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  • The caption competition closes

    Caption competition 7: The results

    Mar 11th 2011, 19:34 by The Economist online

    THANK you for all your entries in our latest caption competition. We asked you to provide a pithy caption for a photo accompanying an article in our United States section. In America, the number of people claiming disability benefit for quite subjective ailments has skyrocketed. "Bad backs" are now a particularly common complaint. You came up with some good ideas. Our favourite entries included:

    JaggedM: "It hurts you more than me"
    Mikaeels6: "Back pay"
    brypeter: "Greenbacks for bad backs"
    Chfall2: "Aching to get paid"
    BWRoddey:
    "Sore for more"
    CPW_CPW: "Ill-gotten pains"
    QuantumPL: "The new common cold"
    WrQu9aeGJt: "Buckache?"

    The winning caption was proposed by chrissolo9: "It only hurts when I work". This appeared in the paper today. We offer our congratulations to the winner, and our thanks to everyone who took part.

  • The Economist

    Digital highlights, March 12th 2011

    Mar 11th 2011, 8:16 by The Economist online

    Saving the euro (and Libya)
    On March 11th the 27 European Union heads of government meet in Brussels to discuss the crisis in Libya. The leaders of the 17 euro-zone countries will then try to iron out plans for economic reforms designed to stave off another euro crisis. Our correspondent reports

    Ask The Economist
    Which emerging technologies are worth watching in 2011? On March 15th Tom Standage, digital editor of The Economist and the editor of Technology Quarterly, will answer your questions live on Twitter. His introductory video suggests four promising technologies to keep an eye on

    Pictures of discontentment
    After rising up against Muammar Qaddafi’s rule, the rebel forces that control parts of Libya’s east are in an increasingly tight spot. We visit Benghazi, home to the rebels’ ruling body, the National Council, where a volunteer culture flourishes amid uncertainty about the region’s future

    Debate: Innovation models
    Is Japanese “incremental innovation” superior to Western “disruptive innovation”? Join the debate

    United States: Clear skies
    Readers debate the merits of imposing a no-fly zone over Libya

    Europe: Still just about frozen
    But the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh is in danger of flaring up

    Africa: Arrival in Abidjan
    A correspondent’s diary from Côte d’Ivoire points out that the conflict is far from over

    Middle East: Mapping the story
    The revolutions in the Arab world, as told through the maps that have accompanied The Economist’s coverage

    Americas: A beer in every hand
    Politicians in Ontario court voters by promising to loosen restrictions on drinking

    Asia: The playing fields
    An acclaimed film director wants to bring Cambodia’s league of volleyball-playing amputees to the big screen

    Business: The naked truth
    The CTO of Rapiscan discusses “security theatre” and the future of airport security

    Business education: MBA diary
    A Canadian student travels to India and finds six-sigma management theory thriving among the dabbawalas of Mumbai

    Economics: No more easy pickings
    Guest experts debate a new book by Tyler Cowen. He argues that a slowdown in technological innovation has contributed to soggy wage growth. Others say that soaring pay for the rich is the real problem

    Technology: A high-fibre diet
    McLaren’s new supercar points the way to mass production with carbon composites

  • Middle East unrest

    The Economist's coverage of the Middle East

    Mar 10th 2011, 18:41 by J.D | LONDON

    AS THE protests across the Middle East proliferate, so too does our coverage of the unrest. Keeping it all on our Middle East page seems somewhat unwieldy so we have created this blog post as a repository for the bulk of what we've written on the recent upheaval. We will update it weekly.

    Week of Mar 10th

    The Arab uprisings: Democracy's hard spring
    Once the protests are over, institutions need building up—often from scratch

    Arab economies: Throwing money at the street
    Governments throughout the Middle East are trying to buy off trouble. They may be storing up more

    The battle for Libya: The colonel fights back
    Colonel Muammar Qaddafi is trying to tighten his grip on the west, while the rebels' inexperience leaves them vulnerable in the east

    Libya's fledgling alternative government: Who's in charge?
    The opposition must get a grip, fast

    Slideshow: On the threshhold of war 
    In Libya's biggest city, banks are open and volunteer culture thrives. But the vacuum left by Qaddafi's rule is yet to be filled

    Week of Mar 3rd

    Oil and the economy: The 2011 oil shock
    More of a threat to the world economy than investors seem to think

    Oil markets and Arab unrest: The price of fear
    A complex chain of cause and effect links the Arab world's turmoil to the health of the world economy

    Videographic: Oil and the Arab uprisings
    The world can cope without Libya's oil—but another supply shock could spark another oil crisis

    The Libyan conundrum: Don't let him linger
    Should the Arabs and the West do anything to remove Muammar Qaddafi?

    Libya: A civil war beckons
    As Muammar Qaddafi fights back, fissures in the opposition begin to emerge

    Libya's no-fly-zone: The military balance
    Muammar Qaddafi has enough military power at his disposal to make dislodging him a bloody and uncertain business

    Revolution in Egypt and Tunisia: It's not over yet
    The countries that started the wave of Arab change both have a long way to go

    Saudi Arabia: The royal house is rattled too
    Can the richest of all the Arab royal families stem the tide of reform?

    Yemens's turbulence: Time running out?
    The president nears the brink

    Protests in Iraq: Even a democracy is not immune
    Corruption and poor services are making people ever angrier

    Oman: The sultanate suddenly stirs
    A benevolent autocrat should survive in the fact of a rare bout of dissent

    The United Nations and Libya: An unlikely unifier
    Outrage over the Qaddafi regime has given tired institutions a new lease of life

    Lexington: Libya and the Iraq syndrome
    Does their caution in Libya show that Americans will make war no more?

    Banyan: More black tea than jasmine
    Watching the Middle East and north Africa, Central Asian rulers see no pressing reason to fret

    China's rescue mission to Libya: Push factor
    The armed forces nudged further afield

    Week of Feb 24th

    Qaddafi and his ilk: Blood and oil
    The West has to deal with tyrants, but it should do so on its own terms

    The Arab uprisings: Endgame in Tripoli
    The bloodiest of the north Africa rebellions so far leaves hundreds dead

    The liberated east: Building a new Libya
    Around Benghazi, Muammar Qaddafi's enemies have triumphed

    Tea with The Economist: Richard Dalton
    Britain's former ambassador to Libya says any military action would be a last resort in getting rid of Qaddafi

    From the archive: Appointment in Tripoli
    We look back at our leader about bombing Libya in 1986

    The uprising in Libya: What the Arab papers say
    We look at coverage of Libya in the Arab press

    Slideshow: Libya's bloody uprising
    The violent conflict in Libya in pictures

    Libya in fragments: A new flag flies in the east
    The founding fathers of a new Libya gather

    Egypt and Tunisia's transitions: When regimes stick
    Toppling leaders is one thing. Disposing of their governments is another

    Tensions in Morocco: A firm royal hand
    The protest movement is damped down by the palace, as usual

    The nervous Gulf: Bullets and bribes
    Saudi Arabia urges Bahrain to keep protesters at bay

    Protests in Yemen: Getting together
    At last, disparate opposition groups are starting to combine

    Another London diaspora: Little Arabia
    The mood on the Arab street (in Knightsbridge)

    Military-to-military relationships: The ties that bind
    America's armed forces may sometimes succeed where its diplomats cannot

    Oil and the Arab world's unrest: Oil pressure rising
    The world is badly placed to deal with another oil crisis

    Dictators and violence: Grim decision-making
    How do dictators decide whether to use force to stay in power?

    Week of Feb 17th

    The Arab world: The awakening
    As change sweeps through the Middle East, the world has many reasons to fear. But it also has one great hope

    After Mubarak: The autumn of the patriarchs
    A generational change of mentality may bring fresh hope to the entire region

    Worried Israel: Encircled by enemies again?
    Israelis are jittery about trends in Egypt, the Arab world and even in America

    Division in Palestine: What shall we do now?
    The rulers of two Palestinian territories offer different answers

    Demonstrations in Iran: Bouncing back?
    The opposition has shown it is still alive; how strongly is less clear

    Bloodshed in Bahrain: A Gulf state that is the odd man out
    A tiny Sunni kingdom with a Shia majority is feeling a chill Egyptian wind

    The restive Maghreb: Dont' count your dominoes
    Will other north African countries explode too?

    Protests in Yemen: Building up
    The president is not yet on the brink, but nor is he safe

    Turkey's election: A Muslim democracy in action
    Popular uprisings in the Arab world are drawing new attention to the example of Turkey's democracy

    Lexington: How Obama handled Egypt
    Crossed wires, close calls, but a good result—until the next friend wobbles

    Audio: Libya's bloody uprising
    Tim Niblock, of the University of Exeter, explains the historical background to the crisis and what the future might hold

    Videographic: The show-throwers' index
    An animated version of our index of unrest

    Tea with The Economist: Maha Azzam
    An analyst on Egypt's future and how the protests sweeping the Arab world stem from different contexts but similar grievances

    Libya's uprising: Time to leave
    Our correspondent reports from the border between Egpyt and Libya

    Protests in Bahrain: An uneasy truce
    The police retreats and protesters rejoice

    Protests in Libya: Blood in the streets
    Demonstrations in Libya are met with violence from the government

    Week of Feb 10th

    Egypt rises up: The long haul
    Hosni Mubarak's regime looks as if it is trying to snuff out the protests. Can it be stopped?

