Lowering the steaks: a Mercosur deal at last

欧盟 - 拉美自贸协定

The Intelligence from The Economist

2026-01-13

23 分钟
PDF

单集简介 ...

From Argentinian beef to German cars, a freshly inked deal between the EU and a bloc of South American countries should ease trade barriers—and is a sign of global trade's topsy-turvy time. Foreigner-bashing is politically fashionable in Japan, but focuses on the wrong problems. And a look at Parkrun, a free weekly event that has unwittingly made many Britons healthier.
更多

单集文稿 ...

  • The Economist.

  • Hello and welcome to the Intelligence from The Economist.

  • I'm your host Jason Palmer.

  • Every weekday we provide a fresh perspective on the events shaping your world.

  • In Japan it's become politically expedient to do a little bit of foreigner bashing.

  • But perhaps more than most countries, Japan needs its Gaijin.

  • Our correspondent unpicks the rhetoric from what really matters for the country.

  • And every Saturday morning across Britain, thousands upon thousands of people get up early and head to the park.

  • For a run.

  • Appropriately called Parkrun.

  • We look into how one small get-together turned into a national public health success story.

  • First up though.

  • At daybreak in Paris this morning a serious traffic jam started to develop.

  • 350 or so tractors rumbling toward the Arc de Triomphe.

  • The traffic jam is intentional.

  • And it isn't the first.

  • On Monday producers and tractors gummed up Lugo in Spain.

  • On Sunday it was Tarragona.

  • The roots of this wheeled protest go back, way back.

  • To the last millennium in fact.