Our podcast on science and technology. This week, we explore how the first new treatment for the condition in over a century ...
Our annual ranking returns ...
For decades it looked as though Simandou’s riches might never be dug up. Rio Tinto, an Anglo-Australian miner, first won ...
On December 3rd the European Commission unveiled a long-awaited proposal to use frozen Russian assets, some €210bn ($245bn) ...
Charlotte Howard, our New York bureau chief, on the president’s efforts to stretch America’s war powers—and lawmakers’ ...
Though the government reopened, Republicans are still stuck. The Senate is to vote as soon as next week on the future of the ...
As the mountain of evidence grows, AI can also extract what is useful. Streams of messages, videos and voice notes can be ...
Peer into The Economist’s decision-making processes with Robert Guest, our deputy editor, who explains how we select and ...
This swaggering right of intervention is called a “Trump Corollary” to the Monroe Doctrine. That is a deliberate tribute to ...
A new survey of labour-force data by Amory Gethin of the World Bank and Emmanuel Saez of the University of California, ...
Ageing bodies tend to gain fat at the expense of muscle mass, for a start. Lean muscles hold lots of water, and alcohol is ...
The firm began borrowing to buy bitcoin in 2020, and ramped up purchases last year. Now it does little else and owns 650,000 ...
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