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缓存内容:Skip to contentMenuWeekly editionThe world in briefSearchSubscribeLog inThe Economist | Independent journalismThe Economist todayThe best of our journalism in a free daily newsletterThe Intelligence podcastOn Marwan Barghouti, the man who would lead PalestineThe US in briefArizona upholds 1860s abortion banChinaChina’s high-stakes struggle to defy demographic disasterThe Communist Party puts its faith in robots, gene-therapy and bathing servicesAsiaTo keep the peace in Asia, Japan plans for warKishida Fumio meets Joe Biden in Washington, DC to shore up deterrenceFinance & economicsThe rich world faces nightmare budget deficitsThat includes America, where Biden and Trump are promising more tax cutsThe world in briefTurkey announced restrictions on exports to Israel of 54 military-related products...The Zaporizhia nuclear power station in southern Ukraine was hit by a drone attack following other attacks in previous days, according to the International Atomic Energy Agency...Arizona’s Supreme Court said the state could enforce a law from 1864 that criminalises abortions except when the mother’s life is in jeopardy...America’s Environmental Protection Agency announced rules requiring chemical plants to reduce toxic emissions that are likely to cause cancer...Continue readingHow one California beach town became Gavin Newsom’s nemesisHuntington Beach’s hard-right turn is typical of modern California RepublicanismFree Exchange: Welcome to an artificial-intelligence UtopiaWhat will humans do if technology solves everything?Why are embassies supposed to be inviolable?Ecuador’s raid on a Mexican embassy challenges a central principle of diplomacyAn enthralling account of Captain Cook’s final, fatal voyageHampton Sides also takes on the complex legacy of the British explorerAmerica’s election yearUS election 2024Who are the Americans switching from Biden to Trump?Try our tool—and see which attributes make voters more likely to pick one candidate over the otherIn brief|5h agoArizona upholds 1860s abortion ban; court rejects Trump delayOur daily political update, featuring the stories that matterAn abortion ruling has Democrats hoping Florida is in playBut for now it will end access to the procedure for millions of women in the SouthTrump v Biden: who’s ahead in the polls?The Economist is tracking the race to be America’s next presidentSign up for our US in brief newsletterBusiness, finance and economicsThink Tesla is in trouble? Pity even more its wannabe EV rivalsA fleet of electric-car startups is struggling to stay in businessBartleby: The six rules of fire drillsPlease display this somewhere in your office where no one will read it. Thank youFree exchange: Daniel Kahneman was a master of teasing questionsHow a psychologist transformed economicsCentral banks have spent down their credibilityThat will make inflation trickier to handle in futureWorld newsBeware a world without American powerDonald Trump’s threat to dump allies would risk a nuclear free-for-allThe Kremlin wants to make Ukraine’s second city unliveableThe race to save Kharkiv from Russian bombsBrazil and Colombia are curbing destruction of Amazon rainforestTree loss in South America fell by almost a quarter in 2023, compared with the year beforeJustin Trudeau is beset by a divided party and an angry electorateAfter almost a decade in power, Canada’s prime minister looks beleagueredStrife in the Middle EastIsrael’s relations with America reach breaking pointFollowing Israel’s killing of seven aid workers, Joe Biden delivers his sternest warning yet to Binyamin NetanyahuWith its latest assassination, Israel is testing IranIt is a dangerous game in a region already at warWhat Israel’s killing of aid workers means for GazaIt will make it even harder to feed desperate people1843 magazine | “I’m afraid I will lose my babies”: diary of a pregnant woman in GazaSoumaya had planned a perfect start in life for her twins. This is what happened insteadMore on the conflict in the Middle EastChina and the world economyXi Jinping’s misguided plan to escape economic stagnationIt will disappoint China’s people and anger the rest of the worldHow Xi Jinping plans to overtake AmericaDigital twins, nuclear fusion and the small matter of fixing China’s economyThe mind-bending new rules for doing business in ChinaXi Jinping is sending mixed messages to Western bosses and investorsChina’s tin-eared approach to the worldIt wanted countries to focus on interests, not values. Careful what you wish forOther highlightsThe rise of the remote husbandShe goes out to work, he stays at home (and logs on)The drawbacks—and benefits—of solitudeThree books examine the perils and pleasures of being aloneCould weight-loss drugs eat the world?Scientists are finding that anti-obesity medicines can also help many other diseasesWhy the Moon needs its own timeThe seconds really do pass more quickly up thereThe war in UkraineHow Ukraine is using AI to fight RussiaFrom target hunting to catching sanctions-busters, its war is increasingly high-techDIY