The.Economist.Europe.April.1.7.TruePDF-2017.pdf

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Crunch time for Brexit
The cloud over coal
China: the geopolitical tortoise
Melding minds with microchips
APRIL
1ST
7TH 2017
The Trump
presidency so far
Contents
8
The world this week
Leaders
The White House
Frustration
Britain and the EU
The negotiation
Coal’s decline
Sunlight over soot
Myanmar
A hero disappoints
Economic policy
Friction lovers
31 College protests
Bicker warning
31 Trump and Russia
Never-ending story
33 Lexington
Lost without a map
The Americas
34 Tourism in Cuba
Stuck in the past
35 Canada’s new rules of war
When to shoot a child
soldier
36 Bello
Brazil’s political class
Middle East and Africa
Famine in Africa and
Yemen
The third horseman returns
Islamic State
Mine enemy
Israel
Prime minister v pundits
Sisi and Trump
Loved up
Europe
Protests in Russia
Sudden movement
Portugal’s recovery
Growing out of it
Foreign policy in France
Nationalist v globalist
Slovakia’s politics
An old kidnapping
Charlemagne
The pivot towards Tokyo
The Economist
April 1st 2017
5
11
12
13
13
14
On the cover
The Trump presidency is in a
hole. That is bad for America
and the world: leader, page 11.
Setbacks for Donald Trump in
Congress and the courts
suggest that America’s
checks and balances are
working. But there is still
plenty to worry about, pages
19-21. Although everyone
agrees that America’s tax
system is too complicated,
reform will be hard, page 29.
Mr Trump redrew the political
map to win office. He now
looks lost: Lexington, page 33
Letters
15 On Scoxit, domino theory,
quantum physics,
refugees, inequality,
apostrophes
Briefing
19 America’s checks and
balances
Constrained?
Asia
Myanmar
Governing in prose
Jihadists in Bangladesh
Dug in
Asylum for a Singaporean
blogger
A haven for the crass
Suicide in India
A break for the despairing
South Korean politics
Rising Moon
37
Brexit
Britain is heading for a
brutal encounter with the
reality. Time to be honest
about the trade-offs ahead:
leader, page 12. The two-year
countdown has started and
the agenda is bulging and
contentious, page 45. Our
outgoing columnist laments
the condition of the British
state: Bagehot, page 47
39
40
40
22
23
41
42
43
43
44
The Economist
online
Daily analysis and opinion to
supplement the print edition, plus
audio and video, and a daily chart
Economist.com
24
24
25
Russia
Just when the
opposition seemed moribund,
Aleksei Navalny brings it back
to life, page 41
E-mail:
newsletters and
mobile edition
Economist.com/email
Print edition:
available online by
7pm London time each Thursday
Economist.com/print
Audio edition:
available online
to download each Friday
Economist.com/audioedition
China
26 China and America
Tortoise v hare
28 Banyan
A new leader for Hong Kong
United States
29 Tax reform
The red and the brown
30 Environmental policy
Down and dirty
30 Farming in the Midwest
Rhyme time
Britain
45 Brexit and the EU
A race against time
47 Bagehot
How Brexit damaged
democracy
Cuba
What the tourist
industry tells you about
communism’s last great
bastion, page 34
Volume 423 Number 9034
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:
Atlanta, Beijing, Berlin, Brussels, Cairo, Chicago,
Lima, Mexico City, Moscow, Mumbai, Nairobi,
New Delhi, New York, Paris, San Francisco,
São Paulo, Seoul, Shanghai, Singapore, Tokyo,
Washington DC
1
Contents continues overleaf
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