The Economist (US) back issues from September 1990:
The old Arab order passes. (Kuwait-Iraq conflict) (editorial)
Sep 01, 1990
Stand up, Japan; unfortunately, lying low or falling down still seems the best it can do. (urging Japan to behave like a leader) (editorial)
Sep 01, 1990
Guilty, in the Guinness trial; verdicts, sentences and even the trial itself were brave. (editorial)
Sep 01, 1990
The best Soviet Union; one with Gorbachev running foreign policy and the republics running competing pro-market economic policies. (editorial)
Sep 01, 1990
A cartel office for Europe; Europe's competition authorities need independence from national pressures. (editorial)
Sep 01, 1990
Sterling's petro-fillip; is just the leg-up into the European Monetary System that it needs. (editorial)
Sep 01, 1990
America's playaholics; the lessons of George Bush's hectic holiday. (George Bush's busy vacation during Kuwait-Iraq conflict) (editorial)
Sep 01, 1990
Welcome back. (George Bush returns to work after August vacation)
Sep 01, 1990
Weather 'tis better.... (weather in America)
Sep 01, 1990
No gusher. (Texas oil)
Sep 01, 1990
United States v Zod. (computer hackers)
Sep 01, 1990
Where it works; architects and town-planners think highly of Portland, in Oregon.
Sep 01, 1990
Messy loggers welcome. (new forestry results in leaving debris instead of cleaning up harvested areas)
Sep 01, 1990
The global constable. (the US)
Sep 01, 1990
Now it's Cambodia's turn. (international mediation )
Sep 01, 1990
Enter three white knights. (Thailand)
Sep 01, 1990
Sheer gamesmanship. (Beijing cleaning up the city to host 1990 Asian Games)
Sep 01, 1990
Now Assam. (India faces oil blockade of its own)
Sep 01, 1990
How much did you say? (Japan's contributions to get Iraq out of Kuwait)
Sep 01, 1990
Private hatred. (Australian Treasurer Paul Keating leads privatization efforts in Australia)
Sep 01, 1990
Selling the silver. (auction of Philippine art treasures)
Sep 01, 1990
Najibullah's Moscow holiday. (Afghanistan President Najibullah)
Sep 01, 1990
Let your breath out, slowly. (Kuwait-Iraq conflict )
Sep 01, 1990
Purged. (Iraq's opposition)
Sep 01, 1990
Tight borders. (sanctions against Iraq)
Sep 01, 1990
Push for change. (Saudi Arabia)
Sep 01, 1990
A hostage in the meat market. (Lebanon's Western hostages overshadowed by Iraq's Western hostages)
Sep 01, 1990
Heads you win, tails I lose. (Jordan)
Sep 01, 1990
Bloody. (Liberia's civil war)
Sep 01, 1990
War's end. (Mozambique)
Sep 01, 1990
Vote in fear. (Haiti)
Sep 01, 1990
The gentlemen go by. (Paraguay)
Sep 01, 1990
How the past could haunt the German future. (reactions to Was Bleibt, autobiography of Christa Wolf)
Sep 01, 1990
Agonizing over abortion.
Sep 01, 1990
No end of trouble. (Bulgaria and Romania)
Sep 01, 1990
A question of body-building; the end of the cold war has made threats to peace in Europe less urgent, but also more complicated.
Sep 01, 1990
The joys of the new Sovietspeak.
Sep 01, 1990
Steak through the heart. (Goodman International Ltd. suffers after Kuwait-Iraq conflict)
Sep 01, 1990
Major's southern mission. (British Chancellor of the Exchequer John Major and the economic and monetary union of the European Community)
Sep 01, 1990
Just like old times. (British-American special relationship)
Sep 01, 1990
Grave affair. (Andre Gardes tries to take over Sark in the Channel Islands)
Sep 01, 1990
End-game? (The Case of the Birmingham Six)
Sep 01, 1990
The generation game. (electricity privatization in Great Britain)
Sep 01, 1990
Waiting for the ferry-man. (London's river transport)
Sep 01, 1990
Pushing the boat out. (Sabbath observance and the profit motive on the Hebridean island of Lewis and Harris)
Sep 01, 1990
Swedish firms set sail for Europe; worried that the 1992 process will shut them out of the European Community, Swedish companies are buying their way in.
Sep 01, 1990
Flogging old logs. (USSR marketing masses of sunken larch logs)
Sep 01, 1990
Shutting the stable door. (OPEC and oil prices)
Sep 01, 1990
Who dares wins ... and loses; the winners and losers from higher oil prices. (Economics Focus)
Sep 01, 1990
Oil's poor relations. (commodities at risk)
Sep 01, 1990
Sink or swim together. (Detroit and the United Auto Workers)
Sep 01, 1990
Back to the drawing board. (Texas Instruments venturing into computer markets again) (company profile)
Sep 01, 1990
Leap into the dark. (privatization in Poland)
Sep 01, 1990
Treading the boardrooms. (managers as actors)
Sep 01, 1990
Monkey business. (pet shops in Bangkok's Chatuchak Park)
Sep 01, 1990
Strained relations among West Germany's big banks.
Sep 01, 1990
High risks, low rewards. (West German banks in East Germany)
Sep 01, 1990
Wyoming's Eastern mystique. (seminar on central banking in Eastern Europe held in Jackson Hole, Wyoming)
Sep 01, 1990
What is this thing called gold? (Market Focus)
Sep 01, 1990
Bump in the night. (financing aircraft)
Sep 01, 1990
Forgive and forget. (Brazil's debt)
Sep 01, 1990
The crayoning on the wall. (new Crayola crayon colors and stock market prices)
Sep 01, 1990
Done with conviction. (the Guinness affair)
Sep 01, 1990
Very debatable units; electromagnetic radiation, repetitive strain injury, stress: is danger coming soon to a screen near you? (computer terminal safety)
Sep 01, 1990
D.H. Lawrence: a Biography.
Sep 01, 1990