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
2024-05-04
Truth and lies: The new science of disinformation
The world this week
Politics
Business
KAL’s cartoon
This week’s covers
Leaders
Emmanuel Macron’s urgent message for Europe
How disinformation works—and how to counter it
Should American universities call the cops on protesting students?
America’s reckless borrowing is a danger to its economy—and the world’s
Why South Africans are fed up after 30 years of democracy
Japan is wrong to try to prop up the yen
Letters
Letters to the editor
By Invitation
Indonesia’s president-elect accuses the West of double standards
Central banks may have misread the impact of QT, says an economist
Briefing
America’s fiscal outlook is disastrous, but forgotten
Asia
Even disillusioned young Indian voters favour Narendra Modi
The Philippines bans some genetically modified foods
Japan and South Korea are struggling with old-age poverty
Meet the maharajas of the world’s biggest democracy
United States
Why the Biden administration is rushing to produce regulations
Hawaii may soon have America’s first official state gesture
Escalating protests expose three fault lines on American campuses
Seaport Tower shows New York’s fight between housing and heritage
California’s population is growing again
A surprising Japanese presence in a traditional American craft
Middle East & Africa
How South Africa has changed 30 years after apartheid
Gulf governments are changing, but not how they talk to citizens
Israel’s prime minister does not know where to go
University protests about Gaza spread to the Middle East
The Americas
Andrés Manuel López Obrador will haunt his successor
Latin America’s farmers are cashing in on hot hot cocoa prices
Years of growth forged prosaic politics. Now Panamanians are fed up
Europe
Ukraine’s draft dodgers are living in fear
Turkey’s President Erdogan faces a new challenge from Islamists
Donald Tusk mulls which of the previous government’s plans to axe
Europeans lack visceral attachment to the EU. Does it matter?
Britain
Labour is the big beneficiary of Scottish political turmoil
Why so many Britons have taken to stand-up paddleboarding
The fight over one of Britain’s last steel plants
Questions grow over the future of the London stockmarket
British farmers shunned green schemes. Then the rain came
A growing number of Britons are on disability benefits
Jeremy Clarkson, patron saint of the Great British bore
Business
Why does BHP want Anglo American?
How not to work on a plane
Can biotech startups upstage Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk?
Does Perplexity’s “answer engine” threaten Google?
Finance & economics
Immigration is surging, with big economic consequences
Russia’s gas business will never recover from the war in Ukraine
Japan will struggle to rescue its plummeting currency
Hedge funds make billions as India’s options market goes ballistic
What campus protesters get wrong about divestment
Working from home and the US-Europe divide
Science & technology
Producing fake information is getting easier
Fighting disinformation gets harder, just when it matters most
Culture
Romantasy brings dragons and eroticism together. At last
Is there more or less sex on screen?
Fed up with Biden v Trump II? Some succour from fictional rematches
A new graphic novel takes aim at Iran’s oppressive government
“Boléro” is among the most lucrative works of classical music
A little-remembered rivalry that shaped the modern world
Economic & financial indicators
Economic data, commodities and markets
Obituary
Eleanor Coppola recorded how a cinematic triumph almost came unstuck