The Economist - June 9, 2018.pdf

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Xiaomi rewrites the rules of business
The gain in Spain
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How to win the World Cup
JUNE
9TH
15TH 2018
America’s
foreign policy
Contents
8
The world this week
Leaders
Trump’s foreign policy
Demolition man
Trade retaliation
Rules of war
A new Spanish government
The gain in Spain
AI and work
Images aren’t everything
Football
How to win the World Cup
China
36 Caring for the dying
Loved to death
37 Inheritance
Good will-writing
Middle East and Africa
Peace and privatisation
Ethiopia’s new prime
minister
Conflict in Nigeria
Wild fire
Africa’s shady middlemen
The death of Ely Calil
Protests in Jordan
Uneasy lies the head
Saudi Arabia
Reform and repression
The war in Yemen
How to make things worse
Europe
Spain’s new prime
minister
A smooth takeover
Italy
Bashing migrants
Animal-lovers v nature
Starving the beasts
Bosnia
Refugee politics
Turkey
The Kurdish kingmaker
Charlemagne
Angela Merkel plays it cool
Britain
Grenfell Tower
The long shadow
Russian oligarchs
Offski?
European security
Galileo’s middle finger
Culture wars
Brexit v Bernard-Henri Lévy
Bagehot
Good capitalism v bad
The Economist
June 9th 2018
5
11
12
12
13
14
On the cover
Even if Donald Trump strikes
a deal with North Korea, his
foreign policy will harm
America and the world:
leader, page 11. America’s
president is undermining the
rules-based international
order. Can any good come of
it? Page 18. Talks between
America and North Korea
might just succeed, but at
what price? Page 31
38
39
39
40
41
41
Executive action
Donald
Trump’s powers are not as vast
as his lawyers claim, page 23
Letters
16 On central banks, life
insurance, work,
Singapore, Prince
Charles, hyphens
Briefing
18 Trump and the world
Present at the destruction
United States
The rule of law
Pardon me?
Elections in California
Almost blue it
Pharmaceuticals
Right to try
Charles and David Koch
Kochtopus fishing
Local government
Scandimonium
Lexington
Bernie Sanders
The Americas
Brazil
Politics after the strike
Abortion in Argentina
Of rosaries and ovaries
Nicaragua
Ortega’s last act
An eruption in Guatemala
Fuego’s fury
Asia
The Trump-Kim summit
Pushing the envelope
Tourism in Japan
No room at the inn
“Tribals” in India
Revolution rocks
Banyan
Malaysia: one country,
two systems
42
23
The Economist
online
Daily analysis and opinion to
supplement the print edition, plus
audio and video, and a daily chart
Economist.com
43
44
44
45
46
24
25
25
26
27
E-mail:
newsletters and
mobile edition
Economist.com/email
Spain’s new government
Populists of the left and right
are on the rise in Europe.
Despite its political turbulence,
Spain is different: leader, page
12. The new prime minister,
Pedro Sánchez, tries to
combine change, stability and
a fragile mandate, page 42
Print edition:
available online by
7pm London time each Thursday
Economist.com/printedition
Audio edition:
available online
to download each Friday
Economist.com/audioedition
47
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29
48
48
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50
Volume 427 Number 9095
Published since September 1843
to take part in "a severe contest between
intelligence, which presses forward, and
an unworthy, timid ignorance obstructing
our progress."
Editorial offices in London and also:
Beijing, Berlin, Brussels, Cairo, Chicago, Madrid,
Mexico City, Moscow, Mumbai, Nairobi, New Delhi,
New York, Paris, San Francisco, São Paulo, Seoul,
Shanghai, Singapore, Tokyo, Washington DC
30
30
Good capitalism v bad
Britain’s Conservative Party
is engaged in a surprising
debate on the virtues of
markets: Bagehot, page 50
31
33
34
35
1
Contents continues overleaf
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