All over Cuba, the justly aggrieved, the crackpot patriots and anyone who just wanted to square a minor account filled their black notebooks with the names of new candidates for rebel justice.
The ReMarkable Paper Pro is fantastic for writing and taking notes, but its high price might make it a hard sell for anyone ...
Chart: The Economist Such comparisons are far from perfect. Flows in and out of government coffers are volatile. In nominal terms spending naturally rises over time, pushed up by inflation.
By The Economist’s count, 70 countries have now officially endorsed both China’s sovereignty over Taiwan and, just as crucially, that China is entitled to pursue “all” efforts to achieve ...
See how to take part in the quiz at the bottom of this page. If you enjoyed this week’s questions, play Dateline, The Economist’s history game. “Someone’s going to call his bluff.” ...
Map: The Economist The Russian tactics are not dynamic, but are causing Ukraine no end of bother. Put simply, Russia has the infantry and Ukraine does not. Issues with mobilisation and desertion ...
THE TRADITIONAL point of an inaugural address is to transcend the politics of the campaign and draw the country together. Donald Trump’s second inaugural was not that. But it stuck with ...
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 correspondence.
Will she be bold enough to turn things around? Chart: The Economist “Britain is going for growth,” she says. “I don’t think what we’re doing on planning, on regulation, on capital ...
We haVE two covers this week. In one we consider Donald Trump’s imperial presidency. The consensus that America should be a benign superpower has gone. Mr Trump wants to see the country ...
But, as a paper by Robert Dur and Heiner Schmittdiel ... it helps to have a compelling vision of the future. Subscribers to The Economist can sign up to our new Opinion newsletter, which ...
The Treasury Department processed 116 million paper checks during fiscal 2024, according to the Department of Government Efficiency.