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Money Talks

Could AI kill the radio star?

Dateline

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Analysing Africa

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Business

The war for AI talent is heating up

Big tech firms scramble to fill gaps as brain drain sets in

Culture

How to hire a spy

Puzzles, games and free thinking are key to codebreaking


China

Watch out Beijing, China’s second-tier cities are on the up

Eight great ones embody growth, optimism and the good life




The world in brief

The Israel Defence Forces said they had rescued four hostages from central Gaza...

Ahead of a Tesla shareholder vote next week, Norway’s sovereign wealth fund said it would vote against a $56bn pay package for Elon Musk...

Congolese officials said that 38 people had been killed in overnight attacks in eastern villages...

Emmanuel Macron, France’s president, welcomed President Joe Biden to Paris, for his first state visit to France on Saturday...


G42, an Emirati AI hopeful, has big plans

Not all of them are narrowly commercial

The SNP feels the heat in Scotland’s election campaign

And Labour is not the only party to see the benefits

Seven memoirs help explain Europe past and present

Their authors are very different, but the continent’s tumultuous history has shaped them all

Money Talks

Could AI kill the radio star?

Dateline

Try The Economist's history quiz

Analysing Africa

Introducing our latest newsletter

Modi’s humbling

A triumph for Indian democracy

The shock election result will change the country—ultimately for the better

Narendra Modi could respond to disappointment in two different ways

He could become more moderate and focus on the economy, or double down on Hindu nationalism


The people and places that turned away from the BJP

The heartland, and especially lower-caste voters, have soured on Narendra Modi


Podcast Podcasts

The Modi Raj: Episode 1

Born in a small town in Gujarat, Narendra Modi is looking for a way to escape. He finds it in the Hindu-nationalist RSS

50:36


Video

World news

A D-Day commemoration that was not just about beating Hitler

Biden, Macron and Zelensky vowed to defend Ukraine and democracy

Morena’s landslide win threatens to take Mexico down a dangerous path

The country’s newly elected president will need to show political courage


Why New York scrapped congestion charging

Back-seat drivers may have influenced Governor Kathy Hochul’s abrupt decision


South Africa’s future is in the hands of a divided ANC

The party is debating whether to embrace populism or pragmatism


Business, finance and economics

Chinese fast-food insurgents are beating McDonald’s and KFC

The healthy appetite comes from smaller cities

Buttonwood: Should you buy expensive stocks?

A new paper suggests the answer is “yes”


American business should not empower a criminal, says Reid Hoffman

No rational CEO would want a capricious strongman in the White House, argues the entrepreneur


Is America’s economy heading for a consumer crunch?

Warning signs have started to appear. But there are reasons for optimism


EU elections

The three women who will shape Europe

At a crucial moment they encapsulate the dilemma of how to handle populism

The rise of the hard right threatens Europe’s political stability

European elections could mean gridlock in Brussels and beyond


Interactive European elections 2024

European Parliament elections tracker: who’s leading the polls?

Will the hard right make gains in June? The Economist is following the contest


How powerful is the European Parliament?

Upcoming elections show its growing clout


America’s election year

America’s billionaires should resist the urge to support Donald Trump

A Trump victory would reward them. But not enough to justify the risks

What Donald Trump’s 34 convictions mean for the presidential election

Come election season, it could be Hunter Biden’s trial that hogs the headlines


Interactive US election 2024

Who are the Americans switching from Biden to Trump?

Try our “Build a voter” tool—and see which attributes make voters likely to pick one candidate over the other


Trump v Biden: who’s ahead in the polls?

The Economist is tracking the race to be America’s next president



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Britain’s election

How the Labour Party could end Britain’s stagnation

Even if the economy peps up, taxes will have to rise

Bagehot: Rishi Sunak and Sir Keir Starmer fight for a poundshop presidency

The general election reveals the absurdities of Britain’s presidential turn


Can Britain’s economy grow as fast as it needs to?

Labour is banking on a big upswing in growth. It will struggle to get one


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

Joe Biden leaked Israel’s first plan to end the war in Gaza

But hardliners in Israel and Hamas may yet scupper it

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


Outrage at a strike in Rafah is unlikely to change policy

America has already said the incident does not cross its red lines


Stories most read by subscribers

Featured read

A battle royal over deep-sea archaeology in the Caribbean

Colombia begins to explore one of the world’s most contested shipwrecks

The war in Ukraine

In Crimea, Ukraine is beating Russia

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

Russia’s explosion of a huge Ukrainian dam had surprising effects

A year after the blast and flood, Ukrainians disagree over whether to rebuild Kakhovka


Tracking the Ukraine war: where is the latest fighting?

Our satellite view of the conflict, updated daily


Ukraine’s desperate struggle to defend Kharkiv

It is holding off Russia’s attack — for now


Other highlights

Yuval Noah Harari on how to prevent a new age of imperialism

Non-Western powers have a stake in bringing peace to Ukraine, argues the historian

Six non-fiction books you can read in a day

Resolved to read more? There may be no more rewarding genre than the short book


Charles III gets his own paper currency

But most Britons will see far less of him than they did his mother


Forget Jack Sparrow and Captain Hook. Piracy is far more fearsome

A riveting new history of aquatic ambushes, from the 1600s to today


A triumph for Indian democracy

Weekly edition: June 8th 2024

A triumph for Indian democracy