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The EconomistThe EconomistSkip to content
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THE ECONOMIST | WORLD NEWS, ECONOMICS, POLITICS, BUSINESS & FINANCE


THE INTELLIGENCE

Our daily podcast considers what’s next for Twitter and its users


WAR IN UKRAINE

Read our latest coverage of the war


INTRODUCING BLIGHTY

Sign up to our new, subscriber-only Britain newsletter

United States


WHY THE REPUBLICANS’ ANTI-DEMOCRACY TURN HAS BECOME NORMALISED

Post-Donald Trump’s presidency, the party isn’t post-Trump at all

Business


ELON MUSK BUYS TWITTER AT LAST

Now comes the hard part

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The Americas


BRAZIL’S ELECTION IS TIGHT AHEAD OF A RUN-OFF ON OCTOBER 30TH

That can be seen most clearly in Minas Gerais, the bellwether state

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


THE WORLD IN BRIEF

Sergei Shoigu, Russia’s defence minister, said the “partial mobilisation” of
300,000 reservists was complete, with 82,000 already sent to Ukraine...

America’s three largest stockmarket indices ended the week higher...

The husband of Nancy Pelosi, the top-ranking Democrat in America’s House, was
assaulted at his San Francisco home by a hammer-wielding intruder...

Germany’s economy unexpectedly grew by 0.3% in the third quarter of the year, as
high energy prices and rising interest rates dampened growth across Europe...

Continue reading

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


THE CLAIM OF A UKRAINIAN “DIRTY BOMB” HAS GOT AMERICA’S ATTENTION

Nuclear and other worries in Washington


BUTTONWOOD: THE SURPRISING MATURITY OF THE CRYPTO-RAVE CROWD

Spicy mezcalitas, tasteful music, discussions of decentralised autonomous
organisations. What’s not to like?


HOW CLOSE IS THE RACE BETWEEN JAIR BOLSONARO AND LUIZ INÁCIO LULA DA SILVA?

The Economist’s poll-of-polls for Brazil’s presidential election


BY INVITATIONFRANCE’S FINANCE MINISTER ON HOW TO FIGHT INFLATION AND PRESERVE
STABILITY

A single monetary policy in the eurozone cannot cohabit with diverging fiscal
policies, says Bruno Le Maire


THE INTELLIGENCE

Our daily podcast considers what’s next for Twitter and its users


WAR IN UKRAINE

Read our latest coverage of the war


INTRODUCING BLIGHTY

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WEEKEND READS


PHRASEBOOKS ARE DYING OUT

It is the end of a revealing literary genre


THE SPORTS TEAMS EVERYONE LOVES TO HATE

Successful clubs tend to be disliked by neutrals

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


PINOCCHIO IS THE HERO OF OUR TIME

He cannot hide his lies. He wants to be a celebrity. But is he a “real boy”?

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


WHAT TO READ TO MAKE AND DRINK BETTER COCKTAILS

The five essential guides to improved mixology

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------




AMERICA’S 2022 MIDTERMS


EXPLAINER: WHY ARE AMERICA’S 2022 MIDTERMS SO EXPENSIVE?

Blame partisan polarisation, but not only


HOW TO SPOT A WONKY POLL

Why a Democrat-aligned Super PAC is publishing funny numbers

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


WHAT TO READ TO UNDERSTAND DONALD TRUMP

Five handy books on the man who remains at the centre of American politics

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


LATEST STORIES

Explore all our coverage of the battle for the House and Senate in one place

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WEEKLY EDITION: OCTOBER 29TH 2022


WILL IRAN’S WOMEN WIN?

 * --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   THE REAL RISK OF BIDENOMICS
   
   Joe Biden’s protectionism is costly for America and the world

 * --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   WILL IRAN’S WOMEN WIN?
   
