Here is a cover-length editorial ... a bigger toll. Last year more than 100,000 Americans were killed by opioid overdoses and 180,000 died from drink. For patients, the new uses of glp-1 drugs ...
Last year hurricanes in the Atlantic ... Subscribers to The Economist can sign up to our new Opinion newsletter, which brings together the best of our leaders, columns, guest essays and reader ...
His second inauguration took place in the Capitol’s Rotunda, the same spot where four years earlier his supporters ... What’s left is something old and new, an ideology from the railroad ...
The scruffy-haired, chainsaw-wielding economist has not disappointed ... down from 25.5% a year earlier. Mr Milei’s economic management is a vast improvement on that of his predecessor.
We haVE two covers this week. In one we consider Donald ... What’s left is something old and new, an ideology from the railroad era mixed with the ambition to plant the flag on Mars.
As the chances of a ban have grown, following the Supreme Court’s decision on January 17th to uphold a sell-or-ban law passed last year ... Some of Xiaohongshu’s new users cite the Cambridge ...
District councils, which often cover areas with 100,000 to 200,000 inhabitants ... Others, like Stevenage, are post-war “new towns” occupied by the descendants of working-class Londoners.
Traditional concerns like improving pay and benefits and flexibility remain more important to workers than expanding DEI ...
In practice, that means that Republicans must find “pay-fors” to cover the cost of extending Mr Trump’s tax cuts from 2017, many of which are due to expire at the end of this year.
Every year, the magazine looked at trends in a special edition called The World Ahead in 2025. Uncertainty would be the hallmark of the coming year, along with the implications of the Trump presidency ...