Binyamin Netanyahu, the prime minister, may still try to stymie the vote. But at best he can buy his government a few more ...
T o have a coffee delivered to an office in Shanghai, simply ask one of China’s artificial-intelligence super-apps to choose ...
T HAT EVEN a short ceasefire could not hold is evidence the war in Ukraine is unlikely to end soon. Both sides accused the ...
By supper Andy Burnham, the mayor of Greater Manchester, had stolen the limelight: he found a parliamentary seat that, should ...
Editor’s note: The Economist is launching a new column on India. Ashoka is named after the first ruler whose empire stretched ...
Most central banks are cutting interest rates. Not Russia’s. Last month policymakers raised rates to 21%, a two-decade high; markets expect them to reach 23% by the year’s end. The shift is all the ...
This is the introduction to Checks and Balance, a weekly, subscriber-only newsletter bringing exclusive insight from our ...
Cover Story shares preliminary sketches and documents the—often spirited—debates that lead each week to a design seen by ...
This is the introduction to Plot Twist, our weekly culture newsletter, in which correspondents spotlight important authors ...
Meeting in China for the first time since 2017 Donald Trump and Xi Jinping committed to stabilising relations and suggested ...
F rom time to time Prabowo Subianto, Indonesia’s president, evinces magnanimity towards his critics. “Am I really an ...
Several demonstrators predicted that the pro-Western pivot would backfire. “He is turning Armenia into a playground for ...