「英国The Economist(エコノミスト)」2012/02/18発売号 
■The world this week Politics this week (2) Business this week (3) KAL’s cartoon (5)
■Leaders United States’ economy Over-regulated America (154) Europe and the euro A way out of the woods (73) India and its near-abroad The elephant in the region (45) The Muslim Brotherhood Dialogue is the best defence (33) Carmakers in Europe Hands off the wheel
■Letters Letters On Syria, aircraft emissions, Charles Murray, Japan, Brazil, the British press, romance
■Briefing The Dodd-Frank act Too big not to fail (13)
■United States Excessive regulation Tangled up in green tape (5) Deleting regulations Of Sunstein and sunsets (4) The president’s budget Another doomed exercise (5) Insider trading in Congress Taking STOCK (3) Reforming gang members Where homies can heal (3) Nuclear power The 30-year itch (3) Lexington Buttering-up and scolding (12)
■The Americas Brazilian politics Coming into her own (18) Foreign-investment disputes Come and get me (1) Venezuela’s oil industry Spilling over (2) Immigrants in Belize A Spanish accent Jails in Honduras An avoidable tragedy (5)
■Asia Economic planning in India Tales of the unexpected (4) India and its near-abroad Your friendly big brother (3) South Korea’s influence in Asia This year’s model Indonesia The Komodo economy
■China China’s princelings Grappling in the dark (39) Consumption economics The incredible shrinking surplus Norway and China Cold shoulder (19) Banyan Wolf in pig’s clothing (5)
■Middle East and Africa The Arab spring A long march (18) Syria’s crisis An offensive regime Qatar’s ruler Flying-carpet diplomacy (3) Africa’s oceans A sea of riches (1) Sierra Leone and the UN Turning tables
■Europe Greece and the euro Flaming February (12) Labour reform in Italy Dangermen (4) Labour reform in Spain Spanish practices (2) France’s presidential election The declaration (7) The media in Russia Echo no more? (15) German services Protected and inefficient (12) European financial regulation Laws for all (1) Charlemagne Running against Merkozy (22)
■Britain Oil and gas Roll on the barrels Economic turmoil Over to you, George (3) NHS reform Difficult birth, slow recovery (2) Organ transplants Life after death (3) Lessons from East Asia Classroom crush (2) Funding the arts The show must go on Bagehot The Clegg paradox (1) Articles flagged with this icon are printed only in the British edition of The Economist
■International Poverty and food The nutrition puzzle (4)
■Business European carmakers Too many cars, too few buyers (5) Nuclear energy in France Fallout (1) Telecoms in America A dark day for LightSquared (2) Patents and mobile devices FRAND or foe? (1) The best and worst stocks of the past decade Invest in a time machine (5) Corporate fraud Mind your language (2) Japanese manufacturing From summit to plummet (5) Schumpeter This time it’s serious (2)
■Finance and economics Rescuing Greece Beyond the edge (83) Buttonwood The oil barons have a ball (2) America’s mortgage deal Unsettling (2) The Bank of Japan Time for action The lexicon of hedge funds From alpha to smart beta (6) Hedge-fund closures Quitting while they’re behind Measuring the impact of regulation The rule of more (6) Free exchange Latin lessons (5)
■Science and technology Cosmology The dark side of the universe (7)
■Books and arts Poverty in Mumbai The places in between (1) Nancy and Lawrence Durrell Days of heaven Capital punishment in America Justice, delayed and denied (3) Haiti’s history Many trials and errors Patterns of migration Go with the flow (1) Murakami in the Middle East Hundred-metre dash
■Obituary Whitney Houston (7)
■Economic and financial indicators Output, prices and jobs Trade, exchange rates, budget balances and interest rates The Economist commodity-price index Global business barometer Markets
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