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1,234円
The world this week

Politics
Business
KAL’s cartoon
This week’s covers
Leaders


The missing quarter of a million
Britain has endured a decade of early deaths. Why?
The mystery of 250,000 dead Britons

America, China and Taiwan
How to avoid war over Taiwan
A superpower conflict would shake the world

Too fast to land
A stubbornly strong economy complicates the fight against inflation
Higher interest rates are not sufficiently slowing global growth

Macron’s troubles
Strikes at home and war in Ukraine test the French president
It is a critical moment for Emmanuel Macron

Testing fail
American universities are pursuing fairness the wrong way
Drop legacy admissions—not standardised exams

Letters

On medical research, fertility in the OECD, soldiers’ mental health, energy firms, the car
Letters to the editor
By Invitation


Russia and Ukraine
Britain’s most recent defence attaché in Moscow on the failings of Valery Gerasimov
Briefing


Storm warning
America and China are preparing for a war over Taiwan
It would spread far across the region, with devastating consequences for the world
Asia


Free trade in Asia
How Donald Trump damaged America’s interests in Asia
Gay watching for straight women
Are Thailand’s gay TV dramas the next K-pop?
East Asian Relations
South Korea has a plan to end its forced-labour feud with Japan
Banyan
The rift in Singapore’s first family turns even nastier
China


Wolf worriers
Tough language from Xi Jinping belies his anxiety
Credibility over confidence
Interpreting China’s unambitious growth target
Learning skills, not values
Many of China’s top politicians were educated in the West
Chaguan
What party control means in China
United States


Say it ain’t Joe
What if Joe Biden decided against running for re-election?
(De)trans litigation
Legal action may change transgender care in America
O beautiful for spacious highs
Cannabis and anaesthesia do not mix
Closing down schools in America
America’s schools are heading for a crunch
Republicans and voter fraud
Three Republican states pull out of voter-fraud prevention scheme
Composting humans
Quite a few young Americans plan to end their days as compost
Lexington
America’s government has not been “weaponised”

Middle East & Africa


The incredible shrinking state
As they cut back on hiring, Arab bureaucracies are spending more to get less
Time’s up—whatever the time is
Fiddling with Egypt’s clocks
Beyond the megacity
The growth of Africa’s towns and small cities is transforming the continent
The Americas


Deals not done
Argentina is wasting the vast opportunities China offers it
Europe


Lock and load
Ukraine is building up its forces for an offensive
The street v the president
France is in a stand-off against Emmanuel Macron’s pension reform
Turning the tables
Turkey’s opposition has picked its man
The centre can hold
Ukraine’s most committed backer wins a huge election victory in Estonia
Russian demography
Russia’s population nightmare is going to get even worse
Charlemagne
Germany is letting a domestic squabble pollute Europe’s green ambitions
Britain


A decade of death
Why did 250,000 Britons die sooner than expected?
Discovery process
Can an AI be an inventor?
Channel crossings
Britain’s new plan to “stop the boats”
Her pulse quickened
Sales of romance novels are rising in Britain
Bagehot
Thatcher, Sunak and the politics of the supermarket
International


French diplomacy
Emmanuel Macron’s vision of a more muscular Europe is coming true
Special report


Taiwan
Taiwan is a vital island that is under serious threat
The past
How Taiwan is shaped by its history and identity
The economy
It is time to divert Taiwan’s trade and investment from China
Semiconductors
Taiwan’s dominance of the chip industry makes it more important
The home front
The battle with China is psychological as much as physical
Defence
Taiwan needs a new defence strategy to deal with China
Politics
Taiwanese politics faces a crucial election in early 2024
What Taiwan needs
Taiwan desperately needs support from the world
Taiwan
Sources and acknowledgments
Business


Seizing the moment
How China Inc is tackling the TikTok problem
Where are all the robots?
Don’t fear an AI-induced jobs apocalypse just yet
The glass-ceiling index
After years in decline, is the gender pay gap opening up?
Bartleby
The small consolations of office irritations
Schumpeter
How to stop the commoditisation of container shipping
Finance & economics


Tokyo grift
Can the West’s perplexing employment miracle continue?
Qiang Ker-ching
How to measure China’s true economic growth
An anti-party party
China’s Communist Party takes aim at hedonistic bankers
Financial competition
New York’s stockmarkets are thrashing Hong Kong and London
A techy tug-of-war
Lessons from finance’s experience with artificial intelligence
Buttonwood
Why commodities shine in a time of stagflation
Free exchange
Emerging-market central-bank experiments risk reigniting inflation
Science & technology


The Human Cell Atlas
A cartography of human histology is in the making
The ocean and climate change
The ocean is as important to the climate as the atmosphere
Chromosomal deletions and neurology
Studying broken chromosomes can illuminate neuroscience
Silver and democracy
Newfangled coins and mercenaries may have brought about democracy
Culture


Covid-19 in China
Two brave books tell the story of lockdown in Wuhan
Nature and nurture
Peter Frankopan looks at the past differently in “The Earth Transformed”
Back Story
It’s war at this year’s Oscars
World in a dish
Singapore’s unique dining style comes to Manhattan
Hollywood moguls
Sumner Redstone and the battle for Paramount
Fiction from New Zealand
In “Birnam Wood”, Eleanor Catton returns with a thriller
Economic & financial indicators

Indicators
Economic data, commodities and markets
Graphic detail


No good options
Retail investors are losing billions buying stock options
The Economist explains


The Economist explains
Why a new UN treaty to safeguard the “high seas” matters
The Economist explains
Who blew up the Nord Stream pipelines?
Obituary


The King of Sting
Justin Schmidt made a lifetime study of insects that attack us
1,234円
The world this week

Politics
Business
KAL’s cartoon
This week’s cover
Leaders


Eat, inject, repeat
New drugs could spell an end to the world’s obesity epidemic
The long-term effects must be carefully studied. But the excitement is justified

Take the deal
The new Brexit deal is the best Britain can expect. Support it
Both the Tories and the Democratic Unionist Party should get behind the new agreement with the EU

Delta force
Is Bangladesh’s admired growth model coming unstuck?
A development superstar faces malign politics and rising corruption

Back to its roots
The tech slump is encouraging venture capital to rediscover old ways
Small, profitable firms in strategic industries are now all the rage

Cash for climate services
Saving the rainforests would be a bargain
Far more money is needed to make conservation more profitable than slash and burn

Letters

On Chile, heat pumps, academic freedom, Yue Fei, Scotland, enthusiastic workers
Letters to the editor
By Invitation


Law and order
Brian Lande and Jeff Rojek believe that American police need better training
Briefing


Big shots
A new class of drugs for weight loss could end obesity
They promise riches for drugmakers, huge savings for health systems and better lives for millions
Asia


Fruit of the loom
Bangladesh’s economic miracle is in jeopardy
Global India
India’s G20 presidency will be a win for Narendra Modi
Indonesia and ASEAN
South-East Asia is crying out for regional leadership
Micro YOLO
Young South Koreans are embracing fractional investing
Banyan
New Zealand is right to atone for its colonial crimes in the Pacific
China


Bowing out
China’s prime minister, Li Keqiang, is about to retire
Shell shock?
Chinese arms could revive Russia’s failing war
Who’s the boss?
How to prevent sycophancy in China’s civil service
Chaguan
Why aren’t China and America more afraid of a war?
United States


International man of mystery
In search of Ron DeSantis’s foreign-policy doctrine
Relief pitch
The Supreme Court looks askance at Biden’s student-debt relief
Misleading polls
Scott Adams’s racist comments were spurred by a badly worded poll
Cops v teachers
Chicago’s mayoral run-off will test the Democrats’ left and right
The way from Amarillo
The big American post-Roe battle over abortion pills
Damned Yankees
Why Connecticut is exonerating witches
Lexington
Biden’s big bet on big government

Middle East & Africa


Situation critical
How America plans to break China’s grip on African minerals
A change of the old guard
Bola Tinubu, Nigeria’s political kingmaker, wins a flawed election
A tinderbox
A new type of Palestinian militia is emerging
A migratory conspiracy
Tunisia’s autocratic ruler adopts the “Great Replacement” theory
Going nowhere
Why Baghdad may have the worst traffic in the Middle East
The Americas


Power breaker
Brazil’s new president may soon face another threat: his predecessor
Shaky democracy
Mexico’s government has attacked the country’s electoral watchdog
Europe


Europe’s new power balance
The war in Ukraine has made eastern Europe stronger
Noughts and crosses
Ukraine finds stepping up mobilisation is not so easy
No way out
Syrian earthquake survivors in Turkey have nowhere to go
Changing times
Italy’s largest opposition party gets a young and radical new leader
Charlemagne
After seven years of Brexit talks, Europe has emerged as the clear winner
Britain


Capital flight
Britain’s stockmarket has languished. Its gilt market may be next
Brexit and Northern Ireland
Explaining what is in the Windsor framework
Salad shortages
Britain’s tomatoes are a victim of the energy crisis
A state of drift
Nicola Sturgeon’s modest record of reform
Rishi in Paris
Can Britain and France put their differences behind them?
Our Mother who art in heaven
God’s pronouns are causing conniptions in Britain
Bagehot
How Britain’s Conservative Party channels Milhouse from The Simpsons
International


