No way to run a country | Jul 6th 2024 | The Economist (2024)

Table of Contents
The world this week Leaders Why Biden must withdraw Labour has won the British election. Now it has to seize the moment Hizbullah poses a grave threat to Israel As Amazon turns 30, three factors will define its next decade Central banks are winning the battle against inflation. But the war is just getting started How spies should use technology How to Trump-proof America’s alliances Letters Letters to the editor By Invitation The West’s values are important, but so is realism, says Finland’s president NATO must tackle instability in the Balkans, says an ex-head Briefing Democratic bigwigs are starting to call for Joe Biden to step aside Senility in high office One generation has dominated American politics for over 30 years Introducing “Boom!” United States The Supreme Court’s term ends with a rash of divisive rulings The unsteady comeback of the California condor What the Chevron ruling means for the next US president Will IVF really be the next frontier in America’s culture wars? Joe Biden is fooling only himself The Americas China’s presence in Latin America has expanded dramatically Paraguay and Taiwan strengthen their embrace, for now Mexico has become a testing ground for psychedelic therapies Asia Japan’s mind-bending bento-box economics Why many young Asians are no longer studying history Why is Thai health care so good? Demand for uranium is booming. Who is benefiting? Indians have grown used to getting nice things from politicians China China is struck by floods and drought—at the same time How to provoke the fury of Xi Jinping China takes a step to curb anti-Japanese rhetoric online Middle East & Africa The next terrifying war: Israel v Hizbullah Meet the victors in Africa’s coup belt How EU do-goodery risks harming Africa’s small farmers Europe Le Pen’s hard right looks set to dominate the French parliament Ukraine’s war has created millions of broken families Turkish tourists can now easily visit nearby Greek islands The EU should be the world’s heat-pump pioneer Europe faces a new age of shrunken French influence Britain Labour’s landslide victory will turn politics on its head The inheritance awaiting Britain’s next government The woes of Hargreaves Lansdown, Britain’s DIY-investing titan Nukes and King Charles—but no door key A prime minister, a plotter and others say farewell as British MPs A weekend with Gareth Southgate and friends What now for Britain’s right-wing parties? International Trump and other populists will haunt NATO’s 75th birthday party Technology Quarterly The tools of global spycraft have changed Ubiquitous technical surveillance has made spying more difficult Signals intelligence has become a cyber-activity Sometimes the old ways of espionage are the best Artificial intelligence can speed-sort satellite photos Private firms and open sources are giving spies a run for their money Sources and acknowledgments Business What next for Amazon as it turns 30? Hollywood enters a frugal new era Panic rooms and private bunkers are all the rage in Germany Your conference-survival handbook Lessons in risk-taking from buccaneering BBVA Finance & economics What happened to the artificial-intelligence revolution? How Starbucks caffeinates local economies Why Chinese banks are now vanishing Ukraine has a month to avoid default America’s banks are more exposed to a downturn than they appear How much cash should be removed from the financial system? Science & technology The world’s most studied rainforest is still yielding new insights A new technique could analyse tumours mid-surgery New yeast strains can produce untapped flavours of lager A new bionic leg can be controlled by the brain alone Culture Can Saudi Arabia become a premier tourist hotspot? Making a case for Shakespeare, 400 years after his death Finishing schools for the age of TikTok The rise of Mollywood, India’s more subtle film hub Like its Montana setting, Kevin Barry’s novel is brutal and gorgeous The Economist reads The best and worst memoirs by British prime ministers Economic & financial indicators Economic data, commodities and markets The Economist explains Who could plausibly replace Joe Biden? How could Democrats replace Joe Biden as their candidate for president? Obituary Ángeles Flórez Peón, “Maricuela”, made sure Spain did not forget its history FAQs References
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Jul 6th 2024

No way to run a country | Jul 6th 2024 | The Economist (1)

The world this week

  • Politics
  • Business
  • KAL’s cartoon
  • This week’s covers

Leaders

No way to run a country | Jul 6th 2024 | The Economist (2)

American politics

Why Biden must withdraw

The president and his party portray themselves as the saviours of democracy. Their actions say otherwise

No way to run a country | Jul 6th 2024 | The Economist (3)

Keir not

Labour has won the British election. Now it has to seize the moment

A volatile electorate and a strong showing for Reform UK are no reason for caution

No way to run a country | Jul 6th 2024 | The Economist (4)

The northern front

Hizbullah poses a grave threat to Israel

But a war right now would be disastrous

No way to run a country | Jul 6th 2024 | The Economist (5)

Everything in store

As Amazon turns 30, three factors will define its next decade

It will have to deal with trustbusters, catch up on AI and revive its core business