    Egypt and the region: The long standoff
    Fighting gives way to talking, but the mood of protest cannot be reversed

    The shoethrowers' index: Where is the next upheaval?

    Iran's view of Egypt: Opportunity and envy
    Which Iranian revolution has now broken out in Cairo?

    The Gulf states: Ripples spreading
    Even the oil-rich Gulf monarchies are feeling the Egypt effect

    Syria's reaction: An alternative is sighted
    For the moment, the president is safe. But that may change

    Tunisia's revolution: Now what?
    Putting the country back together

    Internet blackouts: Reaching for the kill switch
    The costs and practicalities of switching off the internet in Egypt and elsewhere

    Audio: Knocking over entire web systems
    Our correspondent on how Egypt shut off the internet, and a heated debate over the necessity of a "kill switch" in America

    Mubarak's fall: What the Arab papers say
    We look at reactions to the ouster of Hosni Mubarak in the Arab press

    Egypt after Mubarak: Where now?
    What lies ahead for Egypt and the region after the fall of Hosni Mubarak is uncertain

    Egypt: In the headlines
    We look at the front pages of Egypt's newspapers the day after Hosni Mubarak stepped down as president

    Egypt: Mubarak toppled
    After more than two weeks of protests, the president goes at last

    Unrest in Egypt: Strange goings-on
    Rumours that Mubarak would step down seem mistaken

    Week of Feb 3rd

    Democracy in the Arab world: Egypt rises up
    The West should celebrate, not fear, the upheaval in Egypt

    The upheaval in Egypt: An end or a beginning?
    As Hosni Mubarak fights back, where Egypt's revolt will go and how far it will spread, are still unanswered questions

    Tea with The Economist: Rashid Khalidi
    A professor of Modern Arab studies at Columbia University argues that the regime is digging its heels in

    Jordan's monarchy: Nervous times ahead
    The king is catching a harsh wind, too

    Worried Israel: Bad news for the Jewish state
    Egypt's upheaval is rattling the Israelis

    The American conundrum: When allies tumble
    The Obama administration comes off the fence, but the future looks grim

    Audio: Silent panic
    Our Washington bureau chief and Jerusalem correspondent discuss the nuanced and cautious dance between America, Israel and a new Egypt

    Regional reverberations: Variously vulnerable
    Who's next?

    China's reaction to Arab unrest: Build a wall
    The Year of the Rabbit starts badly

    Lexington: Was George Bush right?
    As Egypt erupts, his "Arab freedom" agenda is suddenly looking a little cleverer

    Charlemagne: Out of the limelight
    Europe's new foreign-policy machinery faces its first test. Time for its boss to perform

    Commodities and the Middle East: Protests and the pump
    The Egypt effect may be more pronounced for food than oil

    Slideshow: The scent of jasmine in the land of qat
    We attend an opposition and pro-government protest on the streets of Sana'a and find Yemenis want peaceful, gradual change

    Media freedom in Syria: A show of strength or a sign of weakness?
    The government lifts bans on Facebook, Youtube and Twitter

    Egypt's upheaval: The chaos continues
    Protests show no sign of dying down in Egypt

    Slideshow: Unmoved and unyielding
    Pictures of Egypt's protesters

    Week of Jan 27th

    Protests in Egypt: The scent of jasmine spreads
    As protests erupt in Egypt, Arab leaders everywhere should take heed

    Protests in Egypt: Another Arab regime under threat
    President Hosni Mubarak faces unprecendented protest on the street. But it may not make him go—yet

    Egypt's revolt: The regime sends in the thugs
    Protests in Egypt turn violent

    Unrest in Egypt: What the Arab papers say
    We look at reactions to the upheaval in Egypt in the Arab press

    Slideshow: Days of rage
    Pictures of the growing protests in Egypt

    Egypt's protests: Read all about it
    We look at what Egypt's front pages say about the unrest there

    Egypt: The battle for Cairo is over, or is it?
    Another battle may be needed, soon, before Hosni Mubarak falls for good

    Unrest in Egypt: Not appeased
    The regime fails to placate the protesters

    Tunisia's upheaval: No one is really in charge
    The revolution is still in flux

    Demonstrations in Yemen: Catching on
    Yemen's brittle system rattles

    Unrest in Jordan: Whether he likes it or not
    The winds of change are buffeting Jordan

    Week of Jan 20th

    Tunisia and the Arab world: Let the scent of jasmine spread
    How wonderful if Tunisia became a paragon of democracy for other Arab countries to emulate

    Tunisia: Ali Baba gone, but what about the 40 thieves?
    The flight of Tunisia's longtime president leaves the small country he ruled and robbed in upheaval. Its Arab neighbours wonder whether it's the start of a trend

    Audio: A real shot at democracy
    Juan Cole, of the University of Michigan, on why democracy may bloom in Tunisia, but may not spread to the rest of the Arab world

    Week of Jan 13th

    Tunisia: Out with the old?
    A new government in Tunis proves divisive

    Tunsia: What the Arab papers say
    Reactions in the Arab press to Tunisia's revolution

    Tunisia's revolution: Watching and waiting
    A day after the president fled, the mood in Tunisia remains uncertain

    Tunisia's troubles: A dictator deposed
    Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali, Tunisia's president, steps down at last

    Tunisia: Turmoil in Tunis
    The protests in the capital are getting worse

    Protests in Tunisia: Hotting up
    Tunisia's president addresses the country as protests show no sign of abating after three weeks

    Tunisia's troubles: No sign of an end
    The president imposes a curfew and sacks his interior minister. But will that save his own skin?

    Week of Jan 6th

    Tunisia's troubles: Sour young men
    Why protests, once rare, are persisting

  • European summitry

    The latest from Brussels

    Mar 10th 2011, 16:24 by T.N.

    ON MARCH 11th the 27 European Union heads of government will meet in Brussels to discuss the ongoing fighting in Libya. (France has pre-empted the talks by saying it recognises the rebels in the eastern part of the country as the legitimate government of Libya.)

    The leaders of the 17 countries that use the euro will then discuss a problem closer to home—the sovereign-debt crisis that has already seen two countries, Greece and Ireland, accept international bail-outs.

    Coverage of the euro-zone summit in the current issue of The Economist includes:

    • A leader arguing that Germany should be wary of attempts by its euro-zone partners to create an illiberal "union within a union"
    • A report on how the various countries left outside the new club, such as Poland, Sweden and Denmark, feel about their exclusion
    • Bagehot, our British-politics column, on the dangers for Britain
    • Charlemagne, our European column, on why plans for closer economic integration in the euro zone could cause trouble

    This page will be updated with our online reporting from the summits.

  • Jacques Chirac's corruption trial

    Out of the dock, for now

    Mar 8th 2011, 15:13 by S.P. | PARIS

    FOR nearly two decades, French investigating judges have been compiling dossiers, gathering evidence and hearing witnesses in an attempt to hold Jacques Chirac to account for his time as mayor of Paris. This week the former president of France was finally due to appear in court to stand trial, an event without precedent under France's fifth republic.

    Yet earlier today the presiding judge in the Paris criminal court accepted a technical objection from one of Mr Chirac’s co-defendants, thereby delaying proceedings for a further three months.

    The 78-year-old Mr Chirac is charged with “misappropriation of public funds” in connection with the creation of fake jobs while he was mayor of Paris, in 1977-95. During that time he was building up a new Gaullist party, from which he bid for, and won, the presidency, in 1995. Many town-hall employees, paid for by the taxpayer, were in reality working for his party.

    The trial that (temporarily) opened yesterday involved two separate judicial investigations, 28 bogus jobs and nine co-defendants. Among them is Michel Roussin, Mr Chirac’s former town-hall chief of staff, already convicted in a previous town-hall corruption case. If convicted, Mr Chirac could in theory face up to ten years imprisonment and a €150,000 ($208,000) fine.

    Over the years judges have put together various cases in an attempt to finger Mr Chirac (some are listed in the table). This is the only one to have reached court. All the others have been shelved, either because the statute of limitations expired or because the judges failed to get around the presidential immunity that Mr Chirac enjoyed until he left office in 2007.

    Some of the cases appeared far more serious than the current one, notably those involving an entrenched system of kickbacks on public contracts from the Paris town hall, for which dozens, including Mr Roussin, were convicted. Other inquiries were never resolved, such as that into travel-agency bills paid in cash by the Chirac family.

    So if the investigating judges are ever to hold Mr Chirac to account for what went on during his watch, this is their last chance. That a system of fake jobs existed has already been established. In 2004, Alain Juppé, Mr Chirac’s former right-hand man at the Paris town hall (now reincarnated as France’s new foreign minister) was convicted in connection with the affair.

    But last year, to general surprise, Bertrand Delanoë, the Socialist mayor of Paris, withdrew the town hall as a plaintiff in the Chirac case, after Mr Chirac agreed to pay the city €500,000 in compensation and the UMP, the successor to his Gaullist party, stumped up another €1.7m. Mr Chirac has said that he was willing to appear in the dock, and that he has nothing to hide.

