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How Do Business Decisions Shape Everyday Life?
From housing and healthcare to food, travel, and technology, Stories of Business examines the systems and incentives behind the things we take for granted.

Business. The Real World. Connected
Stories exploring how business shapes communities, systems, and everyday life - locally and globally.
Latest Stories


Inside Guangzhou, the City Supplying the World
Guangzhou is one of those cities that makes more sense when understood through movement rather than monuments. On the surface, it may appear to outsiders as another vast Chinese megacity: towers, highways, metro lines, factories, markets, ports, malls and dense urban districts stretching across the Pearl River Delta. But Guangzhou is far more than a large city. It is one of the world’s great trading machines, a place where commerce, migration, manufacturing, food culture, log
5 hours ago


Why the Future of AI Depends on Cooling Water, Pipes and Fans
Artificial intelligence is often presented as something futuristic and weightless. Advertisements show glowing interfaces, floating graphics and sleek digital assistants capable of answering questions in seconds. Politicians talk about AI transforming economies. Technology firms describe a new industrial revolution powered by data and algorithms. But beneath all the futuristic language sits something far less glamorous: heat. Every AI prompt, image generation request, cloud b
5 hours ago


The Strange Power of a Bowl of Noodles
Noodles are one of the clearest examples of how a simple food can evolve into a vast global system connecting agriculture, migration, industrialisation, comfort, survival, convenience and cultural identity. On the surface, noodles appear uncomplicated: flour, water, heat and seasoning combined into endless variations across kitchens, restaurants, factories and street stalls. But beneath the bowl sits one of the most adaptable and globally embedded food systems in modern civil
5 hours ago


Scuba Diving and the Global Economy Beneath the Water
Scuba diving is often marketed as adventure, freedom and escape. Images of coral reefs, tropical fish, shipwrecks and crystal-clear water dominate tourism brochures from Maldives to Egypt, from Thailand to Mexico. On the surface, diving appears to be about individual experience: a person descending underwater with oxygen tanks, entering a quieter world beneath the noise of ordinary life. But beneath the wetsuits, reefs and dive boats sits a large global system involving touri
5 hours ago


The Last Slow Kingdom? Bhutan and the Pressure of Global Modernity
Bhutan is one of the few countries in the world that built part of its global identity around resisting certain forms of modern acceleration. Surrounded by the giant systems of China and India, this small Himalayan kingdom became internationally famous not because of military power, vast industry or technological dominance, but because it attempted something unusual: slowing down enough to preserve culture, environment and social balance while the rest of the world raced towa
5 hours ago


Loneliness: The Growing System Beneath Modern Life
Loneliness is often described as a personal feeling, but increasingly it behaves like a global system. On the surface, loneliness appears private and invisible. A person sitting alone in a flat in London, an elderly man eating alone in Tokyo, a student struggling to make friends in Toronto, a migrant worker isolated in Dubai or a teenager scrolling endlessly through social media in Los Angeles may all appear disconnected from one another. Yet beneath these individual experien
5 hours ago


Smoking: The Habit That Became a Global Industry
Smoking is one of the clearest examples of how a small human habit can grow into a vast global system. On the surface, it appears simple: a person lights a cigarette, inhales, pauses, talks, waits or steps outside for a break. But beneath that brief action sits one of the most powerful and controversial commercial ecosystems of the last century. Tobacco connects agriculture, addiction, advertising, taxation, public health, class, stress, nightlife, colonial trade, corporate p
5 hours ago


Living Rooms and the Systems Built Around Staying In
Living rooms are often treated as simple domestic spaces — places to sit, watch television, host visitors or relax at the end of the day. But across cultures and economies, living rooms reveal far more than furniture choices or interior design trends. They expose how societies organise family life, status, privacy, hospitality, entertainment, housing, technology and even aspiration itself. The name alone changes across regions. In Uganda and many parts of East Africa, people
5 hours ago
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