Titre : | Summary of Vol. 450 n°9384 (2024) |
Type de document : | Article : Revues - Articles |
Dans : | The Economist (Vol. 450 n°9384, February 17-23rd, 2024) |
Langues: | Anglais |
Catégories : |
[Eurovoc] GÉOGRAPHIE > Afrique [Eurovoc] GÉOGRAPHIE > Afrique > Afrique subsaharienne > Afrique méridionale > Afrique du Sud [Eurovoc] GÉOGRAPHIE > Afrique > Afrique subsaharienne > Afrique orientale > Soudan [Eurovoc] GÉOGRAPHIE > Asie - Océanie > Proche et Moyen-Orient > Israël [Eurovoc] GÉOGRAPHIE > Asie - Océanie > Proche et Moyen-Orient > Machrek > Palestine [Eurovoc] GÉOGRAPHIE > Asie - Océanie > Proche et Moyen-Orient > Yémen [Eurovoc] GÉOGRAPHIE > Europe > Europe centrale et orientale > Ukraine |
Note de contenu : |
feb 17th 2024
The right goes gaga: Meet the Global Anti-Globalist Alliance LEADERS The right The growing peril of national conservatism It’s dangerous and it’s spreading. Liberals need to find a way to stop it Prepare for President Trump Europe must hurry to defend itself against Russia—and Donald Trump The ex-president’s invitation to Vladimir Putin to attack American allies is an assault on NATO. Ultimately, that is bad for America Decline and fall Pakistan is out of friends and out of money A botched election and an economic crisis show how low it has fallen A shock to the system A new answer to the biggest climate conundrum Will electrification of industry live up to its promise? Silicon rally As San Francisco builds the future of technology, can it rebuild itself? People feared a doom loop. Reality has been more surprising America’s shadow central banks Another bank subsidy America should kill off The Federal Home Loan Banks offer loans to Wall Street that are too cheap The ur-snafu How not to do a megaproject The lessons of HS2 for Britain and beyond LETTERS On export controls on China, charter schools, council tax, Ukraine, DEI, Peter Schickele, common sense Letters to the editor BY INVITATION Politics and ageing David Owen argues that Joe Biden and Donald Trump are both too old to be president Corporate culture Two experts predict AI will transform companies’ understanding of themselves BRIEFING Nationalists of the world, unite! “National conservatives” are forging a global front against liberalism The alliance may be incoherent, but that does not make it harmless The burning question First electric cars. Next, electric factories? They could be a major new way to slow global warming EUROPE How to spend it The EU’s covid-19 recovery fund has worked, but not as intended A new role After Russia’s invasion the people of Bessarabia switched sides A concrete wall As Donald Trump threatens NATO, the Baltic states stiffen their defences Back from the slagheap As German industry declines, the Ruhr gives hope Overcooked controversy Europe decides it doesn’t like lab-grown meat before it’s tried it Charlemagne How not to botch the upcoming EU leadership reshuffle BRITAIN Getting nowhere fast The horror story of HS2 Crime prevention Why British police should focus on victims Hotting up Climate will be a battleground in Britain’s next election Britain’s silver zones How to live to one hundred A life more ordinary British lives are getting duller Bagehot Ban it harder! An unwelcome new trend in British politics Roses are perishable Love, frugality and home-grown flowers are in the air UNITED STATES Racial progress in America Black workers are enjoying a jobs boom in America House of cowards House Republicans fear Trump too much to aid Ukraine All in the family Cousin marriage is probably fine in most cases Parler games The far-right’s favoured social-media platform plots a comeback Night court The search for justice in America is not a nine-to-five job Lexington Donald Trump’s tremendous love MIDDLE EAST & AFRICA The next phase of the Gaza war If Israel invades, hell looms in Rafah The case against UNRWA The real problem with the UN’s agency for Palestinians Helping the bad guys How Yemen’s dominant Houthis blackmail foreign aid agencies South African politics Is Julius Malema the most dangerous man in South Africa? Taking credit African governments return to international bond markets Ukrainians in Sudan Evidence mounts that Ukrainian forces are in Sudan THE AMERICAS The perils of Petrobras Why Lula keeps meddling with Latin America’s top oil company From model to muddle Chile’s crisis is not over yet ASIA A historic shift India’s unprecedented love-in with the Middle East Junked bonds India’s Supreme Court delivers a rare setback for Narendra Modi File under F for “fiasco” Pakistan’s voters tell the generals where to put it General, elected Prabowo Subianto will be Indonesia’s next president Banyan Australia needs to rethink its approach to its Pacific island neighbours CHINA China and the world Xi Jinping’s paranoia is making China isolated and insular Messy for Messi Hong Kong is struggling to restore its image as a global city Life’s a beach China is trying to boost domestic tourism Chaguan How China stifles dissent without a KGB or Stasi of its own INTERNATIONAL Counting the votes 2024 is a giant test of nerves for democracy BUSINESS Chipping in China is quietly reducing its reliance on foreign chip technology Tokyo Electrified Japan’s semiconductor toolmakers are booming Paramount’s paramours Suitors are wooing Paramount The super store Why Costco is so loved Bartleby How to benefit from the conversations you have at work Boxing match How worried should Amazon be about Shein and Temu? Schumpeter The row over US Steel shows the new meaning of national security FINANCE & ECONOMICS Artificial intelligence How San Francisco staged a surprising comeback Buttonwood Investing in commodities has become nightmarishly difficult Putting out fires How the world economy learned to love chaos Conflict trading The Ukraine war offers energy arbitrage opportunities American banks Is working from home about to spark a financial crisis? Free exchange In defence of a financial instrument that fails to do its job SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY Lunar odyssey A private Moon mission hopes to succeed where others have failed Milk and two microbes For the perfect cup of tea, start with the right bacteria Shame, set and match What tennis reveals about AI’s impact on human behaviour JET off A 40-year-old nuclear-fusion experiment bows out in style CULTURE Turkish delight The third-largest exporter of television is not who you might expect Indecipherable fingerprints A secret room in Florence boasts drawings by Michelangelo Laughing to tears On “A Wonderful Country”, Israelis joke their way through trauma Drugs, terms and steel The Wa: the world’s biggest drug-dealers, with a tiny profile Pen v plague From Napoleon to Vladimir Putin, disease has shaped history Back Story The real message of Vladimir Putin’s chat with Tucker Carlson THE ECONOMIST READS The Economist reads What to read about Indonesia ECONOMIC & FINANCIAL INDICATORS Indicators Economic data, commodities and markets THE ECONOMIST EXPLAINS The Economist explains What is Russia’s mysterious new space weapon? The Economist explains How Ukraine sank the Caesar Kunikov—and is beating Russia at sea OBITUARY A line through the jungle Jack Jennings was one of the Allied POWs who built the Burma Railway |
En ligne : | https://www.economist.com/weeklyedition/2024-02-17 |
Exemplaires (1)
Code-barres | Cote | Support | Localisation | Section | Disponibilité |
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009241 | ECO | Revue | Centre de documentation du CERDI / Ecole d'Economie | Salle de lecture | Disponible |