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用中文瀏覽經濟學人最新報道

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  President Trump’s mindless tariffs will cause economic havoc (www.economist.com)
  Trump takes America’s trade policies back to the 19th century (www.economist.com)
  The American government’s accidental private-credit subsidy (www.economist.com)
  The Trump train slows (www.economist.com)
  The tyranny of TikTokkers who turn up (www.economist.com)
  Lift sanctions to give Syria a chance of rebuilding (www.economist.com)
  Researchers lift the lid on how reasoning models actually “think” (www.economist.com)
  How Daylight Saving Time affects your sleep and diet (www.economist.com)
  Motors in the wheels take EVs further (www.economist.com)
  What does space miso taste like? (www.economist.com)
  Can the world’s free-traders withstand Trump’s attack? (www.economist.com)
  India sees opportunity, as well as risk, in Trump’s trade war (www.economist.com)
  Blighty newsletter: Shields, handcuffs and swords (www.economist.com)
  Britain’s budget watchdog has ruffled feathers in Westminster (www.economist.com)
  China debates whether Trump is a revolutionary, or just rude (www.economist.com)
  Britain’s plan to smash people-smuggling gangs has a big problem (www.economist.com)
  Are there any business winners in Trump 2? (www.economist.com)
  Why Marine Le Pen should be allowed to run for president (www.economist.com)
  As Chinese drills begin, Taiwan expels mainland influencers (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump digs deep to revive American mining (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump’s plan for American carmaking is full of potholes (www.economist.com)
  Barring Marine Le Pen is a political thunderbolt for France (www.economist.com)
  Zelensky, Trump and Putin may all have done U-turns on elections in Ukraine (www.economist.com)
  Trump is a problem for Europe’s most important hard-right leaders (www.economist.com)
  Chinese hackers are getting bigger, better and stealthier (www.economist.com)
  The strange revival of Liberal Canada (www.economist.com)
  Protests are the last thing keeping Turkey’s democracy alive (www.economist.com)
  What space, submarines and polar research teach about teamwork (www.economist.com)
  Can Musk put people on Mars? (www.economist.com)
  Big law’s capitulation to Donald Trump may be bad for business (www.economist.com)
  Live music seems recession-proof. Thank ticket scalpers (www.economist.com)
  Trump’s tariff pain: the growing evidence (www.economist.com)
  A shambolic leak reveals Team Trump’s contempt for allies (www.economist.com)
  China is developing some startling new kit in its quest to seize Taiwan (www.economist.com)
  Pableaux Johnson, peerless host and chronicler of New Orleans (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump v the spies of Five Eyes (www.economist.com)
  Do viruses trigger Alzheimer’s? (www.economist.com)
  The trap Vladimir Putin has set for Donald Trump (www.economist.com)
  NATO’s race against Russia to rearm (www.economist.com)
  Mark Carney, the Liberal who will lead Canada (www.economist.com)
  The best places to be a working woman in 2025 (www.economist.com)
  Schooled by Trump, Americans are learning to dislike their allies (www.economist.com)
  Mitochondria transplants could cure diseases and lengthen lives (www.economist.com)
  China can greatly reduce its reliance on coal, but probably won’t (www.economist.com)
  The War Room newsletter: How Chinese hackers hunt American secrets (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump’s plan for American carmaking is full of potholes (www.economist.com)
  Will Elon Musk’s cash splash pay off in Wisconsin? (www.economist.com)
  Barring Marine Le Pen is a political earthquake for France (www.economist.com)
  The junta’s spite worsens Myanmar’s catastrophic quake (www.economist.com)
  Trump’s “Liberation Day” is set to whack America’s economy (www.economist.com)
  Zelensky, Trump and Putin may all have u-turned on elections in Ukraine (www.economist.com)
  DOGE comes for the data wonks (www.economist.com)
  Khartoum changes hands, heralding a new phase in Sudan’s civil war (www.economist.com)
