經濟學人最新報道 · 關於 收起 · Buzzing 首頁 · 經濟學人 · 編輯精選 · 國外新聞頭條 · Reddit新聞小組 · 彭博最新 · 突發新聞 · 大西洋週刊 · BBC · 紐約時報 · 財經新聞 · 衛報 · 雅虎財經 · 金融時報 · 華爾街日報 · 路透社 · Business Insider · 天空新聞 · 谷歌新聞 · Politico · 紐約客 · 路透最新 + 更多 - 收起
HN 熱門 · Reddit熱門 · 精神食糧 · 中國 · 下飯視頻 · Ars Technica · HN最新 · PH熱門 · 科技 · Reddit提問 · 中國小組 · HN首頁 · 股市熱門 · Show HN · Lobste · 女權主義 · 業餘項目 · Linux · HN問答 · Dev熱門 · PHYS · Nature · ScienceAlert · 生活科學 · Bear · BigThink · 加密貨幣 · Quora熱門 · 提議更多喜歡的站點?    

用中文瀏覽經濟學人最新報道

數據來源: 該頁面支持的版本: 該頁面支持的語言: 訂閱地址: 社交媒體: 最後更新於: 2026-03-05T23:50:40.834+08:00   查看統計
  Israel and America want the Kurds to join the fight in Iran (www.economist.com)
  Welcome to Kashiwazaki, home to the world’s largest nuclear plant (www.economist.com)
  Allegations against a corruption watchdog rock Malaysian politics (www.economist.com)
  China’s first railway project in the EU is open at last (www.economist.com)
  China sets its lowest growth target for a generation (www.economist.com)
  Thousands of Africans are fighting for Russia in Ukraine (www.economist.com)
  In African development, big is beautiful again (www.economist.com)
  Javier Milei aggressively celebrates a string of successes (www.economist.com)
  States are embracing the MAHA food agenda (www.economist.com)
  Why one of Germany’s richest regions is gripped with anxiety (www.economist.com)
  Feted by Europe’s left, Spain’s Pedro Sánchez is unloved at home (www.economist.com)
  Meet the weekend warriors preparing to defend Europe from Russia (www.economist.com)
  How the Danes and Swedes handle populism (www.economist.com)
  Britain’s class politics is back—with a Green twist (www.economist.com)
  Iran exposes three harsh truths for Britain (www.economist.com)
  Dubai is the front line of Britain’s war with itself (www.economist.com)
  An AI disaster is getting ever closer (www.economist.com)
  Bayer spies an end to a long legal battle (www.economist.com)
  A short guide to email opening lines (www.economist.com)
  Formula One is attracting a different sort of fan (www.economist.com)
  Nigel Farage and Zack Polanski: best of frenemies (www.economist.com)
  Why the British government is spending more on hedgerows (www.economist.com)
  Investigative journalism in India is under threat (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump must stop soon (www.economist.com)
  Russia’s Starlink shutdown is a blow to its soldiers and drones (www.economist.com)
  How the latest regional conflict is reshaping the Middle East (www.economist.com)
  It’s time to unleash Europe’s pensions (www.economist.com)
  To understand why countries grow, look at their firms (www.economist.com)
  India’s economy is not as big as economists thought (www.economist.com)
  Americans’ electricity bills are up. Don’t blame AI (www.economist.com)
  European pensions are a 30trn missed opportunity (www.economist.com)
  In times of chaos, Europe is the muddled power the world needs (www.economist.com)
  A once-proud tradition is becoming awkward for elite universities (www.economist.com)
  What the heirs to General Electric did next (www.economist.com)
  The Iran war has been a stunning operational success (www.economist.com)
  A basket of new fruit varieties is coming your way (www.economist.com)
  China needs a more ambitious growth target (www.economist.com)
  The start of the Iran war was determined by spying success (www.economist.com)
  The New President of the United States (www.economist.com)
  Binyamin Netanyahu is the big winner from the Iran war, for now (www.economist.com)
  How 250 years of immigration shaped America (www.economist.com)
  Binyamin Netanyahu is the big winner from the Iran war, for now (www.economist.com)
  The perils of Donald Trump’s pivot from peace to war president (www.economist.com)
  Rachel Reeves’s economic update was reassuringly boring (www.economist.com)
  Why war isn’t always good for defence stocks (www.economist.com)
  The nightmare scenario energy markets feared is becoming reality (www.economist.com)
  Are Gulf states running out of missile interceptors? (www.economist.com)
  The Iran war is a jolt to Dubai’s business model (www.economist.com)
  Blighty newsletter: Iran exposes three harsh truths for Britain (www.economist.com)
