Has state intervention in banking gone too far?

In the opening of his book, Lombard Street, Walter Bagehot remarked that he would not pass comment on Peel's Banking Act of 1844 as it was still too controversial to discuss.

US-ASEAN Relations: Conversation with Scot Marciel

Do you share The Economist's recent analysis that China is no longer content to be a subordinate player in an American-led world order?  Conversation with Scot Marciel. 

Tbilisi Summit: Kakha Bendukidze

At the Tbilisi Summit, Kakha Bendukidze addresses Georgia's evolving economy and relationship to the EU

The hyperconnected economy

How hyperconnectivity is shaping the global economy

The World in 2013 Predictions Hong Kong

Predictions for The World in 2013 from Hong Kong

The promise of a bio-based economy

Why reducing oil dependence and creating a better environment is no distant mirage

Bringing the green economy to the blue world

When writers search for similes to convey a sense of unfathomable vastness, they often look no further than the ocean—this expansive blue world that humanity is simultaneously removed from and so dependent upon.

Reframing the economy: from ownership to access

Ownership. It has been at the heart of everyday life since the emergence of the consumer economy in the late 17th century. And yet today another contrary trend is building: collaborative consumption.

Talent Managing in the Great Reset

Some highlights of this week's Talent Management Summit run by Economist Events, from one of our regular guest bloggers

Going for broke

The Olympics are only in part about sports; they are quite often as much about politics and economics.

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