The rule of saw
The biggest obstacle to saving rainforests is lawlessness
Business


VCetacean evolution
How the titans of tech investing are staying warm over the VC winter
Intelligence services
Investors are going nuts for ChatGPT-ish artificial intelligence
The angels’ share
Foreign investors are being snagged by India’s tax net
Big tech v the news
Artificial intelligence is reaching behind newspaper paywalls
Bartleby
The uses and abuses of hype
Schumpeter
Lessons from Novo Nordisk on the stampede for obesity drugs
Finance & economics


Bringing down the house
America’s property market suggests recession is on the way
Refined tactics
Russia’s sanctions-dodging is getting ever more sophisticated
Buttonwood
The anti-ESG industry is taking investors for a ride
Vertiginous views
China’s cities are on the verge of a debt crisis
Two-speed transmission
Is India’s boom helping the poor?
Out of focus
David Solomon lacks answers for Goldman Sachs’s angry investors
Banking on it
Ajay Banga may be just what the fractious World Bank requires
Free exchange
The case against Google hinges on an antitrust “mistake”
Science & technology


Their dark materials
Firms search for greener supplies of graphite for EV batteries
Grapes
The origin of grapevines is a tangled vine itself
Archaeology
Antarctic rocks can help sort stone tools from natural lookalikes
Culture


The ethics of empire
Nigel Biggar tries—and fails—to rehabilitate the British Empire
Campus fiction
“I Have Some Questions for You” raises lots of them
Double lives
Three stories of collusion during the second world war
African-American ceramics
The defiant artistry of 19th-century African-American potters
Home Entertainment
Marcel Marceau was a giant of an underappreciated art form
Economic & financial indicators

Indicators
Economic data, commodities and markets
Graphic detail


Power of the pew
Places with high religious participation have fewer deaths of despair
The Economist explains


The Economist explains
How quickly can Russia rebuild its tank fleet?
The Economist explains
Why statelessness is bad for countries and people
Obituary


No-nonsense times two
Bernard Ingham and Betty Boothroyd ensured democracy worked as it should
1,234円
The future of Ukraine

The world this week

Politics
Business
KAL’s cartoon
This week’s cover
Leaders


The future of Ukraine
How to win the hot war in Ukraine and the cold war that will follow it
After a year of fighting, what comes next?

Not enough Wende
A year after he promised a transformation, Olaf Scholz has done too little
Energy policy has radically altered; defence, much less so

Making America greater
Joe Biden’s new border policies irritate the extremes. Good
They mix toughness with generosity and are a step in the right direction

Irrational interest
South Africa’s diplomatic descent
Cosying up to Russia and China harms South Africa, and the world

Tighter belt, shorter road
China has not resolved its past lending mistakes. But it is learning from them
How to speed up debt-relief talks

Letters

On South Korea and Ukraine, ChatGPT, corruption in Britain, Moldova, Bolivia, etymologies
Letters to the editor
By Invitation


Russia and Ukraine
Mark Sedwill on a year of fighting in Ukraine
Africa and the world
Mo Ibrahim on the need to reform international financial institutions
Briefing


A year of war: Geopolitics in flux
Ukraine’s fate will determine the West’s authority in the world
A revanchist invasion has become an ideological battle

A year of war: Keeping the guns blazing
The West is struggling to forge a new arsenal of democracy
Production of weapons is set to increase, but it may be too slow for future conflicts as well as for Ukraine

A year of war: Militarising Russia
The invasion has stalled, but Putin’s war on dissent marches on
Russian society is almost as closed and repressive as it was in Soviet times

A year of war: Ukraine’s self-belief
The war is making Ukraine a Western country
But the cost is appalling

A hail of destruction
Data from satellites reveal the vast extent of fighting in Ukraine
The scars of the war can be found far beyond the front lines
Asia


The indispensable archipelago
The Philippines’ proximity to Taiwan makes it central to Western strategy
Renewable energy
India’s solar power rollout is flagging
Crypto-heist
North Korean hackers stole a record $1.7bn of crypto last year
Banyan
Keeping up with the Tokugawas
China


Proxies and peril
The conflict in Ukraine risks inflaming the Sino-American rivalry
In the net
China’s war on graft in football
Policy maize
Is China’s attitude to genetically modified crops changing?
Chaguan
China’s public is fed up, but not on the brink of revolt
United States


America’s industrial policy
State subsidies fuel America’s EV boom but risk overcapacity
Ghost of the machine
Chicago may throw Mayor Lori Lightfoot out in the first round
The fire and the fury
The Ohio train derailment is turning into a political circus
Land of the fat
Christian Californians may have a solution to America’s obesity
A new awakening
A Christian college in Kentucky has experienced a religious awakening
Lexington
“Freedom” is America’s latest political football

Middle East & Africa


Not so neutral
Why South Africa is drifting into the Sino-Russian orbit
Scorpions can be cuddly
A Nigerian trade in insects that bite
Workers of the world
Young Africans are logging in and clocking on
Cutting your losses
Saudi Arabia is reconciling with regimes it once tried to topple
Could his kingdom come?
The son of Iran’s last shah bids to regain the throne
The Americas


A new chapter
Joe Biden needs Mexico’s co-operation on migration
Not delivering the goods
Gustavo Petro, Colombia’s president, wants to smother the gig economy
A small, necessary step
One Canadian province has decriminalised drugs
Europe


The slow shift of Mr Scholz
A year on, Olaf Scholz’s promise of transformation is only partly kept
Neither shock nor awe
Russia’s vaunted second offensive is a damp squib
The might of miltech
Ukraine’s tech entrepreneurs turn to military matters
Ukraine’s tiger queen
Meet the woman who is saving Ukraine’s wild animals
Charlemagne
Why Vladimir Putin will never stand trial in The Hague
Britain


Protospasm
Rishi Sunak’s uphill struggle to make Brexit work in Northern Ireland
True crime
Nicola Bulley and the era of the social-media sleuth
Nice to have
Britain’s biggest skills problem is that many firms don’t value them
Found in translation
A BBC monitoring station that listened in on the world is being sold
Courting disaster
Why crumbling courts are worsening Britain’s trial backlog
Referee!
The British government hopes a regulator can save football from folly
Bagehot
Bring back Shamima Begum and then put her in prison
International


A home from home
Ukrainian refugees remain in limbo
Business


The Altasian option
Global firms are eyeing Asian alternatives to Chinese manufacturing
Refurbishing the boardroom
Demands on corporate boards are more intense than ever
Bartleby
Unshowy competence brings drawbacks as well as benefits
Everyday low profits
A warning from Walmart about the health of the American consumer
Pay as you post
Facebook sells subscriptions as the ad business stumbles
Mathias in the middle
Axel Springer is going all in on America
Schumpeter
It’s time for Alphabet to spin off YouTube
Finance & economics


Time for the tab
The world’s interest bill is $13trn—and rising
Farewell to Africa
Xi Jinping’s next overseas-lending revolution
Reserve judgment
Big Asian economies take on the forces of international capital—and win
Buttonwood
Despite the bullish talk, Wall Street has China reservations
Budgeting for conflict
What war has done to Europe’s economy
Free exchange
What would the perfect climate-change lender look like?
Science & technology


Scientific malpractice
There is a worrying amount of fraud in medical research
Culture


The singer and the song
At Young Thug’s blockbuster trial, rap lyrics are used as evidence
European history
Timothy Garton Ash travels across Europe and into its past
World in a dish
The rise of chilli crisp is a study in how foods become fads
America’s Federal Reserve
A new book traces the evolution of the Fed’s extraordinary powers
Fiction from Trinidad
In “Hungry Ghosts”, spectres of Trinidad’s past haunt the island
Back Story
How an Ethiopian prince came to be buried at Windsor Castle
Economic & financial indicators

Indicators
Economic data, commodities and markets
The Economist explains


The Economist explains
What are “golden visas”?
The Economist explains
What is Section 230?
Obituary


What madness looks like
Gradually, the besieged city of Bakhmut is being abandoned by everyone
1,234円
Why inflation will be hard to bring down

The world this week

Politics
Business
KAL’s cartoon
This week’s cover
Leaders


Still aloft
Inflation will be harder to bring down than markets think
Investors are betting on good times. The likelier prospect is turbulence

Peak populism
Nicola Sturgeon’s resignation is part of Britain’s great moderation
Pragmatism is taking hold north and south of the border

A constitutional crisis in Israel
Israel’s proposed legal reforms are a dreadful answer to a real problem
They will damage the country at home and abroad

Plug and pay
The world won’t decarbonise fast enough unless renewables make real money
Governments must accept that green power is pricey

A chance for change
Nigeria desperately needs a new kind of leadership
Peter Obi offers the best hope of it

Letters

On China and space, Turkey, Paul Pennyfeather, Pakistan, The Gambia, banking, old age
Letters to the editor
By Invitation


Nigerian politics
Asiwaju Bola Tinubu on why he is running to be Nigeria’s president
Nigerian politics
Peter Obi on why he is running to be Nigeria’s president
Israeli politics
The overhaul of Israel’s judiciary will maim its democracy, says Polly Bronstein
Briefing


A hard road
Lots of investors think inflation is under control. Not so fast
Tight labour markets suggest that prices may continue to rise faster than markets think
Asia


