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

Leaders

China’s Communist Party at 100: the secret of its longevity

Ruthlessness, ideological agility and economic growth have kept it in power

Leaders

Investors can no longer take low interest rates for granted

The Federal Reserve is responding to higher inflation. More is on the way


Business

What the ousting of Toshiba’s chairman says about Japanese capitalism

The plight of an industrial giant offers ammunition to both sides of the corporate-governance debate




The world in brief

Shareholders of Toshiba staged a successful revolt, forcing Nagayama Osamu, the chairman, to resign...

President Joe Biden struck a deal on an infrastructure bill worth around $1.2trn, roughly half in new spending, with a group of senators from both parties...

Mr Biden declared a state of emergency in Florida after the collapse of a 12-storey block of flats in Miami, allowing the Federal Emergency Management Agency to coordinate disaster-relief efforts...

Didi Chuxing, China’s answer to Uber, is seeking a valuation of more than $60bn as it prepares to list on the NYSE...


Haiti’s crisis appears to be getting worse

The postponement of a referendum is bad news for President Jovenel Moïse

Buttonwood: A new phase in the financial cycle

The Treasury-bond yield curve flattens

Which countries are becoming less peaceful?

Many parts of the world are becoming more troubled. Watch out for possible shocks in Equatorial Guinea, Sierra Leone and Laos

Dinosaurs once flourished near the North Pole

The bones of their young suggest they were permanent residents, not migrants

Most read by subscribers

  1. At 54, China’s average retirement age is too low

Graphic detail

Zombie research haunts academic literature long after their supposed demise

Dubious papers taint specialist journals long after they have been retracted

Special report: The Chinese Communist Party

The push to revamp the Chinese Communist Party for the next 100 years

The world’s most powerful political party was founded a century ago. James Miles says it is projecting ever greater confidence, while fortifying itself against collapse

Trying to heal the party’s wounds

The party Xi Jinping inherited had been torn apart by infighting. He now wants to ensure that no one in the party defies him

Busybodies, backed by AI, are restoring the party’s visibility

How Communist Party members help to keep a close eye on Chinese citizens—and on each other

The party is eager to expand its influence within business

In private workplaces, the Communist Party—once almost non-existent—is taking root once again

Getting into the vanguard of the Chinese elite

To well-educated Chinese, Communist Party membership is worth fighting for, even if it is not easy to attain

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