
#economist.com. × How DeepSeek will upend the AI pecking order. Cheaper models will create both winners and losers
#Jan.30.2025 ×

#economist.com. × The fall of Goma heralds more bloodshed in eastern Congo. Rwanda’s reckless invasion raises the risk of a wider war
#Jan.30.2025 ×

#economist.com. × No one gains from American tariffs on cars from Mexico and Canada. Donald Trump’s levy will hit his country’s carmakers hardest
#Jan.30.2025 ×

#economist.com. × Ahmed al-Sharaa declares himself president of Syria. But he has given no details of what kind of state he wants to build
#Jan.30.2025 ×

#economist.com. × Football clubs are making more money than ever. Players not so much. For both teams and their top stars, it helps to have a brand
#Jan.30.2025 ×

#economist.com. × What Elon Musk should learn from Larry Ellison. The founder of Oracle has demonstrated remarkable staying power
#Jan.30.2025 ×

#economist.com. × From cribs to carriers, high-end baby products are in vogue. Demographic and technological changes are making infancy more expensive
#Jan.30.2025 ×

#economist.com. × Tech tycoons have got the Jevons paradox wrong. Following DeepSeek’s breakthrough, the Victorian idea provides less comfort than they imagine
#Jan.30.2025 ×

#economist.com. × Georgia Meloni has grand banking ambitions. Will Italy’s nationalist prime minister manage to concentrate financial power?
#Jan.30.2025 ×

#economist.com. × Can Germany’s economy stage an unexpected recovery?. The situation is dire, but there are glimmers of hope
#Jan.30.2025 ×

#economist.com. × Why your portfolio is less diversified than you might think. The most important idea in modern finance has become maddeningly hard to implement
#Jan.30.2025 ×

#economist.com. × Donald Trump’s economic warfare has a new front. The president has threatened to blow-up the global tax system. Will allies be able to stop him?
#Jan.30.2025 ×

#economist.com. × Tech tycoons have got the economics of AI wrong. Following DeepSeek’s breakthrough, the Jevons paradox provides less comfort than they imagine
#Jan.30.2025 ×

#economist.com. × DeepSeek poses a challenge to Beijing as much as to Silicon Valley. The story of Liang Wenfeng, the model-maker’s mysterious founder
#Jan.29.2025 ×

#economist.com. × Don’t let Donald Trump see our Big Mac index. America’s tariff-loving president could learn the wrong lessons from international burger prices
#Jan.29.2025 ×

#economist.com. × Hamas talks a big game but is in chaos. Look beyond the latest bravado and brutality and it is bitterly split
#Jan.29.2025 ×

#economist.com. × Nvidia is in danger of losing its monopoly-like margins. But don’t count it out yet
#Jan.28.2025 ×

#economist.com. × Iran’s alarming nuclear dash will soon test Donald Trump. There is no plausible civilian use for the enhanced uranium Iran is producing
#Jan.28.2025 ×

#economist.com. × Syria’s new rulers say they are keen to integrate foreign fighters. Outsiders continue to see them as a threat
#Jan.27.2025 ×

#economist.com. × DeepSeek sends a shockwave through markets. A cheap Chinese language model has investors in Silicon Valley asking questions
#Jan.27.2025 ×

#economist.com. × Rwanda’s reckless plan to redraw the map of Africa. The fall of Goma could trigger another Congo conflict
#Jan.27.2025 ×

#economist.com. × Will America’s crypto frenzy end in disaster?. Donald Trump’s team is about to bring digital finance into the mainstream
#Jan.26.2025 ×

#economist.com. × Trump should try to end, not manage, the Middle East’s oldest conflicts. And he should see the region as more than a source of instability and arms deals
#Jan.23.2025 ×
Filter: #economist.com. × #Jan.30.2025 ×
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