South Asia’s filthy air
India and Pakistan are choking on each other’s pollution
Afghanistan
The Taliban are digging an enormous canal
Dry season
Australia re-bans alcohol in some Aboriginal communities
Banyan
After silencing critics at home, Narendra Modi goes after foreign media
China


The other China surveillance threat
How China’s police are ensnaring thousands of suspects abroad
Your driving licence, madam?
How much of a concern are China’s overseas police stations?
America bad, China good
Chinese propaganda is surprisingly effective abroad
Chaguan
China is losing Taiwanese heart and minds
United States


Taking on Trump
Nikki Haley’s bid illustrates the problems of the Republican Party
The rent is too damn high
Pandemic eviction bans have spawned a renters’-rights movement
Homeward bound
In the wake of violence American cities resort to youth curfews
The power of suggestion
Should tech platforms be liable for the content they carry?
Arguing behind bars
Volunteers teach debating skills to America’s incarcerated
Shoot first, ask questions later
What America has been shooting down in the sky
Politics in drag
Why proposed laws targeting drag shows are proliferating in America

Middle East & Africa


The world’s toughest in-tray
Can a political underdog save Nigeria?
The day of judgment
Proposed legal reforms could be dire for Israel
Never let a crisis go to waste
Bashar al-Assad does not want to let a calamity go to waste
The Americas


Rate rage
Latin America’s left-wing presidents risk stoking inflation
A dictator’s purge
Daniel Ortega expels 222 political prisoners from Nicaragua
In bad nick
Latin America’s prisons are overcrowded and violent
Europe


Baby gap
Why there are so few babies in southern Europe
Building bad
Turkey’s earthquakes show the deadly extent of construction scams
On the edge
Moldova fears it may fall victim to a Russian coup plot
Judgment call
Poland’s rule-of-law conflict with the EU is coming to a head
Knives out
Trouble at Italy’s San Remo song festival
Charlemagne
What’s behind France’s fatal fascination with Russia
Britain


Sturgeon goes
Nicola Sturgeon leaves with Scotland split in two
Hostel environment
Britons take against asylum hotels
All hail the laptop classes
The shape of the post-pandemic economy in Britain
A marine puzzle
The mystery of the twitching crabs
Ocean retreat
Britain could soon give up its last African colony
Bagehot
The Brexit Re-enactment Society
International


Driven away
Throughout the rich world, the young are falling out of love with cars
Business


Up. Down. And sideways?
What Tencent’s rebound says about prospects for China’s big tech
Shock therapy
What European business makes of the green-subsidy race
Adani in charts
Adani companies’ decent earnings offer only moderate relief
K-popoly
Corporate intrigue at the heart of K-pop
The Iger sanction
Bob Iger makes big changes at Disney
Bartleby
Why it’s time to get shot of coffee meetings at work
Schumpeter
AI-wielding tech firms are giving a new shape to modern warfare
Finance & economics


Going great guns
War and subsidies have turbocharged the green transition
Cornucobalt
Cobalt, a crucial battery material, is suddenly superabundant
The afterFTX
Scrutiny of major crypto institutions is intensifying
Mixing business with pleasure
Why more Chinese tourism means more capital flight
Buttonwood
Investors expect the economy to avoid recession
Multilateral mess
The World Bank’s embattled chief steps down
Brain gain
Lael Brainard will take control of America’s economic nerve centre
Free exchange
The case for globalisation optimism
Science & technology


Greening steel
A new way to clean up the steel industry
Male contraceptives
A step towards a contraceptive pill for men?
Stabilising mRNA vaccines
Vaccines based on mRNA need to get out of the freezer
Plants, aphids, wasps and L-DOPA
Plants call for help with a chemical employed by people as a drug
Cosmology
Two of the most enigmatic phenomena in the cosmos may be linked
Culture


Russian culture in wartime
A portrait of the Russian artist in the age of Z
Home Entertainment
William Byrd was a favourite composer of Elizabeth I
Psychological fiction
“My Nemesis” is a tale of middle age, femininity and desire
Business and capitalism
American business and propaganda for free markets
Femicide in Mexico
An author reconstructs the life of her murdered sister
Johnson
If stigma is the problem, using different words may not help
Economic & financial indicators

Indicators
Economic data, commodities and markets
Graphic detail


The rich are different
Poor areas suffered 3.5 times more damage in Turkey’s earthquake
The Economist explains


The Economist explains
Will avian flu be the next human pandemic?
Obituary


Through a child’s eyes
Maya Widmaier-Picasso helped to revive her father’s creativity
1,234円
The world this week

Politics
Business
KAL’s cartoon
This week’s covers
Leaders


Search engines
The battle for internet search
Will the AI chatbots eat Google’s lunch?

Seismic shock
The devastating earthquakes in Turkey and Syria might upend politics, too
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan faces a tough election in May

A new social contract in the Gulf
Arab petrostates must prepare their citizens for a post-oil future
Better schools and a political voice would be a start

Wanted: severe contests
How to promote academic freedom in America
Colleges that promote ideological conformity do students a disservice

China and America
Cold-war lessons from China’s spy balloon
To avoid perilous misunderstanding, the two sides should talk more

Adani’s agony
The humbling of Gautam Adani is a test for Indian capitalism
The biggest tycoons need the sternest scrutiny

Letters

On Ukraine and Russia, Britain’s canals, protectionism, Gina Lollobrigida, Esperanto, cannabis, Mickey Mouse, paying MPs
Letters to the editor
By Invitation


Economic growth
Jeremy Hunt’s four-pillar plan to boost productivity
Russia and Ukraine
Sir Richard Barrons on how the characteristics of war are changing
Climate technology
Michael Liebreich wants existing low-carbon technologies to be scaled up much faster
Briefing


A tycoon at bay
Why Adani Group’s troubles will reverberate across India
The conglomerate is not just big; it also embodies the tensions in the country’s growth model
Asia


Broken and broke
Pakistan is at risk of default
Cricket
Indian investors pile in to women’s cricket
Arubaito abroad
Japanese workers are seeking higher wages overseas
A strongman on the Silk Road
Squashing dissidents in Uzbekistan
Banyan
Democracy is reviving in Asia
China


Sino-American rivalry
Tensions will linger over a Chinese balloon downed by America
Gunning for the HK47
Hong Kong starts its largest national-security trial
Seeing red on the silver screen
A hit film recalling an ancient poem fuels Chinese nationalist fervour
Chaguan
The lessons from the Chinese spy balloon
United States


New testaments
American universities are hiring based on devotion to diversity
Drill, maybe, drill
Joe Biden is not quitting fossil fuels
Chains of control
The history and limits of America’s favourite new economic weapon
Picking winners
A new primary calendar gives black Democrats an earlier say for 2024
Murdaugh most foul
The Murdaugh trial and small-town power
Lexington
History may yet judge Joe Biden’s presidency as transformational

Middle East & Africa


Reinventing the Gulf
After decades of empty talk, reforms in Gulf states are real—but risky
Trade mission
Taking stock of America’s flagship trade programme for Africa
The Americas


The revolutionary v the pragmatist
Can Colombia’s mercurial president bring “total peace”?
Friends with benefits
Brazil’s new president is visiting Joe Biden to boost relations
Europe


A crushing blow
The earthquakes in Turkey and Syria have shaken both countries
Ploughshares into swords
Russia’s technocrats keep funds flowing for Vladimir Putin’s war
The enemy within
Thousands of Ukrainian soldiers are suffering with PTSD
Jobs and protest
Why France is arguing about work, and the right to be lazy
Charlemagne
Europe should not respond to America’s subsidies binge with its own blunders
Britain


Definition of insanity
The British government is planning another crackdown on asylum-seekers
Plane speaking
Volodymyr Zelensky visits Britain
Test of metal
Steelmaking in Britain has to get greener. But who’ll pay?
Track records
The technology that can help British hospitals work better
Trance advance
Shamanism is Britain’s fastest-growing religion
Pump unprimed
The heat-pump challenge in Britain
Bagehot
The Conservative Party’s morbid symptoms
International


Move fast and fix things
How a tide of tech money is transforming charity
Business


Seeking change
Is Google’s 20-year dominance of search in peril?
Three is a cloud
Alleged fraud at a Brazilian retailer sparks a corporate reckoning
Bartleby
The pitfalls of loving your job a little too much
The energy majors’ new map
Where on Earth is big oil spending its $150bn profit bonanza?
Schumpeter
What would Joseph Schumpeter have made of Apple?
Finance & economics


What pandemic?
China’s ultra-fast economic recovery
Home truths
South Korea’s housing crunch offers a warning for other countries
Buttonwood
Surging stocks undermine a hallowed investing rule
New lease of life
City centres: from offices to family homes
Quantitative frightening
The Federal Reserve’s $2.5trn question
Free exchange
Google, Microsoft and the threat from overmighty trustbusters
Science & technology


Bad weather
How to predict record-shattering weather events
Military communications
DARPA, lasers and an internet in orbit
Culture


Man of the people
A television show about Jesus Christ has become an unlikely hit
It took a continent
A new history focuses on the collaborators in the Holocaust
Historical fantasy fiction
Salman Rushdie’s new novel is an ode to storytelling and freedom
World in a dish
Thai restaurateurs and British pubs have proved a perfect pairing
Great minds do not think alike
Anaximander is a hero in the development of scientific thinking
Back Story
The genius of Johannes Vermeer is on display as never before
Economic & financial indicators