  What France’s new nuclear-arms doctrine means for Europe (www.economist.com)
  Checks and Balance newsletter: The new cancel culture on campuses (www.economist.com)
  Cuba’s economic divides are widening (www.economist.com)
  Ali Khamenei hoped his legacy might last for ever (www.economist.com)
  Why Ali Khamenei may have welcomed the nature of his death (www.economist.com)
  The Iran war is rapidly engulfing the region (www.economist.com)
  Hizbullah, the reluctant proxy, strikes at Israel (www.economist.com)
  Data centres in space: less crazy than you think (www.economist.com)
  Can Viktor Orban be beaten? (www.economist.com)
  Airlines take a hit from hostilities in the Middle East (www.economist.com)
  The War Room newsletter: A widening war in the Middle East (www.economist.com)
  The modest start of America’s foreign forays (www.economist.com)
  Japan faces a post-Fukushima energy dilemma (www.economist.com)
  Cover Story newsletter: The daunting quest for critical minerals (www.economist.com)
  China’s ice-cold calculus over Iran (www.economist.com)
  In Iran, Donald Trump is making history (www.economist.com)
  War, succession and the perilous test of two myths about Iran (www.economist.com)
  Why Donald Trump gambled in Iran (www.economist.com)
  Gavin Newsom wants to reintroduce himself (www.economist.com)
  At last, reasons to be cheerful about European tech (www.economist.com)
  War in Iran could cause the biggest oil shock in years (www.economist.com)
  Ali Khamenei may be dead, but Donald Trump has unfinished business (www.economist.com)
  Outside the EU, Britain’s car industry is struggling (www.economist.com)
  A cancer diagnosis can push people to crime (www.economist.com)
  India, the world’s most colourful country, is changing its hues (www.economist.com)
  Ali Khamenei grabbed power and held it, at bloody cost (www.economist.com)
  With the supreme leader dead, power in Iran hangs in the balance (www.economist.com)
  America’s Gulf allies face a moment of great peril (www.economist.com)
  America and Israel bomb Iran, aiming to topple its regime (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump goes nuclear on Anthropic (www.economist.com)
  What a Warner Bros-Paramount colossus would look like (www.economist.com)
  What does “open war” between Pakistan and Afghanistan amount to? (www.economist.com)
  Will magnesium supplements help you relax? (www.economist.com)
  The War Room newsletter: Do ceasefires actually work? (www.economist.com)
  Brazil’s almighty Supreme Court must win back public trust (www.economist.com)
  The Greens’ triumph in Manchester threatens Sir Keir Starmer (www.economist.com)
  What North Korea’s mysterious party congress revealed (www.economist.com)
  The Trump court? Not quite (www.economist.com)
  The battle to flip Texas (www.economist.com)
  Labour’s handling of special educational needs offers hope (www.economist.com)
  Britain’s civil service has a new leader (www.economist.com)
  Reform UK’s economic plan looks a lot like Labour’s (www.economist.com)
  The paranoid style in British politics (www.economist.com)
  Who speaks for the Muslim world? (www.economist.com)
  China piles pressure on Japan after Takaichi Sanae’s triumph (www.economist.com)
  Google Maps makes another pitch for better South Korean data (www.economist.com)
  Giorgia Meloni is taking on the courts in Italy (www.economist.com)
  Ukraine is scaling up interceptor drones (www.economist.com)
  How the war in Ukraine affects Siberian Russia (www.economist.com)
  Heathrow’s third runway is turning into another infrastructure fiasco (www.economist.com)
  America’s states should beware of copying Europe too much (www.economist.com)
  Philippe Gaulier refused to tolerate boring people (www.economist.com)
  Mapping China’s holiday rush (www.economist.com)
  Ali Larijani is an increasingly plausible heir in Iran (www.economist.com)
  Iranians’ angry defiance is growing once again (www.economist.com)
  South Sudan’s decrepit regime is unravelling (www.economist.com)
  Iran may insist Hizbullah fights on its behalf (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump’s oil embargo reveals a solar boom in Cuba (www.economist.com)
  The Sphere is taking its success in Las Vegas to the world (www.economist.com)
