The Economist [Fri, 13 Oct 2017] by calibre instant download
Articles in this issue:
Politics this week
Business this week
KAL's cartoon
Chinese politics: The world’s most powerful man
British politics: Clear out the cabinet
Deregulation in America: A cost-benefit analysis
Iraq and Islamic State: Squandering the peace
Cambodia: The man who foiled the UN
On Catalonia, the American constitution, cancer, guns, Tom Petty: Letters to the editor
Xi Jinping after five years: Life and soul of the party
Speech on campus: The intolerant fifth
Campus activists: Psyche protection
Hollywood: Wein stain
Inland waterways: Take me to the river
California’s wildfires: Ablaze
Drones: Buzzed by the fuzz
Trump and the Senate: A Corker of a row
Lexington: A more moral minority
Canada: Trudeau’s flying unicorn hits a storm
Brazil: Elections on a shoestring
Reading to Cuban cigar workers: Havana lector
Bello: Time to bury Che Guevara for good
South Korea: Promising the Moon
Celebrating Diwali: Smoke and errors
Politics in Cambodia: The logical step
Japan’s election campaign: Staying power
The media in Myanmar: Patriotic to a fault
Banyan: Land to the tiller
Justice in Pakistan: More blinkered than blind
Education: Salad days
Aid: Rogue to vogue?
South Sudan: Guns, germs and stealing
American sanctions on Sudan: Not much relief about the relief
Kenya’s electoral poker: Going all in
The coming storm in Tehran: Raining on Iran’s parade
Reconstruction in Iraq: After Islamic State
Cleaning up the Middle East: Rubble trouble
Catalonia and Spain: Touching the void
Austrian politics: The Wunderwuzzi
Turkey and America: Battle of the strongmen
France’s feeble opposition: Luckier with Wauquiez?
Poland: Duda’s defiance
Communist nostalgia: Palace insiders
Charlemagne: Breakaway blues
Brexit and Theresa May’s future: Of balls, courts and no deals
Europe’s other separatists: Lord, make me free—but not yet
The Home Office: A crisis in waiting
The public finances: Best-laid plans
BAE Systems: Throttling back
Micro magazines: Page-turners
Bagehot: Popular capitalism, take two
Trauma medicine: Damage control
Deregulation in America: Trump v the rule book
Manufacturing: Making it in America
McKinsey in South Africa: In the eye of the storm
Procter & Gamble: Close shave
Kobe Steel: Base metal
Smartphone security: Mind the app
Schumpeter: The nuclear option
Supply-chain finance: The missing link
Buttonwood: The more things change
Brexit and derivatives: Standing novations
China’s currency: Tricky troika
Financial technology in Myanmar: Passing the buck
BBVA: Moving target
Free exchange: Reasonable doubt
Glassmaking: Gorilla tactics
The rules of attraction: Best mates
Better childbirth: Bugs for the system
Clean energy and ecology: Flexing the mussels
Military planning: The other side has a vote
Myanmar and the Rohingyas: At first light the darkness fell
Marriage: What goes down may come up
Speech on the quad: The talking cure
Vermeer: Answering the riddle
Lady Lucan: In cold blood
Output, prices and jobs
Trade, exchange rates, budget balances and interest rates
The Economist commodity-price index
Global investment-banking revenue
Markets
Global news and current affairs from a European perspective. Best downloaded on Friday mornings (GMT)
*Free conversion of into popular formats such as PDF, DOCX, DOC, AZW, EPUB, and MOBI after payment.