U.S. Bombing in Iran: What It Means for Business and Entrepreneurs
War-risk premiums, oil volatility, supply-chain reroutes, and a new playbook for founders operating in an unstable world When reports…
War-risk premiums, oil volatility, supply-chain reroutes, and a new playbook for founders operating in an unstable world When reports…
A new world order is forming not through war or crisis, but through strategy. Regional alliances like BRICS+, AfCFTA, and the EU Green Bloc are reshaping trade, technology, and global influence.
The role of the teacher is evolving from lecturer to learning architect. As technology reshapes education, teachers must master creativity, digital fluency, and emotional intelligence – the new foundation of 21st-century instruction.
Beijing’s tariff pledge could redefine Africa’s export landscape, offering Nigerian producers a path to competitive market access in China’s vast consumer base. This shift promises transformative benefits for agriculture, textiles, and light manufacturing sectors.
From sanctions and supply shocks to renewable transitions, the oil market is once again at the center of global power. OPEC’s strategic stance in 2025 highlights the delicate balance between politics, profit, and progress – and the lessons entrepreneurs can draw from it.
After years of declining market share, Intel is rewriting its future through a massive strategic shift – betting on foundry manufacturing and innovation at scale.
The move signals a new era where adaptability, long-term vision, and reinvention define success in business and technology.
From Beijing’s new AI-training mandates to billion-dollar private-education deals, learning is now a global business of innovation. In 2025, the real currency isn’t degrees, it’s adaptability, creativity, and lifelong curiosity.
Visa policy is no longer just about borders – it is about capital, talent, and competitiveness. As the United States recalibrates entry rules for citizens of 72 countries, businesses worldwide must rethink how mobility shapes growth.
Calls to disengage the United States from a broad range of international bodies signal a deeper shift toward economic nationalism. For business leaders, the question is not politics but how reduced multilateral engagement could alter risk, markets, and opportunity.
Power without legitimacy is fragile. Systems built on fear outlast dissent until they don’t. The capture of Nicolás Maduro offers sobering lessons for leaders in every arena about denial, isolation, and the high cost of ignoring reality.
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