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The world economy
Wealth without workers, workers without wealth
The digital revolution is bringing sweeping change to labour markets in both rich and poor worlds
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Afghanistan and America
Don’t let history repeat itself
Barack Obama has dangerously reduced the military help America owes Afghanistan
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Economic reform in Europe
The rise of the Vallenzi
The leaders of France and Italy have a window to pursue genuine reforms, but it is only a narrow one
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American justice
A plea for change
American prosecutors have too much power. Hand some of it to judges
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Hong Kong protests
The Party v the people
The Communist Party faces its toughest challenge since Tiananmen. This time it must make wiser...
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On missile defence, Xi Jinping, the Thames, Canada, health care, entrepreneurs, Ian Paisley, ads, liberalism, Johnny Cash
Letters to the editor
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France
The last Valls
Manuel Valls heads the most reformist government France has seen for many years. But might the...
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Criminal justice
The kings of the courtroom
How prosecutors came to dominate the criminal-justice system
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The attorney-general
Placing Holder
During Eric Holder’s tenure, rights have taken precedence over liberties
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Louisiana’s Senate race
The dynast, the doctor and the gator-wrestler
Why the Pelican State could become the centre of the political universe
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Sexual politics on campus
Yes means yes, says Mr Brown
Is California’s new standard for consent the future for America?
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Lexington
The loneliest man in Congress
Will 2014 spell doom for the last white House Democrat in the Deep South?
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PetroCaribe and the Caribbean
Single point of failure
Venezuela’s financing programme leaves many Caribbean countries vulnerable
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Bello
Three countries or one continent?
Mexico’s reforms should give the idea of a North American community more impetus
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Indonesian politics
The empire strikes back
The old guard is out to obstruct the next president’s ambitious plans for reforms
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South Korean cinema
A shot across the bow
A naval blockbuster set in 1597 feeds nationalism—and popular discontent
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Banyan
Joining the dashes
The South China Sea’s littoral states will fight in the museums, in the archives and on the maps
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Hong Kong protests
No exit
Days of student-led unrest in Hong Kong are a crisis for China’s Communist Party
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Online censorship
HK backspace, backspace
Censors delete news of Hong Kong’s protests, but not quite fast enough
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The war against Islamic State
Unintended consequences
Are American-led air strikes creating a Sunni backlash?
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Iran and the West
Rohani’s outstretched hand
Could America’s fight against Islamic State hasten a nuclear deal with Iran? Probably not
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Pentecostalism in Africa
Of prophets and profits
A collapsed building highlights the international reach of Nigeria’s mega-churches
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Turkey and the PKK
How to deal with Syria’s Kurds
The emergence of another Kurdish entity on its borders unsettles the government
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UKIP’s progress
The flexible Mr Farage
UKIP can bend towards Labour and Tory voters simultaneously. Eventually, though, it will stretch too...
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The economic choice
Trust me
Labour and the Conservatives have laid out their plans to help squeezed Britons
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Luxury boats
We are sailing
Britain’s superyacht business is booming, with a little help from the Chinese
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Bagehot
David Cameron’s grand riposte
The Tory prime minister responds to his critics and rivals with a stirring speech
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The right to be forgotten
Drawing the line
Google grapples with the consequences of a controversial ruling on the boundary between privacy and...
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The cable industry
Tying up the cable business
Lobbying over Comcast’s bid to create a cable-TV behemoth is coming to a head
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Corporate tax deals
A bit too cosy?
Multinationals’ deals with tax-friendly countries are coming under fire
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Yahoo’s true value
What is it really worth?
Investors put a low value on Yahoo’s core business—for now
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Cross-border takeovers
The Germans are coming, again
Why German firms are on the rampage across the pond
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Rocket Internet’s IPO
Launching into the unknown
Predicting Rocket Internet’s trajectory is hard, for want of predecessors
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Electricity companies
Adapting to plug-ins
Electric cars could help save power utilities from a “death spiral”
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Aerospace manufacturers
Good, in parts
In fixing one supply-chain problem, planemakers may be creating another
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Regulating debit cards
Plastic stochastic
Capping fees on card transactions has not worked out as planned
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Saving for retirement
Prudence penalised
European savers have suffered terrible returns from pension funds
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Investing in the Mittelstand
Home is where the capital is
Germans have such faith in their industrialists they are bankrolling them
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The history of inequality
Breaking the camel’s back
What an impressive work of economic history tells you about inequality
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Free exchange
Concrete benefits
Public investments in infrastructure do the most good at times like the present
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Automated hypothesis generation
Computer says “try this”
A new type of software helps researchers decide what they should be looking for
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Longevity and the sense of smell
The scent of death
Low olfactory acuity portends a curtailed lifespan
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Cosmic-ray astronomy
Moonbeams
An intriguing proposal to study cosmic rays by looking at Earth’s satellite
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End-of-life care
Helping hands
Too many old people in the developed world end their lives in hospital, hooked up to machines and...
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Scientific curiosity
Questions, questions
What if—serious scientific answers to absurd hypothetical questions
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Obituary: Deborah Devonshire
Lady of the house
The Dowager Duchess of Devonshire, chatelaine of Chatsworth, died on September 24th, aged 94
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