    This week’s ruling, however, adds to the sense that, when it comes to Mr Chirac, the French justice system keeps stalling. Following the withdrawal of the Paris town hall, the case is being brought by civil plaintiffs, against the advice of the public prosecutor. This week’s technical appeal, querying the constitutionality of the law under which the defendants are being tried, now goes to a higher court. That body has three months to decide whether the appeal is founded, in which case it goes before the Constitutional Council, France’s highest judicial authority (on which, in normal times, Mr Chirac himself sits). If not, the case resumes.

    The oddity is that the French themselves seem ambivalent about sending their ageing ex-president to stand trial. In retirement, he has become something of a national treasure, enjoying public affection and high popularity ratings despite the many wasted years of his presidency. Many remember with pride his stand against the 2003 American-led invasion of Iraq. Most of his Gaullist friends, and some of the opposition, are dismayed at the thought of him in the dock.

    Even Arnaud Montebourg, a Socialist politician and lawyer, who vowed to pursue Mr Chirac the moment his immunity expired, says that “there is no point now in judging him”. Nobody now expects Mr Chirac to get anywhere near the inside of a prison cell. With each delay, he looks ever more likely to emerge relatively unscathed.

  • This week's caption competition

    Caption competition 7

    Mar 7th 2011, 18:13 by The Economist online

    CAN you write an Economist picture caption? The excellent standard of entries in our previous competitions suggests that many of you can: last time your suggestions again provided us with both a caption and a headline. Here's a new chance for you to see your idea in print.

    The photograph above will accompany an article in the United States section in this week's issue. Disability benefits are crucial for many. Yet in America, the number of people claiming disability benefit for quite subjective ailments has skyrocketed. "Bad backs" are now a particularly common complaint.

    As before, it's up to you to provide the caption: please leave your suggestions in the comments thread below. The captions should be as short and snappy as possible, and definitely no more than about 30 characters long. The most appropriate contribution will appear beneath the picture in this week's print edition, which is published on Friday morning. Entries close at midnight London time on Wednesday evening, so you've got a little more than 48 hours. The only reward is that the winner can then truthfully claim to have written (at least a few words) for The Economist. Over to you.

    Update: The competition has now closed, and the winner has been announced.

  • Israeli politics

    A pointed resignation

    Mar 6th 2011, 9:47 by D.L. | JERUSALEM

    A FORMER Israeli ambassador to South Africa has pointedly resigned from the foreign service, citing the collapse of apartheid South Africa as an important lesson for modern-day Israel.

    "For 46 years the apartheid government strove by force of arms to achieve regional hegemony," wrote Ilan Baruch wrote to his colleagues in the Israeli foreign ministry in a parting letter. "Apartheid was supported by almost everyone in the white community, not necessarily as a racist theory but as a policy of self-defence. There was denial of the moral price."

    Mr Baruch stressed that "those who accuse Israel of South Africa-style apartheid are plain wrong. That is a vengeful and vicious calumny against Zionism… However, I do believe that the South African experience needs to be studied." He explained in his letter that he found himself no longer able to represent Israel because the government of Binyamin Netanyahu had no interest in a peace process based on land for peace and designed to end the conflict with the Palestinians.

    Government spokesmen, he wrote, had repeatedly rejected the international demand that Israel withdraw from the occupied Palestinian territories. "They spurn the Annapolis process, they ignore the Road Map [two American peace initiatives from the Bush years which Israel accepted at the time]. The upshot is a malignant diplomatic dynamic which threatens Israel’s international standing and undermines the legitimacy not only of its occupation but of its very membership in the family of nations."

    He was, therefore, taking early retirement, Mr Baruch announced. He is the first and thus far the only member of the foreign service to quit since Mr Netanyahu became prime minister two years ago and installed Avigdor Lieberman, leader of the hard-right Yisrael Beitenu party, as foreign minister. He says he received dozens of e-mails and text messages from colleagues thanking him for expressing what many in the ministry think. No-one wrote condemning his action. Most of his colleagues wrote nothing at all. Perhaps, he surmises, people were not anxious to put their thoughts in traceable writing.

    The foreign ministry itself issued a statement saying that Mr Baruch had applied last year to be ambassador to Egypt, had failed to get the appointment—and that was why he was leaving.

    Mr Baruch dismisses that as petty and spiteful. He admits, though, that if he were younger or poorer he probably would not have left, "but rather have sought a low-profile posting where one can keep one’s head down and wait. A sort of unarticulated, internal resignation; that’s what many people do."

    In his letter, Mr Baruch cautioned that "the paternalistic depiction of Israel as a front-line fortress in a global inter-cultural and inter-religious conflict is dangerous. The depiction of the opposition within the international community to Israel’s occupation policy as anti-Semitism is simplistic, provincial and superficial."

    Mr Baruch took a stinging swipe at the foreign ministry’s efforts to change Israel’s branding as a way of improving its international standing. "The concept that the answer to the various threats to our national security lies in expanding our public advocacy and in promoting Israel’s image as a leader in world technology—that concept is an illusion."

    Tzipi Livni, the foreign minister in the previous government and now leader of the opposition, supported Mr Baruch’s critique. "Public relations without policy is no solution," she said. "Perhaps [Mr Netanyahu] really believes that speaking in fluent English on foreign television stations creates change. But it doesn’t."

  • Iran's opposition leaders

    Behind bars at last

    Mar 4th 2011, 16:36 by The Economist online

    FOR Iran’s best-known dissidents, Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi, the net has tightened with tortuous precision. First came calls that they be arrested for their prominent role in the country’s two-year-old pro-democracy movement, followed by physical attacks, media vilification, and, last month, the spectacle of hardline parliamentarians baying for their execution. By then, the pair had been prevented from leaving their homes, which had been daubed with abusive graffiti and, in Mr Mousavi’s case, sealed with a metal door. Now, according to their families, both have been quietly taken to jail.

    The government refuses to confirm the incarcerations that demonstrators on March 2nd sought to denounce. Thousands took to the streets of Tehran and other towns under the cover of a festive shopping spree–the Persian new year falls on March 21st–only to demand freedom for Messrs Mousavi and Karroubi, and, in some cases, grisly retribution for the author of their misfortunes, the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Motorists honked their support and the security forces responded as usual with tear-gas, baton-charges and arrests.

    These echoed scenes of the protests that followed the disputed re-election of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in 2009 and which restarted last month in emulation of the Egyptian and Tunisian revolutions. There was never any doubting Mr Khamenei’s hankering for revenge over the two men, both former loyalists who have turned against the regime, and his countervailing fear that to do so might spark a popular explosion. But the struggle for Iran’s future is turning out to be a drawn-out affair. It may be some time before the true impact of this latest escalation is felt.

    The truth is that neither of the detained pair was ever iconic enough for his arrest either to signal the end of the movement or to prompt mass anger. Assuming, as seems likely, that the authorities are deliberately blurring the facts, and the pair are to be kept behind bars, a fresh struggle will now begin, out of view.

    Both men will need all their obstinacy, of which they have proven reserves, to resist interrogators’ attempts to force them to make a recantation showing their treasonous intent and allegiance to Western powers. If they resist, news of their courage will seep out and their hold over the public will grow. If they crack, the movement may crack too.

  • The week ahead

    The trial of Jacques Chirac

    Mar 4th 2011, 16:19 by The Economist online

    A selection of things to look out for over the next five days

    Monday March 7th

    The trial of former President Jacques Chirac over charges he misused public funds, when he was mayor of Paris, begins.

    Tues 8th

    America's vice-president, Joe Biden, visits Russia.

    Wednesday 9th

    Ash Wednesday marks the beginning of Lent, a Christian festival that is observed sporadically.

    Thursday 10th

    Crufts, the world's largest dog show, gets underway in Birmingham (Britain rather than Alabama).

    Friday 11th

    The European Council (made up of the heads of EU members' governments) holds a meeting to talk about Libya, in Brussels.

  • Dutch local elections

    Polarised, not polderised

    Mar 4th 2011, 15:09 by A.U. | THE HAGUE

    DESPITE their cliff-hanger outcome, the provincial elections held in the Netherlands on Wednesday brought few surprises. The political landscape remains fractured, with the forces on the right narrowly ahead. But the results may point to a long-term polarisation of politics in the Netherlands, a country once renowned for its consensual model of decision-making.

    In last June's parliamentary elections, a similarly scattered vote produced the first minority government in modern Dutch history, comprising the liberal VVD and the centre-right Christian Democrats (CDA), and propped up by Geert Wilders's far-right Freedom Party. This unwieldy set-up yields a majority of just one seat in the 150-member parliament.

    In Wednesday's elections the Dutch were voting for members of the country’s 12 provincial councils. In late May, these bodies will elect the 75 members of the Senate, the upper house of the Dutch parliament, which is charged with approving government legislation.

    Here the political mathematics get knotty. This week’s results suggest that the VVD, the CDA and the Freedom Party will fall one seat short of the 38 they need for a majority in the Senate. So the government is likely to seek extra support, either from the SGP, a hardline Calvinist party, or various right-leaning local parties in the provincial assemblies. Yet the opposition may also be able to build a Senate majority, enabling it to block legislation. So the fight for the votes in each council will continue until May.

