Bagehot - The Economist Bagehot Our columnist offers astute commentary and analysis on British politics, policies, and societal trends
A new biography of Walter Bagehot, “the greatest Victorian” Rather than Oxford or Cambridge, Bagehot attended University College, London, a new “radical infidel college” designed for people who refused to subscribe to the tenets of the Church of England
What would Bagehot do? - The Economist Bagehot's mischievous doctrine is now conventional wisdom among central banks, as last week's events dramatically demonstrated
A world without Nigel Farage - The Economist A world without Mr Farage is a world without Reform The party is an odd set-up: there is Mr Farage and there are millions of voters There is still, for all its attempts to professionalise itself
Where do The Economist’s unusual names come from? Bagehot, a column about Britain, is named after one of the finest editors of The Economist: Walter Bagehot (pronounced Bajut), who edited the paper between 1861 and 1877 A British Liberal
How to tell a Bagehot from a Banyan - The Economist Bagehot The column about Britain is named after one of the finest editors of The Economist: Walter Bagehot (pronounced “Bajut”), who edited the paper between 1861 and 1877 A British Liberal