The Economist (Middle East and Africa) - 28 Jun 2025
How to win the peace
The treacherous economics of defence
When strongmen divide Europe
Chinese brands: soft-toy power
Conference-panel hell
After the bombs must come a plan to reset the Middle East:
Industrial strategy
Illegal gold-mining
Outsourcing in Africa
The political payload
A tricky NATO summit
Has Donald Trump solved Iran from the air?
The point of extra military spending is to make people safer. Politicians should not use the same pot of money to pursue multiple goals:
On American finance, Ireland, political strongmen, opera, short songs, British politics
A new cohort of consumer firms is taking on sleepy Western incumbents. Good:
Alas, autocrats and despots have an advantage: Charlemagne,
Ban Ki-moon and Helen Clark on the UN’s dysfunction
One unfiltered moderator, three panellists and a universal experience: Bartleby,
The West meekly welcomes Donald Trump’s vigilante justice—at least for now:
Modern warfare is rapidly changing the arms business,
From Labubu dolls to Laopu Gold, Chinese brands are booming,
Settling dust, swirling questions
Obliterated or obscured?
Assessments of the damage to Iran’s nuclear sites vary wildly,
A summary of political and business news
Unban the Awami League
How autocrats divide Europe
The war is over but its impact remains unclear,
Treacherous economics
Constitutional change in Colombia
The return of Andrej Babis
The political fallout,
How to win the peace
Peace in his time
Defence and deindustrialisation,
Vaccine madness
They’re here
Germany’s budget binge
The motorsport cluster
New York’s Democrats
Feral Labour
Football in Suriname
RFK and vaccines
More horror in Gaza
Violence in Nigeria
Buying the Lakers
Jobs and defence
Gimmicky taxes
Fighting robots
Oklahoma City
Sex work in the gig economy
The Vera Rubin Observatory
Modern warfare and the arms industry
Picking a Dalai Lama
Bangladesh’s blunder
Escaping taxes
William F. Buckley
Chinese brands surge
Longevity drugs
Violeta Chamorro, Nicaragua’s first woman president
Prediction markets
A streetside “Evita”
A surprise East Asian love-in
Trump, the Lone Ranger
Who still needs Accenture?
66 Free exchange Manic commodity cycles
Conference panels
Statistics on 42 economies
The rush into engineering
F1’s entertainment empire
AI valuations go crazy
The fragrance oligopoly
Erotic writers in trouble
Car suppliers in trouble
Wendell Weeks
Tariff troubles in India
The best recent novels
Jane Street’s tech trick
A migration museum
Zombies and Brexit
OnlyFans and porn
Japanese surnames
Asia’s fallen saint
Absent migrants
Science sceptics
The world this week
The world this week
How to win the peace
Vaccine madness
The economic consequences of war
Unban the Awami League
China’s new brand ambassadors
Financial points
The emerald tiger
Saintly advice
Culture has no borders
Ain’t wastin’ time no more
Led by donkeys
Letters:
Ban Ki-moon and Helen Clark
Settling dust, swirling questions
Iran’s nuclear programme
Obliterated or simply obscured?
Meltdown averted
Defence spending and the economy
Charlemagne: Dividing Europe
The return of Andrej Babis
Fighting robots in Ukraine
Germany’s budget binge
The jobs of war
The big borrowing binge
Rise of the robots
Bitcoins, Babis and automobiles
When soft power meets hard-nosed autocrats
A lobbyist’s dream
The Formula One cluster
Read more at: Economist.com/Britain
Bagehot: Feral Labour
Non-doms’ exodus
Cousin marriage
In the driving seat
Feral Labour
The world’s next back office
Violence worsens in central Nigeria
Charting the horrors in Gaza
Deaths in the night
Charting the horrors
I came, I bombed Iran
New York’s Democrats
Lexington: Solving Iran
Buying the Lakers
RFK and vaccines
Gimmicky taxes
OKC
Socialism for thee
Please tax us
Showtime buttons up
Big-league city
MAHA, not funny
Peace in his time
Is gold better business than drugs?
Constitutional change in Colombia
Football in Suriname
The desperation of Gustavo Petro
Pass the passports
The more things change
Banyan: A surprise East Asian love-in
Japan’s civil war over surnames
Tariff troubles in India
Asia’s fallen saint
The art of no deal
A tarnished legacy
Names and shame
Grin and bear it
Who will be the chosen one?
The rush into engineering
Erotic writers in trouble
Giant cuffs
Studying the illiberal arts
Sex work in the gig economy
The Telegram: Lone Ranger
A new sheriff in town
The fragrance oligopoly
Profile: Wendell Weeks
AI valuations go crazy
Soft-toy power
Bartleby: Conference-panel hell
Hazard signals for car suppliers
How OnlyFans disrupted porn
Schumpeter: Accenture v AI
Part company
Vibe valuations
Getting paid
Big Smell
Man of glass
The conference panel
Listen to Boss Class Season 2
Will AI take out Accenture?
Complex post-industrial military
Minimising, maximised
What collapsing immigration means
Free exchange: Manic commodities
Buttonwood: Prediction markets
Jane Street’s sneaky tactic
A large hump
Can’t live with them...
The dream scenario
Wild ride
My God, it’s full of stars
Scepticism in science is on the rise
Well informed: Longevity drugs
Find out more
Beyond doubt
Do longevity drugs work?
Right on
Best novels of the second quarter
Back Story: A streetside “Evita”
A new museum about migration
F1’s entertainment empire
Zombies and Brexit
Infectious storytelling
Hang on their words
Frame of mind
The truth is, she never left you
Pitt stop
Economic & financial indicators
Violeta Chamorro
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