
#economist.com. × 7-Eleven is still struggling to fend off its Canadian suitor. The saga points to the sluggish pace of corporate reform in Japan
#Mar.13.2025

#economist.com. × Binyamin Netanyahu likens himself to Donald Trump. Israel’s prime minister is again under pressure from lawyers and security men
#Mar.13.2025

#economist.com. × After the bloodshed, can Syria’s president unite his country?. A deal with the Kurds may yet shore up Ahmed al-Sharaa’s rule
#Mar.13.2025

#economist.com. × Western companies are experimenting with DeepSeek. But concerns over security, censorship and dependence on China remain
#Mar.13.2025

#economist.com. × Abiy Ahmed’s agricultural revolution is too good to be true. The prime minister claims to have made Ethiopia Africa’s breadbasket. The numbers disagree
#Mar.13.2025

#economist.com. × The race to elect the next head of the Olympics is heating up. The winner will be faced with growing competition and a changing media landscape
#Mar.13.2025

#economist.com. × More testosterone means higher pay—for some men. A changing appetite for status games could play a role
#Mar.13.2025

#economist.com. × Why “labour shortages” don’t really exist. Use the term, and you are almost always a bad economist or a special pleader
#Mar.13.2025

#economist.com. × Your guide to the new anti-immigration argument. Nativists say that migrants raise house prices, cost money and undermine economic growth. Do they have a point?
#Mar.13.2025

#economist.com. × What sparks an investing revolution?. Ideas that emerged from the University of Chicago in the 1960s changed the world. But as a new film shows, they almost didn’t
#Mar.12.2025

#economist.com. × Elon Musk’s antics are not the only problem for Tesla. The carmaker’s sales are sinking for other reasons too
#Mar.12.2025

#economist.com. × Will America’s stockmarket convulsions spread?. Investors are hurrying to find alternatives—but all face difficulties of their own
#Mar.11.2025

#economist.com. × Trump’s metals tariffs will cost American industry dearly. Not least because the president is ratcheting up duties on Canada
#Mar.11.2025

#economist.com. × The budget that will determine South Africa’s future. It could make or break its governing coalition
#Mar.11.2025

#economist.com. × South Africa’s government is looking fragile. A spat over the budget exposes deepening rifts
#Mar.11.2025

#economist.com. × How Trump provoked a stockmarket sell-off. Will the president win back investors? Does he even want to?
#Mar.10.2025

#economist.com. × A horrific killing spree shakes Syria. Fresh atrocities suggest a country spiralling out of control
#Mar.10.2025

#economist.com. × Does Trump really want a weaker dollar?. Overturning three decades of American policy will not be painless
#Mar.09.2025

#economist.com. × Investors think the Russia-Ukraine war will end soon. The prospect of peace is reshaping markets, in ways both ominous and promising
#Mar.09.2025

#economist.com. × Mistral, Europe’s biggest AI startup, is blowing hot. Not being American or Chinese may now be a help, not a hindrance
#Mar.06.2025

#economist.com. × Donald Trump’s tariffs are a throwback to the 1930s. “Economic nationalism”, our predecessors wrote, “is almost an American invention”
#Mar.06.2025

#economist.com. × Lebanon’s new government must do three big things immediately. It needs money to reform, but donors want to see reforms before they write cheques
#Mar.06.2025
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