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The Economist is a weekly news and international affairs publication of The Economist Newspaper Limited in London. Subjects typically covered include international politics, business, finance, science and technology and the arts. The publication is targeted at the high-end "prestige" segment of the market and counts among its audience influential business and government decision-makers.
By tradition The Economist calls itself a "newspaper," though unlike most newspapers it is printed in magazine form on glossy paper (like a newsmagazine).
The Economist?s primary focus is world politics and business, but it also runs regular sections on science and technology as well as books and the arts. Every two weeks, the newspaper includes, as an additional section, an in-depth survey of a particular region or field of business.
Articles, which are often heavily opinionated, almost never carry a byline, meaning no specific person or persons can be named as the author. Not even the name of the editor-in-chief (currently Bill Emmott) is printed in most issues. The identities of the newspaper?s contributors are revealed only when it reviews outside works authored by the same, or when well-known persons are invited to contribute opinion pieces.
The newspaper has a trademark ?tight writing? style that is famous for putting a maximum amount of information into a minimum of column inches. The one feature almost all articles have in common is the concluding witticism. Some have joked that as long as the writers can deliver that, their political or other opinions do not matter. The Economist publishes precisely one obituary every week, of a famous (or infamous) person from any field of endeavour.
The Economist is also famous for its Big Mac index, which uses the price of a Big Mac hamburger sold by McDonald's in different countries as an informal measure of purchasing power parity between two currencies. It has turned out to be a whimsical but surprisingly accurate index for comparison. In January 2004, this index was joined by a Starbucks "tall latte index".
The magazine is also a co-sponsor of the Copenhagen Consensus.
Each of the opinion columns in the newspaper are devoted to a particular area of interest. The names of these columns reflect the topic they concentrate on:
The magazine goes to press on Thursdays, and is available on newsstands in selected major markets (New York City, London and Tokyo among them) the very next day.
The Ecomomist newspaper sponsors a yearly "Innovation Awards", now in six categories.
The 2004 Award for Social and Economic Innovation is Muhammad Yunus, founder of the Grameen Bank.
The newspaper was first published in September 1843 by James Wilson to ?take part in ?a severe contest between intelligence, which presses forward, and an unworthy, timid ignorance obstructing our progress.? ? This phrase is quoted on the newpaper's contents page.
When the magazine was founded, the term "economism" denoted what would today be termed fiscal conservatism. The Economist generally takes both an economically and socially liberal (or libertarian) position disfavouring government interference in either social or economic activity, though views taken by individual contributors are quite diverse.
The magazine:
Like many newspapers, The Economist occasionally uses its pages to endorse candidates in upcoming major elections. In the past, the magazine has endorsed:
A history of The Economist by the editors of Economist.com puts it this way:
ABC circulation for the newspaper is approximately 880,000 (July-December 2002 figures) with just less than half the readership based in North America, approximately 20% in continental Europe, 15% in the UK and 10% in Asia. The newspaper consciously adopts an internationalist approach and notes that over 80% of its readership is from outside the UK, its country of publication. The current editor (as at June 2004), Bill Emmott, assumed his role in 1993.
The Economist Newspaper Limited is a wholly-owned subsidiary of The Economist Group. One half of The Economist Group is owned by private shareholders, and the other half by the Financial Times, a subsidiary of The Pearson Group. In 2002, the Economist Group turnover was £227m in 2002 resulting in an operating profit of £15m (down from £21m in 2001 and £32m in 1998, the decrease attributed to a sharp decline in advertising). Income streams are split roughly 50-50 between advertising and other areas, such as subscriptions.
In July 2004, The Economist Group launched an upmarket lifestyle magazine called Newsweek, Time magazine