News from 31/10/2009
2009; Gale Group;
Autores
Denis Macshane MP, Robert Carlton Professor, Horst Joachim Luedecke Retired professor, Imants Liegis Minister, Andrew Bloodworth, Vimon Kidchob Director-general,
ResumoThe Economist Chevron Royal Bank of Canada Contents Pfizer Malaysia International Islamic Financial Centre The world this week Politics Business Sungard ExxonMobil NYSE Euronext Falling fertility Let them vote Prisoners Sort it out Postal services Hewlett-Packard The proof of the pudding Regulating health food SAP BMW Zurich Raining on India's parade Capital controls Back from the dead American health reform Thomson Reuters Britain's place in Europe Shell A changing climate The grain truth Latvia and NATO Thailand's monarchy Citizen commander Economist On the money Buttonwood's notebook Covidien Other highlights The Economist Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus International Business Machines Go forth and multiply a lot less One world The rich are different Low fertility The great giveaway Reforming the centralised state Conviction politics A prisoner seeks the vote Rock carving Reshaping British banking Bahrain El Presidente Tony Blair for Brussels Korean Air Engineering that elusive recovery The Bank of England's next step Mall nutrition The pickup in sales ZTE Thailand Board of Investment Old wars, new battles Scottish history and politics Samsung Cameron's ransom FedEx Airfrance Angela's new team claims its seats… Germany Peering into the murk French corruption scandals Into the ring against Silvio Italy's opposition Portugal The Estonian exception Baltic economies The problem with Don Vito's friends Spain's political scandals Siemens War games NATO and Russia Continental Airlines Deciding Europe's place in the world Panasonic Carbon Trust A public row Health-care reform Love of Labour Obama and the unions Not right enough New York's special election Hard to dislodge Mayoral elections J Street puts a foot in the door American Jews and Israel Desert excellence Public-school education Exit Bratton Cops and crime in Los Angeles Lights down, curtain up Dallas does culture One year of The One Militias march again Colombia's paramilitaries Shades of grey Panama's financial industry Settling up Argentina's debt negotiations Heir not so apparent? Canada and the monarchy Center for Strategic & International Studies Mellersh & Harding Looking east and south Turkey and the Middle East Just like old times? Riots in Jerusalem One-man show Tunisia's durable president No end in sight Bombs and politics in Iraq Selective rescue Protecting displaced Africans An election under siege Afghanistan's bloody election A hostile ally Terrorism in Pakistan Cash and carry China's navy off Somalia Distant dreams South-East Asian summitry They need another hero Japan's samurai culture Banyan Himalayan histrionics A tough search for talent Public-service careers EDF Dead letter The world's ailing postal services Cluck, moo, oink, ka-ching JBS spreads its wings All together now Airline alliances and antitrust Big is best America's struggling newspapers Taking the hill less climbed Yum! Brands' new corporate culture Accenture Sinecures in peril Elections to American boards On a roll Geely closes in on Volvo IG Index Schumpeter Fish out of water The unrepentant chocolatier Clariden Leu A world apart India and capital flows Buttonwood Bribing the markets Slimming cures ING breaks up Dredging the debt Dubai's debt mountain Sticking-plasters of the universe The outlook for private equity Akuo Energy Economics focus Buffer warren Food, glorious food Nutrition and health Red rags Wine and sea food Philips Current thinking Cheaper desalination The first (and last?) flight of Ares An artist making art The story of Vincent van Gogh Vincent van Gogh: The Letters. Edited by Leo Jansen, Hans Luijten and Nienke Bakker. Thames and Hudson; 2,500 pages; $600 and £325 Book of revelations Wall Street's crisis Too Big To Fail: The Inside Story of How Wall Street and Washington Fought to Save the Financial System—and Themselves. By Andrew Ross Sorkin. Viking; 624 pages; $32.95. Allen Lane; £14.99 Those pesky cartoons Islam and the West The Cartoons That Shook the World. By Jytte Klausen. Yale University Press; 240 pages; $35. To be published in Britain in November A creature of the shallows A biography of Jacques Cousteau Jacques Cousteau: The Sea King. By Brad Matsen. Pantheon Books; 320 Pages; $27.95 Don't mess with her Swedish crime fiction The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo. By Stieg Larsson. MacLehose; 572 pages; £20. Knopf; $14.95 The Girl Who Played with Fire. By Stieg Larsson. MacLehose; 569 pages; £17.99. Knopf; $25.95 The Girl Who Kicked the Hornets' Nest. By Stieg Larsson. MacLehose; 602 pages; £18.99. To be published in America by Knopf in May Leaner the better New York theatres Credit Suisse Richard Sonnenfeldt Courses Courses Courses Courses Appointments Appointments Appointments Tenders Tenders Tenders Business & Personal Overview Greenhouse-gas emissions Output, prices and jobs The Economist commodity-price index Trade, exchange rates, budget balances and interest rates Pension funds Markets Bank of America Merrill Lynch Patek Philippe
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