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The Economist Feb 3rd 2024 Calibre

  • SKU: BELL-58903000
The Economist Feb 3rd 2024 Calibre
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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The Economist Feb 3rd 2024 Calibre instant download after payment.

Publisher: calibre
File Extension: EPUB
File size: 5.92 MB
Author: calibre
Language: English
Year: 2024

Product desciption

The Economist Feb 3rd 2024 Calibre by Calibre instant download after payment.

Articles in this issue:
Politics
Business
KAL’s cartoon
This week’s covers
How to end the Middle East’s agony
The end of the social network
Egypt doesn’t deserve a bail-out, but should get one
The evidence in favour of charter schools in America has strengthened
How to fix British defence
Letters to the editor
As Facebook turns 20, politics is out; impersonal video feeds are in
Japan’s ruling party is in crisis
TikTok is a key battleground in Indonesia’s election
The Hindu right’s pro-cow policies are terrible for India’s cows
India’s opposition bloc disintegrates
Asia’s commercial heft helps keep Russia’s war economy going
Imran Khan is convicted. Pakistan’s generals are content
Is China a winner from the Red Sea attacks?
Hong Kong gets a second draconian security law
Watching “The Shawshank Redemption” on stage in China
Hard times for China’s micro-industrialists
Charter schools do things that all Democrats say they support
How Nevada’s Republicans made their primary irrelevant
A leaked recording shakes up the Republican Party in Arizona
Dunkin’ faces a moo-ving class-action suit from the lactose intolerant
Donald Trump is ordered to pay for his bullying
Why not impeach everyone?
How to overcome the biggest obstacle to electric vehicles
America’s shuttle diplomacy to wind down the war in Gaza
The war in Gaza is exacerbating Egypt’s economic collapse
Did UN workers participate in the October 7th attacks?
Northern Ethiopia is again sliding into starvation
Three countries hit by coups are leaving west Africa’s main bloc
Nicolás Maduro, Venezuela’s dictator, thumbs his nose at Joe Biden
Did spies from China, India and Russia meddle in Canada’s elections?
Can Lula fix Brazil’s fiscal mess?
The feud between Ukraine’s president and army chief boils over
Meet Boris Nadezhdin, Vladimir Putin’s brave challenger
Meet the Knights of Malta
Sweden clears a Turkish hurdle to NATO accession
Russia is losing the battle for the Black Sea
Europe’s grumpy farmers are a symptom of wider malaise
Britain’s armed forces are stretched perilously thin
Labour wants to make Brexit work better. What does the EU think?
Northern Ireland gets its government back
The pharmacist will see you now
EV sales in Britain are disappointing expectations
The search for Conservative Party unity
War in space is no longer science fiction
Users of the internet need not think about its physical underpinnings
Advances in physical storage and retrieval made the cloud possible
The internet got better and faster by moving data closer to users
Data centres improved greatly in energy efficiency as they grew massively larger
The physical borders of the digital world
Satellites offer an important alternative to the wired internet
The internet is integrated into virtually every aspect of life
Sources and acknowledgments
Apple’s Vision Pro headset ushers in a new era of personal technology
Could AMD break Nvidia’s chokehold on chips?
Many family firms lack heirs. Unrelated help is at hand
Rolls-Royce goes electric—in style
Joe Biden’s limits on LNG exports won’t help the climate
Jürgen Klopp and the importance of energy
How much should TikTok fear a resurgent Donald Trump?
What four more years of Joe Biden would mean for America’s economy
Bitcoin ETFs are off to a bad start. Will things improve?
China’s leaders are flailing as markets drop
Evergrande’s liquidation is a new low in China’s property crisis
Your pay is still going up too fast
Biden’s chances of re-election are better than they appear
Why prosthetic limbs need not look like real ones
Alzheimer’s disease may, rarely, be transmitted by medical treatment
AI could accelerate scientific fraud as well as progress
Why some whales can smell in stereo
Authors are collaborating with AI—and each other
A row over the Hong Kong Heritage Museum is a window on China
The violence of “Power Slap” is part of its allure
The Sotheby’s trial revealed the art market’s unsavoury practices
Martha Graham’s life tracked the jumps and dips of modern dance
A new “Mr & Mrs Smith” is about more than action, money and sex
What are (some of) the best comic novels?
Economic data, commodities and markets
Did an Israeli hospital raid breach the laws of war?
What on earth is happening in Poland?
Peter Schickele and P.D.Q. Bach were sides of the same coin
Global news and current affairs from a European perspective. Best downloaded on Friday mornings (GMT)

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