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Our latest newsletter covers a complex and consequential region

The US in brief

Trump jury is chosen; Democrats advance Johnson’s aid plan

Subscriber event

Our editors analyse the situation in the Middle East

Middle East & Africa

Israel responds to Iran’s barrage with a symbolic strike

Both sides now have a chance to de-escalate their conflict, at least for now

Briefing

America is uniquely ill-suited to handle a falling population

Which is a worry, because much of it is already shrinking


Finance & economics

Citigroup, Wall Street’s biggest loser, is at last on the up

Jane Fraser’s unexpected success




The world in brief

Iranian media downplayed an attack by Israel and lifted restrictions on flights over major cities...

The foreign ministers of the G7, a group of rich democracies, concluded a series of meetings on the island of Capri in Italy...

Ukraine’s air force said that it shot down a Russian strategic bomber for the first time since the beginning of the war...

Indians began voting in the country’s general election...


1843 magazine | Inside the Kenyan cult that starved itself to death

During covid-19 a preacher lured thousands of people into a remote forest. Then he told them to stop eating

Chaguan: The dark side of growing old

A coming wave of Alzheimer’s and other forms of dementia will test China to its limits

Dateline: The Economist history quiz | April 19th edition

Can you guess when these extracts were published?

Sign up to Middle East Dispatch

Our latest newsletter covers a complex and consequential region

The US in brief

Trump jury is chosen; Democrats advance Johnson’s aid plan

Subscriber event

Our editors analyse the situation in the Middle East

This week

The most important political stories this week

Iran launches a direct attack on Israel, the criminal trial of Donald Trump begins—and more

The most important stories in the business world this week

Britain’s annual inflation rate slows to 3.2%, retail sales grow rapidly in America—and more


Dateline: The Economist history quiz | April 19th edition

Can you guess when these extracts were published?


Letters to the editor

On China, WEIRD countries, nuclear weapons, software engineers, banlieues, uniforms


Strife in the Middle East

Iranians fear their brittle regime will drag them into war

Ultra-religious hardliners are gaining power and yearn for confrontation

A trauma surgeon on why Gaza is the worst of war zones

It is like stepping back into the 19th century, says David Nott


Will Israel retaliate against Iran, or hold back?

America urges restraint after Iran’s large but futile bombardment of Israel


Iran and Israel’s shadow war explodes into the open

But the Islamic Republic may have miscalculated


The war in Ukraine

As Russia’s attacks step up, Ukraine fears waning Western support

An interview with the country’s new national security chief

Ukrainian drone strikes are hurting Russia’s oil industry

The world’s third-largest producer is now an importer of petrol


How Ukraine is using AI to fight Russia

From target hunting to catching sanctions-busters, its war is increasingly high-tech


Russia is sure to lose in Ukraine, reckons a Chinese expert on Russia

Feng Yujun says the war has strained Sino-Russian relations


America’s election year

In brief

Trump jury is chosen; Democrats advance Johnson’s aid plan

Our daily political update, featuring the stories that matter


Interactive US election 2024

Can you build a Trump voter?

Try our tool—and see which attributes make voters more likely to pick one candidate over the other


Trump v Biden: who’s ahead in the polls?

The Economist is tracking the race to be America’s next president



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Business, finance and economics

Generation Z is unprecedentedly rich

Millennials were poorer at this stage in their lives. So were baby-boomers

China’s better economic growth hides reasons to worry

The country’s leaders are too complacent about deflation


America hits Chinese biotech—and its own drugmakers

A sweeping bill in Congress could cost patients at home


Generative AI is a marvel. Is it also built on theft?

The wonder-technology faces accusations of copyright infringement


World news

After a year of war, Sudan is a failing state

Half a million may starve without urgent help

Why most people regret Brexit

A majority of British voters now believe the split was a mistake


Elon Musk is feuding with Brazil’s powerful Supreme Court

The court has become the de facto regulator of social media in the country


South Korean voters—and spring onions—rebuke the president

The failure of Yoon Suk-yeol’s party in parliamentary elections will make his last three years hard


Stories most read by subscribers

Featured read

Would you really die for your country?

Military conscription is on the agenda in the rich world

Other highlights

Bees, like humans, can preserve cultural traditions

Different colonies build in competing architectural styles

1843 magazine | Robert F. Kennedy junior doesn’t care if he condemns America to Trump

He’s a tree-hugging conspiracy theorist – and he’s running for president


Charlemagne: How a conservative conference morphed into a crisis of liberalism

A Brussels hard-right confab descends into a mix of farce and petty tyranny


Dateline: The Economist history quiz | April 12th edition

Can you guess when these extracts were published?


Transgender care

America should follow England’s lead on transgender care for kids

Its approach is neither as harsh as in red states nor as lax as in blue states


What America has got wrong about gender medicine

Too many doctors have suspended their professional judgment


Britain tries to correct the treatment of gender-dysphoric kids

But puberty blockers are still available from private providers


China’s economy

China’s high-stakes struggle to defy demographic disaster

The Communist Party puts its faith in robots, gene-therapy and bathing services

Xi Jinping’s misguided plan to escape economic stagnation

It will disappoint China’s people and anger the rest of the world


How Xi Jinping plans to overtake America

Digital twins, nuclear fusion and the small matter of fixing China’s economy


The spread of AI

Artificial intelligence is taking over drug development

Regulators need to up their game to keep up

How to define artificial general intelligence

Academics and tech entrepreneurs disagree. A court may soon decide


A new generation of music-making algorithms is here

Their most useful application may lie in helping human composers


Just how rich are businesses getting in the AI gold rush?

Nvidia and Microsoft are not the only winners


India’s election

Gandhi v Modi: crunch time for Congress as India prepares to vote

The Economist joins the most prominent opposition politician on the campaign trail

How India could become an Asian tiger

The world’s most selective bureaucracy is struggling to make it happen


Narendra Modi’s secret weapon: India’s diaspora

Migrants help campaign for the prime minister at home and lobby for the country abroad


Yamini Aiyar laments the damage done to Indian democracy under Narendra Modi

Toxic majoritarianism is just part of the story, says the policy scholar


Visual storytelling

Vladivostok is a window into wartime Russia

Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine is transforming the far-eastern city

Joe Biden’s weakness among Latinos threatens his re-election

In Arizona, a growing Hispanic electorate should help Democrats. Yet Donald Trump is gaining ground


Can you build a British voter?

See how Britons might vote in the next election


How cheap drones are transforming warfare in Ukraine

First-person view drones have achieved near mythical status on the front lines


Reasons to be cheerful about Generation Z

Weekly edition: April 20th 2024

Reasons to be cheerful about Generation Z