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The Economist 29 2013 Calibre

  • SKU: BELL-215571474
The Economist 29 2013 Calibre
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

4.7

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The Economist 29 2013 Calibre instant download after payment.

Publisher: calibre
File Extension: MOBI
File size: 3.26 MB
Author: calibre
Language: English
Year: 2013

Product desciption

The Economist 29 2013 Calibre by Calibre instant download after payment.

Global news and current affairs from a European perspective. Best downloaded on Friday mornings (GMT)

Articles in this issue:
Politics this week

Business this week

KAL's cartoon

London's airport problem: Heathrow: our solution

India: Can India become a great power?

The Cyprus bail-out: This septic isle

Egypt: It’s the politics, stupid

Global warming: Apocalypse perhaps a little later

Letters: On America's competitiveness, the Vikings, Sweden, the Republicans, tips, U2, soft drinks

India as a great power: Know your own strength

London’s airports: Flight paths for a cloudy future

Gay marriage and the Supreme Court: Judge not?

America’s raisin regime: De minimis curat lex

Education: Class dismissed

The media: No news isn’t good news

Privatisation in Pennsylvania: Liquid assets

Street parades: The secret life of beads

Lexington: Empathy is not enough

Canada’s economy: On thinning ice

Human rights in the Americas: War of attrition

Smoking in Latin America: Stubbed out

Communal violence in Myanmar: When the lid blows off

Pakistan: Return of an erstwhile king

Breaking up Indian states: The good of small things

Constitutional wrangles in Fiji: Opportunity blown

Banyan: Chicken Kev and the new brutality

Rebalancing the economy: Bottoms up

Exporting bibles: In the beginning was the ideogram

Residency rights in Hong Kong: Less equal

Egypt’s economy: Going to the dogs

Syria’s rebels: Entanglement at home and abroad

Lebanon: Be careful

Israel, America and Turkey: A useful first step

Congo: A hint of peace

The future of Cyprus: A troubled island story

The Third Reich revisited: The war generation

French politics: Abuse of frailty?

Turkey and the PKK: The war may be over

Boris Berezovsky: The archetypal oligarch

Charlemagne: North is north

Manufacturing towns: The last of the metal-bashers

Labour and business: Post-crustaceous politics

Life in the Hebrides: Clash of nature

The McKay commission: Fear and Lothian

Eco-friendly farewells: Six feet greener

Coach travel: Outward bound

Local government: Car wars

Bagehot: A bad day for foreign scroungers

Participatory politics: Processing power

Catholicism and economics: The poor pope

Cyber-security: The digital arms trade

Online media: You’ll never work at home

Regulating America’s tech firms: Logging off

Takeovers: Ding dong Dell

Solar power: Sunset for Suntech

Dodging sanctions in Iran: Around the block

The shipping industry: Sinking under a big green wave

Schumpeter: The real Disney

The Cypriot deal: Second time unlucky

Spanish banks: Up in smoke

Offshore finance: Haven sent

Buttonwood: Off target

The Federal Reserve: Ben. And then?

America’s JOBS Act: Still not working

Mobile banking: Is it a phone, is it a bank?

Free exchange: Property and the Lady

Climate science: A sensitive matter

Christian history: Quietude

Intimacy and the Middle East: The times they will be a-changing

Theoretical physics: Missing the Nobel

Soviet history: Stalin and his cursed cause

Springtime of the Renaissance: At the dawn of magnificence

Chinua Achebe

Output, prices and jobs

Trade, exchange rates, budget balances and interest rates

The Economist commodity-price index

World GDP

Markets

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