    Even if the government does prevail, many believe that Mark Rutte, the VVD prime minister, will struggle to implement anything much beyond his economic agenda, which includes some significant spending cuts. In particular, various controversial anti-immigration and anti-Muslim measures, such as a ban on face-covering Muslim garments, now look less likely to pass. This is because their main proponents, Mr Wilders's Freedom Party, performed worse than expected on Wednesday, slipping into fourth place. Mr Wilders's sharp edge has been somewhat blunted.

    More important in the long term may be the continuing crumbling of the the CDA. Once seen as the natural party of government in the Netherlands, on Wednesday it attracted support from just 14% of voters. Still reeling from the internal quarrels that followed its decision to participate in a government backed by Mr Wilders last year, it may not want to risk alienating its remaining voters by supporting laws that may be seen as anti-constitutional. Its ideological appeal was always vague. Now it is shedding voters both to Mr Wilders and to Mr Rutte's VVD.

    The decline of the CDA could have far-reaching consequences. Its stabilising influence has been an important component of the consensual politics on which the Netherlands has long prided itself, and for which it was often admired by outsiders. As Mr Rutte suggested after the election, the country may be moving towards a system where big decisions are made by a small majority. This would be unknown territory not just for politicians, but for other participants of the once-famous “polder model,” such as trade unions and employer organisations.

    This week's elections could also accelerate a transition towards Euroscepticism. Beset by polarised debate at home, the cabinet will not be inclined to compromise abroad. Accession to the European Union of the Balkan states (other than Croatia) or Turkey will be opposed. Further bail-outs of troubled euro-zone economies, such as Portugal, will be frowned upon. In the months to come the Netherlands' European partners may find themselves dealing with a country that looks increasingly unfamiliar.

  • The Economist

    Digital highlights, March 5th 2011

    Mar 3rd 2011, 18:14 by The Economist online

    Too hot to trot
    A new survey says only 64% of Americans can be described as physically active. In general, it seems that people who live in cold states are more likely to get their weekly workout than those in sunny Florida. Hawaii, where 70% are energetic, is an honourable exception

    Kings of the sky
    The monarch butterfly is famed for its migration, with some insects travelling 2,000 miles from breeding grounds in Canada and the United States to a forest west of Mexico City. But, as this video shows, the insect’s survival is under threat from changing weather and deforestation

    Appointment in Tripoli
    As the world considers how to stem the violence in Libya, we revisit our leader about the American bombing raids in April 1986 that followed a Libyan-sponsored terrorist attack. “The time had arrived to use some kind of force against Colonel Qaddafi,” we reckoned

    United States: Defining “overpaid”
    In the discussions about the role of unions in Wisconsin, overpaid has become a complicated term

    Americas: Haiti’s hallowed hotel
    Now run by a Voodoo priest, the resort that Graham Greene made famous in “The Comedians” is amazingly unchanged

    Middle East: Tea with The Economist
    Richard Dalton, a former British ambassador to Libya, discusses the current crisis

    Asia: The 15-minute parliament
    Whatever Myanmar’s new MPs are doing, they are not doing very much of it

    Asia: Microcreditor in the dock
    Bangladesh’s government uses a mandatory-retirement law to banish Muhammad Yunus from Grameen Bank

    Business: Such stuff as dreams are made on
    Currently the preserve of high-performance cars, carbon fibre could be the future of mass-production carmaking

    Finance: Ageing and shopping
    A pair of big property deals bet on Americans consuming more as they grow older

    Technology: Beating cheating
    Computer analysis of candidates’ answers to standardised tests can reveal cheats

    Europe: Mr Erdogan goes to Germany...
    ...and manages to annoy everyone with a speech accusing Germany of seeking to forcibly assimilate its estimated 3m-strong Turkish community

    Culture: Jan Gossaert’s renaissance
    An exhibition at the National Gallery in London examines an influential Flemish painter who discovered nudes in Italy

    Culture: Books of the month
    Our books and arts editor discusses the impact of innovation on the world economy, business and government

  • The Frankfurt shootings

    The Kosovo connection

    Mar 3rd 2011, 16:25 by B.U. | BERLIN & T.J.

    GERMANY had been nervously bracing itself for its first post-September 11th attack by Islamist jihadis. Now it seems to have happened. Yesterday afternoon a man wielding a pistol opened fire on a busload of American troops at Frankfurt airport, killing two and severely wounding another pair. The suspect, Arif Arid Uka, a 21-year-old of Kosovo Albanian origin, was arrested after he ran into the terminal building. His gun reportedly jammed, which may have averted worse carnage.

    Mr Uka appears to have succeeded where others failed. Although Germany has until now been spared Islamist violence, it has been a hub of terrorist activity and, in part because of its participation in the Afghanistan war, a frequent target of threats. The September 11th attacks in the United States were largely planned and executed by the members of the so-called “Hamburg cell.”

    In 2007 police arrested the four-member “Sauerland Group” before they could launch their car bombs. They are said to have planned attacks on airports and on the American air base at Ramstein, a big logistics base for the military operations in Afghanistan and Iraq and the destination of the soldiers killed yesterday. In 2006 two men planted suitcase bombs on trains leaving Cologne; they failed to explode.

    Investigators have found evidence that Mr Uka had Islamist leanings, including a Facebook page that lists him as a fan of sites such as "Reign of Islam." News reports quote his uncle as saying that he had worked at the airport. The fear is that Mr Uka may be part of a cell that is planning further attacks. He has apparently confessed to the murders—one report said he was driven by anger about German involvement in Afghanistan—but says he acted alone.

    Mr Uka's family hails from Mitrovica, a Kosovar town divided into an Albanian south and a Serb-controlled north, although many reports say he himself was born and raised in Germany.

    Most Albanians, inside and outside Kosovo, are fanatically pro-American following the US-led NATO attack on Serbia in 1999 that led, eventually, to Kosovo's declaration of independence. There is a large statue of Bill Clinton in Pristina, Kosovo’s capital. The influence of the American ambassador on local politics there remains enormous.

    The Kosovar government immediately issued a statement describing yesterday's attack as a “macabre act” carried out by an individual "acting against the tradition of the people of Kosovo, who will always and forever be grateful to the United States of America”. Zeri, a newspaper, headlined its story on the murder "Shame" while this morning’s edition of Koha Ditore says that the murders are a "stain" on Kosovo’s already-damaged reputation, a reference to recent allegations of election fraud and a grisly organ-harvesting scandal implicating the country's prime minister.

    If Mr Uka was radicalised in Germany rather than in Kosovo, some may draw parallels with other cases, in particular the so-called Fort Dix plot. In 2009 three ethnic-Albanian brothers from Debar in western Macedonia were convicted in the US of being part of an Islamist plot to attack Fort Dix, an army base in New Jersey. The brothers, all in their twenties, had left Macedonia as children, and reports suggested that they had never been back.

    The attack may also bolster concerns in Germany that the country is failing to integrate its immigrants. Last October Angela Merkel, the chancellor, said that multiculturalism had "utterly failed" in Germany.

    But there are no immediate signs of alarm. Many German newspapers did not make the attack their lead story this morning. The new interior minister, Hans-Peter Friedrich, seems inclined to follow the cautious policy of his predecessor, Thomas de Maizière (who left the job today to become defence minister after the fall of Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg). In his first day on the job Mr Friedrich has declined to raise the terrorist threat level.

  • McKinsey's reputation

    Unwanted attention for a discreet firm

    Mar 2nd 2011, 12:41 by R.L.G. | NEW YORK

    RAJAT GUPTA was the boss of McKinsey, the world’s most famous consulting house, from 1994 to 2003. He parlayed the connections he made in that powerful shop, which advises firms on big decisions like restructuring and buying other firms, into a number of plum perches afterwards. He advises the United Nations’ secretary-general on management, is the chairman of the International Chamber of Commerce, co-chair of the American India Foundation, and sits on several boards.

    Now the SEC has charged Mr Gupta with using those board positions illegally. What might the allegations mean for McKinsey? The alleged incidents took place after Mr Gupta’s time running the consultancy. But the firm (or “the Firm”, as its employees like to call it) has a proud tradition of advising bosses both expertly and discreetly. Its consultants almost never even divulge their clients’ identities. Marvin Bower, who ran McKinsey in the 1950s and 1960s, fought to have consulting considered a profession like law and accounting, with the training, prestige and adherence to ethics that professionals pride themselves on.

    For the former boss of such a firm to be found double-dealing would deal a more profound reputational blow than the usual insider-trading scandal. Traders and hedge-fund types are expected to scrap for every bit of momentary advantage to make their money. It’s rarely a shock, then, when the boiler-room pressure occasionally blows through legal safeguards. But elite consultants, and McKinsey foremost among them, consider themselves in a different class.

    McKinsey is unlikely to suffer any immediate disaster. But its rivals, the hungry two other top-tier consultancies Bain & Co. and the Boston Consulting Group, are surely gleeful today, and will get to work seizing whatever advantage they can tomorrow.