  Checks and Balance newsletter: Who is (or was) the smartest person in government? (www.economist.com)
  How politics shapes the world’s time zones (www.economist.com)
  Is red meat unhealthy? (www.economist.com)
  Myanmar’s earthquake piles misery on civil war (www.economist.com)
  Jonathan Powell: Britain’s foreign-policy fixer (www.economist.com)
  Estate agents in China are trying everything to sell flats (www.economist.com)
  The Chinese government is cracking down on predatory law enforcement (www.economist.com)
  The war in Gaza has unsettled the Jewish diaspora (www.economist.com)
  Israel courts the Middle East’s minorities (www.economist.com)
  Nigeria’s president pushes the limits of his power (www.economist.com)
  The prospect of war has turned Europe into a continent of preppers (www.economist.com)
  A fight over a cloister in tourist-filled Florence (www.economist.com)
  Ukrainian refugees may be in Europe for good (www.economist.com)
  Trump is driving American scientists into Europe’s arms (www.economist.com)
  Climate change may make it harder to spot submarines (www.economist.com)
  Can Musk put man on Mars? (www.economist.com)
  First, jab more babies (www.economist.com)
  How a year of tremor and terror transformed Japan (www.economist.com)
  Japanese people are starting to quit their jobs (www.economist.com)
  Myanmar’s battered junta embraces drone warfare (www.economist.com)
  Mark Carney calls a snap election in Canada (www.economist.com)
  One island, two worlds (www.economist.com)
  Texas troopers are in more and more lethal car chases (www.economist.com)
  What is the future of British hospitals? (www.economist.com)
  Can Britons be enticed to fix their draughty homes? (www.economist.com)
  Heathrow’s outage raises questions about Britain’s resilience (www.economist.com)
  Why does the British tax year end on April 5th? (www.economist.com)
  Teams and extremes (www.economist.com)
  How safe is your DNA in a bankruptcy? (www.economist.com)
  Barnes & Noble, a bookstore, is back in the business of selling books (www.economist.com)
  Elon Musk is powersliding through the federal government (www.economist.com)
  Israel’s expansionism is a danger to others—and itself (www.economist.com)
  Is Elon Musk remaking government or breaking it? (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump is affecting politics everywhere (www.economist.com)
  Riots over a dead Muslim ruler put Narendra Modi in a tight spot (www.economist.com)
  Why India’s south is fighting plans to overhaul parliament (www.economist.com)
  Even priests need the free market (www.economist.com)
  Can foreign investors learn to love China again? (www.economist.com)
  The surging gold price is boosting Central Asia’s economies (www.economist.com)
  Nubank has conquered Brazil. Now it is expanding overseas (www.economist.com)
  The unpredictability of Trump’s tariffs will increase the pain (www.economist.com)
  The cover-up is worse than the group chat (www.economist.com)
  Britain’s wimpish effort to balance its books (www.economist.com)
  Russia plays for time in Ukraine ceasefire talks (www.economist.com)
  An unrestrained Israel is reshaping the Middle East (www.economist.com)
  Labour can still rescue Britain’s growth prospects (www.economist.com)
  White House denials over the Signal snafu ring hollow (www.economist.com)
  Who will speak for Henry? (www.economist.com)
  Oleg Gordievsky worked for both sides in the cold war (www.economist.com)
  Big law’s capitulation to Donald Trump is a business failure (www.economist.com)
  Lobbyists hope that Trump will produce a bonanza (www.economist.com)
  Trump’s endless trade threats come at a growing cost (www.economist.com)
  President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is throttling Turkey’s democracy (www.economist.com)
  ASML’s boss has a warning for Europe (www.economist.com)
  Europe will have to zip its lip over China’s abuses (www.economist.com)
  America’s Supreme Court tackles a thorny voting-rights case (www.economist.com)
  A newly discovered killing site shocks Mexico (www.economist.com)
  Chinese hacking is becoming bigger, better and stealthier (www.economist.com)
  A leak reveals Team Trump’s carelessness, and contempt for allies (www.economist.com)
