The Economist [Fri, 10 Jul 2020] by calibre instant download
本期文章:
Politics this week
Business this week
KAL’s cartoon
Race and social change: The new ideology of race
The world economy: Tapering without the tantrum
Nuclear proliferation: A better way to contain Iran
Sino-American tensions: Techtonic plates
Sourdough economics: The need to knead
Letters to the editor: On the UN, foreign aid, Olof Palme, green finance, China, coronaspeak
Race in America: Staying apart
Economic policy: The covid bonus
Kansas’s Senate race: The 88-year itch
Policing: Bands of blue
The courts: Reform squared
Chaplains: Civil rites
Lexington: The mark of Cain
Brazil: Christianity, covid, contact
Dominican Republic: A rare power shift
Bello: Promise and disappointment
Covid-19 in India: Flattening the wrong curve
Regional development in South Korea: Seoul v the rest
Asylum in Taiwan: A whispered welcome
Australia and covid-19: Lock, unlock, repeat
Lockdown in the Philippines: Four months and counting
Banyan: Wai-five
Civil society: Who you gonna call?
Human rights: The party’s grip
Chaguan: American soft power, trashed
Jihad in the Sahel: Fighting a spreading insurgency
Zimbabwe: For a few dollars more
Ethiopia: The fragile federation
Iran and the bomb: Booms in the night
Turkey: Converting Istanbul’s Hagia Sophia
France’s reshuffle: L’inconnu
Italy: The last bandit
Bosnia’s memory war: A genocide still denied
Spain’s economy: A lopsided recovery
Charlemagne: A Dutch dilemma
Relations with China: About turn
Human rights: From red carpet to blacklist
Fiscal policy: Sunak’s summer splurge
Economic data: Wrong numbers
Theatres: Cast adrift
Crime in lockdown: Catching up on their to-do lists
Food: Retro diners
Bagehot: Fading Anglophilia
Race and liberal philosophy: In the balance
Executive compensation: Pay guaranteed, performance optional
Sino-American tech tussles: What goes up, and up and up
Online business: E-shopping frenzy
Bartleby: Parkinson’s law updated
Schumpeter: The battle for low-Earth orbit
The global economy: How to feel better
China’s stockmarket: A bull market returns
Global trade: Leading question
The European Union: Seeking haven
Stock exchanges: Down time
Buttonwood: Default settings
Free exchange: Which way, Jay?
The 23rd International AIDS Conference: Social distancing
Archaeology: How illuminating
Climate change: Delayed cool
Populism and democracy: Party like it’s 1999
Japan under the shogunate: A handmaid’s tale
Johnson: Shock value
Choral singing: Voices off
Thought-provoking fiction: Not going gently
Economic data, commodities and markets
GDP and life satisfaction: Blessed are the rich in spirit
William Dement: Perchance to dream
Global news and current affairs from a European perspective. Best downloaded on Friday mornings (GMT)
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