Jornais Acesso aberto

News from 20/11/2010

2010; Gale Group;

Autores

AndrÉ Arias Former minister, Aida Greenbury Managing director, Michael Hunt, Pat Green, Paul Manning, Marilyn Fletcher, Frank McLoughlin, Steve Brickle,

Resumo

The Economist Deutsche Bank Contents Rolex Chartis The world this week Politics Business Renault BASF Saving the euro Speak softly and carry a big chainsaw America's budget deficit Confidence game Dealing with spam Scrap the cap British immigration FedEx Leave well alone Microfinance Xerox The Japan syndrome The future of Japan Georgia Indonesia's forests Shell André Arias On the wrong track Peripheral to periphery Hold on to your hats Economist Digital highlights The Economist Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus HermÈs Confronting the monster The Royal Bank of Scotland Shutting the door Cutting immigration Still choppy The inflation overshoot It all adds up Distance learning Just the job The royal engagement The price of secrecy The secret services and torture Weighing sunlight Information and public services Malaysia International Islamic Financial Centre One man's giant leap Musical chairs at big banks IG Markets Beveridge's children Orange Shell Old wine in new bottles France's new government The nobody who became somebody François Fillon An Italian job Silvio Berlusconi under pressure Marrakech A long odyssey Greece's budgetary woes Atlantic trouble Portugal's financial worries Parker Frau fix-it Germany, central Europe and Russia Constituting a problem Hungarian politics Gang that can't shoot straight HSBC One nation, divisible America in numbers An end to earmarks Congress reconvenes All economics is local Municipal troubles Happy apple New York's recovery Targeting the boss Illegal immigration Qatar Airways Opportunities to invest in Georgia An uncivil action Islam in Tennessee Bluff and counter-bluff Politics in the time of cholera Rebuilding Haiti Towards state socialism Venezuela's economy Ontario IAcción! Mexico's film industry Ungreen gold Illegal mining in South America Fix those borders first Israel, the United States and Palestine Open yet closed Libya Don't try too hard Syria's evangelical Christians A government begins to emerge Iraq's new leaders A horny headache Rhinos in South Africa Please stay calm Guinea's presidential poll A rumble in the Sahel Boxing in Nigeria Hunting down the hoarders China's rising prices Caterpillar fungus, the new gold China's price inflation, continued Politics of hate Bangladesh Beating the drum A coronation in Sri Lanka Raspberries all round Hong Kong's paternalism No paradise, but better than hell North Korean defectors The adventures of SuperGayus Corruption in Indonesia Banyan Freedom from fear Nespresso Long life spam The changing landscape of online fraud Soft pedal Road safety and vigilantism A great deal out there Spamming dissected Thailand Board of Investment SAP China's got viewers Television Mandarin's Great Leap Forward Teaching Chinese Zurich The Economist Foundation for Effective Governance Power struggle Energy companies Leaving home Japanese manufacturers The liquefaction of hardware Innovation in IT Creamy Yogurt Kneading chips Programmable processors Schumpeter The Brazilian model Threadbare Philips Last among equals European bond markets The Delhi consensus The G20 aftermath Overcharging Microfinance under scrutiny Paul Calello Buttonwood Taking von Mises to pieces DHL Nothing to see here Banco PanAmericano Opening stand Cricket and labour markets Economics focus Data birth Crossing the uncanny valley Animation and robotics Time to call the sweep? Pollution in the Himalayas Gotcha! Antimatter Smoking them out Pesticides The scorpions' stratagems Franklin Roosevelt's Supreme Court Scorpions: The Battles and Triumphs of FDR's Great Supreme Court Justices. By Noah Feldman. Twelve Books; 513 pages; $30. To be published in Britain in January 2011; £22.50 Flying the flag Paris under the Nazis And the Show Went On: Cultural Life in Nazi-Occupied Paris. By Alan Riding. Knopf; 416 pages; $28.95. To be published in Britain by Duckworth in March 2011; £20 Page turner Books in prison Running the Books: The Adventures of an Accidental Prison Librarian. By Avi Steinberg. Nan A. Talese; 416 pages; $26 Spooky Haunted Britain The English Ghost: Spectres Through Time. By Peter Ackroyd. Chatto & Windus; 276 pages; £12.99 Glory days Pirate radio in Britain Death of a Pirate: British Radio and the Making of the Information Age. By Adrian Johns. W. W. Norton; 305 pages; $26.95 and £19.99 Expansion Art of the Americas Financial Times Liang Congjie Courses Courses Courses Courses Fellowships Courses Appointments Appointments Tenders Business & Personal Overview GDP forecasts Output, prices and jobs The Economist commodity-price index Trade, exchange rates, budget balances and interest rates Tuberculosis Markets The Economist Patek Philippe The Economist Tokyo Electric Power Company Also in this section Economist Into the unknown Generation change After decades of churning, Japanese politics has started to move On the down escalator A shrinking population makes it harder to rekindle growth and end deflation Insiders and outsiders Japan's fabled corporate culture is ill-suited to a smaller workforce and a knowledge-based economy Corporate euthanasia To boost productivity at home, Japan needs to kill off some of its old, unprofitable companies Recharging the batteries Japan has a strong innovative streak, but needs to use it better Social insecurity Japan's social-security bill is getting out of hand Friends and neighbours Nearby economies are booming, but Japan's foreign relations are getting more complicated The dearth of births Why are so few young Japanese willing to procreate? Bring on the cultural revolution To stop the genteel decline, Japan needs radical measures Economist

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