
World
The Commonwealth of Nations is not a remnant of empire, but understanding what it actually does requires looking past the ceremonial surface.
The Daily World · 27 April 2026
Read
World
Bacteria are evolving faster than the pipeline of new drugs can keep pace, and the consequences for routine surgery and infection treatment are already visible.
The Daily World · 25 April 2026
Read
World
Forests absorb carbon, regulate rainfall, and sustain biodiversity, but they sit on land that economies have always wanted for something else.
The Daily World · 23 April 2026
Read
World
Bitcoin made headlines, but the more consequential story is how governments and central banks are now designing their own digital currencies in response.
The Daily World · 21 April 2026
Read
World
A small island produces the chips that run almost every advanced device on Earth, making it the most consequential single point of failure in the global technology supply chain.
The Daily World · 19 April 2026
Read
World
Decades of predictions about the end of the oil age have not arrived, and understanding why reveals the true scale of the energy transition ahead.
The Daily World · 17 April 2026
Read
World
The global convention of pricing oil in US dollars has shaped geopolitics, exchange rates, and the power of the American economy for more than half a century.
The Daily World · 13 April 2026
Read
World
Australia is one of the world's leading beef exporters, and the complex web of trade rules, biosecurity regimes, and competing suppliers that governs the global meat trade has direct consequences for Australian farmers.
The Daily World · 11 April 2026
Read
World
Central banks are not ordinary banks, and understanding what they actually control explains why their decisions about interest rates reach into every mortgage, business loan, and superannuation balance.
The Daily World · 9 April 2026
Read
World
The ten-nation Association of Southeast Asian Nations is the economic and diplomatic architecture underpinning Australia's most important regional neighbourhood.
The Daily World · 7 April 2026
Read
World
The WHO coordinates the global response to disease outbreaks and sets the health standards that governments and doctors rely on, yet it has far less power than most people assume.
The Daily World · 5 April 2026
Read
World
Gradual ocean rise is not a future threat for some communities; it is already reshaping coastlines, flooding homes, and forcing governments to consider relocating entire populations.
The Daily World · 3 April 2026
Read
World
Thousands of small satellites now circle the Earth in low orbit, transforming both how militaries see the battlefield and how forecasters predict your weekend weather.
The Daily World · 1 April 2026
Read
World
A single vote from one of five countries can block any United Nations Security Council resolution, making the veto one of the most powerful and contested tools in global diplomacy.
The Daily World · 30 March 2026
Read
World
Nuclear energy generates a significant share of the world's electricity with almost no direct carbon emissions, yet it remains one of the most contested power sources on the planet.
The Daily World · 28 March 2026
Read
World
Gold has served as a refuge for wealth for millennia, and the logic behind its price spikes reveals how fear moves financial markets.
The Daily World · 26 March 2026
Read
World
Inflation is one of the most reported numbers in economic news and one of the least understood, measuring something more specific than 'things cost more'.
The Daily World · 22 March 2026
Read
World
The energy transition has made a short list of metals the most strategically contested resources on the planet, and Australia is sitting on a significant share of them.
The Daily World · 20 March 2026
Read
World
A stock market index appears daily in the news as a number going up or down, but what it measures, and what it misses, is less well understood.
The Daily World · 18 March 2026
Read
World
The G20 is not a world government, but it is the closest thing the world has to a room where the biggest economic decisions get pre-negotiated.
The Daily World · 16 March 2026
Read
World
Migration is one of the oldest human behaviours and one of the most misunderstood, driven far more by labour demand and family ties than by crisis alone.
The Daily World · 14 March 2026
Read
World
Fresh water is not running out, but it is very badly distributed, and the gap between where people live and where water falls is widening.
The Daily World · 12 March 2026
Read
World
Governments around the world are asserting the right to control where their citizens' data lives, and the fight is reshaping the internet's architecture.
The Daily World · 10 March 2026
Read
World
A semi-enclosed sea roughly the size of the Mediterranean sits at the intersection of the world's busiest trade lanes and the sharpest territorial disputes in Asia.
The Daily World · 8 March 2026
Read