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//-->Ebola is out of controlHow the West lost UkraineWhy so much tax is paid by so fewDo artificial sweeteners make you fat?SEPTEMBER20TH–26TH 2014Economist.comThe economics of airline seatsXi who must be obeyedHow one man now rules ChinaContents8The world this week3711LeadersThe rise and rise of XiJinpingXi who must be obeyedHealth care in AmericaHow to fix ObamacareEbolaChasing a rolling snowballInequality and thenarrowing tax baseToo reliant on the fewGreenhouse gasesParis via Montreal38The EconomistSeptember 20th 20145121313393940Middle East and AfricaConfronting Islamic StateAn improbable alliancePunishment in SaudiArabiaThe other beheadersEgyptAl-Sisi AscendantHealth in west AfricaHelp in the time of EbolaNigeria’s online retailersE-bolaUnited StatesObamacareIs it working?Private health careThe problem-solversThe NFL and violenceThe politics of outrageConfronting Islamic StateA war by any other nameCountry music andtourismWhat “Nashville” does forNashvilleDrought in CaliforniaPainting the lawn greenLexingtonHillary in IowaThe AmericasVenezuela’s economyOf oil and coconut waterBelloRethinking industrialpolicyLaundering drug moneyMexico’s washing-upMigration via MexicoTaming the beastAsiaPolitics in BangladeshOne and only oneHealth care in VietnamLimping alongThe press in JapanGotchaPolitics in FijiBack into the foldSouth Asia and ChinaXi Jinping’s progressionBanyanPax SinicaOn the coverThe most powerful andpopular leader the countryhas had for decades must usethese assets wisely: leader,page 11. A cult of personalityis growing around China’spresident. What will he dowith the political capital?Page 57. China is trying tobuild a new world order,starting in Asia: Banyan,page 56. A new biography ofan earlier strongman,Napoleon, page 77The EconomistonlineDaily analysis and opinion fromour 19 blogs, plus audio and videocontent, debates and a daily chartEconomist.com/blogs1441424346Letters16 On Azerbaijan, work, airtraffic, Ukraine, heating,grades, GoogleBriefing22 Curbing climate changeThe deepest cuts24 Encouraging climateactionTry jam today26 Towards a treatyThe shadow of CopenhagenEuropeUkraine and RussiaWin some, lose moreRussian oligarchsYukos 2.0?Sweden’s electionLofven’s coalition problemGerman politics...There is an Alternative...and anti-SemitismWho is the Other now?French politicsThe long road to 2017Italy’s economyRenzi reduxCharlemagneEurope’s neighbourhoodBritainThe public financesA tax-free recoveryConfronting Islamic StateBack into the frayReligion and cricketHallowed be thy gameBagehotClan DouglasObamacareAmerica’shealth-care system isdysfunctional. Here’s how toimprove it: leader, page 12.A year after the flawed launchof the reforms, the world’slargest health-care market isin turmoil, page 41. How toprovide better health care forless money, page 4247474827282829293030324950E-mail:newsletters andmobile editionEconomist.com/emailEbolaThe world is still actingtoo slowly to stop the disease:leader, page 13. The epidemicis out of control, page 39Print edition:available online by7pm London time each ThursdayEconomist.com/print5151Audio edition:available onlineto download each FridayEconomist.com/audioedition525353Volume 412 Number 8905Published since September 1843to take part in "a severe contest betweenintelligence, which presses forward, andan unworthy, timid ignorance obstructingour progress."Editorial offices in London and also:Atlanta, Beijing, Berlin, Brussels, Cairo,Chicago, Hong Kong, Johannesburg, Lima,Los Angeles, Mexico City, Moscow, New Delhi,New York, Paris, San Francisco, São Paulo,Singapore, Tokyo, Washington DC33343435545556UkraineFor all thecelebrations in Kiev overratifying the trade deal withEurope, it is the Russians whogot most of what they wanted,page 27. A Russian oligarcharrested, page 28. Businessand political risk, page 61.Europe could survive a cut-offof Russian gas, but only ashort one, page 621Contents continues overleaf
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