2015-05-02 Economist.pdf

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Contents
The Economist
May 2nd 2015
5
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The world this week
32
33
34
34
9
10
11
11
12
Leaders
Our endorsement
Who should govern
Britain?
Illegal drugs
The wars don’t work
The South China Sea
Sea of troubles
Gay marriage in America
Bless it
Business in France
Double trouble
35
36
Asia
After Nepal’s earthquake
To the rescue
Pakistan’s economy
Fuel injection
Australia and Indonesia
Chill factor
Indonesia’s foreign
policy
A thousand jilted friends
Extremism in Central Asia
Enemies of the state
Banyan
Shield and spear in
South Korea
Gay marriage
The legal case
for allowing it is as
clear as the
moral one is urgent:
leader,
page 11. America’s Supreme
Court seems nervous about
altering an ancient institution,
page 21. What life is like for
gay couples who cannot wed,
page 22
On the cover
Despite the risk on Europe,
voters should give the
coalition led by David Cameron
a second term: leader, page 9.
What the English
really think
about their
northern
neighbours, page 50.
Why the
union is crumbling: Bagehot,
page 51. The Conservative
Party’s election campaign
has been a (mostly
unrequited) love letter to
working-class voters, page 49
The Economist
online
Daily analysis and opinion to
supplement the print edition, plus
audio and video, and a daily chart
Economist.com
Letters
13 On internet voting,
rescuing migrants,
Malaysia, Scotland, the
Miliband brothers
Briefing
18 The economics of low
wages
When what comes down
doesn’t go up
United States
Equality before the law
Showtime for gay marriage
Gay marriage
The cost of delay
Cheap oil
Not as good as you think
Baltimore burning
Rioting makes it worse
Roland Fryer
From the hood to Harvard
Closing schools
It’s good for pupils
Utah
Young, tolerant and
surprising
Lexington
Hillary’s money woes
The Americas
Mexico and its NGOs
New movers and shakers
Alberta’s election
End of a winning streak?
Colombia’s judiciary
Trouble at the top
Bello
Latin America’s rural
dream
China
37 The South China Sea
Asserting claims
38 Corruption
Nowhere to run
Middle East and Africa
Israeli politics
Netanyahu v the Supreme
Court
Israel and Syria
Hizbullah in the crosshairs
Repression in Egypt
Worse than Mubarak
The Saudi succession
Palace intrigues
African presidents
Après moi, moi
South Africa’s kings
More trouble than they’re
worth?
Europe
Russia’s Victory Day
Great patriotic war, again
German remembrance
Guilt and reconciliation
Ukraine and Europe
Commitment anxiety
Corruption in Spain
Inside jobs
Divorce in Italy
Arrivederci, darling
Azerbaijan and the
European games
Aliyev’s party
Charlemagne
Margrethe Vestager,
Europe’s competition tsar
39
40
21
22
22
23
26
26
27
40
41
42
42
E-mail:
newsletters and
mobile edition
Economist.com/email
Mexico
Investors take a
century-long bet on boom-
and-bust Mexico, page 61.
Their members don’t wear
balaclavas or wave banners, but
NGOs are bringing about
change, page 29
Print edition:
available online by
7pm London time each Thursday
Economist.com/print
Audio edition:
available online
to download each Friday
Economist.com/audioedition
43
44
44
45
28
Volume 415 Number 8936
Published since September 1843
to take part in "a severe contest between
intelligence, which presses forward, and
an unworthy, timid ignorance obstructing
our 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 DC
29
30
30
31
45
46
47
Victory Day
Vladimir Putin
corrupts the memory of
victory over Nazism to justify
his war in Ukraine, page 43.
As the anniversary approaches,
Germany draws the right
lessons, page 44
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