The Economist | Independent journalism

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Dateline: The Economist history quiz

The US in Brief

Joe Biden’s record-breaking fundraising night

The Modi Raj

A new podcast series about the world’s most successful elected leader

Business

China’s giant solar industry is in turmoil

Overcapacity has caused prices—and profits—to tumble

United States

Republicans are favoured to win the Senate. What would they do?

Congressional Republicans are already considering the art of the possible


Europe

A hard-right 28-year-old could soon be France’s prime minister

Jordan Bardella is poised, social-media savvy and enigmatic




The world in brief

Binyamin Netanyahu, Israel’s prime minister, dissolved the country’s six-person war cabinet...

The London Stock Exchange once again became Europe’s biggest equity market as political turmoil in France spooked investors in Paris...

China opened an anti-dumping probe into pork imports from the EU, less than a week after the bloc hit China’s carmakers with hefty tariffs...

Reform UK, a hard-right party, proposed a staggering £88bn ($112bn) in tax cuts as part of its manifesto ahead of Britain’s general election on July 4th...


Israel’s northern border is ablaze

Can it fight Hamas and Hizbullah simultaneously?

Buttonwood: Has private credit’s golden age already ended?

A more competitive market is a less profitable one

Ray Kurzweil on how AI will transform the physical world

The changes will be particularly profound in energy, manufacturing and medicine, says the futurist

1843 magazine | No British election is complete without a man with a bin on his head

Joke candidates reveal the carnival element of British democracy

Play the archive

Dateline: The Economist history quiz

The US in Brief

Joe Biden’s record-breaking fundraising night

The Modi Raj

A new podcast series about the world’s most successful elected leader

World news

Vladimir Putin’s dangerous bromance with Kim Jong Un

Russia’s dictator may arrive in Pyongyang this week

France is being thrown into uncharted territory

It could soon have a government led by the hard-left or hard-right


How Les Bleus went from zeroes to heroes

“Va-Va-Voom” chronicles the turnaround of the French men’s national team


Thousands of American pensioners are retiring on college campuses

For universities, the boomer business is one way of responding to the enrolment cliff


Business, finance and economics

Why house prices are surging once again

In America, Australia and parts of Europe, property markets have shrugged off higher interest rates

Bartleby: How Gen Zs rebel against Asia’s rigid corporate culture

Young workers are striking, slouching off and setting sail


What Indian business expects from Modi 3.0

After a brief panic, investors and bosses welcome the new government


Free exchange: Does motherhood hurt women’s pay?

Two new studies suggest not—at least in the long run, and in Scandinavia


The rapid rise of Chinese science

How worrying is the rapid rise of Chinese science?

If America wants to maintain its lead, it should focus less on keeping China down

China has become a scientific superpower

From plant biology to superconductor physics the country is at the cutting edge



The tech wars are about to enter a fiery new phase

America, China and the battle for supremacy


Video

America’s election

A second Trump term: from unthinkable to probable

Introducing our 2024 American election forecast model

Five months out, Donald Trump has a clear lead

America’s presidential race is no coin flip, says our forecast


Lexington: Joe Biden’s best chance to shake up the race

But in debating Donald Trump, he faces graver public doubts and a greater challenge than he did in 2020


Might Wisconsin’s redrawn state-legislative districts help Biden win?

Democrats hope newly competitive local contests will boost turnout in the swing state


Stories most read by subscribers

Featured read

If a bestseller list shuns authors it dislikes, it should say so

Bestseller lists are supposed to reflect sales, not political ideology

Britain’s election

Britain’s party manifestos lack detail but leave clues

Labour’s cagey plan would not give them a mandate for radical reform

What would a rout do to the Tories?

A historic electoral defeat would be unlikely to prompt a speedy reckoning


Bagehot: What separates Tony Blair’s Labour from the party today? 

The approach to globalisation is the clearest dividing-line of all


Interactive UK election 2024

General-election forecast: will Labour destroy the Conservatives

Our seat-by-seat prediction for Britain’s next Parliament


The Israel-Hamas war

Hamas and Israel are still far apart over a ceasefire deal

For all America’s optimism, the two sides look fundamentally irreconcilable

Benny Gantz and Gadi Eisenkot leave Israel’s war cabinet

Will this force Binyamin Netanyahu at last to decide to push for a ceasefire?


Talk of war between Israel and Lebanon is growing

Israel and Hizbullah would still prefer to avoid one, but that is getting ever harder to do


Who is responsible for feeding Gaza?

Arguments fly over Israel’s duty to maintain aid


The war in Ukraine

1843 magazine | “Monkeys with a grenade”: inside the nuclear-power station on Ukraine’s front line

Former employees say the plant is being dangerously mismanaged by the Russians


Ukraine has a navy that needs no sailors

It does a surprisingly good job of destroying Russian vessels


In Crimea, Ukraine is beating Russia

The peninsula is becoming a death trap for the Kremlin’s forces


Other highlights

Famous Birthdays wants to be the Wikipedia for Gen Z

From mega to micro stars, this is a validation that cannot be paid for


Three charts assess England’s chances of winning the Euros 2024

Bookmakers’ odds may not tell the whole story


Is now the right time to publish a novel by Louis-Ferdinand Céline?

A newly translated book by an antisemitic French novelist is sure to spark debate


The rise of Chinese science: Welcome or worrying?