  • Insider trading

    A tip too far?

    Mar 2nd 2011, 10:46 by The Economist online

    HEDGE funds are often fatefully named. Long-Term Capital Management, a hedge fund that had to be bailed out in 1998, had a notoriously short lifespan. More recently the Galleon Group, a large hedge fund named after an old-fashioned sort of sailing ship, has dramatically sunk. The boss of the fund, Raj Rajaratnam, and 21 other people have been charged in a sweeping insider-trading case that has allegedly led to at least $85m in illicit profits. 

    On March 1st, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) brought charges against Rajat Gupta (pictured), the former boss of McKinsey, a consultancy. He is the highest profile corporate executive to be ensnared in the case so far, having served as a former board-member of Goldman Sachs, a bank, and, until yesterday, Procter & Gamble, a giant consumer-goods firm. 

    Mr Gupta was an investor in Galleon and a friend of Mr Rajaratnam, which is why he tipped him off, on multiple occasions, according to the SEC. For example, after Mr Gupta found out about Warren Buffett’s $5 billion investment in Goldman Sachs in 2008, he supposedly called Mr Rajaratnam, who bought 175,000 shares in Goldman. All told, Galleon raked in around $15m and avoided losses of around $3m thanks to Mr Gupta’s tips, the SEC alleges.

    Mr Gupta fiercely denies the charges and vows to fight them. But the allegations will permanently tarnish his reputation, and may cause fallout at the companies he worked. McKinsey, for example, prides itself on advising bosses discreetly, and rarely even divulges its clients’ identities. This case against a former boss won’t be good for business. Goldman Sachs, already having settled a lawsuit with the SEC last year for allegedly duping clients into buying mortgage-backed securities without enough information, doesn’t need to give investors another excuse to question how information flows on Wall Street.

    Mr Rajaratnam, who claims innocence despite the guilty pleas some of his colleagues have already put forward, is set to face trial on March 8th. With his day in court so soon, the timing of the SEC’s charges against Mr Gupta probably aren’t coincidental. The SEC may be trying to scare Mr Rajaratnam into a settlement while also bringing down the ultimate corporate insider. It’s one thing to topple a hedge fund manager, but it’s quite another to bring down a major figure in corporate America.

  • Turkey and Europe

    Mr Erdoğan goes to Germany

    Mar 1st 2011, 22:01 by A.Z. | ISTANBUL

    IT IS no secret that Turkey's efforts to join the European Union have not been going well. But a bout of Europe-bashing this week by Turkey’s mildly Islamist prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, has exposed just how rotten relations have become since the EU formally began membership talks with Turkey in 2004. All the more so because Mr Erdoğan made his comments in Germany, where he was meant to be shoring up Turkey’s case. If anything his visit has had the opposite effect.

    Mr Erdoğan's German hosts were outraged by a speech he delivered in Dusseldorf on Sunday before a huge crowd of Turkish immigrants. He accused Germany of seeking to forcibly assimilate its estimated 3m-strong Turkish community. "Nobody will be able to tear us away from our culture…our children must learn German, but they must learn Turkish first," he thundered. Not so, riposted Guido Westerwelle, who said German had to come first.

    Mr Erdoğan was taking aim at Germany’s chancellor, Angela Merkel, who drew Turkey’s ire last year when she declared that multiculturalism in Germany had “utterly failed.” She appeared to be echoing the views of Thilo Sarrazin, a German central banker, who last year argued, in a bestselling book, that German culture was at risk from “parallel” Muslim societies.

    What about Turkey’s estimated 14m Kurds, Mr Erdoğan's hosts may well have asked. Although Turkey's ruling Justice and Development (AK) party has eased restrictions on the Kurdish language, thousands of Kurdish activists are on trial for advocating greater rights for their people and are barred from speaking Kurdish in court.

    Mr Erdoğan’s invective was not reserved for Germany. A day later he told a group of Turkish and German businessmen in Hanover that the idea of NATO intervention in Libya was “absurd”; the alliance had no business meddling in non-member states, he said. Mr Erdoğan suggested that Western interest in Libya and in the Middle East in general was driven by "calculations centred on oil wells" rather than democracy and human rights.

    Mr Erdoğan’s fury will have been fed by a visit to Ankara on February 25th by Nicolas Sarkozy. Much like Ms Merkel, France's president advocates a so-called “privileged partnership” for Turkey with the EU instead of full membership, a view he repeated during last week's visit—which was restricted to five hours, against Turkish wishes.

    Mr Erdoğan declared that the Franco-German stance proves that the EU is a “Christian club.” In an interview with a German television channel he called on the EU to reveal its “true intentions... If you do not want to take Turkey into the European Union then say it clearly and openly,” he huffed.

    Turkey has good reasons for being aggrieved. The EU has failed to deliver on promises to ease a trade embargo on Turks in Cyprus mainly because of protests from the Greek Cypriots, who joined the EU in 2004. Turkey believes, probably rightly, that its other detractors, notably France, Austria and Germany, are using Cyprus as an excuse to torpedo Turkish accession.

    Membership talks have all but ground to a halt. Of the 35 “chapters” into which the negotiations are divided, as many as 18 have been blocked by the EU as a whole, by Cyprus or by France.  Only one chapter, on science, has been concluded. And none has been opened under the current Hungarian presidency. Egemen Bağış, Turkey’s chief EU negotiator, is said to have asked Mr Erdoğan to scrap his job.

    In private, many AK leaders sniff that Turkey can do perfectly well without the EU. Their confidence has been compounded by Turkey’s growing regional clout, especially in the Arab world, where Mr Erdoğan is hailed as a hero thanks to his repeated salvoes against Israel.  There is more and more talk of a "Turkish model" for the rebellion-wracked Middle East.

    Moreover, Turkey’s economy has weathered the global financial crisis relatively unscathed. Growth this year is predicted to average 5%, not far behind India and China. Opinion polls suggest AK will win a third single-rule term in elections due on June 12th.

    What a third term of AK rule bodes for Turkish-EU relations remains unclear. AK leaders, notably the foreign minister, Ahmet Davutoğlu, insist that EU membership remains a strategic goal. But so long as Turkey believes that the EU needs Turkey more than it needs the EU, it is unlikely to make the kind of radical concessions—such as opening its ports to Greek Cypriot vessels—that would unblock the talks.

    In the meantime, Mr Erdoğan’s tirades may win him votes at home, but they will only provide further fodder for Mr Sarkozy and Mrs Merkel.

  • From the archive

    From the archive: Bombing Libya

    Mar 1st 2011, 17:11 by The Economist online

    AS THE world debates how best to stem the violence in Libya, including the possibility of a military no-fly zone, we look back at our leader about Ronald Reagan's use of force in April 1986 after a Libyan-sponsored terrorist attack.

    ________________________________________________________________________

    Appointment in Tripoli
    The Economist, April 19th 1986

    In bombing Libya, the United States killed sleeping women and children and opened a dangerous new period in which terrorism against Americans and West Europeans may, for a time, get worse rather than better. Most Europeans but very few Americans conclude that America was wrong to use its bombers against Libya. The United States did not choose the best instrument of force available to it. Aerial bombardment rarely serves a political end, and better options were available on the night of April 14th-15th. It is not foolish or weak-kneed to worry about what will come next. Nevertheless, the time had arrived to use some kind of force against Colonel Qaddafi. Unless this week's bombing causes him to stop sponsoring terrorists, the time will come when it will be right to use more force and, if necessary, to overthrow him.

    The United States should have no illusions about the course on which it has set out. It will be precarious, frustrating and possibly unrewarding. Twenty-five years ago America was confident that its big army and air force, with all the shiniest technology, could defeat guerrilla insurrections. That confidence was smashed in Vietnam, and the United States spent several years afterwards believing that military force could solve nothing. Under Ronald Reagan it rediscovered on the tiny island of Grenada that armed clout sometimes achieves good things. But the United States and its European allies face in terrorism a threat that is even more intractable than the guerrillas of the 1960s.

    The need for action

     Americans would be wrong to conclude that force and more force will, by itself, suppress terrorism. A combination of political and economic pressure, better police work and attempts to ease the conflicts that help to generate terrorism are also needed to contain it. But it has to be understood, especially in a week of sickening television shots of the victims of American bombs, why military force must be one of the instruments in the fight against terrorism. Two reasons, one present and one prospective, justify an extreme course of action against Colonel Qaddafi. The present one is that, in attacking Libya, the United States was defending itself. America's existence, of course, is not threatened by anything that the colonel could do, even in his wildest dreams. But a government's first duty is to protect the lives of its citizens, and the evidence has damningly piled up over the years that Mr Qaddafi has paid for, housed, trained and directed terrorists whose business is to murder Americans (and Europeans). Proof of Libya's complicity in the latest terrorist attack, the bombing on April 5th of a West Berlin discotheque frequented by American soldiers, has convinced even some habitual sceptics. The colonel shows no true remorse over any of this—indeed, Mr Reagan and Mrs Thatcher claim that more terrorist attacks backed by him were in the works—and the United States has ample grounds for trying to stop him from going any farther.

