The EconomistFebruary 29th 2020 5
1 Contents continues overleaf
Contents
The world this week
7 A summary of political
and business news
Leaders
9 Covid-
Gone global
10 Bernie Sanders
America’s nightmare
11 The war in Afghanistan
This way out
11 Argentina and the IMF
New partners, old dance
12 Free speech at work
Woking nine to five
Letters
14 On companies, gender,
Qatar, war, Brexit,
committees
Briefing
15 Covid-
Flattening the curve
Britain
19 The £18bn research
question
20 Heathrow expansion
rejected
21 Farmers’ post-Brexit fears
21 Anti-terror architecture
22 Shooting ranges
23 Falling life expectancy
23 Scotland’s free periods
24 BagehotKeir Starmer
dares to be dull
Europe
25 Terrorism in Germany
26 The scandal of L’Arche
27 Tech in Serbia
27 Austria’s Jews
28 Italy’s troubled steel plant
United States
29 Bernie Sanders and his
world
32 Harvey Weinstein
32 SCOTUS gets busy
33 The invisible wall
34 LexingtonThe primary
problem
The Americas
35 Guyana’s oil riches
36 Keeping Carnival rain-free
38 BelloAMLO’s theatre
Middle East & Africa
39 Another Israeli election
40 Jews who vote for Arabs
40 Hosni Mubarak dies
41 South Africa’s budget
42 Africa’s trade with
America
BartlebyThe wrong way
to give employee
feedback, page 56
On the cover
The virus is coming.
Governments have an
enormous amount of work to
do: leader,page 9. How to
cope with a pandemic:
briefing,page 15. Rethinking
China-only supply chains:
Chaguan,page 50
- Bernie v Trump: an American
nightmare The senator from
Vermont would present America
with a terrible choice: leader,
page 10.What does his political
revolution hope to accomplish?
Page 29. A recipe for a populist
takeover: Lexington, page 34 - Meet the EU’s trade bruiser
How the European Union’s trade
policy is being rebranded,
page 63 - Woking nine to five
Companies should be stopped
from trying to silence their
employees: leader,page 12.
But they are increasingly
worried about what their people
say—inside and outside the
office, page 51 - Digital twin of the heart
Virtual copies of patients’ hearts
could help doctors diagnose and
treat cardiac disease,page 65