The Economist (Asia Pacific) - 25 Okt 2025
WINNING THE TRADE WAR
Why American women are quitting work
Screen-addicted seniors
Milei’s peso pain
Taiwan’s plan B
After months of pain China is on top:
When it comes to bosses, one size does not fit all,
Conservation in Africa
Who speaks to Trump and Xi?
Javier Milei’s biggest test
What is Taiwan’s plan B?
Redistricting wars
On European stocks, drug pricing in America, Muhammad Ali, cyclists, John Singer Sargent, Orwell and pubs
Screen-addicted seniors
Milei’s peso pain
Chinese chipmakers are innovating around America’s embargo,
The country is winning its trade war with America:
Why American women are quitting work
The fate of Javier Milei’s economic reforms may turn on an upcoming election,
Dan Wang on America copying China
America is copying the wrong things from China:
Taiwan’s plan B
A summary of political and business news
The migration schemes even populists love
Why China is winning
The digital habits that defined youth are transforming old age,
China is winning
Targeting online scammers
Square-eyed elders
The lessons from Brazil
Trump in South-East Asia
Tanzania and Ivory Coast
Peso pain
War powers
Hong Kong’s gold rush
Shutdown stalemate
Elections in Virginia
A new boss in Japan
Saving the Amazon
New drone rules
Grave problems
Whither Qatar
Petro v Trump
Israeli politics
Voting rights
Office perks
AI’s Cronos syndrome
Germany’s autumn of disappointment
Chinese chip innovation
Bashing London
Guest workers
A pioneer of mass deportation
Senior screen addicts
Kanchha Sherpa, a mountaineer in two minds about Everest
Statistics on 42 economies
Admitting Ukraine to the EU
Sparrows and the Great Leap Forward
China’s productivity
The $1trn capex question
“Frankenstein” returns
Europe braces for combat
Selling Argentina
Lyra Belacqua’s final journey
SAD lamps
AI forecasts the monsoon
Leadership style
Buckaroo policy
Value up in South Korea
A boom for mercenaries
Turkish textile trouble
AI in the poor world
Women quitting work
The world economy
The booze business
Waltzing in Vienna
Looting the Louvre
Fondation Cartier
Sport and pirates
Copper markets
Sarkozy is jailed
Western drones
Nord Stream 2
The world this week
The world this week
Why China is winning the trade war
Peso peril
The lessons from Brazil
The migration schemes even populists love
Square-eyed elders
The cogs in the machine
Lowering drug costs
He stung like a bee
Icy conditions for cyclists
Investing in Europe
The “Triumph of Religion”
Motherly barmaids required
Letters
Dan Wang
Fighting fit
What is Taiwan’s plan B?
Banyan: Targeting online scammers
Trump in South-East Asia
A new boss in Japan
Breaking the mould
Ego trip
Blocked calls
Mediating a dysfunctional relationship
Hong Kong’s gold rush
Chaguan is away
Grave problems
A grave problem at the last
Joining the global gold rush
The mapmakers’ war
Lexington: War powers
Shutdown stalemate
Elections in Virginia
New drone rules
Voting rights
Office perks
The next front
Whirring forward
Awkward silence
What, no pickleball?
Wonk appeal
Licence to kill
A battle to be the least disliked
Colombia’s MAGA mauling
Saving the Amazon
War of words
This gigantic green world
Save a tree, make a mint
Two flawed elections in Africa
Qatar considers its future
Israeli politics after Gaza
A tale of two flawed elections
Crossroads at a crossroads
Crisis rekindled
Autumn of disappointment
Charlemagne: Admitting Ukraine
Who blew up Nordstream 2?
Western drones in Ukraine
Turkish textile trouble
Sarkozy is jailed
Treacherous waters
Battle conditions
Palace to prison
Worse for wear
Outside, looking in
Capital punishment
Read more at: Economist.com/Britain
Parliament versus Prince Andrew
Birmingham’s ban on Israeli fans
Bagehot: Buckaroo policy
Sumo comes to London
Buckaroo! The government’s favourite game
The new screen addicts
The Telegram: Europe’s backbone
Europe in a world of hostile strongmen
The Cronos syndrome
Schumpeter: The $1trn capex question
The drinks business keeps flowing
South Korea’s value proposition
Bartleby: Leadership style
The uses of sports piracy
A boom for mercenaries
Half empty, or half full?
Soldiers of fortune
Value proposition
If you can’t beat ’em, use ’em
Beware the “romance of leadership”
The $1trn capex question
A welcome boom
The New York-London copper divide
Free exchange: China’s productivity
Can AI make the poor world richer?
Women leaving the labour force
Buttonwood: Selling Argentina
The resilient world economy
Liberated
We’re hiring:
Bump in bumpin’
Red flag
Leaps and limits
All sizzle, no steak
Don’t sweat
The mother of invention
Sparrows and the Great Leap Forward
Well Informed: SAD lamps
AI forecasts the monsoon
The wrong target
Meteorologic rise
Bright idea
Fondation Cartier, shiny and new
Lyra Belacqua’s final journey
Looting the Louvre
A pioneer of mass deportation
Dancing the waltz in Vienna
Back Story: “Frankenstein” returns
The power of three
Dust to dust
Bring the bling
The art of the steal
The doctor, not the monster
Economic & financial indicators
Kanchha Sherpa
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