    Many people wonder why sanctions short of military force would not do. The answer is that the United States has tried all of them, and they have done no good. Had it been joined in its efforts by European governments, it might have been less inclined to go for the bombing that most of them deplored this week. The bland measures belatedly adopted by the EEC’s foreign ministers a few hours before America attacked were a tiny move in the right direction, but it is hard to believe that a man of Mr Qaddafi's passion and sincerity would be deflected by diplomatic reproofs. Some critics of America's bombing claim that it will encourage him to further wildness. So it might. But to do nothing—to accept failure—certainly would. To doubt that is to misunderstand the nature of modern terrorism and the minds of its perpetrators.

    The prospective reason for using force against Mr Qaddafi is that before this century is over the rush of technology will probably deliver into the hands of some minuscule powers conventional weapons of frightening power, and quite possibly nuclear weapons as well. The West and Russia can live with their armed competition with each other. Neither can tolerate a world in which Qaddafis can give a few terrorists the power to wipe out whole cities and countries that do not concede their demands. The physical safety of the West ten years from now depends on its setting clear rules today which tell state backers of terrorism that they will be stopped.

    Colonel Qaddafi is not the only, and perhaps not even the biggest, present backer of terrorism. The Syrian and Iranian governments are formidable competitors for that title. But Mr Qaddafi has made an example of himself. The Americans are justified in making an example of him too. Their purpose should not be revenge, however vengeful they may feel; it is to persuade Colonel Qaddafi to change his ways.

    Better behaviour by Libya is not out of the question. Colonel Qaddafi is not the "mad dog" that President Reagan has described. He is deeply committed to certain principles and to his means of achieving them. That does not make him irrational or impervious to pressure. Two of his own children were injured, and an adopted daughter is said to have been killed. The thought of being killed or overthrown must grow in his mind when he sees that people are trying to achieve those things. The thought of what his actions are bringing down upon Libya must nag at his countrymen and (more to the point) his soldiers. The bombing may at first strengthen the colonel's grip. The longer-term calculation of his army officers, the only Libyans whose say about a change of policy or of leader might matter, could move towards a different conclusion.

    Prepare the next steps

     The odds are, at least for a while, against a coup. The stories on Wednesday of internal risings against him seemed to stem from wild anti-aircraft fire and surprised newsmen's wishful thinking. America and Western Europe should therefore be aware that this week's events—including the range of attacks on Thursday from Heathrow to Lebanon—could be a prelude to even nastier ones. What should the West be ready to do?

    If Libya does respond with more terrorism, the next step up the military ladder would be a blockade of Libya's oil-exporting ports, probably by mining them. This is a bigger and in many ways riskier military operation than the bombing America carried out this week: apart from anything else, it would need to go on for a long time and would involve interfering with neutral (eg, Soviet) rights of passage. It would, however, be less likely than the bombing was to kill civilians, and for that reason would have this week been preferable to the bombing raids. The blockade would need to last until the colonel condemned terrorism without reservation, and handed over some known terrorists to Western governments.

    Beyond a blockade, if that did not work in making Colonel Qaddafi lay down his terrorist weapon, would lie an invasion and overthrow, of Libya's government. Even that would not get rid of terrorism. Terror in the modern sense—the murder of people who have no personal connection with the political grievance behind it—is not merely a phenomenon of the Middle East, though that is its chief arena. It has its roots there in the legitimate complaints of Palestinian Arabs, though it has produced many another, twisted, flower. The question of Palestine is not, it seems, about to be settled. Even if it were, there would still be people willing for other reasons, half-rational or wholly irrational, to take advantage of the technologies that make random murder so dramatic and practicable, and there would be governments willing to back them.

    Even those who shrink from punitive measures against such governments accept the humdrum need for better airport security, intelligence about terrorists, control over Libya's embassies and the like. Saving lives is always better than avenging them. But the terrorist war of the late twentieth century has passed the stage where defence on its own is enough.

  • zu Guttenberg resigns

    Teflon no more

    Mar 1st 2011, 15:31 by B.U. | BERLIN

    "I'VE reached the limits of my strength." With these words Germany’s most promising politician, Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg, resigned as defence minister this morning. He fell less than two weeks after revelations that large chunks of his 2006 doctoral dissertation had been plagiarised. At first, it looked as if his charisma and popularity would save him. The chancellor, Angela Merkel, backed him. So did voters, according to opinion polls.

    But he could not survive the tsunami of outrage from Germany’s academic community and the internal contradictions of his position. Mr zu Guttenberg and his party—the Christian Social Union (CSU), which is the Bavarian branch of Mrs Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union (CDU)—stand for nothing if not for conservative values like personal responsibility. His downfall is a heavy blow for the chancellor, for both parties and for the health of politics in Germany generally.

    Mr zu Guttenberg’s rise, from precocious backbencher to prospective future chancellor in little more than two years, has been called the fastest ascent in post-war German politics. His aristocratic background, good looks and glamorous wife gave him a head start. But he capitalised on it. His favourite trick was to flout orthodoxy in ways that unsettled his political allies but found favour with voters.

    As economy minister in Mrs Merkel’s last government he threatened to resign over a proposed bail-out of Opel, a car-maker, winning fame as a defender of liberal economic principles. At the defence ministry he prevailed over his fellow conservatives in ending conscription, the first step in an ambitious proposal for modernisation of the armed forces.

    This vaulted Mr zu Guttenberg into a position occupied by no other politician. Germans in general are disillusioned with conventional politics. Voter participation is dropping and support for the big-tent political parties, including the Social Democratic Party on the left, is in long-term decline. Angry citizens are resorting to protests and referendums to countermand the decisions of a political class for which they have little respect. Mr zu Guttenberg was the great exception, the one politician who stirred something like enthusiasm among ordinary voters.

    If his rocket-like rise resembled Barack Obama’s, his fall was reminiscent of Hosni Mubarak’s. Reports of plagiarism first appeared in the newspapers, but they gained momentum on the internet. Online sleuths posted their findings on GuttenPlag Wiki, a website. An interim report found that more than a fifth of the text had been copied without attribution. Furious doctoral students wrote an open letter, signed by thousands, to Mrs Merkel demanding that she sack Mr zu Guttenberg.

    Mrs Merkel said she had hired a minister, not a “research assistant.” But in the face of indignation from would-be, serving and former research assistants, his political allies began feeling squeamish. How could Mr zu Guttenberg credibly remain in charge of the two armed-forces universities, they wondered. How could the CDU and CSU continue to pose as defenders of intellectual property rights? How, as the authors of the open letter asked, could Mrs Merkel continue to proclaim Germany an “education republic”? Treating plagiarism as a side issue was an uncharacteristic blunder on her part.

    With Mr zu Guttenberg gone the chancellor faces two immediate problems. The first is to find a credible new defence minister who does not upset the balance among the CDU, the CSU and the third coalition partner, the Free Democratic Party. The CSU transport minister, Peter Ramsauer, was an obvious choice, but he has already rejected the job.

    The second problem is that there are six state elections to come this year, three in March alone. The most important is in the southern state of Baden-Württemberg, on March 27th. At stake is the CDU’s unbroken 57-year record in charge of government. The party had seemed to be heading for a narrow victory, but the zu Guttenberg affair throws a new element into the mix. Losing Baden-Württemberg would be even more painful for Mrs Merkel than losing her defence minister.

    As for Mr zu Guttenberg himself, it would be unwise to write him off. By stepping down now, he hopes to preserve much of the goodwill he has accumulated over the past few years. His resignation may be a prelude to resurrection rather than the end of a brilliant career.

  • Future of food

    A response to Oxfam

    Mar 1st 2011, 14:56 by J.L.P

    A VERY thoughtful analysis of our special report on food this week in Poverty and Power, a blog run by Duncan Green, head of research at Oxfam GB.  (An outstanding blog, by the way. Bookmark it now).

    Mr Green gives the report “top marks on biology, botany, chemistry, ecology and the other natural sciences”; and zero marks on the “humanities – people, power and politics”. There’s nothing in the report, he says, on who does the farming (smallholders or large commercial farms); nothing on how they exercise influence over their governments and large food processing and distribution companies; and nothing on trade (as he rightly says, an “odd absence” for The Economist). “The bottom line for The Economist,” he concludes, “is that all that tricky power and politics stuff is just too difficult.”

    The basic characterisation of the report is absolutely fair (though I don’t agree with the conclusion). So let me explain why the report takes the approach it does, and then respond to some of Mr Green’s specific points.

    The report sets out to answer the question how will the world feed 9 billion in 2050? To do that, it concentrates on the basic constraints on food supplies – land, water and so on - and asks how they might be overcome. The report is only secondarily concerned with politics, policies and trade. This is not the only way of looking at the food business. One could look at other questions, such as why are a billion people hungry? Why are prices rising? Or one could say – as Mr Green does – that prices and other incentives influence how basic constraints are dealt with, and since these things are influenced by politics and policies, the distinction between constraints on the one hand and politics on the other is artificial.

