From: The Economist - Saturday Sep 19, 2020 11:14 am
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September 19TH 2020

The Economist this week

Our coverage of the coronavirus

Welcome to the newsletter highlighting The Economist’s best writing on the pandemic.

Our cover this week is about an energy shock that is speeding up the shift to a new world order. As covid-19 struck the global economy earlier this year, demand for oil dropped by more than a fifth and prices collapsed. Meanwhile, the clean-energy industry is gaining real momentum. What does that mean for 21st-century geopolitics? 

In our writing on covid-19 we focused on the effects of the pandemic rather than the disease itself, starting with a review of what, in April, we called “the 90%” economy—in which activity would remain deeply depressed. Did it turn out as badly as we feared? A correspondent in China reports from Wuhan, where it all started. We look at Britain’s problems with testing, and how the virus has affected controls on abortion and added to inequality in rural America. And Adrian Wooldridge, a columnist for our sister magazine, 1843, compares the social mores of 2020 to the plague-ridden Middle Ages.

Our mortality tracker uses the gap between the total number of people who have died from any cause and the historical average for the time of year to estimate how many deaths from the virus the official statistics are failing to pick up.

We have also been covering the pandemic in Economist Radio and Economist Films. This week Babbage, our podcast on science and technology, explores the achievements of Rosalind Franklin, who was born 100 years ago and whose work helped define the molecular structure of DNA—and viruses like SARS-CoV-2.

As the recorded death toll approaches 1m, the implications  of the pandemic continue to deepen. I hope you find that our coverage helps you explore them.

Zanny Minton Beddoes
Editor-In-Chief

Editor’s picks

Must-reads from our recent coverage







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