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


SUMMER READS

A collection of our most beach-friendly articles


UKRAINE AT WAR

All of our coverage of the war in one place


THE INTELLIGENCE

Our daily podcast. Today: the Kremlin after the Wagner mutiny

Leaders


WHAT THE WORLD’S BUDDING AUTOCRATS ARE LEARNING FROM EL SALVADOR

President Nayib Bukele is gutting democracy and being applauded for it

Leaders


SHOULD UKRAINE GET RUSSIA’S FROZEN RESERVES?

How to make Russia pay for the war while upholding international law

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

United States


AMERICANS ARE MOVING TO PLACES BESIEGED BY EXTREME HEAT

To stay liveable, hot cities are experimenting with ways to keep cool

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

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

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


THE WORLD IN BRIEF

Igor “Strelkov” Girkin, a former Russian intelligence officer and well-known war
blogger, was reportedly arrested in Moscow and charged with “extremism”...

Seven American big-tech companies, including OpenAI, which created ChatGPT,
agreed to voluntary safeguards for the development of “safe, secure and
transparent” artificial intelligence, according to the White House...

A federal judge scheduled Donald Trump’s trial, over his mishandling of
classified documents, for May 2024...

More than 1,000 air-force reservists in Israel threatened to stop reporting for
duty next week if Binyamin Netanyahu charges ahead with his judicial reforms...

Continue reading

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


VOTERS GIVE BRITAIN’S RULING CONSERVATIVES A HISTORIC MAULING

But a backlash over clean-air policies leaves questions for the opposition
Labour Party


BANYAN: WHY ARE POLITICS IN WEST BENGAL SO VIOLENT?

The political stakes are even higher in the east Indian state than elsewhere in
India


DAILY CHART: THE NEXT THREAT TO COMMODITY PRICES WILL BE EL NIÑO

The weather phenomenon could ravage Latin American crops


AT THE WOMEN’S WORLD CUP, MOTHERS ARE FLOURISHING

Football is at last accepting that players can have both children and careers


SUMMER READS

A collection of our most beach-friendly articles


UKRAINE AT WAR

All of our coverage of the war in one place


THE INTELLIGENCE

Our daily podcast. Today: the Kremlin after the Wagner mutiny


SPAIN’S ELECTION


THE HARD-RIGHT VOX COULD BE IN SPAIN’S NEXT GOVERNMENT

The centre-right PP should win the election, but may need its help to govern


BY INVITATIONAS SPAIN PREPARES TO VOTE, ITS SOCIALIST PRIME MINISTER SETS OUT
THE CASE FOR CONTINUITY

Economic resilience is proof of policy success, says Pedro Sánchez

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


BY INVITATIONALBERTO NÚÑEZ FEIJÓO ON WHY HE DESERVES TO LEAD SPAIN

The country needs a government with more ambition for reform, says the head of
the opposition

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


A RIGOROUS, EVEN-HANDED HISTORY OF MODERN SPAIN

Michael Reid, a former Spain correspondent of The Economist, considers the
problems afflicting the country

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




THIS WEEK


THE MOST IMPORTANT POLITICAL STORIES THIS WEEK

Thailand’s parliament votes against Pita Limjaroenrat, heat records are broken
around the world—and more


THE MOST IMPORTANT STORIES IN THE BUSINESS WORLD THIS WEEK

China’s GDP growth slows, Tesla reports strong profits—and more

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


LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

On deep-sea mining, water regulation in Britain and working from home

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


KAL’S CARTOON

A lighter look at this week’s events

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


WORLD NEWS


YOUNG LATIN AMERICANS ARE UNUSUALLY OPEN TO AUTOCRATS

A new poll suggests a worrying regional trend


CHAGUAN: CHINA’S FOREIGN MINISTER GOES MISSING

Official silence about Qin Gang’s whereabouts speaks volumes about Xi Jinping’s
China

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


REALISM WITH “OPPENHEIMER”, OR ESCAPISM WITH “BARBIE”?

What the fortunes of this summer’s blockbusters will reveal about our times

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


POST-MUTINY MOSCOW DESCENDS INTO FACTIONAL MURK

Vladimir Putin’s authority has suffered a grave blow

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




BUSINESS, FINANCE AND ECONOMICS


THE WORLD ECONOMY IS STILL IN DANGER

Falling inflation is good news. But it is too early to hail a “soft landing”


INSTANT PAYMENTS FINALLY REACH AMERICA WITH FEDNOW

The country’s banks are not entirely on board

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


TESLA’S SURPRISING NEW ROUTE TO EV DOMINATION

Become more like the industry you disrupted

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


WHY AFRICA IS POISED TO BECOME A BIG PLAYER IN ENERGY MARKETS

It has plenty of natural gas, sunshine and wind

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


HEATWAVES


HOW CITIES CAN RESPOND TO EXTREME HEAT

Officials from Beijing to Phoenix are grappling with unbearable temperatures


ARE THE CURRENT HEATWAVES EVIDENCE THAT CLIMATE CHANGE IS SPEEDING UP?

All sorts of records are being broken in all sorts of places

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


EXTREME TEMPERATURES SEPARATE “THE COOL AND THE DAMNED”

A new book on heatwaves reads like a horror story

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


EXPLAINER: WHAT HAPPENS WHEN EXTREME WEATHER HITS SEVERAL PLACES AT ONCE?

