top of page

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


Dragobete and the Economics of Local Love
On 24 February each year, parts of Romania mark Dragobete, a traditional celebration associated with love, courtship, and the symbolic arrival of spring. In rural folklore, Dragobete was linked to the mating season of birds, to young people gathering in forests and villages, to public courtship rituals that signalled the start of romantic commitments. Unlike Valentine’s Day, which is anchored in global retail campaigns and uniform iconography, Dragobete carries agricultural r
37 minutes ago


The F1 Machine: Media, Money, and Manufactured Scarcity
Formula 1 presents itself as a battle of drivers and machines. In reality, it is a tightly engineered economic system built on scarcity, media leverage, and sovereign capital. The race lasts ninety minutes. The financial structure runs year-round. The sport’s transformation accelerated in 2017 when Liberty Media acquired Formula 1. Under previous ownership, the series was commercially powerful but culturally narrow. Liberty reframed it as a global media property. Social platf
43 minutes ago


The Aviation Stack: Manufacturing, Leasing, and the Long Economics of Flight
When a passenger boards an aircraft, the airline’s logo dominates the experience. Yet in most cases, the airline neither built the plane nor owns it outright. Behind every commercial flight sits a layered industrial and financial system stretching from multi-billion-dollar development programs to Irish leasing vehicles and long-term engine servicing contracts. Aviation is not simply a transport industry. It is a capital stack. At the top of that stack sit manufacturers such a
49 minutes ago


The Fertility Market: How Reproduction Became an Industry
For most of human history, reproduction sat largely outside formal markets. It was shaped by culture, religion, biology, and family structure. Today, in clinics across London, Copenhagen, Los Angeles, Mumbai, and Madrid, reproduction is scheduled, priced, stored, exported, and financed. The fertility sector — encompassing IVF, egg freezing, sperm banks, and surrogacy — has evolved into a global industry built around one central tension: biology runs on a fixed clock, modern l
53 minutes ago


The DJ Economy: Status, Scarcity, and the Price of a Night Out
The modern DJ sits at the centre of a peculiar economy. On the surface, it is about music and movement. Beneath it lies a layered system of real estate costs, brand positioning, platform algorithms, ticket risk, bar margins, and status signalling. A night out is not simply entertainment. It is a transaction shaped by scarcity and attention. The DJ once functioned primarily as a distributor. Access to vinyl, rare imports, and technical equipment created natural gatekeepers. In
59 minutes ago


Why Maternity Wear Exposes the Flaws in Fashion
Fashion presents itself as an industry built around bodies. Yet one of the most predictable bodily transitions in adult life — pregnancy — has historically been treated as a niche interruption rather than an integrated design consideration. The way maternity wear is positioned within apparel reveals something structural about how fashion really works. It is optimised for turnover, not transformation. Most of modern fashion runs on repeat purchase cycles. Seasonal collections,
1 hour ago


From Tiger to Trump: How Golf Became a Global Power Platform
Golf has long presented itself as a sport of patience and precision. Yet beyond the fairway lies a different structure. Courses require vast land allocation, sustained capital investment, and long-term planning. Rounds last four hours or more, creating extended private space for conversation. Membership lists filter access. Tournaments attract sponsors, heads of state, and corporate leaders. Over time, golf evolved into something larger than competition. It became a platform
22 hours ago


Happy Hour : The Politics of Time-Based Pricing
Between the end of the working day and the beginning of the evening rush lies a carefully monetised window of time. The discounted cocktail, the two-for-one pint, the early-evening wine offer — these are not spontaneous acts of generosity. Happy hour is a structured response to one of hospitality’s core challenges: high fixed costs and uneven demand. It reveals how businesses price not just products, but hours. Bars and restaurants operate with substantial fixed expenses. Ren
22 hours ago
bottom of page











