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The Economist's editors and readers developed a taste for more data-driven stories throughout the 2000s. [134] Starting in the late-2000s, the paper began to publish more and more articles that centred solely on charts, some of which were published online every weekday. [134] These "daily charts" are typically followed by a short, 500-word ...
Print/export Download as PDF; ... Non-free The Economist magazine covers (2 F) P. The Economist people (1 C, 75 P) Pages in category "The Economist"
The where-to-be-born index, formerly known as the quality-of-life index (QLI), was last published by the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) in 2013. Its purpose was to assess which country offered the most favorable conditions for a healthy, secure, and prosperous life in the years following its release.
The book was noted by The Economist as journalistic in its approach to the rise of economists involved with public policymaking, by, in example, presenting "the intellectual case" to facilitate twenty years of tax cuts, from the 1960s on, and by helping to engineer two decades of deregulation from the 1970s.
1843 (formerly Intelligent Life) is a digital magazine published by The Economist which features longform narrative journalism as well as shorter reads and columns. [1] Named after the year The Economist was founded, 1843 offers a complementary perspective to its sister publication, focusing more on narrative, rather than analysis.
Laurence Kotlikoff, the brash Boston University economics professor and Social Security expert, doesn’t mince words. “We Americans are financially quite sick,” he writes in his new book ...
A Pareto chart is a type of chart that contains both bars and a line graph, where individual values are represented in descending order by bars, and the cumulative total is represented by the line. The chart is named for the Pareto principle , which, in turn, derives its name from Vilfredo Pareto , a noted Italian economist.
India is ranked in ninth position in crony-capitalism with crony sector wealth accounting for 3.4 per cent of the gross domestic product (GDP), according to a study by The Economist. In India, the non-crony sector wealth amounts to 8.3 per cent of the GDP, as per the latest crony-capitalism index. [7]