   Their uprising could be the beginning of the end of Iran’s theocracy

 * --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   RISHI SUNAK’S VERY LOW BAR
   
   Reasons to be cheerful are scant

 * --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   PONDERING A PUTINLESS FUTURE
   
   

Read full edition



STORIES MOST READ BY SUBSCRIBERS


 1. RUSSIA’S ELITE BEGINS TO PONDER A PUTINLESS FUTURE


 2. WILL IRAN’S WOMEN WIN?


 3. RISHI SUNAK’S FIRST JOB? CLEARING UP THE MESS HE HELPED MAKE


 4. THE RISKS OF BIDENOMICS GO BEYOND INFLATION


 5. RISHI SUNAK’S PROMISE OF STABILITY IS A LOW BAR FOR BRITAIN


LEADERS


WILL IRAN’S WOMEN WIN?

Their uprising could be the beginning of the end of Iran’s theocracy


SPECIAL REPORTS: OCTOBER 15TH 2022


THE WORLD DIVIDED

China wants to change, or break, a world order set by others. It may yet
succeed, says David Rennie

 * --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   China wants to change, or break, a world order set by others

 * --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   China seeks a world order that defers to states and their rulers

 * --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   To show that it can follow global rules, China built its own multilateral
   institution

 * --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   China is exerting greater power across Asia—and beyond

 * --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   Why America and Europe fret about China turning inwards

 * --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   China has chilling plans for governing Taiwan

 * --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   For Western democracies, the price of avoiding a clash with China is rising

Read full report



PODCASTS


 * WHAT HAVE DEMOCRATS ACHIEVED IN POWER?


 * “HE’S PLANNING SOME PRETTY RADICAL SURGERY AT THE COMPANY”—ELON MUSK AND
   TWITTER


 * HOW WILL RISHI SUNAK LEAD BRITAIN?


FILMS


 * CHECKS AND BALANCE: AMERICA’S MIDTERM ELECTIONS


 * THE INTERNET IS CHANGING VIOLENT EXTREMISM


 * WHAT ARE RISHI SUNAK’S BIGGEST CHALLENGES?


1843 MAGAZINE


 * A NEW GENERATION OF BLACK ARTISTS ARE CHANGING FASHION PHOTOGRAPHY


 * ELECTRIC SHOCKS, SAVAGE DOGS AND DAILY BEATINGS: THREE WEEKS IN RUSSIA AS A
   UKRAINIAN PRISONER-OF-WAR


 * THE COST OF LIVING: PRICE RISES, WRINKLY SKIN…AND GRATITUDE FOR LIFE ITSELF?


CLIMATE CHANGE


 * FEW GOVERNMENTS HAVE DONE MUCH ABOUT THE CLIMATE THIS YEAR


 * INDIA’S NEXT GREEN REVOLUTION


 * WILL INDIA BECOME A GREEN SUPERPOWER?


BY INVITATION


 * FRANCE’S FINANCE MINISTER ON HOW TO FIGHT INFLATION AND PRESERVE STABILITY


 * BRITAIN SHOULD RENEW TIES WITH OLD FRIENDS IN ASIA, ADVISES GEORGE YEO


 * THE BILL FOR CAMPAIGN POPULISM IS PAID IN OFFICE, WARNS MATTEO RENZI


GRAPHIC DETAIL


 * STRONG GDP FIGURES WILL NOT HELP THE DEMOCRATS IN THE MIDTERMS


 * AMERICAN-BORN WOMEN HAD MORE BABIES DURING THE PANDEMIC


 * THE EU IS STRENGTHENING DEMOCRACY IN EASTERN EUROPE


THE ECONOMIST EXPLAINS


 * WHY ARE AMERICA’S 2022 MIDTERMS SO EXPENSIVE?


 * HOW MIGHT JAIR BOLSONARO WIN BRAZIL’S ELECTION?


 * HOW MUCH DO AMERICA’S VOTING-ACCESS REFORMS AFFECT TURNOUT?


THE ECONOMIST READS


 * WHAT TO READ TO UNDERSTAND CLIMATE CHANGE


 * WHAT TO READ TO MAKE AND DRINK BETTER COCKTAILS


 * WHAT TO READ TO UNDERSTAND NORTH KOREA


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