The Economist (Middle East and Africa) - 2 Nov 2024
WHAT COULD POSSIBLY GO WRONG?
The Telegram: a new column on world affairs
Does China need more stimulus?
The machinations inside Iran
Focusing on ADHD
A second Trump term comes with unacceptable risks:
Nvidia’s suppliers want more profits from AI chips for themselves,
Mexico v Trump
Georgia’s election
The anti-politics eating the West
What to watch for on election night
Labour’s first budget
Iran’s security strategy
On the OECD and climate, violence against women, the NHS, AI and nuclear power, Britishisms
Fear and loathing of the other side is doing democracies increasing damage. In a seven-page essay we parse the partisan data,
Does China need more stimulus?
The Telegram: a new column on world affairs
Focusing on ADHD
leader, Researchers are starting to question the nature of ADHD,
The machinations inside Iran
What could possibly go wrong?
A sunny view of America’s democratic vitality:
A sting in the tail risks
A summary of political and business news
Large numbers, narrow vision
America’s economy is thriving. And voters are at last starting to notice,
Charm
offensives
American democracy
A scramble for minerals
Think outside the box
Capital control
Nebraska and the Senate
Uruguay’s anti-populism
Ukraine fights to survive
Solar power in…Canada
Ethiopia’s new conflicts
The fight for the House
Nasty Labour
Agricultural migration
Turkey and the Kurds
Where Israel hit Iran
Spain’s floods
Polling errors
The bro vote
and briefing,
Scramble for Antarctica
Stimulus expectations
Nastier North Korea
Cloud feuds
America’s glorious economy
Rethinking ADHD
Media's Mexican wave
Lily Ebert, Holocaust survivor and memoirist
Statistics on 42 economies
A resource rush in Greenland
Our new column on world affairs
American bond vigilantes
Prabowo Subianto’s boot camp
Micro-monopolies
Dawkins on reading genes
The return of goth culture
Japanese toilets go global
German business in crisis
Why space is bad for you
Ireland’s taxing windfall
Beating jet lag
Unsold homes in China
Fibre optics in molluscs
Cargo-carrying airships
Ties with North Korea
China’s mining binge
Sino-Aussie relations
Podcasts and politics
Faith as big business
Hello Kitty turns 50
Elections on screen
The influencer glut
Bookshops abroad
Judges in Pakistan
Men back at work
Halloween scares
Sin taxes struggle
Japanese politics
Trump and Asia
The world this week
The world this week
What could possibly go wrong?
Large numbers, narrow vision
How to avoid anarchy in Antarctica
Capital control
Think outside the box
Take care of NHS staff
Men must respect women
Financing AI’s nuclear power
What’s the problem?
Assessing climate policies
A sting in the tail risks
THE ANTI-POLITICS EATING THE WEST
The death of a European dream
Ukraine fights to survive
Charlemagne: Charm offensives
Agricultural migration
Turkey and the Kurds
Spain’s floods
Survival mode
The long road to peace
Spain’s floods
The immigrants Europe wants
French affairs of heart and state
Spend now, reform eventually
Bagehot: Not-so-nice Labour
Read more at: Economist.com/Britain
The far right after the riots
Baby bust, baby boom
Canal boats
Brighten up
Death of a doctrine
Where Israel hit Iran
Ethiopia’s not-quite-peace deal
Diminished defences
The not-quite-peace deal
Take this into a count
Campaign calculus: Polling errors
Lexington: American democracy
Nebraska and the Senate
The fight for the House
The bro vote
Will young MAGA men turn out?
Election-night coverage
Miss calculation
Osborn again
Bringing down the House
American exception
Round two
Uruguay’s anti-populism
Solar power in…Canada
Dark solar
Jam tomorrow
Something has changed in the north
Pakistan’s weakened judiciary
Banyan: Prabowo’s boot camp
Faith as big business in India
A historic rebuke in Japan
Australia v China in PNG
Prayer and profit
Hard ball
Cut down to size
Rebuffed
Boot camp
Why China may be saving its bazooka
Scary Halloween costumes
Chinese bookshops abroad
Ties with North Korea
When lips part
Spooked
Readers in exile
Diplomacy on ice
The Telegram: A dangerous world
Introducing our new geopolitics column
The Medicis and Michelangelo
The influencer glut
Schumpeter: Micro-monopolies
Bartleby: How to beat jet lag
Japanese toilets go global
German business in crisis
China’s mining binge
Oversubscribed
From shuddering to shuttering
Flush fund
Dig, baby, dig
Jet set
Feeling chippy
In a new light
American men get back to work
Free exchange: Resource curses
Asia prepares for Donald Trump
Sin taxes face a sinner shortage
Buttonwood: Bond vigilantes
Ireland’s overflowing coffers
China’s empty-home woes
Despair no more
In the crossfire
Haunted by ghosts
A nice problem
In search of lost revenue
Reincarnation time
Sitting on a critical-mineral mine
Coming into focus
Fibre-optic tech in molluscs
Could airships ever carry cargo?
Why space is bad for you
Bivalve broadband
The wrong stuff
The sky’s the limit
A Mexican wave
Hello Kitty turns 50
Podcasts and American politics
Dawkins on reading genes
The return of goth culture
Elections on screen
Still cute at 50
A tale of two biologists
Back to black
Hear them out
The ballot and the box
Economic & financial indicators
Lily Ebert
at PressDisplay
Newspapers from Algeria
Newspapers in English