The Economist | Independent journalism

“Dateline” history quiz

This week: Challenger explodes; Greta goes on strike; and more

The US in brief

Our re-launched forecast model says: “Game on”

The Economist today

The very best of our journalism, handpicked for you each weekday

Leaders

Reluctantly, America eyes building more nuclear weapons

The superpower faces more adversaries, new technologies and less-confident allies

United States

Our election prediction model shows Democrats back in the race

Kamala Harris is neck and neck with Donald Trump, according to our model


Middle East & Africa

Iran’s electronic confrontation with Israel

The two adversaries are engaged in an intense cyber struggle, with Israel still a click ahead




The world in brief

Russia declared a federal emergency in Belgorod, a Russian border region, as Ukraine’s army continued its offensive in the neighbouring oblast of Kursk...

The S&P 500 hit its highest level since late July...

Narendra Modi, India’s prime minister, said that perpetrators of sexual violence must face “the strictest punishment” after the rape and murder of a young doctor in Kolkata last week...

America’s government said it expects Medicare, a federal health agency, to save $6bn in 2026 after negotiating lower prices for ten widely used drugs...


Europe’s economic growth is extremely fragile

Risk is concentrated in one country: Germany

Lexington: Why the 2024 Chicago convention is not the 1968 convention

And the war in Gaza is not Kamala Harris’s Vietnam

From Taylor Swift to Star Trek, niche cruises are on the rise

Themed offerings are luring young and old

“Dateline” history quiz

This week: Challenger explodes; Greta goes on strike; and more

The US in brief

Our re-launched forecast model says: “Game on”

The Economist today

The very best of our journalism, handpicked for you each weekday

This week

Politics

Ukraine’s incursion into Russia, Thailand’s prime minister sacked—and more

Business

Starbucks gets a new boss, Mars buys Kellanova—and more


KAL’s cartoon

A lighter look at this week’s news


Letters to the editor

On Donald Harris, Burberry, sickle-cell disease, Vienna, Katherine Parr, reading books


The war in Ukraine

What next after Ukraine’s invasion of Russia?

It could dig in, pull back or grab more as a bargaining chip

Ukraine’s shock raid deep inside Russia rages on

The surprise attack comes as Ukraine is under pressure in the Donbas


How much of a difference will Ukraine’s new F-16s make?

Too few to beat Russia’s air force, but a strong symbolic start


Amid the bombs, Ukrainians rediscover the beach

Odessa gives itself permission to tan again


America’s election

Our forecast puts Kamala Harris and Donald Trump neck and neck

We relaunch our presidential-election model for a transformed race

Our new forecast for America’s presidential election

Why the polls don’t tell the whole story


Donald Trump plays with fire in Atlanta

Going after Georgia’s popular Republican governor will do him no good in the state


Donald Trump v Kamala Harris: who’s ahead in the polls?

We’re tracking the race for the White House


World news

Bangladesh’s new ruler is in a race against time

The country’s police have gone missing

Afghans are suffering. Don’t expect any tears from the Taliban

Three years on from America’s humiliating departure, the country is ignored


A deadly new strain of mpox is raising alarm

The WHO has declared the outbreak to be a global health emergency


Kishida Fumio, Japan’s prime minister, stands down

The race to succeed him next month is unusually unpredictable


Business, finance and economics

Schumpeter: The cautionary tale of Elon Musk

A new book considers the complex relationship between presidents and company bosses

What is behind China’s perplexing bond-market intervention?

The central bank seems to think the government’s debt is too popular


What is a carry trade?

Borrowing cheaply to buy high-yielding assets is popular, but risky


Can Chipotle’s boss turn Starbucks around?

Brian Niccol faces three big challenges


America’s economy

Will America’s economy swing the election?

It is not entering recession, but it is slowing down. That is bad news for Kamala Harris

Can Kamala Harris win on the economy?

A visit to a crucial swing state reveals the problems she will face


Swing-state economies are doing just fine

They would be doing even better if the Biden-Harris administration had been more cynical


America’s “left-behind” are doing better than ever

But manufacturing jobs are still in decline


Israel’s wars

Israeli aircraft buzz Beirut as the drums of war bang loud

As Iran and Hizbullah threaten retaliation for Israeli assassinations, Lebanon is in the firing line

Hamas’s pick of Yahya Sinwar as leader makes a ceasefire less likely

The appointment of the architect of October 7th ties the group closer to Iran


The Middle East braces for wider war as Iran weighs its response

After Israeli strikes, America is rushing troops to the region and airlines are steering clear


The Middle East must step back from the brink

That still means starting with a ceasefire in Gaza


Summer food

Tinned fish is swimming against the tide

Once a staple of wartime diets, it is now a social-media phenomenon

How Provençal rosé became the summer tipple par excellence

When temperatures rise, wine-drinkers think pink


The world’s best summertime drink relies on nature’s magic

Making tepache, like any other fermentation project, is a lesson in co-operation


When it comes to ice cream, the instinct to innovate is misguided

Forget flavours like ketchup, pickle and blood. It’s best to keep it vanilla


Video

Travel

Exposure to the sun’s UV radiation may be good for you

For now, though, keep the sun cream handy

Why travel guidebooks are not going anywhere

Despite predictions that the internet would kill them


We enjoyed reading these books on holiday. You might, too

A selection of titles chosen by The Economist’s journalists


What the war on tourism gets wrong

Visitors are a boon, if managed wisely


Summer stories

Making sense of the world’s most dangerous horse race

Il Palio is chaotic and corrupt—and full of community spirit

Engineered dust could help make Mars habitable

Restoring water on Mars may be easier than you think


“Deadpool & Wolverine” is revolting, but popular

The film has had the highest-grossing opening of an R-rated film


How long would it take to read the greatest books of all time?

The Economist consulted bibliophile data scientists to get an answer



Our guide to a season of great reading

Our summer issue

1843 magazine | How to get rich (Taylor’s version)

Think you know the story of how Taylor Swift took on the music industry? The reality is more complicated

1843 magazine | How the Proud Boys are prepping for a second Trump term

They led the charge on the Capitol. What next?


1843 magazine | Marwan Barghouti, the world’s most important prisoner

There’s one Palestinian who could help end the conflict. He’s in an Israeli jail


1843 magazine | The cruise that will get you chased by the Chinese coastguard

China is bullying its rivals in the South China Sea. For some tourists, that makes it a perfect holiday destination


Recent highlights

Colombia prepares for a vanilla boom

Purveyors of scented products and posh ice-creams take note

The significance of liquid water on Mars

There could be an ocean’s worth deep underground



Lavender extract makes excellent mosquito-repellent

Scientists have turned it into clothing


Stories most read by subscribers

Featured read

Three years ago this month America withdrew from Afghanistan

A trio of new books tries to make sense of the war and its aftermath

AI schools briefs

A short history of AI

In the first of six weekly briefs, we ask how AI overcame decades of underdelivering


How AI models are getting smarter

Deep neural networks are learning diffusion and other tricks


LLMs will transform medicine, media and more

But not without a helping (human) hand


Footloose and fancy degree: How countries compete for talent