| COSTOFLIVING | Settling existing accounts - sounds like something pricey the economists came up with (4,2,6) |
| PREMIUMBONDS | “The practical man in the street who knows anything about ____ is quite aware that they are in their nature and intention lotteries” (The Economist, 1908) |
| COMPOSMENTIS | Sound of MP with economists employing spin |
| MILTONKEYNES | Town in Buckinghamshire named after two economists (6,6) |
| BIGMAC | The Economist's ____ Index tracks global prices of this item, chosen for its universal availability |
| TERMSOFTRADE | Redesigned forms treated to show economists' ratio |
| DURABLEGOODS | Cars and appliances, to economists |
| SAVEYOURMONEY | The economist's zero-star review? |
| TOYNBEE | The economist who wrote The Industrial Revolution; or, the historian who wrote A Study of History (7) |
| CANVEYISLAND | Offshore area in 16 Down dubbed 'the most Tory place in Britain' by The Economist |
| MCELVOY | Anne ___, journalist for The Economist and the Evening Standard married to Sunday Times editor Martin Ivens |
| DATA | "The world's most valuable resource," per The Economist |
| ANONYMITY | Key aspect of articles written in the weekly news magazine The Economist (9) |
| RICARDO | Take a single message: "Love to the Economist" (7) |
| OBITUARY | Feature given a full page in The Economist each week |
| EMOTICONS | Could be smiles or frowns that disturb the economist (9) |
| FRIEDMAN | Cannibal's dish perhaps described in The Economist (8) |
| TETEATETES | Leaders in the Economist repeated, repeated within as paired discussions (4-1-5) |
| KEYNESIANS | Followers of the economist who advocated a measure of public control within capitalism (10) |
| BIGMACINDEX | Measure published by The Economist and named after a McDonald's hamburger |