  A visual guide to critical materials and rare earths (www.economist.com)
  How Europe can hurt Russia’s economy (www.economist.com)
  Turkey’s anti-democratic crackdown is damaging its economy (www.economist.com)
  A faster rollout of malaria vaccines would save many lives (www.economist.com)
  New data show that the class divide in Britain may not be so wide (www.economist.com)
  President Erdogan jails his rival, and endangers Turkey’s democracy (www.economist.com)
  MAGA is already rewiring American education (www.economist.com)
  Musk Inc is under serious threat (www.economist.com)
  Live music seems recession-proof. Thank the ticket scalpers (www.economist.com)
  Trump is a problem for Europe’s most important hard-right leaders (www.economist.com)
  Checks and Balance newsletter: Which past is MAGA promising to revive? (www.economist.com)
  Six charts show the impact of Obamacare (www.economist.com)
  Armin Papperger: the German arms boss Russia wants dead (www.economist.com)
  How harmful are electronic cigarettes? (www.economist.com)
  Why don’t seals drown? (www.economist.com)
  Richard Fortey remade the world with fossils (www.economist.com)
  The right way to fight nativists (www.economist.com)
  China is developing some startling new kit in its quest to reclaim Taiwan (www.economist.com)
  Ageism is rampant in Chinese companies (www.economist.com)
  Why China hates the Panama Canal deal, but still may not block it (www.economist.com)
  China’s cynicism offensive in Asia (www.economist.com)
  Taiwan’s president takes on alleged Chinese infiltration (www.economist.com)
  North Korea is remarkably entrenched in global supply chains (www.economist.com)
  The success of Ivory Coast is Africa’s best-kept secret (www.economist.com)
  Nigerian politics is a nasty place for women (www.economist.com)
  A coup attempt in Tigray raises tensions in the Horn (www.economist.com)
  America’s strikes on the Houthis could whip up a regional tempest (www.economist.com)
  How Cuba competes with Uncle Sam in the Caribbean islands (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump has reshaped one of the world’s most important migration routes (www.economist.com)
  Will Donald Trump shape the Mexican president’s domestic agenda? (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump is testing more than America’s Constitution (www.economist.com)
  What a Christian theatre town can teach Trump’s Kennedy Centre (www.economist.com)
  Why America has not passed a law to treat addiction better (www.economist.com)
  Cambridge yimbies (www.economist.com)
  The American and Russian right are aligning (www.economist.com)
  Europe needs to spend more on defence, not just pretend to (www.economist.com)
  The Bundestag approves the biggest fiscal expansion in post-war history (www.economist.com)
  Europe’s arms makers have ramped up capacity (www.economist.com)
  Why apprenticeships are so rare in Britain (www.economist.com)
  A Northern Irish factory has a deal to make missiles for Ukraine (www.economist.com)
  Comparing apples and oranges. And also small caged mammals (www.economist.com)
  ZOE, a British personal-nutrition app, is growing fast (www.economist.com)
  The thinking behind Labour’s benefits cuts (www.economist.com)
  Should BHP, Rio Tinto and Vale learn from Chinese rivals? (www.economist.com)
  The horrors of shared docs (www.economist.com)
  The luxury industry is poised for a deal wave (www.economist.com)
  How hospitals inflate America’s giant health-care bill (www.economist.com)
  East Asia’s arms-makers are on the rise (www.economist.com)
  The judges Trump scorns should stand their ground (www.economist.com)
  Dreams of improving the human race are no longer science fiction (www.economist.com)
  How to enhance humans (www.economist.com)
  Even the Trumpiest stocks are suffering (www.economist.com)
  India is obsessed with giving its people “unique IDs” (www.economist.com)
  Why the Indian diaspora has not yet embraced Donald Trump (www.economist.com)
  If you can’t find a place to rent, blame the government (www.economist.com)
  Lessons from the happiest countries in the world (www.economist.com)
  Erdogan arrests the candidate who could beat him (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump shoots his own global mouthpiece (www.economist.com)
