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Welcome to the Subscription Connection profile for Economist.com where you'll find details, pricing, links to related subscriptions, member reviews and information on the publisher, The Economist Newspaper Ltd.. Satisfy your curiosity. Read about other featured sites in this and the many other categories profiled by Subscription Connection. Economist.com Profile
Detailsback to topNote: Subscription details are assembled using information from the publisher's site. Economist.com is the premier online source for the analysis of world business and current affairs, providing authoritative insight and opinion on international news, world politics, business, finance, science and technology, as well as overviews of cultural trends and regular industry, business and country surveys. Economist.com publishes all articles from The Economist print edition (including those printed only in British copies) plus a searchable archive of all The Economist's articles back to June 1997. Links to other articles and to relevant sources on the web are included with many of the stories. Other Economist.com services include:
Print subscriptions to The Economist include a free subscription to Economist.com for the term of your print subscription. Economist.com — Pricing Optionsback to topNote: Prices are listed for informational purposes only, not as an offer to sell. Every effort is made by our staff to keep pricing information current and accurate. Pricing options are sorted by cost per year.
Economist.com — Related Subscriptionsback to top
Economist.com — Member Reviewsback to topWrite a review and tell everyone what you think about Economist.com.
Economist.com — Publisher Informationback to topNote: Publisher information is assembled using data from the publisher's site. The Economist Newspaper Ltd. Edited in London since 1843, The Economist is a weekly paper of news, ideas, opinion and analysis. Printed in six countries and published on the Internet, more than 80% of its circulation is outside the United Kingdom. Because of its independent and international editorial perspective, it is read by more of the world's political and business leaders than any other magazine. The Economist believes in plain language. Walter Bagehot, our most famous 19th-century editor, tried "to be conversational, to put things in the most direct and picturesque manner, as people would talk to each other in common speech, to remember and use expressive colloquialisms". That remains the style of the paper today. Editorial independence is at the heart of The Economist. The constitution of the company does not permit any organisation or individual to gain a majority share-holding. The editor is appointed by trustees who are independent of commercial, political and proprietorial influences. The principle of anonymity is also central to the paper's philosophy. The Economist has no bylines, because it believes that what is written is more important than who writes it.
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