2. Jeffrey Epstein rubbed shoulders with the great and the good, from Bill Clinton to Donald
Trump. Those contacts are now scrambling to distance themselves from the New York financier
after he was charged with sexually abusing under-aged girls. The FT's Joshua Chaffin and
Kadhim Shubber profile Mr Epstein, who was previously charged in 2008, and ask how high
society tolerated him for so long?
3. Depression and anxiety cost companies $1tn every year worldwide, and some employers'
indifference to their workers' mental health can have tragic consequences, as the FT's Lilah
Raptopoulos and James Fontanella-Khan reveal in a striking feature for the FT Weekend
Magazine.
4. Bankers: "highly paid and disposable". That's chief business commentator John Gapper's
verdict on the massive lay-offs launched by Deutsche Bank this week. He argues bankers have
been alienated from their jobs.
5. As Boris Johnson edges closer to power the FT Westminster team assess whether his
bluster on Brexit will end in a catastrophic crashing out. Across the aisle, Labour's tortured stance
on leaving the EU has been shaped by Jeremy Corbyn's hard-left advisers, profiled this week
by chief political correspondent Jim Pickard.
6. Africa editor David Pilling makes a pitch for the cheapest Lunch with the FT of all time, a
£2.16 feast in a Ugandan slum with rapper turned politician Bobby Wine, an unlikely challenger to
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