  The stunning rise of China’s most audacious miner (www.economist.com)
  Tony Robbins, the megalosaurus of motivation (www.economist.com)
  Each year tens of thousands of Americans accidentally kill (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump is at risk of launching a war without purpose (www.economist.com)
  The fake-meat industry is in trouble (www.economist.com)
  SOS for India’s Pink City (www.economist.com)
  America’s dangerous pursuit of critical-mineral dominance (www.economist.com)
  America’s trade chaos is just beginning (www.economist.com)
  Protectionists dislike trade and migration. And capital flows? (www.economist.com)
  Why Chinese people spend so much on food (www.economist.com)
  America’s new era of state-sponsored mining (www.economist.com)
  America’s welfare state is more European than you think (www.economist.com)
  Investors should demand more transparency from private-markets firms (www.economist.com)
  A viral research note on AI gets its economics wrong (www.economist.com)
  Luxury goods are Europe’s global tax on vanity (www.economist.com)
  Anthropic says China’s AI tigers are copycats (www.economist.com)
  America’s bosses are being dragged into local politics (www.economist.com)
  Americans have no idea what Donald Trump wants from Iran (www.economist.com)
  Marks left by Stone Age humans were surprisingly complex (www.economist.com)
  One-stop blood tests for multiple types of cancer are increasingly popular (www.economist.com)
  To navigate physical spaces, AIs need world models (www.economist.com)
  Our language analysis of Donald Trump’s state-of-the-union address (www.economist.com)
  Modernisation is making South-East Asia more Islamic (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump’s unworthy state of the union (www.economist.com)
  Blighty newsletter: The prince and the lord are a long way from jail (www.economist.com)
  A stay-calm plan to save the world (www.economist.com)
  Brazil’s high court is caught up in a vast scandal (www.economist.com)
  It’s California’s 250th birthday, too (www.economist.com)
  For AI labs, Pete Hegseth’s Pentagon brings opportunities—and risks (www.economist.com)
  Analysing Africa newsletter: An interview with Zambia’s president (www.economist.com)
  How to get rich in modern China (www.economist.com)
  Bosses should not hold their breath for a Trump tariff refund (www.economist.com)
  Heathrow’s expansion is on track to be eye-wateringly expensive (www.economist.com)
  The war against PDFs is heating up (www.economist.com)
  How Russia’s fatalities compare with Ukraine’s (www.economist.com)
  The War Room newsletter: What is Donald Trump’s aim for Iran? (www.economist.com)
  Where the DHS shutdown could start to hurt (www.economist.com)
  France’s far left reckons with the murder of a far-right activist (www.economist.com)
  The River Thames has changed shape (www.economist.com)
  The rotten tail of China’s property bust (www.economist.com)
  The killing of Mexico’s most powerful narco will please Donald Trump (www.economist.com)
  Rejoice! Private equity is taking over America’s small businesses (www.economist.com)
  What are Donald Trump’s strike options in Iran? (www.economist.com)
  Why one corner of Europe’s car industry is still booming (www.economist.com)
  The AI productivity boom is not here (yet) (www.economist.com)
  Markets are churning furiously beneath a calm surface (www.economist.com)
  India’s VIP culture is out of control (www.economist.com)
  Checks and Balance newsletter: Jesse Jackson and the great racial backlash (www.economist.com)
  The Midwest’s remarkable turnaround (www.economist.com)
  The Supreme Court strikes down Donald Trump’s tariffs (www.economist.com)
  Should you be fibremaxxing? (www.economist.com)
  The moment of reckoning between America and Iran (www.economist.com)
  What Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s arrest means for the monarchy (www.economist.com)
  A psychedelic medicine performs well against depression (www.economist.com)
  China now fills the world’s luxury hampers (www.economist.com)
  Can Bangladesh’s old guard build a new democracy? (www.economist.com)
  A nasty spate of shark attacks in the Sydney area (www.economist.com)