Indicators
Economic data, commodities and markets
Graphic detail


Stuck in the middle
Turkey sits at the crossroads of tectonic plates as well as civilisations
The Economist explains


The Economist explains
What is short-selling?
The Economist explains
How drones dogfight above Ukraine
Obituary


Whisky and moderation
Pervez Musharraf was one of Pakistan’s better dictators
1,234円
The world this week

Politics
Business
KAL’s cartoon
This week’s cover
Leaders


Economic reform
Joe Biden’s effort to remake the economy is ambitious, risky—and selfish
But America’s plan to spend $2trn could help save the planet

Adani v Hindenburg
Nagging questions over the Adani empire won’t go away
A short-seller’s report raises uncomfortable questions for India’s policymakers, too

Out of control
The Bank of Japan should stop defending its cap on bond yields
“Yield-curve control” has left the central bank facing huge losses

Dodged penalties
Why the West’s oil sanctions on Russia are proving to be underwhelming
Another embargo comes into force on February 5th. Manage your expectations

Latin American democracy
Peru needs an early election and outside support, not interference
A self-serving Congress and some neighbouring countries are fanning the flames

Letters

On the North Sea, police reform, economics research, doctors, America’s civil war, classified documents
Letters to the editor
By Invitation


Russia and Ukraine
Ukraine should—and, properly supported, can—seize Crimea, argues Ben Hodges
Russia and Ukraine
Talks between Russia and Ukraine would save lives, argues Christopher Chivvis
Briefing


Rosy for riveters
America’s government is spending lavishly to revive manufacturing
Can an industrial renaissance make America stronger, greener and richer?
Asia


Chip networks, chip wars
America’s hoped-for Asian semiconductor pact looks tricky
Defending Ukraine
South Korea still refuses to send arms to Ukraine
Bollywood v BJP
Shah Rukh Khan faces down India’s Hindu right
Banyan
China’s put-upon maritime neighbours are pushing back
Asia’s multi-headed conflict
Myanmar’s civil war has moved to its heartlands
China


A representative problem
A new challenge to relations between America and China
Death and denial
Will we ever know how many people died of covid-19 in China?
Irreconcilable differences
A geopolitical setback for China in the Pacific
Chaguan
Why Vladimir Putin is not a pariah in China
United States


Green v green
America needs a new environmentalism
Black and blue
Why holding bad police officers to account is so difficult
Ice, ice, maybe
The sport of ice fishing is being transformed by technology
Height of heists
Why it was so easy for crooks to steal money meant for pandemic relief
Preventing overdoses
Medication for opioid addiction is getting easier to access
Lexington
Republicans are right that federal budgeting is a joke

Middle East & Africa


The amazing race
Nigeria’s presidential race goes down to the wire
To fight or not to fight
Can Kenya bring peace to eastern Congo?
Old birds and power cuts
South Africa’s blackouts hurt the economy in unexpected ways
Courting disaster
Lebanon’s judges battle over their probe of Beirut’s port blast
Curb the courts, sink the economy
Israel’s government is facing anger from new and unexpected quarters
A jilted mistress
France dumps Morocco in favour of Algeria
The Americas


Americas
Political turmoil is tearing Peru apart
Smokes and fire
The United States says corruption in Paraguay starts at the top
Europe


All steady on the eastern front
Ukraine’s troops in the east are quietly confident
The broken toy
Georgia is drifting into the Kremlin’s orbit
Recycling Russia
A campaign to “de-Russify” Ukraine is under way
Delayed ratification
A burnt Koran holds back Sweden and Finland from joining NATO
Germany’s Greens
Pragmatism paints a paler shade of Green
Charlemagne
At last, populism in Europe is losing its mojo
Britain


David Brent Ltd
For Britain to grow faster it needs better managers
Worse service
The BBC World Service shuts several foreign-language radio services
Economics on the box
The BBC assesses its coverage of the dismal science
Once more unto the breeches
The murder of a king makes for a most jolly day out
Prisons and gender
Where should trans prisoners serve their sentences?
Wipe out
Britain’s newest islets are made of wet wipes
Bagehot
Meet Ms Heeves, the face of Britain’s new political consensus
Business


Adani under fire
What next for Gautam Adani’s embattled empire?
Fireworks artists
Hindenburg Research, attacker of the Adani empire
Battle of the boffins
The race of the AI labs heats up
Bartleby
The relationship between AI and humans
Mark to market
Things are looking up for Meta
Entente cordiale
An alliance between Renault and Nissan gets a reboot
Schumpeter
China’s BYD is overtaking Tesla as the carmaker extraordinaire
Finance & economics


Ships in the night
How Russia dodges oil sanctions on an industrial scale
A nightmare job
Is there a fix for Japan’s markets mess?
Buttonwood
The last gasp of the meme-stock era
No relief in sight
China is paralysing global debt-forgiveness efforts
A spike in the tail
Rallying markets suffer from a doveish illusion
The grip tightens
Super-tight policy is still struggling to control inflation
Free exchange
The AI boom: lessons from history
Science & technology


Haptic technologies
The touchy-feely world of the metaverse and future gadgets
Brain scans and politics
People of different opinions process political data differently
Trendy tits
Birds are just as fashion-conscious as people
Pixels in the eye
Researchers find a way to make VR headsets more realistic
Culture


Democracy and its discontents
Martin Wolf’s new book analyses the West’s malaise
Bad memories
Explaining Chinese amnesia over the Cultural Revolution
Home Entertainment
Released 50 years ago, “Soylent Green” is an eerie prophecy
Transatlantic histories
As Europeans went west, indigenous people travelled the other way
Contemporary art
Look closely at Peter Doig’s paintings. Then look again
Johnson
Some well-known etymologies are too good to be true
Economic & financial indicators

Indicators
Economic data, commodities and markets
Graphic detail


Batting down disease
Habitat loss and climate change increase the risk of new diseases
The Economist explains


The Economist explains
Why does Ukraine want Western jets—and will it get them?
The Economist explains
Who is Gautam Adani?
Obituary

1,234円
The world this week

Politics
Business
KAL’s cartoon
This week’s cover
Leaders


Goldman sags
The humbling of Goldman Sachs
The struggle to reinvent a firm trapped by its own mythology

Polycrisis or polyrecovery?
The world economy’s inflation problem is easing
But recession is still likely

Rescue and repeat
China’s property slump is easing, but the relief will be short-lived
Without reforms, the sector is doomed to cycles of boom and bust

Handouts and arms races
What should Britain’s industrial strategy be?
Money matters a lot less than decent government

Debt on the Nile
To save Egypt’s economy, get the army out of it
Donors should not keep bailing out a state that enriches men in khaki
Letters

On Poland and Germany, Turkey, physical education, Britain’s economy, historical inflation, Prince Harry, retirement
Letters to the editor
By Invitation


American politics
Brian Deese, John Podesta and Jake Sullivan on the Inflation Reduction Act
Briefing


Vampire squib
How Goldman Sachs went from apex predator to Wall Street laggard
Its attempts to diversify out of volatile businesses and into consumer lending have disappointed
Asia


India’s opposition
Relaunching Rahul Gandhi, again
May the force be without you
The Philippines’ new president rewires the war on drugs
Kiwi politics
Jacinda Ardern’s successor is unveiled
Full metal jacket
Indonesia embraces resource nationalism
Banyan
The Rohingyas long for their homes in Myanmar, but cannot go back
Corruption and covid-19
An anti-graft drive brings down Vietnam’s president
China


A cuddlier China?
China is trying to win over Westerners and private firms
Tense as ever
Does China’s softer tone extend to Taiwan?
Itching to hitch ’em
Chinese singles face the heat over the holiday
Chaguan
What a new drama series reveals about China
United States


Red meat and greet
Congress is gridlocked. America’s statehouses are very much not
Florida’s woke wars
Ron DeSantis wants to limit free speech in the name of free speech
Trillion-dollar chicken
There is no easy escape from America’s debt-ceiling mess
Footloose
A shortage in America creates opportunities for nurses with wheels
Cop city
A violent dispute is impeding police reform in Atlanta
Lexington
What Edward Hopper saw
Middle East & Africa


Pyramid scheme
A crisis of confidence in Egypt
No cheques please, we’re Kuwaiti
A populist plan to pay off private debts is another sign of Kuwait’s ills
Fluent in empathy
A white, gay, Zulu-speaking mayor is shaking up South African politics
A family business
Togo promises development, not democracy
Deals on wheels
Why bicycles are crucial to Congo’s cross-border trade
The Americas


Ready for relaunch?
As Lula takes over, Brazil’s economic prospects are looking up
El Chapo: the sequel
A trial in New York exposes US-Mexican counter-narcotics tensions
Middle-income trap
A new generation of Argentine musicians is topping the charts
Europe


Plain sailing
After a steady first 100 days, choppier waters await Giorgia Meloni
The great Panzerwende
What Western tanks should give Ukraine in the next round of the war
Germany’s armed forces
The state of the Bundeswehr is more dismal than ever
Bouncing back
Spain’s economy is recovering from the pandemic, but problems persist
French obesity
France sees a surprising surge in obesity
Charlemagne
Experience from a past crisis suggests Europe should shake off any complacency
Britain