  Beneath investors’ feet, the ground is shifting (www.economist.com)
  The British state has a bad case of long covid (www.economist.com)
  The trap Vladimir Putin set for Donald Trump (www.economist.com)
  The Economist is seeking three Audience fellows (www.economist.com)
  The Economist is hiring an Audience Editor (www.economist.com)
  Rumours on social media could cause sick people to feel worse (www.economist.com)
  Why are North Korean hackers such good crypto-thieves? (www.economist.com)
  Can people be persuaded not to believe disinformation? (www.economist.com)
  The Trump administration is playing a dangerous stockmarket game (www.economist.com)
  Why British spooks are reaching out to the private sector (www.economist.com)
  Putin woos Trump with a partial ceasefire and big geopolitical deal (www.economist.com)
  Britain at last takes aim at worklessness (www.economist.com)
  America’s Democrats would be wise to embrace “abundance liberalism” (www.economist.com)
  Blighty newsletter: Why are so many Britons not working? (www.economist.com)
  Where will be the next electric-vehicle superpower? (www.economist.com)
  Israel’s strikes may be only the start of a new offensive in Gaza (www.economist.com)
  Did Donald Trump willfully defy a court order? (www.economist.com)
  The pandemic hit pupils hardest in America’s Democrat-leaning states (www.economist.com)
  Binyamin Netanyahu is leading Israel into (another) crisis (www.economist.com)
  Can anything get China’s shoppers to spend? (www.economist.com)
  Will Trump’s tariffs turbocharge foreign investment in America? (www.economist.com)
  The War Room newsletter: The fraying nuclear umbrella (www.economist.com)
  Ukraine’s army escapes from Kursk by the skin of its teeth (www.economist.com)
  Could antivirals treat Alzheimer’s? (www.economist.com)
  Trump v the spies of Five Eyes (www.economist.com)
  America is facing a beef deficit (www.economist.com)
  Why rents are out of control (www.economist.com)
  Checks and Balance newsletter: Elon Musk’s low opinion of the Democrats—and America (www.economist.com)
  Ten indicators explain what’s going on with America’s economy (www.economist.com)
  What is the best way to keep your teeth healthy? (www.economist.com)
  Time is running out for Syria’s president (www.economist.com)
  Athol Fugard spoke truth to apartheid South Africa (www.economist.com)
  Trump’s whims are overriding the national interest (www.economist.com)
  Could Europe replace Starlink if America pulls the plug? (www.economist.com)
  American politics prompt some Chinese to explore historical taboos (www.economist.com)
  Hong Kong’s taxi drivers are told to smile more (www.economist.com)
  China’s super-smart Tesla-killers (www.economist.com)
  How dangerous would Asian security be without America? (www.economist.com)
  Another civil war looms in South Sudan (www.economist.com)
  Abiy Ahmed’s agricultural revolution is too good to be true (www.economist.com)
  Binyamin Netanyahu likens himself to Donald Trump (www.economist.com)
  After the bloodshed, can Syria’s president unite his country? (www.economist.com)
  Panama’s giveaway game (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump is setting new boundaries for political speech (www.economist.com)
  Jared Isaacman, the high-school dropout who will lead NASA (www.economist.com)
  The education department is halved overnight (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump has pushed Europe back into “whatever it takes” mode (www.economist.com)
  The struggle to defeat Russian censorship and propaganda (www.economist.com)
  Spain’s terrible record on defence spending (www.economist.com)
  Europe’s other front: peaceniks vs hawks (www.economist.com)
  Dessert cafés are a symbol of modern Britain (www.economist.com)
  Ships crash in the North Sea (www.economist.com)
  British women thrived under remote working (www.economist.com)
  Britain’s worklessness disaster (www.economist.com)
  America First may be a boon for Walmart’s Mexican business (www.economist.com)
  The race to elect the next head of the Olympics is heating up (www.economist.com)
  7-Eleven is still struggling to fend off its Canadian suitor (www.economist.com)
  The importance of repetition in the workplace (www.economist.com)