The effects of concurrent disasters can be greater than the sum of their parts

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




SUMMER READS


TRY THESE BOOKS ON YOUR SUMMER HOLIDAY

Our correspondents recommend the finest books, old and new, in their areas of
interest


WHEN IT COMES TO ICE CREAM, THE INSTINCT TO INNOVATE IS MISGUIDED

Forget flavours like ketchup, pickle and blood. It’s best to keep it vanilla

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


STARTUPS ARE PRODUCING REAL DAIRY WITHOUT A COW IN SIGHT

Can precision fermentation eat plant-based milk’s lunch?

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


A NEW NOVEL IMAGINES LIFE IN ANDY WARHOL’S STUDIO

Nicole Flattery’s “Nothing Special” depicts the art world’s inequities

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


STORIES MOST READ BY SUBSCRIBERS


 1. POST-MUTINY MOSCOW DESCENDS INTO FACTIONAL MURK


 2. ARE THE CURRENT HEATWAVES EVIDENCE THAT CLIMATE CHANGE IS SPEEDING UP?


 3. TESLA’S SURPRISING NEW ROUTE TO EV DOMINATION


 4. MAKING BABYMAKING BETTER


 5. AMERICA’S BIG BANKS ARE IN RUDE HEALTH—WITH ONE EXCEPTION


THE ECONOMIST EXPLAINS


EXPLAINER: WHY RUSSIA’S BOMBINGS OF UKRAINIAN PORTS HAVE JOLTED WHEAT PRICES

Global supplies of grain are plentiful for now, but at greater risk




WEEKLY EDITION: JULY 22ND 2023


MAKING BABYMAKING BETTER: A SPECIAL REPORT ON THE FUTURE OF FERTILITY

 * --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   WILL BETTER ECONOMIC NEWS LAST?
   
   Falling inflation is good news. But it is too early to hail a “soft landing”

 * --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   THE SCIENCE OF HEATWAVES
   
   All sorts of records are being broken in all sorts of places

 * --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   HOW TO RUIN BRITAIN’S UNIVERSITIES
   
   Squeezing foreigners is not a sustainable way to pay for world­-class
   institutions

 * --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   BARBIE V OPPENHEIMER
   
   What two Hollywood blockbusters reveal about our times

Read full edition


TECHNOLOGY QUARTERLY: JULY 22ND 2023


THE MOST PERSONAL TECHNOLOGY

Demand for, and expectations of, in vitro fertilisation are growing. The
technology is struggling to keep up, write Catherine Brahic and Sacha Nauta

 * --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   In vitro fertilisation is struggling to keep up with demand

 * --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   IVF remains largely a numbers game

 * --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   The fertility sector is booming

 * --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   Not all types of families can access IVF

 * --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   Some women need eggs from others, or from their younger selves

 * --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   New ways of making babies are on the horizon

 * --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   Lack of basic research has hampered assisted reproduction

 * --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   Video: Why we know so little about human reproduction

Read full report



PODCASTS


 * HOW WOULD A SECOND TRUMP TERM BE DIFFERENT FROM THE FIRST?


 * PRIGOZHIN’S MUTINY MAY HAVE FAILED, BUT PUTIN APPEARS WEAKER THAN EVER


 * THE BUSINESS OF SPORT


FILMS


 * INSIDE EL SALVADOR’S WAR ON CRIME


 * CAN SCIENCE STOP THE BIOLOGICAL CLOCK?


 * UKRAINE AT WAR: RUSSIAN UNCERTAINTIES


1843 MAGAZINE


 * UKRAINE’S BOG WARRIORS BRAVE SWAMPS, STENCH AND RUSSIAN DRONES


 * UKRAINE’S EMERGENCY WORKERS SAY THEY ARE BEING DELIBERATELY TARGETED


 * SERFING USA: A UNIONISED CASTLE GOES ON STRIKE


CLIMATE CHANGE


 * HOW CITIES CAN RESPOND TO EXTREME HEAT


 * AMERICANS ARE MOVING TO PLACES BESIEGED BY EXTREME HEAT


 * WHY AFRICA IS POISED TO BECOME A BIG PLAYER IN ENERGY MARKETS


BY INVITATION


 * ONE OF THE “GODFATHERS OF AI” AIRS HIS CONCERNS


 * FEARS ABOUT AI’S EXISTENTIAL RISK ARE OVERDONE, SAYS A GROUP OF EXPERTS


 * AS SPAIN PREPARES TO VOTE, ITS SOCIALIST PRIME MINISTER SETS OUT THE CASE FOR
   CONTINUITY


GRAPHIC DETAIL


 * THE NEXT THREAT TO COMMODITY PRICES WILL BE EL NIÑO


 * COULD UKRAINE’S ALLIES BE SENDING IT MORE WEAPONS?


 * DATA FROM SATELLITES SUGGEST VIOLENCE HAS SURGED IN MUCH OF SUDAN


THE ECONOMIST EXPLAINS


 * HOW TWO NEW MUNITIONS COULD AFFECT THE WAR IN UKRAINE


 * WHY RUSSIA’S BOMBINGS OF UKRAINIAN PORTS HAVE JOLTED WHEAT PRICES


 * HOW MANY IRREGULAR MIGRANTS GO MISSING?


THE ECONOMIST READS


 * WHAT TO READ TO UNDERSTAND CHICAGO


 * WHAT TO READ TO BECOME MORE CREATIVE


 * WHAT TO READ (AND LISTEN TO) ABOUT SOUTH AFRICA


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Published since September 1843 to take part in “a severe contest between
intelligence, which presses forward, and an unworthy, timid ignorance
obstructing our progress.”


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