Pulling the plug?
Britain’s carmaking industry is increasingly under threat
The architecture of fun
Britain is beginning to protect its 1970s leisure centres
Birds of a Pennyfeather
Rishi Sunak’s hapless government
Bedlam
Britain has fewer hospital beds than almost any other rich country
Sick or retired
Illness is stopping Britons from coming back to work
How was it for you?
How to conduct a sex survey
Bagehot
Blat, the Soviet art of getting by, comes to Britain
International


Education in a can
Most children in poor countries are being failed by their schools
Business


Bulldozed
Big business is in for a rough earnings season
Picking on winners
Hindenburg’s critique of the Adani empire
Bartleby
The curse of the corporate headshot
The too-much-of-everything store
Can Amazon deliver again?
Gadfly season
Elliott and fellow activist investors take on big tech
Schumpeter
How will Satya Nadella handle Microsoft’s ChatGPT moment?
Finance & economics


Dare to dream
How the world economy could avoid recession
Gaucho, grilled
Argentina and Brazil propose a bizarre common currency
Buttonwood
When professional stockpickers beat the algorithms
Overheated and overvalued
What inflation means for the Big Mac index
Religious investing
Christians fight about how to serve God and mammon
Disaster relief
Can China fix its property crisis?
Free exchange
Have economists misunderstood inflation?
Science & technology


Out of ’cyte, out of mind
Neurons are not the only brain cells that think
Fertility testing
Hormone tests for women’s fertility seem not to work
Insect repellents
A better way of keeping mosquitoes at bay is under development
Surveillance technology
Wi-Fi signals could prove useful for spies
Archers and heart rates
How to measure how stress affects athletes’ performance
Culture


The future of energy
How much innovation is necessary to see off fossil fuels?
Travels in the Balkans
Kapka Kassabova traverses a landscape that time forgot
Panoramic fiction
Love, loss, history and exile in Aleksandar Hemon’s new novel
World in a dish
How to eat to 100
Heady times
England’s 17th century was a ferment of ideas and revolution
Back Story
A Broadway musical updates “Some Like It Hot”
Economic & financial indicators

Indicators
Economic data, commodities and markets
Graphic detail


Labour markets
Where have all America’s workers gone?
The Economist explains


The Economist explains
What makes Germany’s Leopard 2 tank the best fit for Ukraine?
Obituary


Sacredness in Suffolk
Ronald Blythe recorded the passing, and continuance, of rural life
1,234円
The world this week

Politics
Business
KAL’s cartoon
This week’s covers
Leaders


Hollywood v Silicon Valley
Disney’s troubles show how technology has changed the business of culture
At 100, the mouse can still roar. But it faces a new kind of rival

Recep for trouble
Turkey could be on the brink of dictatorship
President Erdogan could tip his country over the edge

Flashing red
Excess deaths are soaring as health-care systems wobble
What lessons can be learned from a miserable winter across the rich world?

Arresting development
South Africa’s collapsing railway company is a cautionary tale
A “developmental state” is less useful than keeping the lights on and trains running

Don’t try to dig what we all say
How to sell to the young
A myth-busting memo for your boss

Letters

On free speech, Starlink terminals, America’s towns, future populations, weight, Pope Benedict’s shoes, food, presents
Letters to the editor
By Invitation


Russia and Ukraine
Mona Juul says Russia-Ukraine talks would be premature—but preparing for them would not
Russia and Ukraine
Jeffrey Sachs on why neutral countries should mediate between Russia and Ukraine
Briefing


Thrills and spills
As Disney turns 100, its business is on a rollercoaster ride
The decline of TV and cinema and rise of streaming will reshape entertainment
Asia


Military muscle
Japan’s armed forces are getting stronger, faster
Cracks in the façade
India’s sinking towns spark debates about development
Renuclearising
Why South Korea is talking about getting its own nukes
Making faces
Japanese youngsters want to look like Chinese starlets
Farewells
Jacinda Ardern resigns as New Zealand’s prime minister
Killing women
A murder in Afghanistan highlights the misery of women
Banyan
Who gets to define what Asia means?
China


Falling China
For the first time since the 1960s, China’s population is shrinking
Preparing for launch
A planned spaceport in Djibouti may give China a boost
Has the wave peaked?
Covid-19 has already torn through large swathes of China
Chaguan
Riding the slow train in China
United States


The unstuck middle
Incomes are rising in America, especially for the poorest
Sloppy Joe
The presidential mislaying of classified documents is infectious
Proud, distracted boys
How America’s far right flits from issue to issue
Cash for everyone
What the spread of universal basic-income schemes says about America’s safety net
Batty
It is still legal to hit children in school in 19 American states
Lexington
George Santos is the congressman America deserves

Middle East & Africa


In from the cold but still miserable
Turkey eyes reconciliation with a Syrian regime it tried to topple
Judges’ dread
Binyamin Netanyahu rushes to take on Israel’s Supreme Court
A Gulf apart
Iran and its Arab neighbours are divided over a name
Vive la résistance
How young Sudanese are still fighting for democracy
Off the rails
South Africa’s disintegrating freight railway is crippling firms
Economics lessons
Why Zimbabwe’s schools have taken to selling chickens
The Americas


Boom or bust?
What does China’s reopening mean for Latin America?
Ever more polarised
Peru’s political chaos looks likely to persist
Fewer bellies full
Brazil’s new president wants to reduce the number of hungry people
Europe


Reaching over the Rhine
France and Germany stifle their spats to celebrate a 60-year friendship
Danger zone
A helicopter crash has dealt a heavy blow to Ukraine’s government
Invisible dead
A Russian town counts the cost of Vladimir Putin’s war
Uncertain allegiance
Some liberated Ukrainian regions have mixed loyalties
There will be mud
The next Czech president will be a Trumpish oligarch or a general
Between three seas
The Ukraine war is forcing eastern Europe to build more links
Charlemagne
Europe’s “neutral” countries are having to adapt to the new world
Britain


Predators in the police
The toxic culture of the Metropolitan Police Service
Populism, Scottish-style
The SNP response to the blocking of its transgender act is illiberal
The going rate
Britain’s trade unions lose faith in the pay review bodies
Safe as houses
Britain is well-placed to cope with a downturn in the housing market
Equine decline
Horse-racing in Britain is in deep trouble
The silent treatment
Why super-strict classrooms are in vogue in Britain
Bagehot
British politics needs more money
International


An open book
Open-source intelligence is piercing the fog of war in Ukraine
Special report


Turkey
Turkey faces a crucial election this summer
The economy
The Turkish economy is in pressing need of reform and repair
Friends and relations
Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s relatives are becoming increasingly powerful
Syria
The effects on Turkey of Syria’s civil war
Political Islam
Turkey has given up promoting political Islam abroad
Foreign policy
Turkey has a newly confrontational foreign policy
Politics
The Turkish opposition faces big obstacles to winning the election
The future
Turkey is still just a democracy, but it is not certain to remain that way
Business


Buying time
How the young spend their money
Going electric
Mexico’s electric-car ambitions
Foot off the throat
China’s tech crackdown starts to ease
Bartleby
Why pointing fingers is unhelpful
Growing pains
The painful development of India’s startups
Schumpeter
TSMC is making the best of a bad geopolitical situation
Finance & economics


Ouch
Why health-care services are in chaos everywhere
Return to sender
China’s re-globalisation paradox
Buttonwood
Venture capital’s $300bn question
Speculators swatted
Japan’s extraordinarily expensive defence of its monetary policy
Marginal profits
Investment banks are struggling in a high-interest-rate world
Property
The rise of the uber-luxurious office
Free exchange
Could Europe end up with a worse inflation problem than America?
Science & technology


Private moonshots
Which firm will win the new Moon race?
SETI
Ideas for finding ET are getting more inventive
Dopamine. Dogma. Doubt
A decades-old model of animal (and human) learning is under fire
Culture


Untold stories
New films in France tackle race, gender, exile and belonging
The spy in your pocket
“Pegasus” lifts the lid on a sophisticated piece of spyware
Swing and a miss
A philosopher offers four case studies in failure
Home Entertainment
“O Caledonia” teaches girls how to grow up
Self-portraits
In “Still Pictures” Janet Malcolm turns her pen on herself
Johnson
Translating the Bible is a vexed task, as a new book shows
Economic & financial indicators

Indicators
Economic data, commodities and markets
The Economist explains


The Economist explains
How gas stoves became part of America’s culture wars
The Economist explains
How humans healed the ozone layer
Obituary


The good forger
Adolfo Kaminsky saved thousands of Jews by changing their identities
Graphic detail


Mother of invention
A flurry of new studies identifies causes of the Industrial Revolution
1,234円
Zero-sum

The world this week

Politics
Business
KAL’s cartoon
Leaders


Zero-sum
The destructive new logic that threatens globalisation
America is leading a dangerous global slide towards subsidies, export controls and protectionism

The tools for the job
The West should supply tanks to Ukraine
Allies have been too cautious about giving it the means to resist Russian aggression

The storming of Brazil’s Congress
How Brazil should deal with the bolsonarista insurrection
Punish those who broke the law, but govern inclusively