    All true. But in looking at the question of feeding 9 billion, the most useful thing The Economist can do is lay out some of the basics: land, water, climate, seed technology, etc. This seems justified in itself: farmers start with these things. It seems helpful because public debate on such matters is sometimes rather confused: the debate on GM technology, for instance, rarely makes a distinction between using genes from a different organism (GMOs) and changing – hopefully improving – the existing genetic base of plants through marker-assisted breeding. I thought such an approach would add to the sum total of human knowledge because there is already quite a lot about trade, small holders versus large farms and so on. I’m certainly not saying these things don’t matter. But even in 14 pages, you have to make choices. Above all – and I was surprised by this – there really is a problem of declining yield growth. Yields are growing more slowly than population for the first time in over 30 years. This seems a big deal and deserves more attention than it usually gets.

    So the report concentrates on the “what” of food (what’s gone wrong; what needs to be done), rather than the “how” (how to do it). Obviously these aren’t contradictory approaches. But starting with the “what” seems justified because it is the prior question.

    So much for the basic approach. Let me turn to a few of the holes in the argument that Mr Green points out. Because the problem of boosting yields is such a big one, it seems to me one can make too much of the trade-offs between small and large farmers. These do exist but because the problem of failing yields is so large, I suspect we will need better productivity from both large and small farmers. Neither can do it alone. Which will dominate will vary from place to place. Two of the great successes in agriculture have been Brazil and Vietnam. Brazilian farming is dominated by large commercial exporters; Vietnam’s by smallholders who also export. I’m agnostic about whether large or small farms matter most, though I suspect that in practice people will want to leave farming so consolidation of plots is inevitable.

    On gender, Mr Green is right: because women do most of the farming in many developing countries, sexual discrimination in things such as credit policies is a big problem. Getting rid of  it is desirable in itself and would boost output.

    Mr Green takes me to task for saying “Pushing up supplies may be easier than solving the distributional problem” and says this is a complete cop-out. Maybe. But the sentiment is supposed to be a straightforward statement of fact. It will be easier to provide extra food to the have-nots by growing more, than by switching it from the haves by transforming distribution systems. Damaging trade barriers have persisted for decades. We can’t stop the biofuels lunacy. I’m certainly not against boosting producer organisations or tackling vested interests that skew government decision-making (The Economist has been railing against trade distortions for 150 years). But I fear that, unless we boost yields of staple crops, the current spike in food prices won’t be a spike at all but will turn into an endlessly sustained period of high and rising prices.

  • VW buys into BMW's carbon-fibre dream

    VW buys into BMW's carbon-fibre dream

    Mar 1st 2011, 14:31 by P.M.

    VOLKSWAGEN sprang a surprise at the Geneva car show today. The carmaker announced that it will invest €140m ($194m) in an 8% stake in SGL Carbon, a German firm which constructs things from carbon-fibre composite materials. The deal surprised many because SGL is already instrumental in BMW’s quest to use carbon fibre to manufacture lighter vehicles. Ferdinand Piëch, VW’s chairman, says he does not think sharing SGL with one of VW’s big rivals will cause any problems. Mr Piëch has good reason to hope it will not because the use of carbon fibre is turning into a critical area of competitive advantage for carmakers.

    For the car industry, the race to master carbon-fibre technology began 30 years ago when McLaren, a British-based Formula 1 team, built a racing car with a unique carbon-fibre monocoque (as a structural body which also doubles up as a chassis is called). It did not take long before the car, driven by John Watson, won the 1981 British Grand Prix at Silverstone. Within a few years all the F1 teams raced carbon-fibre cars.

    The attraction of carbon fibre is that it is extremely strong (one reason why racing-car drivers now walk away from horrendous crashes) but also very light—some 30% lighter than aluminium and 50% lighter than steel. This means it can be used to greatly reduce the weight of a car. A lighter car can go a lot faster or use less fuel—or a combination of both. Hence carbon fibre is being used to build both supercars, like the new McLaren MP4-12C (pictured above) and a range of electric cars which BMW is developing. With electric and hybrid cars lightness can be used to increase both performance and range.

    The difficulty is that carbon fibre can be an expensive and labour-intensive material to work with. Customers for high-performance products like aircraft wings, racing cars and tough mountain bikes are prepared to pay the extra cost for added performance. But to take these performance gains to broader markets producers need to find ways to make carbon fibre more suitable for high-volume production. And that is what companies like SGL and McLaren are now doing. Hence VW’s interest.

    BMW has been extremely impressed with the potential of carbon fibre, so far. The company has been working with SGL on a type of injection-moulding process that can produce parts in minutes, and be handled mainly by robots. Parts can be bonded together or larger parts made as a single component. As the aerospace industry has already discovered, producing things with fewer parts greatly reduces the cost of assembly. The cars have also performed well in crash tests and shown that in many cases damaged parts are repairable. There are other advantages too. Unlike steel, carbon composites do not corrode.

    Anthony Sheriff, managing director of McLaren’s automotive division, reckons carbon fibre will move to more mainstream production. McLaren, which has been working with Carbo Tech, an Austrian firm that specialises in carbon composites, is planning to build 5,000 cars a year with carbon fibre at a new factory near its base in Woking—which in supercar terms is mass production.  

  • Property deals

    Ageing and shopping

    Mar 1st 2011, 14:17 by The Economist online

    IT ISN'T always cause for worry when billions are being splashed on property deals. Two big commercial-property transactions have been announced this week. On February 28th Ventas, an American real-estate investment trust (REIT) specialising in health-care facilities and housing for the elderly, agreed to buy Nationwide Health Properties (NHP) for $7.4 billion. And today Centro Properties Group, a debt-laden Australian group, announced a major restructuring plan, the centrepiece of which is the $9.4 billion sale to Blackstone of its portfolio of American shopping malls. 

    The two deals are very different. The Ventas-NHP tie-up, paid for in Ventas shares, is about old-fashioned consolidation. There are lots of listed REITs and little happening in the way of new development. The deal follows other acquisitions by Ventas and will create the country’s largest health-care REIT, helping to diversify the combined group’s assets and reducing Ventas’s leverage. Inexorable demographic forces underpin the sector’s growth prospects: the baby boomers are starting to retire and America’s 85-plus age group is growing at three times the national average. 

    The Centro deal is about escapology rather than strategy, the cycle rather than structural change. As well as offloading its American assets, the Australian group has reached agreement with its senior creditors to extinguish its debt in return for almost all of its Australian assets, too. If the restructuring goes ahead as planned, about $100m will be left over for Centro’s shareholders and junior creditors. 

    The sale of the group’s portfolio of 588 strip malls in America is nonetheless an important moment in the commercial-property recovery. To date, institutional investors have been channelling money into high-grade, or “prime”, assets in America’s big, international cities, where demand is always stronger. The next stage in the industry’s recovery will be for that money to start flowing into secondary assets like Centro’s malls, whose anchor tenants are supermarkets and discount stores. 

    That point has not yet arrived. But Blackstone is the type of opportunistic investor, on the prowl for buildings where it sees the potential for capital gains, which acts as a bridge between the distressed owners of today and the institutional investors of tomorrow. This is not the first investment it has made in shopping centres since the crisis but it is the biggest, and it had to fight off competition to land the assets. If the Ventas purchase is a reflection of American ageing, the Centro sale is a bet on the strength of American consumers. 

  • Canada's mobile-phone market

    Three is the magic number

    Feb 28th 2011, 15:58 by The Economist online

    BEING a vast and sparsely populated country, mobile phones are important in Canada. But hopes that the country’s moribund wireless market will be opened up to greater competition have been dealt a blow. Earlier this month a federal court ruled that Globalive Communications, an upstart mobile phone firm, be shut down. Because Orascom, an Egyptian company, owns 65% of its shares, the court concluded that it breaks antiquated foreign-ownership rules requiring all operators to be Canadian-controlled.

    The ruling came after intense lobbying by Canada’s “big three” operators, Bell Canada, Rogers Communications and Telus. Between them, these firms serve 95% of the country’s wireless subscribers. They are a clubby bunch. Canada’s mobile phone penetration has stalled at around 60%. This compares with 84% in the US and over 100% in much of Europe. Many blame a lack of competition.

    The big three have repeatedly attempted to put the brakes on Globalive, which has signed more than 250,000 subscribers to its Wind Mobile brand since it launched 14 months ago. But the government is keen to encourage new entrants. Tony Clement, Canada’s industry minister, says he will take the latest challenge to the Federal Court of Appeal, reviving a bare-knuckle fight between the government and the country’s telecom establishment that dates back to 2009. In that instance, Mr Clement overturned a decision to block Globalive from doing business by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission, the national regulator. 

    Under Globalive’s corporate structure, the company’s Canadian chairman, Anthony Lacavera, controls the majority of voting shares. Orascom has a minority of seats on the board of directors and is a largely a silent partner. In the government’s view, this makes Globalive a Canadian-controlled company.

    The big three, fearful of losing their monopoly oligopoly—and fat profit margins—don’t see it that way. They are using their formidable resources to uphold the letter of the law. That may yet backfire. Some are suggesting that Mr Clement simply amend the Telecommunications Act, rendering their objections worthless. 

