International

Why oceans matter for climate and for the economy

Oceans’ Contribution to Climate Stability & Economy

Oceans as the planet’s dominant climate regulatorThe global ocean spans about 71% of Earth’s surface and functions as the planet’s chief climate moderator, absorbing and redistributing heat and carbon to soften temperature fluctuations, shape weather systems, and maintain essential life-supporting biogeochemical processes. Two key functions are especially notable.Heat storage: The ocean has taken up the vast majority of excess heat from greenhouse gas emissions—commonly estimated at over 90% of the planet’s stored excess heat—slowing atmospheric warming but creating long-term thermal inertia that locks in future change.Carbon sink: The ocean absorbs a large fraction of human-emitted CO2—roughly a quarter to a…
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How standards shape trade and who gets locked out

How standards shape trade and who gets locked out

Standards are the rules, specifications, testing methods and conformity procedures that determine what products and services must be like to enter a market. They range from technical specifications for a household appliance to sanitary rules for meat, to data-protection protocols, to private sustainability labels imposed by multinational buyers. By reducing information asymmetries and improving interoperability, well-designed standards can lower transaction costs, build consumer trust, and expand trade. At the same time, standards can be deployed — intentionally or not — as barriers that exclude competitors, fragment markets, and reshape global value chains. The distributional effects are profound: who benefits, who…
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What makes a franchise model attractive compared to company-owned growth?

Franchise vs. Company-Owned: Which Growth Model Wins?

Businesses seeking expansion often face a strategic choice: grow through company-owned locations or adopt a franchise model. While both paths can lead to scale, the franchise model has proven especially attractive across industries such as food service, retail, fitness, and hospitality. Its appeal lies in how it distributes risk, accelerates growth, and leverages local entrepreneurship while maintaining brand consistency.Maximizing Capital Utilization and Accelerating GrowthOne notable benefit of franchising lies in its strong capital efficiency, as a company-owned structure requires the brand to finance real estate, construction, equipment, personnel, and early-stage operating deficits, which can significantly slow expansion.Franchising shifts much of…
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Why recycling alone won’t solve plastic pollution

Why We Need More Than Recycling for Plastic Waste

Plastic recycling is often depicted as a catch‑all solution to plastic pollution, but the reality is considerably more complex. Although recycling provides significant benefits, it cannot by itself eradicate plastic waste because of technical, economic, behavioral, and systemic limitations. This article examines these constraints, offers relevant evidence and illustrations, and underscores complementary strategies that must accompany recycling to create lasting change.Today’s scale: how production, waste, and the real impact of recycling unfoldGlobal plastic production has surged to well over 350 million metric tons annually in recent years. A landmark assessment of historical production and waste revealed that, of all plastics…
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What happens when countries restrict food exports

Consequences of Countries Limiting Food Exports

When a nation limits the export of essential foods or critical agricultural inputs, the impact spreads through markets, households, governments, and international relations. Export restrictions can take the form of complete prohibitions, licensing requirements, increased export duties, quota limits, or procedural delays. While these actions often aim to shield domestic consumers or steady local prices, they also trigger effects that reach past national boundaries and last well beyond the immediate period.Mechanisms and Their Prompt Market ImpactReduction in global supply: When one or several exporters curb their outgoing shipments, the overall volume available worldwide declines, and for commodities with tight supply-demand…
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What’s failing in the global plastics response

Unpacking the Failures in Global Plastic Solutions

The global response to plastics has produced partial wins and many persistent failures. Production continues to expand, waste systems are under-resourced, policy mixes rely heavily on voluntary industry action, and many proposed technical fixes do not address root causes. The result is a growing flow of plastic pollution, entrenched fossil-fuel linkages, and rising social and environmental harms—especially in low- and middle-income countries.Failure 1 — Production continues to rise while policy stays focused on end-of-life stagesThe conversation remains tilted toward waste management and recycling while production of new plastics marches upward. Global production is on the order of hundreds of millions…
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Why food security remains fragile

Decoding the Fragility of Global Food Security

Food security is the condition in which all people, at all times, have physical and economic access to sufficient, safe, and nutritious food. Despite progress in agricultural productivity and declining child mortality in some regions over recent decades, global food security remains fragile. Multiple interacting drivers — environmental, economic, political, social, and technological — continuously undermine availability, access, utilization, and stability of food supplies. The following analysis explains the main causes, illustrates them with cases and data trends, and highlights practical pathways to reduce fragility.Core drivers of fragilityConflict and instability: Armed conflict is the single largest driver of acute food…
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Why regulating social media is so hard globally

Navigating the Difficulties of Worldwide Social Media Regulation

Social media platforms mediate information, politics, commerce, and private lives across borders. Regulating them is not simply a matter of drafting rules; it involves reconciling competing legal systems, technical limits, economic incentives, political power, cultural differences, and operational realities at an unprecedented global scale. Below I map the core challenges, illustrate them with cases and data points, and sketch pragmatic directions for progress.1. Scale and technical limitsSheer volume: Platforms accommodate billions of users and handle an immense stream of posts, messages, photos, and videos each day. While automated tools assist, human judgment is still required for subtle or context-heavy decisions,…
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Why the world is talking about a chip race

Why Everyone’s Discussing the Chip Race

The term "chip race" evokes a worldwide push to secure dominance in semiconductor design, manufacturing, equipment and supply-chain control, with chips serving as the core technology behind smartphones, data centers, electric vehicles, telecom systems, medical tools and modern defense hardware, so when access to cutting-edge processors tightens, entire industries and national plans feel the strain, prompting companies, governments and research institutions to invest heavily in funding, policy and influence to shape the future of chip development.What’s on the lineEconomic growth: Advanced semiconductor manufacturing and design generate high-wage jobs, exports and technology spillovers across industries.National security: Chips are dual-use—critical for both…
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What influence operations are and how to spot them

What influence operations are and how to spot them

Influence operations are coordinated efforts to shape opinions, emotions, decisions, or behaviors of a target audience. They combine messaging, social engineering, and often technical means to change how people think, talk, vote, buy, or act. Influence operations can be conducted by states, political organizations, corporations, ideological groups, or criminal networks. The intent ranges from persuasion and distraction to deception, disruption, or erosion of trust in institutions.Key stakeholders and their driving forcesThe operators that wield influence include:State actors: intelligence agencies or political entities operating to secure strategic leverage, meet foreign policy objectives, or maintain internal control.Political campaigns and consultants: organizations working…
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