Leaders
America’s trustbusters plan to curtail the use of non-compete clauses. Good
The clue is in the name

Waiting-longer rooms
Fixing Britain’s health service means fixing its family doctors
Don’t change the partnership model. Do change the targets

Letters

On Italy, James Callaghan, mental health, education in Sierra Leone, inflation, cricket, The Economist’s cover price
Letters to the editor
By Invitation


America and China
Daleep Singh on America’s economic statecraft
Briefing


Efficiency be damned
Globalisation, already slowing, is suffering a new assault
Subsidies, export controls and curbs on foreign investment are proliferating
Asia


Land of the riven atom
Japan pivots back to nuclear power
The hidden powers of flowers
Myanmar’s generals are deeply superstitious
Digital dead zones
India’s rocketing internet-user growth has stalled
No fly zone
South Korea’s travel spat with China
Banyan
Abe Shinzo’s assassin achieved his political goals
Unhappy valley
The mirage of peace and prosperity in Kashmir
China


Data, diplomacy and disease
Covid is complicating China’s efforts to re-engage with the world
Shrine to a whistleblower
The cult of Li Wenliang, the doctor who spotted covid-19
A different type of lockdown
China is still punishing those who protested against zero-covid
Chaguan
Many Chinese villagers seem ready to move on from covid-19
United States


House rules
After a spectacularly chaotic start for Congress, more discord looms
Mega-problems
What California’s deadly storms reveal about the state’s climate future
Marching on their stomachs
America’s army has launched a scheme to slim down its recruits
Disrupting the dyad
Polyamory is getting slivers of legal recognition in America
Red and blue science
America’s culture wars extend into medicine
Lexington
How rappers are strengthening Donald Trump’s movement

Middle East & Africa


Baba go-slow to go-go
After eight dismal years, Nigeria prepares to replace President Buhari
Uneasy peace
Ethiopia’s war in Tigray has ended, but deep faultlines remain
Blood money
Kenya’s blood shortage and the kicking of an aid addiction
The rope tightens
Protests have subsided in Iran, but clerics cannot yet proclaim victory
Oil and water
A century-old choice created one of the Gulf’s oddest geopolitical features
Hard to believe
The Arab world’s rulers have turned journalists into courtiers
The Americas


The storming of Congress
A copycat insurrection in Brazil, and its troubling aftermath
Sex pots
Erotic statues in Peru are challenging taboos
Barrios and baristas
Latin American cities are becoming far nicer for poorer inhabitants
Europe


Retirement gamble
Emmanuel Macron unveils his pension reforms
Little green mayhem
The war has devastated Ukraine’s environment, too
Gyros and gunboats
Might Turkey seize a tiny Greek island?
Taking aim at the Kurds
Turkey is on the point of banning the main Kurdish opposition party
No way in
The Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh have been blockaded by Azerbaijan
Britain


Dr no go
General practitioners are a big part of Britain’s health-care crisis
The NHS in crisis
How many excess deaths in England are associated with A&E delays?
Spare us
Prince Harry’s autobiography is an ill-advised romp
Weathering the storm
Lower gas prices will provide only limited relief to Britons
Newquay, we have a problem
What the failure of Virgin Orbit means for Britain’s space ambitions
Agricultural subsidies
The longed-for transformation of English farming isn’t happening
Bagehot
British museums and galleries are dealing with the past, clumsily
International


The generation game
The age of the grandparent has arrived
Business


The fuzzy corporation
How technology is redrawing the boundaries of the firm
Shipping forecast
Investments in ports foretell the future of global commerce
The costs of transparency
German companies fret about a new supply-chain law
High-performance motoring
The priciest cars are selling fast
Scandal at Air India
A humiliating incident on an Air India flight triggers outrage
Bartleby
How to unlock creativity in the workplace
Schumpeter
Go to Texas to see the anti-green future of clean energy
Finance & economics


The wrong competition
What America’s protectionist turn means for the world
Buttonwood
The dollar could bring investors a nasty surprise
Good day sunshine
The energy crisis and Europe’s astonishing luck
Professional problems
Has economics run out of big new ideas?
Absent billions
The hunt for FTX’s missing riches
Free exchange
Warnings from history for a new era of industrial policy
Science & technology


Authenticating images
Proving a photo is fake is one thing. Proving it isn’t is another
Bug bites bird
A praying mantis attacks a nestling
Horticulture
Wasp larvae that eat aphids alive may save apple crops
The elephant in the room
What causes elephant poaching?
Ancient concrete
Roman civil engineering has lessons for the modern world
Culture


Arms and the men
To their critics, Mexican drug ballads glorify violence
Swords and sandals
Cinema meets radicalism in “Picture in the Sand”
World in a dish
The quest for the perfect chip
Health is wealth
“For Blood and Money” charts a race to develop a blockbuster drug
Going underground
How Cambodian music survived the horrors of the Khmers Rouges
Back Story
The truth about Stone Mountain’s giant Confederate memorial
Economic & financial indicators

Indicators
Economic data, commodities and markets
Graphic detail


Needles in haystacks
Antidepressants are over-prescribed, but genuinely help some patients
The Economist explains


The Economist explains
What is the House Freedom Caucus?
The Economist explains
What is a tank—and does France’s gift to Ukraine fit the bill?
Obituary


Breaking, making
Vivienne Westwood sowed never-ending revolution all through the fashion world
1,234円
The world this week

Politics and business
KAL’s cartoon
Leaders


The end of magical thinking
A realistic path to a better relationship between Britain and the EU
The question of Europe has caused a decade of turmoil. Here’s how to use the next ten years better

Exit wave
How China’s reopening will disrupt the world economy
A tale of death, growth and inflation

Northern delights
Why the gusty North Sea could give Europe an industrial edge
Wind power is breathing life into a new green economy on its coasts

Internet from the sky
Starlink’s performance in Ukraine has ignited a new space race
Never mind the moon; look to low-Earth orbit

Unspeakable
What the Kevin McCarthy saga means for America’s Congress
Power struggles, public humiliation and a government shutdown may follow

Letters

On Britain’s constitution, Canada, Dutch auctions, bad translations
Letters to the editor
By Invitation


Europe’s economy
Paschal Donohoe on how the euro will thrive in spite of the war in Ukraine
Briefing


A murmuration of Starlinks
How Elon Musk’s satellites have saved Ukraine and changed warfare
And the worries about what comes next
Asia


Asian geopolitics
Reinventing the Indo-Pacific
Cloud coup-coup land
A historic transfer of power in the South Pacific
Groping in the dark
Postponing India’s census is terrible for the country
Banyan
Pakistan and China find they have little leverage with the Taliban
China


The tsunami
China is overwhelmed, yet an even bigger covid wave may be coming
Chaguan
The Chinese Communist Party plans to avoid a zero-covid reckoning
United States


Making little plans
Chicago’s woes are over-hyped
Business time
Eric Adams and Kathy Hochul have grand plans for New York City
McCarthy and the new House
Republicans struggle to elect a speaker of the House
Wealth warning
Pay-transparency laws do not work as advertised
Lexington
The great mystery of American politics

Middle East & Africa


Nothing’s gonna stop us now
Israel’s new government will test the ties with Arab states
The cost of the coup
Sudan’s troubled east is a microcosm of a wider crisis
Sex toys and taboos
Women in the Middle East are leading a revolt against prudish men
The Americas


Big plans, not much money
Brazil’s new president faces a fiscal crunch and a fickle Congress
Europe


Hills to die on?
A Russian warlord’s savagery is sending a loud message to Moscow
Game-shooting in France
France reviews its hunting rules
Frenemies on the Oder
Why Poland loves to hate Germany
Charlemagne
Fifty years ago, the EU cracked the secret of its current success
Britain


Je regrette quelque chose
Assembling a better British relationship with Europe
The gender wars
Scotland’s new gender-reform law presents Rishi Sunak with a dilemma
Windrush
Britain’s offshore wind farms attract tourists
Bagehot
Britons in their thirties are stuck in a dark age
International


Late prelate
The death of Pope Benedict removes a problem for liberal Catholics
Joy and severity
Pope Benedict XVI was an iron fist in a white glove
Business


Mare industriae
Can the North Sea become Europe’s new economic powerhouse?
Bartleby
How to have the most productive working day of your life
Bitter syrup
A scandal rocks India’s pharmaceutical industry
The Tesla conundrum
Investors conclude that Tesla is a carmaker, not a tech firm
Schumpeter
How to avoid flight chaos
Finance & economics


Life after covid-19
What the great reopening means for China—and the world
The sound of silence
Imagine an India without hawkers
Whydunnit?
Sam Bankman-Fried pleads not guilty
Buttonwood
Will investors have another awful year in 2023?
Science & technology


Covid-19
All around the world, covid surveillance is faltering
Killing SARS-CoV-2
Acidifying the air may protect against covid
The changing nature of science
Papers and patents are becoming less disruptive
Culture


Kings of the world
Alexander the Great and the birth of the modern world
Genetic engineering
“As Gods” is a valuable primer on a controversial science
Creepy fiction
“The Thing in the Snow” is a weird but wonderful novel
Courtly love
For the Tudors, love was an elaborate game
Economic & financial indicators

Indicators
Economic data, commodities and markets
Graphic detail


The secret is out
America’s 117th Congress accomplished a lot. So did its recent predecessors
The Economist explains