No way to run a country | Jul 6th 2024 | The Economist (6)

The end of the beginning

Central banks are winning the battle against inflation. But the war is just getting started

Politics and protectionism will make life difficult

No way to run a country | Jul 6th 2024 | The Economist (7)

Cloud and dagger

How spies should use technology

Digital tools are transforming spycraft, but won’t replace human agents

No way to run a country | Jul 6th 2024 | The Economist (8)

NATO at 75

How to Trump-proof America’s alliances

An essential step will be to let Ukraine into NATO

Letters

On solar power, the New York Times bestseller list, Metallica, football, presidential debates

Letters to the editor

By Invitation

Geopolitics

The West’s values are important, but so is realism, says Finland’s president

Europe’s other flashpoint

NATO must tackle instability in the Balkans, says an ex-head

Briefing

No way to run a country | Jul 6th 2024 | The Economist (10)

Demotivational speaking

Democratic bigwigs are starting to call for Joe Biden to step aside

A sitting congressman has broken ranks

No way to run a country | Jul 6th 2024 | The Economist (12)

Gerontocrats ascendant

One generation has dominated American politics for over 30 years

How have they become so entrenched?

No way to run a country | Jul 6th 2024 | The Economist (13)

A new podcast

Introducing “Boom!”

A six-part series about the generation that blew up American politics

United States

Supremely controversial

The Supreme Court’s term ends with a rash of divisive rulings

Vulture capital

The unsteady comeback of the California condor

Bureaucratic power

What the Chevron ruling means for the next US president

Fertile ground

Will IVF really be the next frontier in America’s culture wars?

Lexington

Joe Biden is fooling only himself

The Americas

The sleepwalkers

China’s presence in Latin America has expanded dramatically

The other China

Paraguay and Taiwan strengthen their embrace, for now

A different kind of therapy

Mexico has become a testing ground for psychedelic therapies

Asia

A new era begins

Japan’s mind-bending bento-box economics

The strange death of liberal arts

Why many young Asians are no longer studying history

An Asian model

Why is Thai health care so good?

Going nuclear

Demand for uranium is booming. Who is benefiting?

Banyan

Indians have grown used to getting nice things from politicians

China

Worrying about water

China is struck by floods and drought—at the same time

No defence

How to provoke the fury of Xi Jinping

An attack and a crackdown

China takes a step to curb anti-Japanese rhetoric online

Middle East & Africa

The northern front

The next terrifying war: Israel v Hizbullah

The new nationalists

Meet the victors in Africa’s coup belt

The forest for the trees

How EU do-goodery risks harming Africa’s small farmers

Europe

France’s parliamentary election

Le Pen’s hard right looks set to dominate the French parliament

A black hole

Ukraine’s war has created millions of broken families

Send in the Turks

Turkish tourists can now easily visit nearby Greek islands

Green policies

The EU should be the world’s heat-pump pioneer

Charlemagne

Europe faces a new age of shrunken French influence

Britain

The British election

Labour’s landslide victory will turn politics on its head

Legacy thinking

The inheritance awaiting Britain’s next government

Deplatforming

The woes of Hargreaves Lansdown, Britain’s DIY-investing titan

Onboarding

Nukes and King Charles—but no door key

Political retirements

A prime minister, a plotter and others say farewell as British MPs

Bagehot

A weekend with Gareth Southgate and friends

Bagehot

What now for Britain’s right-wing parties?

International

Fickle friends

Trump and other populists will haunt NATO’s 75th birthday party

Technology Quarterly

New-look spooks

The tools of global spycraft have changed

Dead drop drops dead

Ubiquitous technical surveillance has made spying more difficult

Dot-dot-dot dashed

Signals intelligence has become a cyber-activity

Old-school broadcasts

Sometimes the old ways of espionage are the best

SpookGPT

Artificial intelligence can speed-sort satellite photos

Intelligence, Inc

Private firms and open sources are giving spies a run for their money

Spycraft

Sources and acknowledgments

Business

Growing closer

What next for Amazon as it turns 30?

Erase and rewind

Hollywood enters a frugal new era

A bunker mentality

Panic rooms and private bunkers are all the rage in Germany

Bartleby

Your conference-survival handbook

Schumpeter

Lessons in risk-taking from buccaneering BBVA

Finance & economics

A sequence of zeroes

What happened to the artificial-intelligence revolution?

Business creation

How Starbucks caffeinates local economies

Disappearing act

Why Chinese banks are now vanishing

In the wars

Ukraine has a month to avoid default

Buttonwood

America’s banks are more exposed to a downturn than they appear

Free exchange

How much cash should be removed from the financial system?

