Titre : | Summary of Vol. 451 n°9391 (2024) |
Type de document : | Article : Revues - Articles |
Dans : | The Economist (Vol. 451 n°9391, April 6th - 12th, 2024) |
Langues: | Anglais |
Catégories : |
[Eurovoc] GÉOGRAPHIE > Afrique [Eurovoc] GÉOGRAPHIE > Afrique > Afrique subsaharienne > Afrique orientale > Ouganda [Eurovoc] GÉOGRAPHIE > Asie - Océanie > Proche et Moyen-Orient > Israël [Eurovoc] GÉOGRAPHIE > géographie économique > pays tiers méditerranéens > Syria |
Note de contenu : |
apr 6th 2024
China’s risky reboot LEADERS China and the world economy Xi Jinping’s misguided plan to escape economic stagnation It will disappoint China’s people and anger the rest of the world Fool me once Central banks have spent down their credibility That will make inflation trickier to handle in future Nuclear deterrence Beware a world without American power Donald Trump’s threat to dump allies would risk a nuclear free-for-all Beware malware A chilling near-miss shows how today’s digital infrastructure is vulnerable This is how to protect the internet from malicious attacks Culp able What Boeing, Disney and others can learn from General Electric Lessons from the tenure of Larry Culp LETTERS On carbon pricing, handbags, museum collections, Starship, AI and music, British immigrants, how to describe X Letters to the editor BY INVITATION Chinese aspirations Yu Hua on why young Chinese no longer want to work for private firms Nuclear weapons As the world changes, so should America’s nuclear strategy, says Frank Miller BRIEFING Nuclear weapons America and its allies are entering a period of nuclear uncertainty And it means the balancing act is getting harder EUROPE The Olympics and urban planning The new geography of Paris The trouncing of a strongman An electoral bruising for Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Turkey A well-timed feud Poles and Ukrainians are at loggerheads. That’s good news for Putin Organised crime in Italy The mafiosi of Naples turn white-collar Happy Finns The secret behind the world’s happiest country Charlemagne Germany’s Free Democrats have become desperate spoilers BRITAIN Stormy weather How has the Bank of England dealt with four years of shocks? Private renting Two cities show the problems faced by Britain’s renters Unionism stunned What Jeffrey Donaldson’s arrest means for Northern Ireland Young people’s movements Why some parts of England have so few graduates Waxing and waning Madame Tussauds reflects the fragmentation of fame in Britain Bagehot Sadiq Khan’s London offers a taste of Starmer’s Britain UNITED STATES Like a dream to me now The Biden campaign in Michigan has a tremendous ground-game advantage Florida woman An abortion ruling has Democrats hoping Florida is in play Marriage The rise of the remote husband Drug-dependent Joe Biden’s assault on the $900 child-eczema cream The struggling state California is gripped by economic problems, with no easy fix Lexington Are American progressives making themselves sad? MIDDLE EAST & AFRICA Israel’s shadow war with Iran Israel is ratcheting up its shadow war with Iran World Central Kitchen What Israel’s killing of aid workers means for Gaza Jihadist blues Protests have erupted against another Syrian dictator A cruel law Ugandan judges uphold a draconian anti-gay law Cool it Recent heatwaves are a harbinger of Africa’s future THE AMERICAS The Anti-communist International Latin America’s new hard right: Bukele, Milei, Kast and Bolsonaro Feeling the heat South American vineyards brace for tricky summers ahead A house divided Justin Trudeau is beset by a divided party and an angry electorate ASIA The Modi paradox Why India’s elite loves Narendra Modi Building back stronger Japan is still reeling 100 days after the Noto earthquake In a different league The end of cricket’s Indian monopoly Damaging dynasties Asian “nepo babies” are dominating its politics Banyan For a glimpse at Japan’s future, look at its convenience stores CHINA The power of princelings How China’s political clans might determine its future Chaguan China’s tin-eared approach to the world INTERNATIONAL Mass killings Thirty years after Rwanda, genocide is still a problem from hell BUSINESS A new opening? The mind-bending new rules for doing business in China King of the castle Bob Iger has defeated Nelson Peltz at Disney. Now what? The world’s largest startup India’s biggest conglomerate takes on chipmaking Less general, more electric Will GE do better as three companies than as one? System engineering Meet the French oil major that balances growth and greenery Bartleby The six rules of fire drills Schumpeter Why Japan Inc is no longer in thrall to America FINANCE & ECONOMICS Hype and hyperopia How Xi Jinping plans to overtake America A lovely wall The Federal Reserve cleans up its money-printing mess The $10.6bn question Will FTX’s customers be repaid? Buttonwood How to build a global currency Free exchange Daniel Kahneman was a master of teasing questions SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY Pharmacology Could weight-loss drugs eat the world? Robotics Why robots should take more inspiration from plants Hacking the internet A stealth attack came close to compromising the world’s computers CULTURE Under the mushroom cloud What would nuclear war look like in the 21st century? Atomic beast On his 70th birthday, Godzilla has roared back to relevance Selling scripture How to make money from the Bible A numbers game In the Premier League, data help minor clubs take on the mighty Rwanda How Paul Kagame uses culture to keep Rwandans on message ECONOMIC & FINANCIAL INDICATORS Indicators Economic data, commodities and markets OBITUARY Fighting for breath Paul Alexander lived longer than anyone in an iron lung |
En ligne : | https://www.economist.com/weeklyedition/2024-04-06 |
Exemplaires (1)
Code-barres | Cote | Support | Localisation | Section | Disponibilité |
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009359 | ECO | Revue | Centre de documentation du CERDI / Ecole d'Economie | Salle de lecture | Disponible |