The Economist explains
Who is Andrew Tate, the misogynist hero to millions of young men?
Obituary


King of the beautiful game
Pelé went from poverty to football superstardom
1,234円
The world this week

The world this year
KAL’s cartoon
Leaders


The crucible
What 2022 meant for the world
Some years bring disorder, others a resolution. This one asked questions

Inspiration nation
Our country of the year for 2022 can only be Ukraine
For the heroism of its people, and for standing up to a bully

Twitter
Elon Musk’s $44bn education on free speech
He has had a crash course in the trade-offs in protecting free expression

After the storm
The year of the rate shock
Financial markets are adjusting to higher rates. That does not mean the chaos is over

The laws of nature
Why climate change is intimately tied to biodiversity
There is a financial case for investing in biodiversity

Letters

On needle-exchange programmes, Kenya, the EU, the Titanic, street names, job titles
Letters to the editor
By Invitation


Biotechnology
Jaime Yassif on the need for better safeguarding of bioscience
Asia


Slum-mop billionaire
Can India’s richest man remake Mumbai’s biggest slum?
Dumplings and skewers
Japan’s cities are being remade for an ageing population
Moving house
Extreme weather is making parts of Australia uninhabitable
China


A pandemic stress test
A wave of covid-19 reveals flaws in China’s health system
Way back when
Bertrand Russell and “The Problem of China”
United States


Care or confinement
Is forced treatment for the mentally ill ever humane?
Move along
Donald Trump’s popularity with Republican voters is sinking
Disorder on the border
Title 42 might be nixed
Lexington
Free speech is not in peril in America
Middle East & Africa


Finding faith in the fund
Ghana has struck a preliminary IMF deal and halted debt payments
Urbanisation gone nuts
What the price of Zanzibari coconuts says about African development
One Saied-ed
A farcical election pushes Tunisia towards one-man rule

The Americas


Man bites watchdog
An “electoral reform” in Mexico will make elections less safe
It was messy, but it’s Messi
Argentina clinch the World Cup after beating France on penalties
Europe


Christmas in Kharkiv
A Ukrainian city celebrates despite the cold and the Russians
No room in the middle
Pope Francis has failed to be a spiritual mediator in Ukraine
The last taboo
France starts a debate on legalising assisted dying
Balkan barricades
Kosovo and Serbia are on the verge of conflict again
Charlemagne
Why Europe’s traditional foods are not always what they seem
Britain


The new Britons
The children of Britain’s eastern European immigrants are changing the country
Gift-giving economics
The inefficiencies of Christmas
Nursing a grievance
British nurses launch unprecedented strikes
Bagehot
Westminster’s other cathedral
Christmas Specials


Time lords
In a corner of Java live the Amish of Indonesia
All uncreated men are equal
Should we care about people who need never exist?
A tale of oil and rubber
What Brazil’s 19th-century rubber crash could teach today’s oil drillers
Use your loaf
How food affects the mind, as well as the body
Puppy love
What makes certain dogs popular in certain countries
When money dies
The great inflation of the 1500s is echoing eerily today
City planning
The decline of the city grid
Take me out to the ball game
Why cricket and America are made for each other
The wibbly-wobbly circle of life
Deadly, dirty, indispensable: the nitrogen industry has changed the world
The weight of the world
The economics of thinness
The myth of the holy cow
India’s movement to protect cows is rooted in politics, not religion
Complex saviours
The new tech worldview
The three knife trilogy
Emigrants from a small corner of China are making an outsize mark abroad
Hot spot
How will the haj change as global temperatures rise?
Taking the Mickey
A treasure trove of Hollywood intellectual property is heading for the public domain
Through a crystal curtain
The Chinese celebrate Tang poetry as a pinnacle of their culture
Secrets of the shallows
A megadrought has revealed a possible mafia murder mystery
Business


When brown meets green
Why the Gulf’s oil powers are betting on clean energy
Parting of the clouds
Airlines are closing in on their pre-covid heights
More Sino-American business tensions
America tries to nobble China’s tech industry. Again
Bartleby
How to make the most of LinkedIn
Schumpeter
How Bernard Arnault became the world’s richest person
Finance & economics


Top of the charts
2022’s unlikely economic winners
To protect and to swerve
China’s leaders ponder an economy without lockdowns—or crackdowns
Robots and jobs
The pandemic and the triumph of the Luddites
No time like the present
The Bank of Japan shocks investors
Buttonwood
India’s stockmarkets are roaring. They also have serious faults
Free exchange
The Federal Reserve’s great anti-hero deserves a second look
Science & technology


Information technology
Artificial intelligence and the rise of optical computing
Optical cryptography
A better way to process encrypted data
Smart coatings
A golden sandwich that demists your windscreen
Culture


Heart of darkness
Francisco Goya’s vision of war is powerful and urgent
A family affair
A delightful world history, told through influential families
Back Story
The year of the underdogs
Economic & financial indicators

Indicators
Economic data, commodities and markets
Graphic detail


The year of Ukraine
War replaces disease as the world’s most newsworthy subject
The Economist explains


The Economist explains
Is Russia running out of ammunition?
The Economist explains
How to understand 2022 in memes
Obituary


The endless quest
Daniel Brush’s drive to understand beauty led him to the life of a hermit
1,234円
The winter war

The world this week

Politics
Business
KAL’s cartoon
Leaders


War in Ukraine
A looming Russian offensive
Ukraine’s chiefs, in an unprecedented series of briefings, tell The Economist about the critical months that lie ahead

Little steps, many lives
China’s covid wave could kill as many as 1.5m people
The government can still avoid an enormous death toll

I say go, go, go!
Why are the rich world’s politicians giving up on economic growth?
Even when they say they want more prosperity, they act as if they don’t

Nuclear energy
The French exception
As the world turns back to nuclear power, it should heed the lessons from France

After farmgate
How to save South Africa
The ruling party is unreformable. The country needs a coalition of the clean

Letters

On public registries in the EU, homelessness, lay-offs, pensioners, Northfield, Bagehot
Letters to the editor
By Invitation


Ukraine and Russia
Volodymyr Zelensky’s chief of staff on how to end war in Ukraine
Covid-19 in China
Two health experts say China’s haste to re-open risks needless death and disruption
Geopolitics
Aaron Friedberg says the West should abandon efforts to integrate a hostile, revisionist China
Briefing


Ukraine’s fateful winter
Volodymyr Zelensky and his generals explain why the war hangs in the balance
Our interviews with the men shaping Ukraine’s response to Russia’s aggression

Restraint under fire
Ukraine’s top soldier runs a different kind of army from Russia’s
Valery Zaluzhny wants to encourage initiative and devolve authority

General principles
“Anyone who underestimates Russia is headed for defeat”
An interview with Colonel-General Oleksandr Syrsky, Ukraine’s second most senior soldier
Asia


Sino-Japanese relations
East Asia’s big beasts are getting on badly
Forgetting your parents
Japan’s most endangered languages face extinction
Boy band of brothers
BTS takes on­ Kim Jong Un
At the coal face
Mongolians brave the cold to decry corruption
Banyan
China’s frontier aggression has pushed India to the West
China


On their own
How Chinese people are dealing with the spread of covid-19
No worse than the flu?
What to make of China’s claims about covid
Lives on the lines
Our model shows that China’s covid death toll could be massive
Chaguan
The politics of Xi Jinping’s covid retreat
United States


Picket lines and poké
America’s unions are gentrifying
Mr Musk’s moderation
What to make of the Twitter Files?
Crimes of fashion
Why catalytic-converter theft has soared in America
Chop chop
Axe-throwing may be the friendliest new sport in America
Or else
A city experiments with paying people not to be annoying
Smoke and mirrors
E-cigarette taxes may reduce teenage drink-driving deaths
Lexington
Republicans should leave Hunter Biden to his painting, and the Justice Department

Middle East & Africa


A bitter life for all
The party of Nelson Mandela is imploding
Zilch cows
Commercial cattle-raiding is impoverishing Uganda’s herders
Big brother will see you now
China is helping Zimbabwe to build a surveillance state
The elusive looters
Iraq’s new prime minister vows to clean up the country
Of lions and pride
Morocco’s World Cup success sparks a debate about Arab identity
The Americas


The agony of Peronism
Argentina’s populist political movement is at its lowest ebb
Europe


Survival of the blitzed
Despite power cuts and blockades, Ukraine’s economy is coping
Missing multitudes
The war has worsened Ukraine’s demographic woes
Unbeloved Berlin
Germany’s capital struggles to clean up its act
The job-share taoiseachs
Ireland’s new prime minister is mocked before he starts
Two-speed nation
France needs better slow trains, not just fast ones
Charlemagne
A corruption scandal leaves the EU reeling
Britain


A historical mystery
The strange case of Britain’s demise
Data and declinism
Britain’s economic record since 2007 ranks near the bottom among peer countries
Railing against the system
The British government and the unions dig in on train strikes
Bagehot
Why do Harry and Meghan wind people up?
International


Covid babies
The pandemic’s indirect effects on small children could last a lifetime
Business


