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jonahhorowitz | 9 months ago

This post in current affairs[0] remains the best piece of writing about the Economist that I've ever read.

[0] - https://www.currentaffairs.org/news/2017/05/how-the-economis...

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thegrim33|9 months ago

The best piece of writing about the Economist you've ever read is a piece by an author who admits that "until last week, I had not read The Economist since high school"? This is the author whose opinion on the Economist you trust?

Waterluvian|9 months ago

I haven’t read the piece, but if someone makes a well-reasoned argument, it doesn’t matter who they are or what credentials they hold.

It’s equally as meek a counter-argument as, “trust me because I hold degrees in this topic.” Good. Then it should be easy for you to make a well-reasoned argument.

tuatoru|9 months ago

The best take on The Economist magazine that I saw (after subscribing for several years) is that it's News of the World for policy wonks. To be read for laughs. For maximum effect, leave your paper copy aside for six months, then read it.

JumpCrisscross|9 months ago

> leave your paper copy aside for six months, then read it

So what from the December issue proved horribly wrong?

jfengel|9 months ago

Is it true that most of their writers are twenty-somethings?

I accept the article's assertion that their kneejerk free-market philosophy is, at the least, limiting. But to me, the tone has always suggested middle-age journalism grads, rather than the right-wing business-school types the article is suggesting.

They have a bias, but they don't seem stupid or inexperienced. So much of free-market thought in the US, and recently the UK, has been caught up in culture war, and the Economist is staunchly against that.

Which is to say, they don't read like twenty-somethings to me. So if I'm wrong about that, I need to take another look at the lens through which I view their writing.