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Britain’s economy
How is it really doing?
Encouraging numbers disguise deep problems. Mark Carney must take action to mitigate them
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Climate change
Can China clean up fast enough?
The world’s biggest polluter is going green, but it needs to speed up the transition
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Italian politics
Addio, Silvio
Having at last been convicted of a crime, Silvio Berlusconi should leave the national stage
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Legal highs
A new prescription
New Zealand’s plan to regulate designer drugs is better than trying to ban them and failing
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Letters
On tax reform, cochlear implants, outdated acts, gift-giving, paying MPs, treating mental illness, home-brewing, crime, entrepreneurs
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China and the environment
The East is grey
China is the world’s worst polluter but largest investor in green energy. Its rise will have as...
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Barack Obama and the war on terror
Taking no chances
The administration claims that al-Qaeda is on the brink of strategic defeat. So why all the alarms...
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Executive misbehaviour (1): San Diego
Just a little local difficulty
Everyone wants Bob Filner to resign. He doesn’t care
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Executive misbehaviour (2): Virginia
Gifts galore
Bob McDonnell upends a state tradition of disinterested public service
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The Baseball Hall of Fame
We’ll get ’em next year
Rampant drug use in the game hurts baseball’s shrine in New York state
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Lexington
Keeping the mighty honest
A new wave of press barons should not allow newspapers to become niche products
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Corruption in Venezuela
The billion-dollar fraud
Evidence of huge rip-offs at the heart of the “Bolivarian revolution” has unleashed political...
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Thailand’s economy
The rice mountain
An increasingly unpopular government sticks to its worst and most costly policy
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Australian politics
Trust v fair dinkum
What promises to be a bruising election campaign gets under way
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Bangladesh’s volatile politics
The battling begums
The pendulum swings away from Sheikh Hasina and her government
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Aviation
Crowded skies, frustrated passengers
Military control of airspace and a risk-averse culture threaten to cripple China’s rapid growth in...
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Elections in Zimbabwe
Stealing the vim from Zim
Robert Mugabe claims another dubious victory at the polls
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Syria’s civil war
A flower in the desert
What has happened to a priest who embodied Syria’s pre-war tolerance?
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The Middle East’s migrant workers
Forget about rights
Attempts to improve the lot of migrants working in the Middle East are unlikely to make much...
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The Israel Defence Forces
Taking wing
Israel’s armed forces are shifting emphasis from mechanised warfare toward air and cyber power
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Italian politics
L’Italia giusta v political expediency
Silvio Berlusconi’s criminal conviction could yet bring down the government
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Hungary’s Roma
How to get out of a vicious circle
A murder trial is symptomatic of Europe’s biggest social problem
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Living standards
Squeezing the hourglass
Growth is back. But for many Britons, it does not feel like it
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Organised crime
Farewell to the heist
British gangsters are more professional and cosmopolitan than in the past
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Lloyds Banking Group
Industrial revolution
Britain’s biggest domestic bank has returned to profit. The government is likely to sell its stake...
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Subsidies for working mothers
Keep it in the family
A proposal to help working mothers has opened a cultural rift in the Tory party
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The Indosphere
Made outside India
As growth slows and reforms falter, economic activity is shifting out of India
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Business and cyber-crime
Firewalls and firefights
A new breed of internet-security firms are encouraging companies to fight back against computer...
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Mexico’s oil industry
Unfixable Pemex
Even if the government plucks up the courage to reform it, Pemex will be hard to fix
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American newspapers
Chasing paper profits
Tycoons with a keen eye for a bargain are buying up print newspapers
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Commercialising neuroscience
Brain sells
Cognitive training may be a moneyspinner despite scientists’ doubts
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Italian manufacturing
A washout
Years of crisis have reinforced the pressure on Italy’s once-envied industrial base
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Europe’s bail-out programmes
What Angela isn’t saying
Euro-zone rescues have left sovereign debt too high to be sustainable
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Raghuram Rajan joins the RBI
Out of the frying pan
A star economist is put in charge of India’s central bank
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The race to head the Federal Reserve
Summers v Yellen
What does it take to run America’s central bank?
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The trial of Fabrice Tourre
Collective guilt
The verdict against a former trader exposes Goldman Sachs
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The price of fish
Different scales
Fish are getting more expensive, but they do not all move at the same speed
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Artificial meat
A quarter-million pounder and fries
The world’s first hamburger made from lab-grown meat has just been served
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The Johnson & Johnson dynasty
Pass the painkillers
A headache-inducing biography of the Johnson family
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