landmine-clearing is putting Ukrainian farmers in dangerLicensed deminers are swamped and farmers want to sowThe Kremlin wants to make Ukraine’s second city unliveableThe race to save Kharkiv from Russian bombsTracking the Ukraine war: where is the latest fighting?Our satellite view of the conflict, updated dailyThe spread of AIArtificial intelligence is taking over drug developmentRegulators need to up their game to keep upHow to define artificial general intelligenceAcademics and tech entrepreneurs disagree. A court may soon decideA new generation of music-making algorithms is hereTheir most useful application may lie in helping human composersJust how rich are businesses getting in the AI gold rush?Nvidia and Microsoft are not the only winnersStories most read by subscribersThink Tesla is in trouble? Pity even more its wannabe EV rivalsXi Jinping’s misguided plan to escape economic stagnationThe rise of the remote husbandSteven Levitt and John Donohue defend a finding made famous by “Freakonomics”The secret behind the world’s happiest countryFeatured readMadame Tussauds reflects the fragmentation of fame in BritainNot every newcomer is widely recognisedIndia’s electionHow India could become an Asian tigerThe world’s most selective bureaucracy is struggling to make it happenNarendra Modi’s secret weapon: India’s diasporaMigrants help campaign for the prime minister at home and lobby for the country abroadYamini Aiyar laments the damage done to Indian democracy under Narendra ModiToxic majoritarianism is just part of the story, says the policy scholarWhat to read about HindutvaSix books explain the dangerous ideology of India’s ruling partyVisual storytellingVladivostok is a window into wartime RussiaVladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine is transforming the far-eastern cityJoe Biden’s weakness among Latinos threatens his re-electionIn Arizona, a growing Hispanic electorate should help Democrats. Yet Donald Trump is gaining groundCan you build a British voter?See how Britons might vote in the next electionHow cheap drones are transforming warfare in UkraineFirst-person view drones have achieved near mythical status on the front linesMore interactive articlesweekly edition: april 6th 2024China’s risky rebootTrump and nuclear deterrenceThe presidential candidate’s threat to dump allies would risk a nuclear free-for-allLatin America’s right-wingersCrime, abortion and socialism, not immigration, are the issues that rile themWhy India’s elite loves ModiEducated voters usually disdain populists. Three factors explain why India’s leader is differentMore cures from weight-loss drugsScientists are finding that anti-obesity medicines can also help many other diseasesRead full editiontechnology quarterly: march 30th 2024A new prescriptionAIs will make health care safer and better, reports Natasha Loder. It may even get cheaper tooAIs will make health care safer and betterArtificial intelligence has long been improving diagnosesMedical AIs with human faces are on their wayArtificial intelligence is taking over drug developmentCan artificial intelligence make health care more efficient?Read full reportPodcastsWhy Xi Jinping’s economic plan won’t workHow Vladimir Putin brought Russia’s economy back from the brinkWhy slimming drugs could treat many conditionsFilmsWho is “Europe’s last dictator”?Is Putin winning the war in Ukraine?A portrait of Alexei Navalny1843 magazineWould you risk a breakdown to cure baldness?“I’m afraid I will lose my babies”: diary of a pregnant woman in GazaDjibouti, the port-state squeezed by the Houthis’ Red Sea campaignClimate changeBrazil and Colombia are curbing destruction of Amazon rainforestSouth American vineyards brace for tricky summers aheadRecent heatwaves are a harbinger of Africa’s futureBy InvitationA BJP bigwig on how India can become an advanced economySteven Levitt and John Donohue defend a finding made famous by “Freakonomics”Climate change and conflict must be tackled together, argues a foundation headGraphic detailUFOs are going mainstreamThe economics of American lotteriesThree reasons why oil prices are remarkably stableThe Economist explainsWhy are embassies supposed to be inviolable?What are “golden visas”?Why the Moon needs its own timeThe Economist readsWhat to read about HindutvaSix great books about baseballSeven of the best war novelsSubscribeGroup subscriptionsReuse our contentHelp and contact usKeep updatedPublished since September 1843 to take part in “a severe contest between intelligence, which presses forward, and an unworthy, timid ignorance obstructing our progress.”The EconomistAboutAdvertisePress centreThe Economist GroupThe Economist GroupEconomist IntelligenceEconomist ImpactEconomist Impact EventsWorking HereEconomist Education CoursesExecutive JobsTo enhance your experience and ensure our website runs smoothly, we use cookies and similar technologies.Manage CookiesTerms of UsePrivacyCookie PolicyAccessibilityModern Slavery StatementSitemapYour Data RightsCopyright © The Economist Newspaper Limited 2024. 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