Sign in Welcome! Log into your account your username your password Forgot your password? Get help Create an account Create an account Welcome! Register for an account your email your username A password will be e-mailed to you. Password recovery Recover your password your email A password will be e-mailed to you. What Comes Next? 112 December 2, 2011 FacebookTwitterPinterestWhatsApp Published in The Economist (U.K.) on by (link to originallink to original) Translated from by . Edited by . Back To Origin This post appeared on the front page as a direct link to the original article with the above link . Tags:U.K. Hot this week Block titleFeaturedAll time popularMore Australia: Could Canada and Australia Form a Critical Minerals Supergroup? February 23, 2026. Published in ABC News Australia 0 Japan: First US Investment Project: Securing and Solidifying Profit for Japan February 28, 2026. Published in Sankei ShimbunJapanese and U.S. governments have decided on Japan's first lending and investment project in the U.S. ... up to $550 billion. 0 Saudi Arabia: America through Europe’s Critical Eye February 23, 2026. Published in Asharq Al-Awsat[R]epublican democracy in America proved easier to attain but more superficial and fragile. 0 Canada: Trump Sticks to Celebratory Script in State of the Union, with 1 Angry Detour February 25, 2026. Published in CBC 0 Canada: Why the US Olympic Hockey Victory Is a Win for Canada February 24, 2026. Published in Toronto Star 0 Topics Belgium: In the US, Democracy Is OK, Trade Is a KO February 28, 2026. Published in L'Echo[T]he Supreme Court may have just put another cog into to the president’s infernal machine. 0 Japan: First US Investment Project: Securing and Solidifying Profit for Japan February 28, 2026. Published in Sankei ShimbunJapanese and U.S. governments have decided on Japan's first lending and investment project in the U.S. ... up to $550 billion. 0 Egypt: Can Trump’s Mediation Succeed? February 27, 2026. Published in Ahram OnlineTrump’s potential advantage lies in leverage. 0 Indonesia: Soft Power in Retreat, Fear in Ascent February 27, 2026. Published in The Jakarta Post[T]he crisis of soft power risks accelerating the decline of [U.S.] power in the world, activating and speeding up centrifugal dynamics that might otherwise have taken years to fully manifest. 0 India: Tariffs, Turmoil and the Midterms: Beginning of the End of the Trump Era February 27, 2026. Published in FirstpostTrump knows time is running out: the clock on his second and final presidential term is ticking. 0 Canada: Trump and Co. Vow To Make Western Civilization Great Again February 27, 2026. Published in Toronto Star 0 Austria: Rubio’s Trip to Central and Eastern Europe Was More Than Mere Anti-EU Symbolism February 27, 2026. Published in Der StandardThe fact that a united Europe is harder to deal with than a divided one is not something only Moscow understands; Washington is aware of it as well. 0 Canada: US Women’s Hockey Team Deserves Better than To Be Mocked February 26, 2026. Published in National Post 0 Related Articles Austria: Maybe Trump’s Tariff Bludgeon Was Good for Something after All May 20, 2025. Published in Die Presse U.K.: The Guardian View on the IMF’s Warning: Donald Trump Could Cost the World a Trillion Dollars April 22, 2025. Published in The GuardianThe U.S. president’s economic agenda collides with fragile financial systems, triggering market fears, investor flight and developing nation chaos. U.K.: The Guardian View on Donald Trump’s Industrial Policy: Inward Turn by Ultimatum April 17, 2025. Published in The GuardianThe U.S. is retreating behind chokepoints and tariffs. It remains determined to invent the future but is struggling to ensure its control. U.K.: The Guardian View on the US Immigration Crackdown: What Began with Foreign Nationals Won’t End There April 9, 2025. Published in The GuardianThe Trump administration is deliberately fomenting fear through the deportations and arrests. U.K.: The Guardian View on Trump’s Tariffs: A Monstrous and Momentous Act of Folly April 5, 2025. Published in The GuardianThe U.S. president has expelled his own country from the rules-based global trade system that America itself created. Previous articleBoth Myanmar and the U.S. Should ChangeNext articleAlways More, or Else LEAVE A REPLY Cancel replyLog in to leave a comment