News from 09/10/2010
2010; Gale Group;
Autores
D. James Baker Director, Jeffrey S. Atkin Chief executive, Gabriel Stein Director, William J. Clinton, Julian Scola Communications director, Krister Andersson, Lee J. Alston, John J. Tkacik Junior, Joe F. Ferguson Chief executive,
ResumoThe Economist Rolex Cathay Pacific Contents Bahrain Enel The world this week Politics Business Renault DHL GE imagination The quest for growth Time to bury Governor Gerry Electoral boundaries in America Biting the hand that feeds him Public spending Royal Bank of Canada Highly charged motoring Electric cars Thomson Reuters BAE Systems Call Robert Mugabe's bluff Zimbabwe The euro Shell Seeing REDD Blowing in the wind The right way up A mountain or a molehill? Economist Credit Suisse Digital highlights Hewlett-Packard Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus International Business Machines Can Robert Mugabe ever be persuaded to give up? British Gas And for my next trick The row over welfare cuts Blue on blue The Tory right Bleak house Housing immigrants More with less Fire-service reform Striking the set North Sea oil Upper crust Cornish pasties Xerox To the victor, the bill Paying for higher education Xerox Keep calm, but don't carry on FedEx IG Markets Watch out, world France's president Not exactly Dutch courage Politics in the Netherlands How now Brian Cowen? Ireland's politics Schneider Electric Guts and glory Latvia's election Greenery in high places Germany's Greens Schneider Electric Oktobergloom German beer drinking Schneider Electric A false prophet Ups AngloAmerican Enter the housekeeper The California governor's race Rage against the machine Arnold Schwarzenegger Still worth reading? Political polls A new man for harder times Pete Rouse AmericanAirlines The blue blip Indiana's Senate race The new Calvins Southern Baptists Bang & Olufsen Help from the moon Wave power Rara avis Birdwatching The best Congress money can buy? A miss, but not by a mile Brazil's presidential election Send in the clown Brazil's electoral laws A strike against democracy Ecuador's police mutiny Commerzbank Do as I say Human rights in Argentina Trying violence Chile's Mapuches Sanctions begin to bite Iran's economy Walking several paces behind Women in South Africa The Peninsula A bloody election omen Bombings in Nigeria A rum old mix An index of African governance Hobbling along Pakistan's shaky government On the brink America and Pakistan The Petraeus strategy up close American troops in Afghanistan Mount Everest is singing for joy Railways in Tibet At least they started The Commonwealth games in Delhi Of cabbages and kims South Korea's kimchi crisis Hondajet Banyan And never the twain? Unholy rows Holy places Deep waters, slowly drying up Aquifers Virgin Trial trails Alien torts Passing the tin Global health funding Intelligent life Standard Bank A sparky new motor Electric cars Windows or curtains Microsoft's mobile operating system Beaming in Grandma Video communication Drive my car Car hire Dough rising Fast-food restaurants A growing appetite Bright Food Riding the tiger Irish companies Schumpeter The other demographic dividend Having a ball Zurich The big squeeze Investment banking Buttonwood The magic bullet First mover Regulating Swiss banks Autopsy The flash crash Crude awakening Oil prices Skyteam Easy does it The Japanese economy All his fault SocGen's rogue trader Charities Aid Foundation Economics focus Flood barriers Scientists behaving badly Chinese ethics A dusty neighbour Making new things The 2010 Nobel prizes Phoning ET The search for extraterrestrial intelligence On top of the world Global power Why the West Rules—For Now: The Patterns of History and What They Reveal About the Future. By Ian Morris. Farrar, Straus and Giroux; 750 pages; $35. To be published in Britain by Profile in November; £25 Banker to the world James Wolfensohn A Global Life: My Journey Among Rich and Poor, from Sydney to Wall Street to the World Bank. By James Wolfensohn. PublicAffairs; 448 pages; $29.95 Killer instinct A literary memoir The Hilliker Curse: My Pursuit of Women. By James Ellroy. Knopf; 203 pages; $24.95. William Heinemann; £16.99 Carve her name with pride Edith Cavell Edith Cavell. By Diana Souhami. Quercus; 416 pages; £25 Man in motion Eadweard Muybridge Michael Lassen Courses Courses Courses Courses Courses Courses Courses Postgraduate Courses Appointments Scholarships Appointments Appointments Tenders Fellowships Tenders Tenders Business & Personal Announcements Overview The Economist poll of forecasters, October averages Output, prices and jobs The Economist commodity-price index Trade, exchange rates, budget balances and interest rates Effective tax rates Markets FT Oracle The Economist Swiss Re Also in this section Economist How to grow Barclays Capital Withdrawal symptoms After the stimulus, the hangover Intel Uruguay XXI Verizon Egypt The cost of repair A battered finance sector means slower growth From hoarding to hiring Some countries have successfully preserved jobs. Now they must create new ones Raiffeisen International Pass and move Spain offers a test case for labour-market reform in Europe Smart work Faster productivity growth will be an important part of rich economies' revival HEC London Business School ACCA ESADE Business School Wiley International Monetary Fund A better way The rich world should worry about growth-promoting reforms more than short-term fiscal austerity Economist Bank of America Merrill Lynch Ageas
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