
It is currently the stuff of bestseller lists: is the United States in 8220;imperial decline8221;? The Economist8217;s position is clear: 8220;Still No 18221;, says its cover June 28. Consider these statistics. It accounts for 27.5 per cent of the world8217;s GDP, but 45.7 per cent of global military spending of 1.2 trillion. But it is nevertheless a military power at full stretch: 8220;What seem out of the question for the foreseeable future are the medium-scale 8216;wars of choice8217;.8221; Furthermore: 8220;The dilemma for the Pentagon is how to improve its ability to fight today8217;s insurgencies while preparing for tomorrow8217;s conventional threats.8221; These include Russia and China, 8220;the country that most worries the Pentagon8221;. Iran, Venezula, North Korea remain defiant. The sense of waning power is strengthened by worries about financial centres elsewhere gaining dominance and America8217;s soft power being depleted by images of Guantanamo Bay. This, however, is a call to renewal and not a sign of decline, according to the leader: 8220;From the perspective of relative rather than absolute supremacy, a superpower8217;s strength lies as much in what it can prevent from happening as in what it can achieve. Even today, America8217;s 8216;negative power8217; is considerable. Very little of any note can happen without at least its acquiescence8230; In all sorts of areas 8211; be it the fight against global warming or the quest for an Arab-Israeli peace 8211; America is quite simply indispensable.8221; The forecasts for the US: 8220;It will bounce back stronger again.8221;
Time spends some time with Rupert Murdoch to understand why he8217;d make such a sustained bit for The Wall Street Journal and how he understands the future of news to be intimately connected with the Internet. 8216;The Last Tycoon8217;, July 9. 8220;In financial terms, Dow Jones is a simple deal. The 5 billion price tag is easily absorbed by a company that earned 2.3 billion on sales of 25.3 billion last year and has little debt. But if the financials are simple, everything else about the deal is complicated. 8216;The price of the Journal,8217; says Murdoch, 8216;is 60 plus vitriol.8217;8221;
Meanwhile: Fortune July 1-9 examines why business loves Hillary Clinton. The New Statesman June 28 anticipates a more constitutionally reformist Labour government under Gordon Brown. The Spectator June 30 sees his emphasis on the 8220;British way of life8221; resonating with Conservative voters.