The Economist - World News, Politics, Economics, Business & Finance

The Economist today

News analysis
Finance & economics

Stockmarket mania comes to China again. Can it last this time?

There are grounds for optimism but also signs of irrational exuberance

Related

China is the world’s factory, more than ever

United States

Cutting American police budgets might have perverse effects

Without other changes, it might even set back the effort to reform how police deal with black citizens

Highlights
Middle East & Africa

The bitter dispute over Africa’s largest dam

Egypt, Ethiopia and Sudan are struggling to share water

The Americas

The Dominican Republic changes its ruling party

The new president has a mandate, but the pandemic and a severe recession will disrupt his plans

From our columnists
Finance & economics

Buttonwood: Why zero interest rates might lead to currency volatility

There is little scope for them to adjust to economic trouble. So something else must

Daily chart

Many Americans are ready to question the result of the presidential election

A study finds that a significant share of partisans will support a re-run if they don’t get their way

Moreover
Prospero

Sergio Leone and Ennio Morricone had a unique film-making partnership

The director and composer reshaped the Western, and drew up a new blueprint for movie soundscapes

The Economist’s coverage of the coronavirus

Read now

Podcasts

Sound reasoning on current affairs, business and finance, science and technology, and global issues.

Listen now

In context: The World If

The World If

What if water shortages destabilise China?

The painfully unequal distribution of water in China reawakens intra-regional resentments not seen in decades. An imagined scenario from 2050

The World If

What if nuclear power had taken off in the 1970s?

How would the world look today if more countries had adopted nuclear power after the 1973 oil crisis? A look back on an alternative history from a rather different 2020

Special report: The new world disorder

Global leadership is missing in action

Seventy-five years ago the world’s leaders designed the peace even as they fought the war. Today’s leaders need to do something similar, says Daniel Franklin

Economist Films

Authoritative insight on news, politics, business, finance, science, technology and the connections between them.

Watch now

The world at your fingertips.

Subscribe for unlimited access to world-leading reporting and analysis.

Subscriber-only benefits

  • Full access to all Economist digital products
  • Read and listen offline on iOS and Android
  • Subscribers-only daily briefing newsletter
  • The weekly edition, in print, digital and audio