Step inside The Economist’s summer issue

THIS WEEK we published our second-ever summer double issue. As well as the usual diet of news and analysis, you’ll find a special 48-page supplement of meaty features from 1843 magazine, The Economist’s sister publication. (We won’t publish a print edition next week, but that doesn’t mean we’ll be putting our feet up. We’ll continue to publish new articles on The Economist app and website every day.) 1843 summer stories• The demonisation of BlackRock’s Larry Fink• How Ukraine’s virtually non-existent navy sank Russia’s flagship• Rum and coke and automatic rifles: Myanmar’s Gen Z guerrillas• The Baghdad job: who was behind history’s biggest bank heist?• Who will succeed the Dalai Lama?Our deeply reported profile of Larry Fink, the chief executive of BlackRock, a giant fund manager, examines a man who set himself up as the cheerleader for environmentally friendly investing in America but attracted the ire of the Republican right. As our cover leader this week argues, businesses are incre

A person who loves writing, loves novels, and loves life.Seeking objective truth, hoping for world peace, and wishing for a world without wars.
Step inside The Economist’s summer issue

THIS WEEK we published our second-ever summer double issue. As well as the usual diet of news and analysis, you’ll find a special 48-page supplement of meaty features from 1843 magazine, The Economist’s sister publication. (We won’t publish a print edition next week, but that doesn’t mean we’ll be putting our feet up. We’ll continue to publish new articles on The Economist app and website every day.)

Our deeply reported profile of Larry Fink, the chief executive of BlackRock, a giant fund manager, examines a man who set himself up as the cheerleader for environmentally friendly investing in America but attracted the ire of the Republican right. As our cover leader this week argues, businesses are increasingly caught up in the battles of politicians. Quarrels between America and China have led to sanctions for chipmakers, including Micron and Nvidia, and social-media firms, such as TikTok. Once-staid carmakers now find their investments in the spotlight. And everyone from bankers to brewers has been ensnared in America’s toxic culture wars.

Elsewhere in the issue, we follow the money stolen in the greatest bank heist ever—$2.5bn nicked in broad daylight from an Iraqi state-owned bank. Our correspondents travel to the jungles of Myanmar to meet the country’s Gen Z rebels, and to Ukraine to learn how a non-existent navy sank Russia’s flagship. And we ponder the great matter of what will happen when the Dalai Lama dies.

These features make up our special supplement, for which our designers came up with a suitably summery second cover image.

We hope you enjoy this extended weekly edition of The Economist. You can read more of 1843’s narrative journalism here. Our next weekly issue will be dated August 12th (and, as always, online a couple of days earlier). In the meantime, visit our app and website for a steady stream of news, analysis and features.

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