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
2024-09-14
How ugly will it get?
The world this week
Politics
Business
The weekly cartoon
This week’s cover
Leaders
America’s election is mired in conflict
Mario Draghi’s best ideas are those Europe finds least comfortable
How to finish Japan’s business revolution
Nigeria’s catastrophic fuel crisis has a straightforward solution
By Invitation
Mario Draghi outlines his plan to make Europe more competitive
Clearing Ukraine’s mines is crucial for global food security, say Howard Buffett and Tony Blair
Briefing
What will happen if America’s election result is contested?
United States
How Boston became the safest big city in America
Astrologers are predicting the result of America’s election
Democratic control of the Senate depends on a seven-fingered farmer
The systemic bias Kamala Harris must overcome in order to win
America’s college heads revise rules for handling campus protests
Kamala Harris makes Donald Trump look out of his depth
The Americas
Venezuela’s opposition is getting smashed
The sweet story of Peru’s blueberry boom
Asia
What ilish, a fish, says about India-Bangladesh relations
The downfall of a Philippine mayor may be linked to Chinese gangs
Kim Beom-su, the billionaire founder of Kakao, faces trial
Youngsters are fleeing Japan’s once-mighty civil service
Middle East & Africa
Is Syria’s drug-dealing dictator coming in from the cold?
Turkey is trying to deport Syrian refugees back to a war zone
A narrow corridor in Gaza has become an obstacle to a ceasefire
If Nigeria cannot end fuel shortages, disaster beckons
How trading in war-torn Sudan survives—just
Europe
Squeaky-clean Europe is more corrupt than you think
Michel Barnier’s burden
Danger in Donbas as Ukraine’s front line falters
Poland’s ruling coalition divides over women’s rights
A northern Italian town bans cricket
Nice ideas, Mr Draghi—now who will pay for them?
Britain
The harmony between Labour and Britain’s trade unions
Britain’s submarines are at sea for too long—or not at all
Finding a driving test in Britain is painful, slow and expensive
Why have Britain’s new towns become fashionable again?
Loons and the Tory leadership battle in Britain
International
Sport is getting hotter, harder and deadlier
Business
Is the era of the mega-deal over?
Japan’s sleepy companies still need more reform
AI will not fix Apple’s sluggish iPhone sales any time soon
Demand for high-end cameras is soaring
People are splurging like never before on their pets
European firms are smaller and less profitable than American ones
Why family empires dominate business in India
Physical proximity has big effects in the workplace
Intel is on life support. Can anything save It?
Finance & economics
Can anything spark Europe’s economy back to life?
Norway’s weak currency presents a mystery
Strangely, America’s companies will soon face higher interest rates
Can bonds keep beating stocks?
The IMF has a protest problem
Why orange juice has never been more expensive
An American sovereign-wealth fund is a risky idea
Science & technology
Breast milk’s benefits are not limited to babies
Baby formulas now share some ingredients with breast milk
The world’s first nuclear clock is on the horizon
Particles that damage satellites can be flushed out of orbit
Culture
The information wars are about to get worse, Yuval Noah Harari argues
Why many French have come to like “Emily in Paris”
Paul Gauguin is an artist ripe for cancellation
“The Perfect Couple” and the new map of Moneyland
Tabloids are about more than trashy headlines
The Economist reads
How Christianity shapes politics in America
Economic & financial indicators
Economic data, commodities and markets
Obituary
Sérgio Mendes sent Brazil’s party spirit out into the world