What could possibly go wrong?

The world this week

Leaders

Our election endorsement

A second Trump term comes with unacceptable risks

If The Economist had a vote, we would cast it for Kamala Harris

Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves carries the red budget box at Downing Street in London, United Kingdom on October 30th 2024

Mission unaccomplished

The British budget combines large numbers and a narrow vision

A bigger state but an irrational way to fund it

Antarctic Dream ship at Petermann Island, Lemaire Channel, Antarctic Peninsula

A very cold war

How to avoid anarchy in Antarctica

All that stands between the status quo and chaos is a fragile treaty

A bank surrounded by fences and one hand adding one in front of the door

Capital control

Index funds want to continue being treated as “passive” investors

They should act like them, then

A black figure with spikky hair going through a door with the same spikes at the top

Think outside the box

ADHD should not be treated as a disorder

Adapting schools and workplaces for it can help far more

Letters

On the OECD and climate, violence against women, the NHS, AI and nuclear power, Britishisms

Letters to the editor

By Invitation

Briefing

An illustration of columns representing U.S. institutions being destroyed by a wrecking ball with Trump sitting atop it.

A sting in the tail risks

How bad could a second Trump presidency get?

The damage to America’s economy, institutions and the world would be huge

Middle East & Africa

Iranian demonstrators hold posters of the Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei

The aftermath of the Israeli strikes

Iran needs a new national-security strategy

The not-quite-peace deal

Another African war looms

Economic & financial indicators

Obituary