may have ripple effects in Lebanon (www.economist.com)
  Somalia’s state-building project is in tatters (www.economist.com)
  Ugandan intervention in Congo risks stoking ethnic violence (www.economist.com)
  As Gaza starves, Israel fights on (www.economist.com)
  The year of the women’s-sports bar (www.economist.com)
  A little poetic justice for Donald Trump (www.economist.com)
  Cuts to food stamps are about to hit in America (www.economist.com)
  A year after Britain’s riots, things have deteriorated (www.economist.com)
  Seven in ten Britons expect more riots (www.economist.com)
  Why Britain’s police hardly solve any crimes (www.economist.com)
  Peace in Turkey must not become a smokescreen for repression (www.economist.com)
  Rethinking the war on AIDS (www.economist.com)
  Trump’s astonishing battering of Brazil (www.economist.com)
  A new paradise for crypto (www.economist.com)
  Macron was right about strategic autonomy (www.economist.com)
  Cigarettes, booze and petrol bankroll Europe’s welfare empire (www.economist.com)
  Could Europe be the next big coffee producer? (www.economist.com)
  Trump’s tariff mayhem has been a blessing for shippers (www.economist.com)
  The Gulf’s oil giants risk becoming sprawling conglomerates (www.economist.com)
  The rail mega-merger that could transform American supply chains (www.economist.com)
  Can Grab and GoTo forge a South-East Asian tech champion? (www.economist.com)
  The continuation of the war in Gaza disgraces Israel (www.economist.com)
  “Bangla Teslas” give Musk a run for his money (www.economist.com)
  The new private jet pecking order (www.economist.com)
  Fauja Singh took up running somewhat late in life (www.economist.com)
  What economics can teach foreign-policy types (www.economist.com)
  Where will be the Detroit of electric vehicles? (www.economist.com)
  The world should follow Trump’s lead on stablecoins (www.economist.com)
  The economics of superintelligence (www.economist.com)
  What if AI made the world’s economic growth explode? (www.economist.com)
  AI labs’ all-or-nothing race leaves no time to fuss about safety (www.economist.com)
  The dark horse of AI labs (www.economist.com)
  Vindication for two bankers. Questions for Britain’s legal system (www.economist.com)
  Inside the top-secret labs that build America’s nuclear weapons (www.economist.com)
  Crypto’s big bang will revolutionise finance (www.economist.com)
  Fragmentary Latin inscriptions can be completed with AI (www.economist.com)
  Why 24/7 trading is a bad idea (www.economist.com)
  Ukraine’s leader, Volodymyr Zelensky, should junk a very bad bill (www.economist.com)
  What does it take to make a nuclear weapon? (www.economist.com)
  The peril of trying to please people (www.economist.com)
  The surprising lessons of a secret cold-war nuclear programme (www.economist.com)
  Outrage in Ukraine as the government attacks anti-corruption watchdogs (www.economist.com)
  Epstein’s ghost haunts the Trump-Murdoch alliance (www.economist.com)
  Blighty newsletter: Can electoral reform fix Britain’s growth? (www.economist.com)
  Russian sabotage attacks surged across Europe in 2024 (www.economist.com)
  Why are British doctors so radical? (www.economist.com)
  Airlines’ favourite new pricing trick (www.economist.com)
  Underground with America’s nuclear-missile crews (www.economist.com)
  China’s smartphone champion has triumphed where Apple failed (www.economist.com)
  The War Room newsletter: Three new books on espionage (www.economist.com)
  Britain’s water watchdog is to be put down (www.economist.com)
  Populism and polarisation come to Japan (www.economist.com)
  The Houthis shatter European pretensions to naval power (www.economist.com)
  Is Xi Jinping in trouble? (www.economist.com)
  How far off is dollar doom? (www.economist.com)
  Tamaki Yuichiro, Japan’s populist upstart who wants to be prime minister (www.economist.com)