The Senate’s health–care bill: Deep cuts to Medicaid remain the...
Democracy in America
Into the light: How humans became intelligent
Consciousness explained6
Hakan Gunday’s fiction: People-smugglers
A prescient novel about a pressing problem0
Football writing: A game of two halves
An unusual account of the 2014 World Cup1
The Economist asks: Should we turn our understanding of the Middle East on its head?
Host Anne McElvoy is joined by Peter Frankopan, historian and bestselling author of The Silk Roads, to discuss how reorienting how the history of the Middle East is viewed could have far reaching ramifications for diplomacy7
Babbage: The brain that stopped remembering
Paul Markillie buckles up for a future of 48-volt hybrid cars. Matt Kaplan examines whether self-control is really a finite resource. And Luke Dittrich, the author of a new book, explains how a lobotomy gone wrong paved the way for the science of memory. Tom Standage hosts2
The Economist asks: Does power inevitably corrupt?
Anne McElvoy interviews prominent psychologist Dacher Keltner, author of new book The Power Paradox, to investigate how power is acquired, maintained and abused0
The Economist asks: How will worries over technology shape our digital future?
As gadgets become more intelligent, should we embrace smart devices or fear them? Thomas Rid, a professor at King's College and author of a new book, Rise of the Machines: A Cybernetic History, talks to our editors Kenneth Cukier and Edward Lucas0
Historical perspective: On pluralism and light
"Holy Lands” by Nicolas Pelham and "Six Facets of Light” by Ann Wroe are two new books by Economist writers. Both look at contemporary questions through historical lenses2
Money talks: Single and ready to spend
UNMARRIED women are becoming an increasingly potent economic force and we check in with the author of our Special report on business in Africa0
Contemplatively: The Economist asks: Charles Duhigg on how to be smarter
The author of “Smarter, Faster, Better” boasts a way to make us more productive. Kenneth Cukier and Anne McElvoy quiz his findings on Economist Asks1
The week ahead: Zuma's misspent millions
Trump faces up to defeat in Iowa but leads the polls in New Hampshire, South Africa's president uses public funds on his mansion and we check in with the author of our special report on Turkey0
Waging war: The World in Conflict
In his new book, John Andrews, former foreign correspondent for The Economist, discusses the history, evolution and persistence of terrorism and global warfare1
Love and marriage: It takes grit
A wise novel about a couple as they face a big test10
Artificial intelligence and job security: The Economist asks: Jerry Kaplan
The author of “Humans Need Not Apply" discusses the impact of the artificial-intelligence revolution on peoples' jobs, wealth and happiness1
The Economist asks: Flora Fraser: The Washingtons: A legacy forged in war
We ask the author of a new historical biography how Martha Washington's role shaped the course of America's history, and became a template for future First Ladies5
New American fiction: Being Franzen’s friends
Jonathan Franzen’s latest novel cannot quite live up to its predecessors5
Mozambican fiction: Of lions and men
A haunting mix of history and mystery from post-civil war Mozambique0
Drug-trafficking: On the cocaine trail
An angry account of the suffering inflicted by the world’s appetite for illegal drugs9
Milan Kundera’s new fiction: Unbearable lightness
The Czech novelist has published what could be his last book4
The Economist Asks: Steve Hilton: More than tech
The author of "More Human" and former policy advisor to David Cameron talks about how government, education and business are overdue for redesigns2
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The Senate’s health–care bill: Deep cuts to Medicaid remain the...
Democracy in America
Daily chart: America’s segregated labour market
Graphic detail
Choral progression: How the Opera di Roma turned things around
Prospero
Slick moves: Why the falling oil price isn’t hurting markets
Buttonwood’s notebook
Indicators: Retail sales, producer prices, wages and exchange rates
Markets and data
Markets and data
The Economist explains: How the euro zone deals with failing banks
The Economist explains
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