#economist.com. × Africa’s young “generation hustle” hits the big time. They are pious, entrepreneurial and eager to make the most of their potential
#Feb.20.2025 ×
#economist.com. × Syria’s next steps towards a new order. Will Syria’s leader make good on his promises?
#Feb.20.2025 ×
#economist.com. × Sudan’s national army is on the brink of retaking the capital. That could be a turning point for the country’s civil war
#Feb.20.2025 ×
#economist.com. × Hollywood’s Trump-baiting Oscars. As Silicon Valley embraces the president, legacy media steers clear
#Feb.20.2025 ×
#economist.com. × Europe is set to start cutting red tape—lightly. But those hoping for radical deregulation will be sorely disappointed
#Feb.20.2025 ×
#economist.com. × Leaving the seat of power. The doctrine of management by walking around matters more than ever
#Feb.20.2025 ×
#economist.com. × Why American credit-card delinquencies have suddenly shot up. They are now at a 13-year high. How concerned should you be?
#Feb.20.2025 ×
#economist.com. × China’s leaders look to have blinked in their property face-off. They did not want to bail out indebted firms. Now they are on the verge of doing so
#Feb.20.2025 ×
#economist.com. × Donald Trump’s reciprocal tariffs are absurd. At first glance, they are a bureaucratic nightmare. On a closer look, they are even worse
#Feb.20.2025 ×
#economist.com. × To spend big, Germany’s next government may need EU help. How self-imposed constraints could lead to a bizarre outcome
#Feb.20.2025 ×
#economist.com. × American inflation looks increasingly worrying. Trump’s tariffs are fuelling consumer concerns, which may prove self-fulfilling
#Feb.18.2025 ×
#economist.com. × Why Xi Jinping is making nice with China’s tech billionaires. Jack Ma’s rehabilitation may be the most lucrative of all time
#Feb.17.2025 ×
#economist.com. × Xi’s rehabilitation of Jack Ma may be the most lucrative ever. Why China’s leader is making nice with the country’s tech billionaires
#Feb.17.2025 ×
#economist.com. × It’s not just AI. China’s medicines are surprising the world, too. Its firms are at the forefront of cheaper, faster drug discovery
#Feb.16.2025 ×
#economist.com. × Will Europe return to Putin’s gas?. A deal with the devil would boost the continent’s miserable economy
#Feb.16.2025 ×
#economist.com. × Israel mounts an attack on Palestinian intellectual life. The arrest of a prominent bookseller in Jerusalem bodes ill for freedom of expression
#Feb.13.2025 ×
#economist.com. × Chinese cars are taking over the global south. Petrol engines, not batteries, are powering their growth
#Feb.13.2025 ×
#economist.com. × How to go from fish lover to fish farmer. Expanding aquaculture in Africa could have many benefits
#Feb.13.2025 ×
#economist.com. × Homs’s troubles show the challenges facing Syria’s leaders. Both supporters and opponents of the old regime are unhappy with the new rulers
#Feb.13.2025 ×
#economist.com. × Hizbullah’s decline is a boon for Lebanon’s new government. But it will not be able to ignore the armed group entirely
#Feb.13.2025 ×
Filter: #economist.com. × #Feb.20.2025 ×
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