News from 17/07/2010
2010; Gale Group;
Autores
Dick Rich, Sambitsen, Jason Kenney Minister, Peter Corning, Flavio Zanchi, Carl Schwab, Jan Kubis Executive secretary, Lynn St Amour President,
ResumoThe Economist Airbus Credit Suisse Contents Thailand Board of Investment Philips The world this week Politics Business Deutsche Bank Bang & Olufsen Thank you and goodbye Leviathan's spyglass Counting people Diet of worms Governing Japan Don't flunk this one European banks The central bankers' burden Global monetary policy HSBC Come on in Eads Give every man his due Still relevant Deserving doctors The threat of the internet What Americans mean Economist Hp Online highlights The Economist The Economist Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus When kings and princes grow old Accenture Talent Capital singapore Once more into the ring Reforming the NHS Marching as to war Unrest in Northern Ireland Third among equals? Lord Mandelson's memoirs Not revolting enough Unhappy shareholders Teething troubles Britain's new fiscal forecaster The oldest quandary Standard Bank At ease Germany's armed forces An army of volunteers Community service in Germany Calumny, lies and more questions The Bettencourt affair Safran Follow the money State industries in Lithuania Exit, pursued by a Turk Serbia and Turkey Nobbling the 'Ndrangheta Organised crime in Italy Calling time on progress The law of the weed Legalising marijuana Rationer-in-chief Health-care reform Lexus Putting a cap on it The Gulf oil spill Fading drumbeats Gay rights Corporate village malta Economist Intelligence Unit Out of the shadows Iran, America and spying Chris Christie's compromise New Jersey's budget Farewell to the Boss George Steinbrenner Where has all the greatness gone? Pharos Speak softly and carry a blank cheque Brazil's foreign-aid programme Help wanted Caribbean crime-fighting Commune-ism Venezuela's politics Strange bedfellows Argentina's Congress Spearheading dissent Ecuador's leftist strife Somalia comes to Uganda Bombings in Uganda Is there a lot more to come? South Africa after the World Cup Perky again—but for how long? Resilient Lebanon Take it off Syria and the niqab Let's twist again Japan's upper-house elections Young, free and single An up-and-coming force in Japanese politics Snap to it? Australian politics Old wars never die The Hmong and Laos Budding greens Environmental groups in China Fast foes Sri Lanka and the UN Keith Colquhoun Obituary Banyan Splittism on the roof of the world A tide turns Spycraft Shifting up a gear Cycling in cities Grim reapings The quality of death Struggling for control The race to organise television Antennaegate Apple's iPhone imbroglio Strength amid paralysis Japan's hidden growth markets Roll of the dice Gambling in France Keep on trucking Online grocers Hit Print Schumpeter Profiting from non-profits End of an experiment IG Markets Bombmakers bombarded Goldman Sachs Buttonwood A mirage, not a miracle An uneasy calm Greece's debt auction Baltic dries up Shipping-freight rates DHL The out-of-towners Taxing hedge funds Defanging China's growth China's economy That bloated feeling Japanese banks and government bonds Economics focus Easy-money riders Keeping cool and green Air-conditioning Stiletto stiffness Anatomy and behaviour The new face of surgery Surgical technology Battling grannies The role of grandmothers Robo raider Military drones Portrait of a revolutionary The father of Islamic fundamentalism Sayyid Qutb and the Origins of Radical Islamism. By John Calvert. Hurst & Co; 256 pages; £25. To be published in America by Columbia University Press in August Choose the right pals, for a change America in the Middle East Reset: Iran, Turkey and America's Future. By Stephen Kinzer. Times Books; 288 pages; $26.00. Henry Holt; £17.99 Past and present New British fiction The Shape of Her. By Rowan Somerville. Weidenfeld & Nicolson; 288 pages; £18.99 How little changes Ethiopia Famine and Foreigners: Ethiopia Since Live Aid. By Peter Gill. OUP; 304 pages; £14.99. To be published in America by OUP in September Pinch me New film Getting one over The art of the parody The Oxford Book of Parodies. By John Gross. Oxford University Press; 368 pages; £16.99. To be published in America by OUP in August Spoiled by choice Human dilemmas Choice. By Renata Salecl. Profile; 224 pages; £10.99 Beryl Bainbridge Courses Courses Courses Appointments Courses Appointments Business & Personal Tenders Appointments Overview Foreign-born labour Output, prices and jobs The Economist commodity-price index Trade, exchange rates, budget balances and interest rates Stockmarkets Markets The Economist Oracle The Economist Orascom Telecom Also in this section Economist The long wait America's lieutenant But Egypt's role as a regional peacekeeper is getting harder to sustain The best man always wins How Egypt's government perpetuates itself A favoured spot Egypt is making the most of its natural advantages Long-sighted Wealthy Egyptian business families venture abroad A slow learning curve A rotten education system lets the country down No paradise Most Egyptians put up with a lot Saving faith Islam seems to be fading as a revolutionary force After Mubarak Change is bound to come, but when? Economist
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