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Higher education
Creative destruction
A cost crisis, changing labour markets and new technology will turn an old institution on its head
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Reform in Japan
The third arrow
Shinzo Abe has the best chance in decades of changing Japan for the better. He seems poised to take...
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Poland’s second golden age
Europe’s unlikely star
Poland just had the best 25 years in half a millennium, but its transformation remains unfinished
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Taxing America’s diaspora
FATCA’s flaws
America’s new law on tax compliance is heavy-handed, inequitable and hypocritical
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Legalising v decriminalising drugs
A half-smoked joint
Decriminalising drugs leaves the crooks with the cash. Legalise drugs instead
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Letters to the editor
On Iraq, Scotland, Spain, Latin America, pens, ICD-10, student fees, hurricanes
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The future of universities
The digital degree
The staid higher-education business is about to experience a welcome earthquake
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America’s crumbling infrastructure
Bridging the gap
For a country where everyone drives, America has shoddy roads
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Climate change and the economy
The cost of doing nothing
Scorched farms, flooded homes and lower productivity
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Primary battles
The Tea Party, scalded
Republicans remain horribly divided, but the Establishment is fighting back
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Lexington
Chinese garden diplomacy
What the 11-year struggle to build a friendship garden reveals about soft power
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Abenomics picks up speed
The battle for Japan
Shinzo Abe’s fight to reshape Japan’s economy and society is entering a new phase
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Japan and the “comfort women”
Looking for loopholes
To excuse the inexcusable, Japan again resorts to obfuscation
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Pakistan at war
Better late than never?
Doubts remain about the belated offensive of Pakistan’s army in North Waziristan
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A dramatic decline in suicides
Back from the edge
The first of two articles on China’s suicide rate looks at the effect of urbanisation
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Official suicides
Unnatural deaths
Xi Jinping’s anti-corruption campaign may have led to a spate of official suicides
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Iraq
Will the jihadist tide be stemmed?
As the rebels extend their reach across Iraq, Nuri al-Maliki is being urged to widen his...
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Jordan and Iraq
Shuddering
The ructions in neighbouring Iraq are making Jordan’s rulers edgier than ever
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Egypt’s new government
Marching forward, to the past
An enigmatic new president seems to be harking backwards
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Nigeria’s displaced
A rising tide of misery
As the Islamist insurgency spreads its net, more and more people are fleeing
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France and economic reforms
Valls’s difficult climb
A stagnant economy underlines how hard it will be for the new prime minister to improve France’s...
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Turkey’s prime minister
Of generals, judges and presidents
Recep Tayyip Erdogan seeks backing from all quarters for his presidential bid
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Inequality in the Netherlands
A capital issue
How large differences in wealth have begun a new tax debate
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Charlemagne
The accidental president
Jean-Claude Juncker will be the next commission boss, even though nobody wants him
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Interest rates
Don’t hold your breath
Why Britain’s interest rate will still be below 1% in a year’s time
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After the hacking trial
Rules and regulators
The main phone-hacking trial is over. The row over the press is not
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Predicting power prices
Reassuringly expensive
How cheaper energy could threaten Britain’s green ambitions
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Metropolitan revolutions
Power surge
When even the Treasury wants to give cities more power, it might happen
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Police reform
Murders and acquisitions
The success of Scotland’s police reforms shames England and Wales
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Bagehot
Andy Coulson’s malign legacy
The downfall of David Cameron’s former press secretary has damaged British democracy
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General Electric
A hard act to follow
It has taken GE’s boss, Jeffrey Immelt, 13 years to escape the legacy of his predecessor, Jack...
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The state as shareholder
Raison d’état
Other countries are selling off state-owned industries but France is trading up
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Business in Italy
Raising a half-full glass to Renzi
Businesspeople are cautiously optimistic about the Italian prime minister’s promises to make their...
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Etihad
Flying against convention
The ambitious airline is trying a riskier route to expansion than its Gulf rivals
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The higher-education business
A winning recipe
Two big Brazilian education firms, now in the process of merging, show how universities can do both...
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Schumpeter
Hit me baby one more time
Napster’s founders demonstrate the challenges of entrepreneurial second acts
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Migration to the United States
Under-age and on the move
A wave of unaccompanied children swamps the debate over immigration
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Tax evasion
Dropping the bomb
America’s fierce campaign against tax cheats is doing more harm than good
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Foreign banks in China
Lenders of little resort
China is an enticing but elusive market for foreign banks
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Restructuring sovereign debt
Busted flush
As Argentina ponders its next step, the IMF suggests new rules for broke countries
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Shadow banking in India
Desert storm
A new book sheds light on Sahara, India’s most mysterious financial firm
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Particle physics
The ghosts and the machine
Studying the diaphanous neutrino will be America’s contribution to a new generation of physics
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The Tour de France
It’s the taking part that counts
The best cycling stories often involve the least celebrated riders
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Obituary
Isaac Patch
Isaac “Ike” Patch, a CIA book-smuggler, civil-rights campaigner and naturalist, died on May 31st...
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