#economist.com. × Have Israel’s far-right religious nationalists peaked?. They wield great power but schisms within the movement are deepening
#Aug.29.2024 ×
#economist.com. × From Southwest to Spirit, budget airlines are in a tailspin. The woes of America’s low-cost carriers could soon be mirrored elsewhere
#Aug.29.2024 ×
#economist.com. × Pinduoduo, China’s e-commerce star, suffers a blow. It faces a slowing economy, stiffening competition and angry merchants
#Aug.29.2024 ×
#economist.com. × A Nigerian’s guide to weddings during the cozzie livs. Even the most lavish of partygoers are adjusting to a cost-of-living crisis
#Aug.29.2024 ×
#economist.com. × How Abercrombie & Fitch got hot again. The once-troubled brand is now a favourite of millennials and gen-Zs alike
#Aug.29.2024 ×
#economist.com. × The plasma trade is becoming ever-more hypocritical. Reliance on America grows, as other countries clutch their pearls
#Aug.29.2024 ×
#economist.com. × Are American rents rigged by algorithms?. That is what Department of Justice prosecutors allege
#Aug.29.2024 ×
#economist.com. × Inflation is down and a recession is unlikely. What went right?. A few years ago, nobody thought that a soft landing was possible
#Aug.29.2024 ×
#economist.com. × How Vladimir Putin hopes to transform Russian trade. He believes the country’s future lies with China and India. What could go wrong?
#Aug.28.2024 ×
#economist.com. × Meta is accused of “bullying” the open-source community. It hopes its models will set the standard for open-source artificial intelligence
#Aug.28.2024 ×
#economist.com. × Vast government debts are riskier than they appear. A provocative new paper gets central bankers talking at Jackson Hole
#Aug.27.2024 ×
#economist.com. × Israel’s settlers are winning unprecedented power from the war in Gaza. They are gaining land—and sway over the army, police and politics
#Aug.27.2024 ×
#economist.com. × What could stop the Nvidia frenzy?. Two contradictions could stymie the AI chipmaker-in-chief
#Aug.26.2024 ×
#economist.com. × Israel and Hizbullah play with fire. They both attempt escalating attacks that fall short of all-out war
#Aug.25.2024 ×
#economist.com. × Jerome Powell (almost) declares victory over inflation. The Federal Reserve chairman strikes a notably doveish tone
#Aug.23.2024 ×
#economist.com. × The threat of war is empowering the Islamic republic’s hardliners. As a result, Iran’s new president is off to a disappointing start
#Aug.22.2024 ×
#economist.com. × What a takeover offer for 7-Eleven says about business in Japan. Its merger with a Canadian firm would create a convenience-store goliath
#Aug.22.2024 ×
#economist.com. × Why Germany’s watchmakers are worried about the AfD. The far-right party threatens the industry’s brand
#Aug.22.2024 ×
#economist.com. × Making love not war in the Middle East. Israelis and Lebanese are finding each other on dating apps, whether they want to or not
#Aug.22.2024 ×
Filter: #economist.com. × #Aug.29.2024 ×
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