  Could One Nation soon become Australia’s most popular party? (www.economist.com)
  Peru ousts a president under the shadow of Chinese meddling (www.economist.com)
  The Scottish government’s new bonds will waste taxpayers’ money (www.economist.com)
  Britain is the closest the world has to an AI safety inspector (www.economist.com)
  North London is suffering a measles outbreak (www.economist.com)
  Plaid Cymru is on the cusp of power (www.economist.com)
  The case for workplace inefficiency (www.economist.com)
  Giorgio Armani’s bizarre will has caused a rift at his fashion label (www.economist.com)
  Could the next big gambling destination be in the Gulf? (www.economist.com)
  Libya has no good options for leaders (www.economist.com)
  A book fair in Damascus is a window on the new Syria (www.economist.com)
  The global triumph of Nigerian fashion (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump’s policies are reshaping American health care (www.economist.com)
  The Trump administration wants to put antifa on trial (www.economist.com)
  Different ideas about faith are dividing Republicans over Israel (www.economist.com)
  Poles have split and soured on America (www.economist.com)
  How Germany fell out of love with China (www.economist.com)
  Serbia’s protesters learn it’s hard to topple a president (www.economist.com)
  Saudi Arabia and the Emirates must resolve their own differences (www.economist.com)
  How to improve American legislators’ lot (www.economist.com)
  How four years of war have changed Russia (www.economist.com)
  India is in the midst of a data-centre investment boom (www.economist.com)
  The EU is thrashing out a more muscular set of economic policies (www.economist.com)
  Did America’s war on poverty fail? (www.economist.com)
  Why the IMF’s newest report finds that the yuan is undervalued (www.economist.com)
  Prediction markets are rife with insider betting (www.economist.com)
  Vladimir Putin is caught in a vice of his own making (www.economist.com)
  Don’t go after the rich to fix broken budgets (www.economist.com)
  Welcome to the era of anarchic antitrust (www.economist.com)
  Why insider trading isn’t always bad (www.economist.com)
  That irritable feeling that France was right (www.economist.com)
  South Korea is still haunted by its disgraced ex-president (www.economist.com)
  China’s humanoids are dazzling the world. Who will buy them? (www.economist.com)
  Brain-like computers could be built out of perovskites (www.economist.com)
  The Human Exposome Project will map how environmental factors shape health (www.economist.com)
  How ICE’s new software tools could speed up deportations (www.economist.com)
  Activists are pushing to loosen childhood-vaccine requirements (www.economist.com)
  How a four-year onslaught has changed Ukraine (www.economist.com)
  Jesse Jackson made a black president possible (www.economist.com)
  Russia’s economy has entered the death zone (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump’s envoys failed to reassure Europe (www.economist.com)
  How big is the prize of reopening Russia? (www.economist.com)
  Why the Gulf’s most powerful countries are at odds (www.economist.com)
  The financialisation of AI is just beginning (www.economist.com)
  Off the Charts newsletter: Coping with outliers (www.economist.com)
  Beware China’s shrinking car market (www.economist.com)
  It’s a good time to be a British football prodigy (www.economist.com)
  The flaws in India’s AI plans (www.economist.com)
  The War Room newsletter: Is a peace deal possible? (www.economist.com)
  How governments are increasingly soaking the rich (www.economist.com)
  The crummiest job in Washington is getting worse (www.economist.com)
  Nicaragua has so far dodged the fate of Cuba and Venezuela (www.economist.com)
  Americans are unleashing their anger on food-delivery robots (www.economist.com)
  Why American allies are flocking to see Xi Jinping in Beijing (www.economist.com)
  Donald Trump’s schemes to juice the economy (www.economist.com)
  Dubai’s crazy rich Chinese (www.economist.com)
  Checks and Balance: The death of the “endangerment finding” (www.economist.com)
  Cover Story newsletter: The most powerful woman in the world (www.economist.com)
