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The Economist Mar 2nd 2024 Calibre

  • SKU: BELL-58902998
The Economist Mar 2nd 2024 Calibre
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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The Economist Mar 2nd 2024 Calibre instant download after payment.

Publisher: calibre
File Extension: EPUB
File size: 6.1 MB
Author: calibre
Language: English
Year: 2024

Product desciption

The Economist Mar 2nd 2024 Calibre by Calibre instant download after payment.

Articles in this issue:
Politics
Business
KAL’s cartoon
This week’s covers
How to build a British voter
A golden age for stockmarkets is drawing to a close
Fentanyl cannot be defeated without new tactics
The perils of a Le Pen presidency
How to put Russia’s frozen assets to work for Ukraine
To see India’s future, go south
Autocracies are exporting autocracy to their diasporas
Letters to the editor
A former political prisoner on how the West should honour Alexei Navalny’s legacy
Ashoka Mody argues that India is stunted by a lack of moral leadership
America’s ten-year-old fentanyl epidemic is still getting worse
Inside Narendra Modi’s battle to win over the south
Massive farmers’ protests are a headache for Narendra Modi
What will Prabowo Subianto’s foreign policy look like?
Living outside China has become more like living inside China
China tells bankers to be more patriotic
IVF is a slam-dunk issue for Democrats. Abortion may not be
The economics of skiing in America
Does Joe Biden’s re-election campaign have a Gaza problem?
Is Google’s Gemini chatbot woke by accident, or by design?
A millennial is building America’s first nickel-cobalt refinery
Vladimir Putin hardly needs to interfere in American democracy
Africa’s tiger economy is shot
The Palestinians’ new prime minister faces a nightmare
As Iran scares the Middle East, at home its regime rots
Lula’s gaffes are dulling Brazil’s G20 shine
The former president of Honduras is tried for drug trafficking
Argentina’s football clubs are resisting privatisation
How Marine Le Pen is preparing for power
France and Germany are at loggerheads over military aid to Ukraine
Europe hopes barbed wire will keep migrants out. It won’t
Azerbaijan is racing to rebuild in recaptured Nagorno-Karabakh
Kharkiv is struggling under Russian rocket attacks
Is Europe’s stubby skyline a sign of low ambition?
A changing British electorate is propelling Labour towards victory
English football’s financial fracas
The institution that taught Margaret Thatcher about politics
More than half of Britain’s ponds have disappeared
Speaker Hoyle and the strange politics of human resources
Africa is juggling rival powers like no other continent
How businesses are actually using generative AI
Meet the French startup hoping to take on OpenAI
Western multinationals’ Russian dilemmas
Why you should lose your temper at work
Can whisky conquer Chinese palates?
Car shows in the West are in terminal decline
How Argentine businessmen size up Javier Milei
Stockmarkets are booming. But the good times are unlikely to last
Are passive funds to blame for market mania?
Activist investing is no longer the preserve of hedge-fund sharks
How Trump and Biden have failed to cut ties with China
Uranium prices are soaring. Investors should be careful
What do you do with 191bn frozen euros owned by Russia?
AI models make stuff up. How can hallucinations be controlled?
Scientists want to tackle multiple sclerosis by treating the kissing virus
A variety of new batteries are coming to power EVs
Why recorded music will never feel as good as the real thing
Britain’s arts still dazzle the world
“The Picture of Dorian Gray” points to the future of theatre
Why did a once-revered painter, Frans Hals, fall out of favour?
“Palestine”, an old graphic novel, is making a comeback
Can a dozen shipwrecks tell the history of the world?
Cinemas may be dying. But IMAX and the high end are thriving
What to read to understand cyber-security
Economic data, commodities and markets
Robert Badinter persuaded France to abolish the guillotine
Global news and current affairs from a European perspective. Best downloaded on Friday mornings (GMT)

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