GuGuDu
首页
最近更新
全部外刊
加入会员
登录
注册
GuGuDu
首页
最近更新
全部外刊
更多分类
登录
注册
经济学人
The Economist
2024-06-22
Dawn of the solar age
The world this week
Politics
Business
KAL’s cartoon
Leaders
The exponential growth of solar power will change the world
Emmanuel Macron’s project of reform is at risk
How to tax billionaires—and how not to
Javier Milei’s next move could make his presidency—or break it
India should liberate its cities and create more states
Letters
Letters to the editor
By Invitation
Ray Kurzweil on how AI will transform the physical world
Vladimir Putin’s war against Ukraine is part of his revolution against the West
Briefing
How AI is changing warfare
Asia
Vladimir Putin’s dangerous bromance with Kim Jong Un
Thailand legalises same-sex marriage
The army-backed establishment in Thailand goes after its enemies
Why India should create dozens of new states
United States
Republicans are favoured to win the Senate. What would they do?
Are America’s leading presidential candidates up to it?
America is educating a nation of investors
Lauren Boebert’s primary is a window into everyday Trumpism
New research exposes the role of women in America’s slave trade
Legal immigration to America has rebounded
Donald Trump has finally got it right about the January 6th insurrectionists
Middle East & Africa
Is a Palestinian state a fantasy?
Israel’s northern border is ablaze
Private firms are driving a revolution in solar power in Africa
A remarkable new era begins in South Africa
The Americas
Javier Milei has turned Argentina into a libertarian laboratory
Europe
Emmanuel Macron faces heavy losses after a short campaign
A hard-right 28-year-old could soon be France’s prime minister
Hard-right parties are entering government across Europe
Russia’s latest crime in Mariupol: stealing property
Why southern Europeans will soon be the longest-lived people in the world
Britain
Britain’s Conservatives rule the Thames Estuary. Not for long
What taxes might Labour raise?
Child poverty will be a test of Labour’s fiscal prudence
Climate change casts a shadow over Britain’s biggest food export
Jeremy Corbyn wants more nice things, fewer nasty ones
The silence of the bedpans
Britain’s Conservatives are losing as they governed. Meekly
Business
Floating solar has a bright future
The cautionary tale of Huy Fong’s hot sauce
European airlines are on a shopping spree
Nvidia is now the world’s most valuable company
Are manufacturing jobs really that good?
Palmer Luckey and Anduril want to shake up armsmaking
Finance & economics
How bad could things get in France?
Europe faces an unusual problem: ultra-cheap energy
Indian state capitalism looks to be in trouble
America’s rich never sell their assets. How should they be taxed?
Think Nvidia looks dear? American shares could get pricier still
Is America approaching peak tip?
Science & technology
The dominant model of the universe is creaking
The secret to taking better penalties
A flower’s female sex organs can speed up fertilisation
How physics can improve image-generating AI
Culture
Wine collectors are at last taking champagne seriously
Theories of pre-history are a mirror on their times
What a row over sponsorship reveals about art and Mammon
Technology has changed money-laundering
How games and game theory have changed the world
The Economist reads
How to stare at the Sun, through art
Economic & financial indicators
Economic data, commodities and markets
Obituary
Birubala Rabha fought to end the stigmatisation of women