  Western companies are experimenting with DeepSeek (www.economist.com)
  With Manus, AI experimentation has burst into the open (www.economist.com)
  A selection of emails received by employees of the CDC (www.economist.com)
  Can Europe cope with a free-spending Germany? (www.economist.com)
  More testosterone means higher pay—for some men (www.economist.com)
  Why “labour shortages” don’t really exist (www.economist.com)
  The new economics of immigration (www.economist.com)
  Your guide to the new anti-immigration argument (www.economist.com)
  America’s bullied allies need to toughen up (www.economist.com)
  If it comes to a stand-off, Europe has leverage over America (www.economist.com)
  India is benefiting from Trump 2.0 (www.economist.com)
  Are these the world’s most beautiful airports? (www.economist.com)
  Europe thinks the unthinkable on a nuclear bomb (www.economist.com)
  What sparks an investing revolution? (www.economist.com)
  America’s trade hawks fear the gaps in Trump’s tariff wall (www.economist.com)
  Canada’s security complex has woken up to Trump’s menace (www.economist.com)
  How Labour learned to love rearmament (www.economist.com)
  Ukraine’s embrace of drone warfare has paid off (www.economist.com)
  The race is on to build the world’s most complex machine (www.economist.com)
  Want even tinier chips? Use a particle accelerator (www.economist.com)
  DOGE comes to England’s health service (www.economist.com)
  Elon Musk’s antics are not the only problem for Tesla (www.economist.com)
  Will Vladimir Putin really agree to stop his killing machine? (www.economist.com)
  Trump’s erratic policy is harming the reputation of American assets (www.economist.com)
  NATO’s race against Russia to re-arm (www.economist.com)
  Ukraine hopes its ceasefire offer will turn the tables on Russia (www.economist.com)
  Young Americans are getting happier (www.economist.com)
  Which countries are most vulnerable to Donald Trump’s aid cuts? (www.economist.com)
  Will America’s stockmarket convulsions spread? (www.economist.com)
  Discord erupts in Nigel Farage’s Reform UK (www.economist.com)
  The global importance of Rodrigo Duterte’s arrest (www.economist.com)
  Trump’s metals tariffs will cost American industry dearly (www.economist.com)
  The budget that will determine South Africa’s future (www.economist.com)
  China’s AI boom is reaching astonishing proportions (www.economist.com)
  How Trump provoked a stockmarket sell-off (www.economist.com)
  How DOGE is driving America’s public-health guardians mad (www.economist.com)
  A horrific killing-spree shakes Syria (www.economist.com)
  Why Britons pay so much for electricity (www.economist.com)
  The War Room newsletter: “Be quiet, small man”—diplomacy, Musk style (www.economist.com)
  Mark Carney must keep an expansionist America at bay (www.economist.com)
  America and Ukraine prepare for brutal negotiations (www.economist.com)
  Does Trump really want a weaker dollar? (www.economist.com)
  Investors think the Russia-Ukraine war will end soon (www.economist.com)
  Checks and Balance newsletter: Depending on America is a vulnerability (www.economist.com)
  Mark Carney, the Liberal who may lead Canada (www.economist.com)
  Is butter bad for you? (www.economist.com)
  Two private companies reach the Moon within four days (www.economist.com)
  How do Ukrainian soldier fatalities compare with Russia’s? (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump’s tariffs are a throwback to the 1930s (www.economist.com)
  Stitch by stitch, Rose Girone kept her family going (www.economist.com)
  America First is a contagious condition (www.economist.com)
  The tech bros selling drugs by drone (www.economist.com)
  A new film is breaking box-office records in China (www.economist.com)
  Chinese warships circumnavigate another island: Australia (www.economist.com)
  Why New Zealanders are emigrating in record numbers (www.economist.com)
  Indonesia’s shakedown of Apple comes to an end (www.economist.com)
  Lebanon’s new government must do three big things immediately (www.economist.com)
  Why some Africans see opportunity in foreign-aid cuts (www.economist.com)
  A new kind of Brazilian music is poised for a global boom (www.economist.com)