  • Protests in Iraq

    Angry Iraqis

    Feb 28th 2011, 15:16 by A.F. | BAGHDAD

    ANOTHER Friday, another Tahrir Square, this time in Baghdad. At the end of last week, several thousand people came for a day of shouting and chanting. But things turned nasty when the demonstrators tried to push down a blast-wall barrier onto a bridge leading out of the square into the heavily-guarded Green Zone which houses Iraq's parliament and its ministers. As parts of the wall collapsed, riot police sprang into action. Later they used  water cannons, gas and live ammunition on protesters, said eye-witnesses.

    The protest may have been small but the authorities were determinted to quash it. The prime minister, Nuri al-Maliki, gave a stern speech saying that Saddamist and al-Qaeda factions would try to take over—or attack—any protests. Security officials predicted bombs. Clerics, who are close to or part of many political factions, urged their followers to stay away. Journalists filming the demonstrations were arrested and a curfew banning vehicles was imposed across the city. Everything closed down. The city was silent except for children playing in the streets unusually empty of cars, and a few hundred people—mainly young men—who walked miles from the suburbs to the square, waving banners. Largely secular, they were a mix of graduates and working class, all with the same grievances: not enough electricity and clean water, no jobs, corrupt politicians who wasted eight months on full pay forming a government. Iraq’s democracy, they said, was not worth much unless their elected representatives worked harder.

    The "day of rage", organised like others in the Middle East on social networking websites, spread across the country, with bloody consequences. Around a dozen people were killed in clashes between police and protesters in Mosul, Kirkuk, Fallujah and even near the usually peaceful Kurdish city of Sulimaniyah. A number of government buildings went up in flames, and various politicians stepped down, notably the governor of the oil-rich southern city of Basra.

    Mr Maliki released a conciliatory statement promising to look into the demands of the people. Protesters said they would be back on the streets soon. When demonstations began in Tunisia, ministers said Iraq was immune to such unrest because it was already a democracy. They may have underestimated Iraqi anger about their government. As one old man in Tahrir Square said, "we did vote for them, but they’re gangsters."

  • French politics

    The first European casualty of the Arab uprisings

    Feb 28th 2011, 13:32 by S.P. | PARIS

    THIS year was supposed to mark the revival of French diplomacy. France currently runs both the G20 and the G8, and President Nicolas Sarkozy hoped to use both as a perch to reassert French influence in the world. But the wave of revolution spreading through the Arab world has caught France unprepared, exposed its complicity in the region and weakened its voice. The departure of Michèle Alliot-Marie (pictured) as foreign minister, announced yesterday by Mr Sarkozy in a televised address, is a belated attempt to repair the damage.

    Mr Sarkozy did not mention Ms Alliot-Marie by name in his speech, and her exit was described as a “resignation”. But it was clearly an enforced eviction, prompted by her repeated gaffes and a series of revelations about her links to the former Tunisian president, Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali.

    Just days before the regime fell, and Mr Ben Ali fled, she had offered Tunisia the “savoir-faire” of French security forces in crowd control. She then confessed to taking one, and then two, trips on a private jet owned by Aziz Miled, a local tycoon with links to the Tunisian regime, while holidaying in the country over Christmas. As if this were not enough, it then emerged that, during her holiday, a property deal had been tied up between her elderly parents and Mr Miled.

    At first, Mr Sarkozy tried to shrug off her blunders. But as the weeks went by it became clear that Ms Alliot-Marie had been so weakened that she could not carry out her own job. Last week, Mr Sarkozy sent Christine Lagarde, the finance minister, to head a ministerial visit to Tunisia, the first for the French government since the regime fell, while Ms Alliot-Marie was kept far away, in Brazil. Such absurdities were unsustainable.

    In Ms Alliot-Marie's place, Mr Sarkozy has named Alain Juppé, whom he described pointedly as “a man of experience”. It is quite a comeback for this Gaullist former prime minister (who has held the foreign-ministry portfolio once before, in 1993-95). In 2004, he was suspended from political life for a year, and given a 14-month suspended prison sentence, for political corruption linked to a fake-jobs scandal at the Paris town hall when Jacques Chirac was mayor.

    Having spent a year in self-imposed exile in Canada, this former arch-rival to Mr Sarkozy has quietly rebuilt his career. Last year Mr Sarkozy brought him back into government as defence minister. A clever, though cold, operator, his great merit for the unpopular Mr Sarkozy is that his darker dealings have already been exposed.

    Although French foreign policy will remain firmly in Mr Sarkozy’s hands, Mr Juppé may have a bit more freedom than his predecessors enjoyed. As part of this latest reshuffle, Claude Guéant, Mr Sarkozy’s chief of staff, has been moved to the interior ministry, to replace Brice Hortefeux, who becomes special adviser to the president. This, in effect, removes one source of parallel diplomacy from the Elysée Palace, since Mr Guéant ran his own network of foreign contacts, mostly in Africa and the Arab world, alongside those of the French foreign ministry.

    But Mr Juppé has his job cut out. French diplomats have grown frustrated over the past few years, sidelined by the Elysée’s grip on foreign policy. Last week a group of them, writing anonymously in Le Monde, a left-leaning newspaper, said that “France’s voice has disappeared in the world” and that “our foreign policy has been dictated by improvisation”.

    Mindful of the criticisms, Mr Sarkozy spoke yesterday of “a new era” in France’s relations with countries on the southern Mediterranean shore. The only spoiler was that he also called for a fresh lease of life for the Union of the Mediterranean, a moribund grouping that has not met since Mr Sarkozy launched it in Paris in 2008, and which was co-presided by none other than Egypt’s Hosni Mubarak.

  • Ireland's election

    The honeymoon is over—before it began

    Feb 28th 2011, 10:20 by J.O'M | DUBLIN

    NO IRISH election has produced a result as far-reaching. In a landmark election on Friday, the centre-right Fine Gael transformed the political landscape by displacing Fianna Fail as Ireland's largest party. When parliament reconvenes on March 9th, Fine Gael seems likely to form a coalition with the centre-left Labour Party, which also performed strongly at the polls, almost doubling its seats. Although the seat count has not yet concluded, such a government would enjoy the largest parliamentary majority in Ireland's history.

    Since 1932 Fianna Fail, a centrist nationalist party founded by Eamon de Valera, has been Ireland’s natural party of government. It has been in office for three out of every four years since, and continously since 1997 (with a number of coalition partners). But on Friday Ireland's voters, enraged by a government that had taken the economy on a rollercoaster ride that culminated, last November, in an €85 billion ($115 billion) rescue by the European Union and the IMF, exacted their revenge.

    Overnight a political giant was turned into a pygmy; Fianna Fail lost three quarters of its seats and finished behind Fine Gael and Labour. The party won just one seat in the capital, Dublin. Many ministers, including the prime minister, Brian Cowen, did not seek re-election; others lost their seats. Fianna Fail's erstwhile coalition partner, the Green Party, which had triggered last week's early election by quitting government in January, was completely wiped out.

    The scale of Fianna Fail’s defeat raises questions over its future as a political force. The party finds itself unrepresented in over half the country’s 43 constituencies, and without a single woman member of parliament. This leaves it poorly equipped to lead the opposition benches, where it will find itself in competition with Sinn Fein. That party, formerly considered fringe, has greatly increased its parliamentary representation, and bolstered its presence with the election of its president, Gerry Adams.

    Fine Gael's success marks a triumph for its underestimated leader, Enda Kenny. In 2002 Mr Kenny, Ireland’s longest-serving parliamentarian, took over the leadership of a party in some disarray. Eight months ago Mr Kenny defeated a challenge to his leadership. Back then the party was lagging behind Labour in the polls. It is now a handful of seats short of an overall parliamentary majority and Mr Kenny is prime minister-elect.

    If Fine Gael and Labour are to form a parliamentary alliance they must first narrow the policy differences that sharply divided them in the election campaign. Seeking to maximise their prospective electoral gains, the parties disagreed on tax, public spending and how quickly the budget deficit should be reduced.

    But time is not on their side. After March 9th the new government will face a stern test at an EU summit on March 24th-25th. There, Ireland may come under pressure from Germany and France to raise its low corporate-tax rate in exchange for an easing of the terms of the EU element of the bail-out package. During the campaign one of the few issues that united all Ireland's parties was that the rate, seen as vital in securing foreign investment, should be left untouched. For the new government, there will be no political honeymoon.

  • The week ahead

    What happened next

    Feb 27th 2011, 12:56 by The Economist online

    A round-up of things to look out for in the next seven days


    THE week's big story will once again be the spread of the Jasmine Revolution through the Middle East, with particular attention on Libya. However, there are some other things going on too.

    Monday 28th

    In Germany, Turkey's Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan meets Chancellor Angela Merkel. In New York the delayed trial of Raj Rajaratnam, who founded a hedge fund called Galleon, begins.

    Wednesday 2nd

    The Netherlands holds regional elections. Apple holds a press conference at which it is expected to unveil the iPad 2.

    Thursday 3rd

    The Geneva Motor Show begins. Climate-change negotiators from some 200 countries meet in Bangkok.

About Newsbook

In this blog, our correspondents respond to breaking news stories and provide comment and analysis. The blog takes its name from newsbooks, the 16th-century precursors to newspapers, which covered a single big story, such as a battle, a disaster or a sensational trial

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