#economist.com. × How to get people to resign. Without torching the organisation or losing your best employees
#Feb.13.2025 ×
#economist.com. × Cheap solar power is sending electrical grids into a death spiral. Pakistan and South Africa provide a warning for other countries
#Feb.13.2025 ×
#economist.com. × Russian inflation is too high. Does that matter?. In a strong economy, price pressure can endure for a long time
#Feb.13.2025 ×
#economist.com. × How AI will divide the best from the rest. Optimists hope the technology will be a great equaliser. Instead, it looks likely to widen social divides
#Feb.13.2025 ×
#economist.com. × Why you should repay your mortgage early. For the first time in decades, the arithmetic suggests settling housing loans
#Feb.13.2025 ×
#economist.com. × The danger of relying on OpenAI’s Deep Research. Economists are in raptures, but they should be careful
#Feb.13.2025 ×
#economist.com. × Elon Musk is failing to cut American spending. DOGE has so far disrupted everything in government bar the deficit
#Feb.12.2025 ×
#economist.com. × Instead of luxury condos, Gaza faces a resumption of war. Donald Trump’s chances of a grand bargain in the Middle East are shrinking
#Feb.12.2025 ×
#economist.com. × Elon Musk’s $97bn offer is a nuisance for Sam Altman’s OpenAI. Tesla’s boss is willing to use whatever means he can to hobble his opponent
#Feb.11.2025 ×
#economist.com. × Elon Musk’s $97bn offer is a headache for Sam Altman’s OpenAI. Tesla’s boss is willing to use whatever means he can to hobble his opponent
#Feb.11.2025 ×
#economist.com. × BP is underperforming and under pressure. Yet another strategic U-turn is on the cards
#Feb.11.2025 ×
#economist.com. × Donald Trump’s Super Bowl tariffs are an act of self-harm. Duties on aluminium and steel will throttle American industry and fragment global markets
#Feb.10.2025 ×
#economist.com. × German business is being suffocated by high costs and red tape. Many bosses doubt that the upcoming election will change that
#Feb.09.2025 ×
#economist.com. × Shein and Temu are in Donald Trump’s cross-hairs. An end to the de minimis exemption will hurt Chinese e-commerce firms—and enrage American consumers
#Feb.06.2025 ×
#economist.com. × A leader of Congo’s rebels vows to fight on. It is not clear that a recent truce in Congo will hold
#Feb.06.2025 ×
#economist.com. × Why Islamists in the Arab world speak the language of free markets. The Middle East’s most religious politicians are often its most capitalist as well
#Feb.06.2025 ×
#economist.com. × Donald Trump loves big oil. Does big oil love him back?. American supermajors’ shareholders have mixed feelings
#Feb.06.2025 ×
#economist.com. × An encounter with the reception desk. The place where first impressions are made
#Feb.06.2025 ×
#economist.com. × Narendra Modi is struggling to boost Indian growth. Tax cuts may lift short-term output, but deeper reform is required
#Feb.06.2025 ×
#economist.com. × Europe has no escape from stagnation. Things look increasingly dark for the continent
#Feb.06.2025 ×
#economist.com. × When will remote workers see their pay cut?. Logging on at home is a perk, yet so far it has not been treated as such
#Feb.06.2025 ×
#economist.com. × Tariff uncertainty can be as ruinous as tariffs themselves. Whatever its geopolitical merits, the “madman theory” transfers badly to economics
#Feb.06.2025 ×
Filter: #economist.com. × #Feb.13.2025 ×
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