  Why MAGA brands have been a flop (www.economist.com)
  The battle to save South America’s skull-crushing big cat (www.economist.com)
  India’s pollution is becoming an economic roadblock (www.economist.com)
  America offers Europe warmer words, but a deep chill remains (www.economist.com)
  How to oust a prime minister (www.economist.com)
  How dangerous is Donald Trump’s “endangerment” decision? (www.economist.com)
  Can the shingles vaccine slow ageing? (www.economist.com)
  Can Bangladesh’s old guard build a new democracy? (www.economist.com)
  ICE’s operation in Minneapolis is about to wind down (www.economist.com)
  Checks and Balance newsletter: Why 1873 still matters for America (www.economist.com)
  Don’t welcome Africa’s newest despot (www.economist.com)
  How Africa’s hottest new museum unravelled (www.economist.com)
  A deadly attack shows Nigeria’s security crisis is worsening (www.economist.com)
  Why Syria and Iraq cannot reconcile (www.economist.com)
  Virginia Oliver worked Maine’s waters for nearly a century (www.economist.com)
  Emmanuel Macron thinks Europe’s crisis demands buying local (www.economist.com)
  Can Germany rearm its way to growth? (www.economist.com)
  The European Onion is a joke whose time has come (www.economist.com)
  Britain’s shifting GDP numbers (www.economist.com)
  Alpha offers a starter course in salvation (www.economist.com)
  Britain’s “Hillsborough law”, pledging candour, is avoiding it (www.economist.com)
  Tin mining is making a surprise return to Cornwall (www.economist.com)
  America’s hottest grocery store is also its priciest (www.economist.com)
  Arm wants a bigger slice of the chip business (www.economist.com)
  Private-equity barons have a giant AI problem (www.economist.com)
  The excruciating quest for a meeting room (www.economist.com)
  What China is really up to in the Arctic (www.economist.com)
  What’s the point of AI in acupuncture? (www.economist.com)
  Why China’s concert scene has boomed since the pandemic (www.economist.com)
  Cuba’s fate may be in Marco Rubio’s hands (www.economist.com)
  Central America’s biggest city is eternally snarled with traffic (www.economist.com)
  The decline of single-earner housebuyers in America (www.economist.com)
  Alabama offers three tricks to fix poor urban schools (www.economist.com)
  RFK’s idea of making America healthy starts with making it politically sicker (www.economist.com)
  Inside Jeffrey Epstein’s network (www.economist.com)
  Asia is turning stablecoins into banking infrastructure (www.economist.com)
  India, Pakistan and Bangladesh are weaponising cricket (www.economist.com)
  The rich world should beware Brazilification (www.economist.com)
  Sir Keir Starmer clings to office—but not power (www.economist.com)
  More and more countries are banning kids from social media (www.economist.com)
  Don’t ban teenagers from social media (www.economist.com)
  The world’s most powerful woman (www.economist.com)
  Ethnic minorities are driving America’s startup boom (www.economist.com)
  Why China’s central bank won’t save the country from deflation (www.economist.com)
  Chinese homebuyers are enraged by shoddy building standards (www.economist.com)
  How to put a price on a human life (www.economist.com)
  How Japan’s prime minister will use her massive new mandate (www.economist.com)
  The Epstein files tell a story of justice denied (www.economist.com)
  Britain’s predicament will get worse before it gets better (www.economist.com)
  A European fighter-jet partnership is verging on a break-up (www.economist.com)
  The alternatives to Sir Keir (www.economist.com)
  Asia’s capitalists will need to fight for their revolution (www.economist.com)
  Humans are not the only animals that treat each other’s injuries (www.economist.com)
  Robots with human-inspired eyes have better vision (www.economist.com)
  What drives the wage gap between men and women? (www.economist.com)
  How Democrats aim to curb ICE without losing votes (www.economist.com)
  Entrenched interests are throttling Brazil’s economy (www.economist.com)
  The Epstein files are sullying Norway’s squeaky-clean image (www.economist.com)
  Are liberal values a luxury the West cannot afford? (www.economist.com)
  Should you rent or buy? (www.economist.com)