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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


The Sky Without Queues: Inside the World of Private Jets
At major airports around the world, a separate world exists beyond the commercial terminals. While most travellers queue at security checkpoints and wait at crowded departure gates, another group moves through discreet lounges and private hangars known as Fixed Base Operators. Their aircraft are smaller, often sleek and immaculate, waiting on sections of the runway. Within minutes of arriving at the airport, these passengers can be airborne. This is the world of private aviat
6 hours ago


The Invisible Shields: The Expanding Global Economy of Private Security
Walk through a shopping mall in Dubai , a corporate office in Singapore, a bank in Nairobi, or a construction site in Sydney and one presence is almost guaranteed: a security guard standing watch near the entrance. These guards often wear uniforms that resemble those of police officers, carry radios, monitor cameras, and manage access to buildings. Yet they are not part of the state police. They belong to a vast and growing industry of private security services that operates
6 hours ago


Pilgrimage Without a Season: The Expanding Economy of Umrah
Each year millions of Muslims travel to the city of Mecca in Saudi Arabia to perform a pilgrimage known as Umrah. Unlike the Hajj, which occurs during a specific period of the Islamic calendar and is considered one of the five pillars of Islam, Umrah can be performed at almost any time of the year. This flexibility has transformed it into one of the most significant religious travel systems in the world. What appears to be a deeply spiritual journey also functions as a comple
6 hours ago


The Invisible Luxury of Perfume: An Economy of Scent
A person walks into a department store and sprays a fragrance onto their wrist. Within seconds they decide whether they like it or not. The scent may remind them of a holiday, a person, or a feeling they cannot easily explain. They might then spend £80, £150, or even £300 on a small bottle of liquid that will slowly evaporate into the air over the coming months. Perfume is one of the most curious products in the modern consumer economy. It is invisible, intangible, and tempor
6 hours ago


Canals, Chocolate and Crowds: The Economic Machine of Bruges
At first glance, Bruges feels like a place that belongs to another century. Cobbled streets wind between medieval buildings, canals glide beneath stone bridges, and horse-drawn carriages move slowly past Gothic churches and market squares. The city’s preserved beauty gives the impression of a town frozen in time. Yet beneath this carefully maintained historic façade lies a highly organised modern economy built around tourism, heritage preservation, and cultural storytelling.
7 hours ago


From Crufts to Westminster: The Curious Global Economy of Pet Shows
Each year in large exhibition halls and arenas around the world, dogs are brushed, groomed, paraded, and judged with remarkable seriousness. Handlers move carefully around show rings while judges inspect posture, movement, coat condition, and breed standards with meticulous attention. For spectators it can feel both fascinating and slightly surreal. Why would thousands of people gather to watch animals walk in circles? Yet dog shows and pet competitions have evolved into a su
7 hours ago


From Screeching Modems to Streaming Everything: The Infrastructure of Fast Internet
There was a time when connecting to the internet required patience. A computer would dial a telephone number, the modem would emit a sequence of mechanical screeches, and the connection would finally establish itself at speeds measured in kilobytes rather than megabytes. During those dial-up years of the 1990s and early 2000s, using the internet meant tying up the household phone line and waiting several seconds for a single image to load. Today the experience is radically di
7 hours ago


The Hidden Highways Beneath Our Feet: The Global Economy of Pipes
Pipes rarely attract attention. They run beneath streets, inside walls, across deserts, and under oceans, transporting liquids and gases that sustain modern life. Most people encounter pipes only indirectly—when turning on a tap, flushing a toilet, or filling a car with fuel. Yet these unassuming tubes form one of the most extensive and valuable infrastructures in the global economy. From municipal water systems to international oil pipelines, pipes function as hidden highwa
7 hours ago
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