Science & technology

Tropical biology

The world’s most studied rainforest is still yielding new insights

Neurosurgery

A new technique could analyse tumours mid-surgery

Brewed awakenings

New yeast strains can produce untapped flavours of lager

Best foot forward

A new bionic leg can be controlled by the brain alone

Culture

Call of the desert

Can Saudi Arabia become a premier tourist hotspot?

Not of an age, but for all time

Making a case for Shakespeare, 400 years after his death

Manners maketh money

Finishing schools for the age of TikTok

Stories from Kerala

The rise of Mollywood, India’s more subtle film hub

Melancholy in the mountains

Like its Montana setting, Kevin Barry’s novel is brutal and gorgeous

The Economist reads

The Economist reads

The best and worst memoirs by British prime ministers

Economic & financial indicators

Indicators

Economic data, commodities and markets

The Economist explains

The Economist explains

Who could plausibly replace Joe Biden?

The Economist explains

How could Democrats replace Joe Biden as their candidate for president?

Obituary

The keeper of memory

Ángeles Flórez Peón, “Maricuela”, made sure Spain did not forget its history

No way to run a country | Jul 6th 2024 | The Economist (2024)

FAQs

Is The Economist owned by Rothschild? ›

Aside from the Agnelli family, smaller shareholders in the company include Cadbury, Rothschild (21%), Schroder, Layton and other family interests as well as a number of staff and former staff shareholders.

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Overview. Ad Fontes Media rates The Economist in the Middle category of bias and as Reliable, Analysis/Fact Reporting in terms of reliability. The Economist is an international weekly newspaper founded in 1843. It is published in print and in a digital magazine format from its headquarters in London.

How to cite The Economist article? ›

"The Digital Currencies That Matter." The Economist, 8 May 2021, www.economist.com/leaders/2021/05/08/the-digital-currencies-that-matter. (Smith et al.) Note: If the source has a long title, you may shorten it in your in-text citation by using the first word/phrase from the title. Author's Last Name, First Name.

Who is the CEO of the Economist Group? ›

What businesses do the Rothschilds own today? ›

Today, Rothschild businesses are on a smaller scale than they were throughout the 19th century, although they encompass a diverse range of fields, including: real estate, financial services, mixed farming, energy, mining, winemaking and nonprofits.

How powerful is the Rothschild family? ›

The Rothschild family is the most famous of European banking dynasties, dating back as a banking house to the late 18th century. The Rothschilds had considerable economic influence in Europe during the 19th and 20th centuries. They are also known for numerous acts of charity.

Who is the most respected economist in the world? ›

Adam Smith is considered one of the most influential economists. He is also known as the father of modern economics. Smith was a proponent of the free market economy and opposed any government intervention in the market. His book, the Wealth of Nations, contains many ideas that form the basis of classical economics.

Is The Economist worth the money? ›

Final thoughts. While The Economist isn't a cheap publication, it's packed with value and information that could be useful to any investor. You can check out an occasional article online but eventually will have to pay for additional articles.

Who is the target audience of The Economist? ›

As a leading brand in data journalism, The Economist delivers content for high-profile individuals, organizations, and entrepreneurs who want to stay abreast of events within the world of business, politics, science, and arts.

Can I read The Economist for free? ›

You can register for a free economist.com account here. By registering for a free account you can access a limited number of articles for free per month on the economist.com website.

Do economists use MLA or APA? ›

Chicago Citation Style is used in humanities and social science disciplines. It is the preferred citation style for Economics. The first edition of the Chicago Manual of Style was published in 1906 by the University of Chicago Press.

Who is bidens economist? ›

NPR's Scott Detrow talks with President Biden's top economic adviser, Jared Bernstein, about the state of inflation in the United States according to Thursday's Consumer Price Index report.

What is the profit of The Economist? ›

Results for the 12 months ended March 31st 2024:

Operating profit was £47.4m, 12% higher than the prior year and 14% higher at constant currency. Operating expenses declined and a more stable US dollar exchange rate reduced the charge from foreign exchange.

Who is the owner of economics? ›

Key Takeaways. Adam Smith was an 18th-century Scottish philosopher; he is considered the father of modern economics.

Does Pearson own The Economist? ›

Pearson's sale of The Economist allows it to focus on its educational properties, though it still holds a 47 percent stake in Penguin Random House, the publishing firm.

Who is the Rothschild heir? ›

Baron Rothschild (1885)

The heir presumptive is the present holder's first cousin, James Amschel Victor Rothschild (born 1985). The heir presumptive's heir apparent is his son, born in 2022. There are no other living male-line descendants of the first Baron.

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