Fertility crisis: why IVF isn't working
More and more women are using IVF to try to get pregnant. But it is painful, expensive and often does not work. Could new, more ...
The Economist
Wall Street's king, Jamie Dimon, on the US presidency
CEO of America's largest and most successful bank, JPMorgan Chase, Jamie Dimon heads up a globe-spanning operation worth ...
The Economist
Generative AI: what is it good for?
Generative AI is the technology behind the wave of new online tools used by millions around the world. As the technology is ever ...
The Economist
Why India's diaspora is so powerful
India has the largest diaspora in the world. But that isn't the only reason why Indian migrants are so influential—in business, ...
The Economist
Inside El Salvador’s war on crime
President Nayib Bukele's brutal crackdown on crime has dramatically reduced the murder rate and won him favour with the public, ...
The Economist
Mutiny in Russia: why is it so significant?
The mutiny in Russian, led by Wagner leader Yevgeny Prigozhin, has exposed chaos in the military command but what does it ...
The Economist
Can being thinner make you richer?
Across the developed world, the richer people are, the thinner they tend to be—but the correlation between wealth and weight ...
The Economist
War in Ukraine: inside Russia’s divided military elite
With Ukraine's counteroffensive under way, infighting has broken out within Russia's military elite. How will Ukraine's successes ...
The Economist
Heatwaves: how hot can it get?
Heatwaves are becoming more frequent, more intense and more deadly. But what is a heatwave, why are they so dangerous and ...
The Economist
Is it worth having kids?
Fertility rates are falling across the rich world, as more and more people are weighing up whether to have children. Raising them ...
The Economist
How to stop AI going rogue
Artificial intelligence is improving so fast that no one knows what it might be capable of. It brings huge opportunities, but also huge ...
The Economist
Why are wars getting longer?
The outbreak of violence in Sudan isn't an anomaly; the world's civil wars are growing longer and deadlier. Robert Guest, The ...
The Economist
Beyond ChatGPT: what chatbots mean for the future
With the arrival of generative AI chatbots, artificial intelligence no longer seems the preserve of science fiction. Now that the bots ...
The Economist
What is the debt ceiling?
As America's government hits the debt ceiling, US politics has become a multi-trillion dollar game of chicken. If neither side backs ...
The Economist
What's the future of crypto?
The financial revolution once promised by cryptocurrencies has been knocked off course by regulators and allegations of fraud.
The Economist
War in Ukraine: Tracking the fighting with satellites
With Ukraine's counter-offensive shrouded in secrecy and Russian-controlled territory impenetrable, can satellite data help you ...
The Economist
The World Ahead 2023: five stories to watch out for
What stories should you be following in 2023? From India becoming the world's most populous country, to an illegal drug that ...
The Economist
Can Ukraine's counter-offensive succeed?
As Ukraine's long awaited counter-offensive finally begins, The Economist's Russia and Eastern Europe editor, Arkady Ostrovsky, ...
The Economist
Silicon Valley Bank: what really went wrong?
Since the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank, American regulators have pulled out all the stops to protect depositors. But the scramble ...
The Economist
Удивительный секрет расшифровки обложки THE ECONOMIST 2023. Главные события года еще впереди!
The economist 2023. Новый подход к разбору самой сложной обложки журнала экономист. Годовая обложка журнала ...
Viktor Skorokhodov
What causes hurricanes?
Hurricanes are among the most dangerous natural phenomena on earth, causing billions of dollars of damage and destroying ...
The Economist
Why is chicken so cheap?
People eat 65 billion chickens every year. It is the fastest-growing meat product. Yet pound for pound the price of chicken has ...
The Economist
How to make poor areas richer
Many people in the rich world are feeling the pinch, particularly in its poorest regions. As the cost of living rises, how can such “left ...
The Economist
Israel's protests: why Bibi's delay is an opportunity for Israel
Israel's prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, has pressed pause on his power-grabbing judicial reforms. Now a strife-torn country ...
The Economist
Why does time pass?
The equations of physics suggest time should be able to go backwards as well as forwards. Experience suggests, though, that it ...
The Economist
Beyond Good Friday: the future of peace in Northern Ireland
Twenty five years ago the Good Friday Agreement brought peace to Northern Ireland. But while the treaty has saved thousands of ...
The Economist
How an obsession with home ownership can ruin the economy
Many dream of owning their own home, and thanks to huge financial incentives in the rich world many have been able to so.
The Economist
Why it's harder to earn more than your parents
In the 21st century it's got harder to earn more than your parents and to climb the social ladder. What's gone wrong, and what can ...
The Economist
How El Niño and La Niña cause extreme weather
El Niño and La Niña are opposite states of one of Earth's most important climate processes, the El Niño Southern Oscillation, ...
The Economist
America’s $2trn green boost, explained
America is spending trillions of dollars in an effort to make the country stronger, greener and richer. These are the three key things ...
The Economist
How migration could make the world richer
Many of the recent political shifts in the West—the election of Donald Trump, the rise of populism in Europe and Brexit—can be ...
The Economist
Why is there still poverty in America?
In America almost 40m people—one eighth of its population—live in poverty. Why does the richest big country in the world still ...
The Economist
How Africa could one day rival China
Africa is changing so fast, it is becoming hard to ignore. In the short term the continent faces many problems, including covid-19, ...
The Economist
How modern families increase social inequality
Modern families with two working adults are richer than those with a single breadwinner, and can afford to take a different ...
The Economist
How to manage a megacity
By 2050, 6 billion people could be living in cities. How should the challenges caused by rapid urbanization be handled in the ...
The Economist
THE ECONOMIST ANUNCIA LA SEGUNDA LLEGADA DE DONALD TRUMP EN 2024
The Economist anuncia la segunda llegada de Donald Trump en 2024.
EnigmAnónimo
Covid-19: how tech will transform your kids' education
The pandemic not only disrupted education—it also thrust technology onto a sector which historically has been slow to adopt it.
The Economist
The Economist's cartoonist on humanity's greatest threats
Ever wondered how Kevin Kallaugher—The Economist's resident cartoonist—comes up with his illustrations? Here our cameras ...
The Economist
See what three degrees of global warming looks like
If global temperatures rise three degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels, the results would be catastrophic. It's an entirely ...
The Economist
How does raising interest rates control inflation?
When central banks raise interest rates, the impact is felt far and wide. Mortgages become more expensive, house prices might fall ...
The Economist
Hydrogen: fuel of the future?
It's been hailed as fuel of the future. Hydrogen is clean, flexible and energy efficient. But in practice there are huge hurdles to ...
The Economist
"The Economist" Calls Indian Media Ill-Informed. Here's Why It's Wrong | Vantage with Palki Sharma
"The Economist" Calls Indian Media Ill-Informed. Here's Why It's Wrong | Vantage with Palki Sharma The Economist recently ...
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