News from 30/01/2010
2010; Gale Group;
Autores
Georges HÉbert, Flavio Zanchi, Ranko Bon, Brian Smale, Yanek Mieczkowski Professor, Carlton Getz, Cyrille Brisson,
ResumoThe Economist Barclays Capital Contents Chevron Philips The World this week Politics Business Accenture Hublot The book of jobs The Bihari enlightenment Development The limits to verbiage The state-of-the-union speech Royal Bank of Canada Stage prop Regulating America's banks British Midland International The cruelty of compassion Reforming European economies SAP Grouping nations People power Rehabiliating Gerald Ford Banning the burqa Blowing bubbles The gates of hell Economist Shell Thomson Reuters Left in the dark Electric cars Thomson Reuters Other highlights Intelligent life Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus Carbon Trust Victory for the Tiger-slayer Hp Renault Boeing The recovery and the election End of the recession Dark before the dawn? Northern Ireland For he that hath Reversing inequality Whatever What Britain thinks Tilting at windmills New banking ventures Muddling through no more Reforming central governmant Societe Generale Trouble in store Making military helicopters Bahrain Regime changer Virgin The Royal Bank of Scotland Horse power to horsepower Poland's strong economy The power of history Auschwitz 65 years on Le roi s'amuse Rebranding Nicolas Sarkozy The centre-left cannot hold Italy's troubled left Beyond the Kremlin's reach Russia and its regions Left turn ahead? Oskar Lafontaine Starting them young Agencia Nacional De Hidrocarburos Still talking, at any rate The state-of-the-union message Strange meeting Populist and bankers The pendulum swings back Oregon's tax referendums Getting to closure The Guantánamo file BAE Systems Unbound Free speech and campaign cash Men and marriage The family in figures Credit Agricole The party of No Incredible india Scrabbling for survival Haiti two weeks after the earthquake Wolf sheds fleece Venezuels's drift to authoritarianism The almost-lost cause of freedom Liberalism in Brazil Oil, glorious oil Rising Angola Patience, the essential virtue How to visit Angola Stagnation stirs everything up Nigeria's Muslim sects Reopening the old sectarian wounds Iraq's coming election Swing along again A jazz revival in Ethiopia Still fraught Reporting Iraq Will he, won't he, join the dance? The Palestinians and the peace process Cross about cross-dressing A debate about fashion in Qatar EDHEC On the move Bihar's remarkable recovery A zero contribution Fighting corruption in India Riches in the near abroad China in Central Asia The delights of home cooking Beijing's representative-office scandals Front-line vets American forces in the Philppines Dangerous convictions Repression in Vietnam The World in 2010 Chicago Booth Banyan Japan's love-bubbles for China The bombs that stopped the happy talk The resurgence of at-Qaeda A needier era Scarcity and globalisation Standard Bank Steve Jobs and the tablet of hope Apple unveils the iPad A union of pariahs The Ticketmaster-Live Nation merger All in the family Samsung's leadership saga The engineering gap Testing India's graduates At last, GM finds a buyer Saving Saab Chile Sweet and lowdown The sweetener battle Building Block Tax preparation World Food Programme Credit Suisse Garrottes and sticks Regulating banks New plan, new people? Obama's economics team Buttonwood Not what they meant Off target Hedge funds and private equity Stuyvesant Town in default My big fat sell-off Greek government bonds A lighter burden Financing solar power Can Kan? Tackling deflation in Japan Fading trading World trade Economics focus From bail-out to bail-in The calibration of destruction Aerial bombardment Shelling out Breeding better oysters Frog preserves Freezing amphibian eggs Flame wars Chemical pollution and fertility The young and the restless New fiction 1 The Unnamed. By Joshua Ferris. Reagan Arthur; 310 pages; $24.99. Viking; £12.99 Off they go New fiction 2 Parrot and Olivier in America. By Peter Carey. Knopf; 452 pages; $26.95. Faber and Faber; £18.99 What you can do for nothing Readers meet writers in India Cider and apples New fiction 3 The Wilding. By Maria McCann. Faber and Faber; 335 pages; £12.99 An anthropologist on the run The state of America The Cracked Bell: America and the Afflictions of Liberty. By Tristram Riley-Smith. Skyhorse; 326 pages; $26.95. Constable; £8.99 Bringing an icon to life New film Miep Gies Courses Courses Courses Courses Courses Courses Appointments Courses Appointments Tenders Business & Personal Overview Capital flows to emerging economies Output, prices and jobs The Economist commodity-price index Trade, exchange rates, budget balances and interest rates Hedge funds Markets The Economist Oracle The Economist Ontario Canada Also in this section Economist A world of connections Global swap shops Why social networks have grown so fast-and how Facebook has become so dominant Samsung Twitter's transmitters The magic of 140 characters Lombard Odier Profiting from friendship Social networks have a better chance of making money than their critics think A peach of an opportunity Small businesses are using networks to become bigger Malaysia International Islamic Financial Centre Yammering away at the office A distraction or a bonus? Social contracts The smart way to hire workers EMBA-Global Privacy 2.0 Give a little, take a little Towards a socialised state The joy of unlimited communication Economist
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