Atomic reactions
Can the French nuclear industry avoid meltdown?
A Taj of class
Why Mumbai’s old business district is so shabby
Log off-ice
Tech lay-offs are the latest blow to office landlords
Silicon Wall Street
Big tech pushes further into finance
Cutback Christmas
German retailers aren’t feeling very festive
Bartleby
The enduring value of an analogue technology
Schumpeter
America’s biggest ports face a new kind of paralysis
Finance & economics


First-world problems
How the West fell out of love with economic growth
Facing the music
The game is up for Sam Bankman-Fried
US economy
America’s inflation fever may be breaking at last
Going Dutch
What an unusual auction says about the art market
No time to chill
Europe looks increasingly complacent about the winter ahead
Stormy skies
The struggle to put a carbon price on a flight
Free exchange
The insidious threats to central-bank independence
Science & technology


A brouhaha about fusion
Controlled fusion is little nearer now than it was a week ago
COP15
A UN biodiversity meeting is slugging it out in Montreal
Menstrual products
Not enough is known about the science of pads and tampons
Snake sex
A study of ophidian clitorises suggests snakes are highly sexed
Culture


Beautiful world, there are you
Reading Sally Rooney in China
Turkey and the Ottomans
The Ottoman empire fell a century ago. Or did it?
Johnson
And the word of 2022 is…
The naked truth
Alice Neel’s art is at last getting the attention it deserves
Economic & financial indicators

Indicators
Economic data, commodities and markets
The Economist explains


The Economist explains
What caused the demise of Boeing’s 747 airliner?
The Economist explains
How to design a perfect World Cup
Obituary


To breach a wall
Squadron Leader Johnny Johnson longed to give Hitler a bloody nose
1,234円
The world this week

Politics
Business
KAL’s cartoon
Leaders


Britain’s economy
Free the north
Fire up Britain’s economy by invigorating its second-tier cities

China and covid-19
What is the plan?
China is loosening its covid restrictions, at great risk

Italy and Europe
Crying out for reform
Giorgia Meloni needs to be bold. Sadly, she appears reticent

Canada
Charter fights
A clause in Canada’s constitution lets politicians nullify citizens’ rights. It needs to go

Financial markets
The new rules
Investing in an era of higher interest rates and scarcer capital

Letters

Letters to the editor
On Chinese students, FTX, Britain’s spending cuts, Kazakhstan, classical music, “When Harry Met Sally”
By Invitation


Russia and Ukraine
A former French ambassador on the paradox unveiled by the war in Ukraine
Crypto after FTX
A crypto-exchange founder makes his case for decentralised finance
Briefing


The new rules of investment
When the tide turns
Rising interest rates and inflation have upended the world of investing
Asia


India’s development
Gujaratification
Press unfreedom in the Philippines
Dead convicts and a peculiar murder
Toon wars
Manga v webtoons
Indonesia’s extramarital-sex ban
Bad news for Bali
Banyan
Karma chameleon
Cross-border gambling
China’s cash gift to the rest of Asia
China


The zero-covid policy
Dismantling the machine
Vaccinating the vulnerable
Obstinate elders
Dissidents v censors
Good, good, good
Chaguan
The politics of death in China
United States


Congress
Last-minute bargains
A SCOTUS double feature
Moore or less
Tax law
High deductibles
Invasive species
Cat got your tern
Youth suicide
Beginnings and endings
Lexington
Defender of the faith

Middle East & Africa


The Gulf and China
Arabs looking east
Iran
Off with those scarves!
Perverse incentives
To reap, perchance, per diem
South African politics
Sofa so good
Education in Africa
Lessons in poverty
The Americas


Canada
A bomb lodged in the constitution
Peru
Castillo the brief
Bello
An adiós in troubled times
Argentina
Peronist in peril
Europe


Germany
The traffic-light at one
Germany
The unhappy prince
Ukraine’s Somme
The battle for Bakhmut
Moscow
The silence of the Russians
Ukraine
Smart warfare
French brand names
C’est easy-peasy
Charlemagne
Cancel sculpture
Britain


Manchester
The sputtering engine of the north
Constitutional reform
A test of radicalism
Inflation
Tapped out
Asylum-seekers
Traffic fights
Britain’s growth crisis
The family silver
Bagehot
Mind your manners (or go to jail)
International


Deep-sea fishing
An uneven contest
Special report


Italy
Wanted: an Italian Thatcher
The economy
The cost of vulnerability
The public debt
Spreadeagled
Business in Italy
Structural faults
The south
Sunrise or sunset?
Politics
Italy’s bane
Repopulation
The houses that Giuseppe sold
The future
A new reform spirit
Italy
Sources and acknowledgments
Business


Information technology
The new age of AI
Artificial intelligence
The bard of AI-von
Pandemic profits
The value of zero
Bartleby
The scourge of title inflation
The business cycle
Axeing questions
Schumpeter
Supercharging super-apps
Finance & economics


Pension funds
The incredible shrinking plan
Stalling Asia
The chips hit the fan
Consumer prices
The monetary marathon
Transatlantic trade
Concrete jungle
Buttonwood
Thrill bills
Free exchange
The cost of impunity
Science & technology


Naval drones
Q-boats
Neuroscience
Silent synapses
Palaeontology
Join the club
The origin of lager
Cheers!
Culture


Our books of the year
The good books
Books by our writers
The midnight oil
Economic & financial indicators

Indicators
Economic data, commodities and markets
Graphic detail


Protests in Iran
Lifting the veil
The Economist explains


The Economist explains
Why Darjeeling tea may face extinction
The Economist explains
Can hydropower help ease Europe’s energy crisis?
Obituary


Jay Pasachoff
The shadow-lover
1,234円
The world this week

Politics
Business
KAL’s cartoon
Leaders


The pandemic
China’s covid failure
Caught between raging disease and unpopular and costly lockdowns, Xi Jinping has no good fix

Oil prices
Will the cap fit?
Why the West’s proposed price cap on Russian oil is no magic weapon

The gaming market
CoD and chips
Why trustbusters should let Microsoft buy Activision Blizzard

The cyberwar in Ukraine
The digital front
Ukraine has shown how cyber-defence can prevail

Sex
The wounds of silence
Sexual problems can wreck people’s lives. Yet remedies are often simple

Letters

On Qatar and the World Cup, Ukraine, Elon Musk, Janet Yellen, “Peanuts”
Letters to the editor
By Invitation


Chinese politics
The Chinese government exercises control through local busybodies, explains Lynette H. Ong
Chinese politics
The protests in China may change the way Xi Jinping runs the country, says Minxin Pei
Briefing


China
Zero options
Xi Jinping’s failing covid strategy leaves China with no good way forward
Asia


America’s Asian allies
When the chips are down
Taiwan’s elections
Across the Strait, a lockdown protest
Pakistan’s latest crisis
Hail the chief
New Zealand’s gangs
Mongrel mobsters
Banyan
Pilgrim’s progress
Crimes against Indian women
How the other half live
China


Protests in China
Echoes of the past
The protests and ethnicity
Solidarity, of a sort
Frustrated students
Testing the party
Chaguan
Lessons from a protest
United States


Arms control
The conundrum of three-way nuclear deterrence
Needle exchanges
No harm intended
New blood in Congress
To the winners, the spoilers
Morticians
Bodies, bodies, bodies
The future of Napa Valley
In vino veritas
Lexington
Star dreck

Middle East & Africa


Iran’s economy
Too poor to strike
Israel
Numbers is just a book in the Bible
South Africa
Ranch of government
Angola
Mine craft
Kenya
Brotherhood of bikers
The Americas


Venezuela
Oil be back
Bello
The coming swing to the right
Europe


Ukraine
Crimean War
Hungary
Big Viktor is watching
Germany
Angela Merkel’s faded glory
Spain
Unreasonably blue
Illegal drugs
So goes the blow
Charlemagne
United States, divided Europe
Britain


Looking after the elderly
Wear and care
The census
Few on pews
The Conservative Party
Tory jarheads
Innovation in Britain
Here’s an idea
Monarchy
Royal erosion
Energy efficiency
Insulation nation
Bagehot
If you don’t like it, there’s the door
International


Sexual health
Talking about it at last
Business


Big business
America’s best firms…and the rest
Video games
Game on or game over?
Energy in Germany
The hand on the tap
Bartleby
Ins and outs
Schumpeter
The other gig economy
Finance & economics


Energy sanctions
Crude weapon
Green investing
Uncle Sham
Dirty money
Laundry softener
Central-bank reserves
Vault face
Global taxation
Fiscal feud
Buttonwood
PE-kaboo
Free exchange
I’ll do things for you
Science & technology


Cyberwarfare
A nest of wipers
Cyberwar and cybercrime
Black hats, white hats, grey hats
Pollution and suicide
Ill winds
A drug for Alzheimer’s disease
Enter lecanemab
A diving dinosaur
An amphibious dinosaur from the Cretaceous
Culture


Technology and fairness
The algorithm’s mercy
The history of Venice
In the doge house
Ukrainian culture
Art against war
Icelandic fiction
Home truths
Johnson
Rise of the cyborgs
Social housing
Heaven with the gates off
Economic & financial indicators

Indicators
Economic data, commodities and markets
Graphic detail


The football World Cup
Margins matter
The Economist explains


The Economist explains
Why has America’s army recruitment plummeted?
The Economist explains
Why are boys doing badly at school?
Obituary


Jiang Zemin
An unlikely strongman
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