The UK’s new autonomous sanctions regime: What HNWIs should know
By Dr Anna Bradshaw, Partner, and Alistair Jones, Associate, at Peters & Peters Solicitors LLP
When the Brexit transition period expired at 11pm on...
e-Governance in Estonia: Balancing Citizen Data Privacy, Security and e-Service Accessibility
By Eric Blake Jackson
How can governments provide effective e-services to the public, while also protecting the privacy of citizens and securing their data from...
US’ strive to sustain its global role, China’s willingness to resist: Is conflict inevitable?
By Shraddha Bhandari
The US and some of its allies are drawing red lines for China’s conduct in the global arena – through internal...
Netherlands: The Perfect Home to a Successful Business
The business world is a competitive industry where it takes years of experience and hard work to reach on top. All the big companies...
The Secrets to Growing a Business in Asia in 2021
It is said that the Asian century has begun and it will be the Asian region that will shape the next phase of globalisation....
Indonesia Needs More Large Companies
By Mohammad Zeqi Yasin
The Indonesian economy is supported by the manufacturing sector for decades. However, there is an irony when evidently this sector remains...
Is this the end of trickle-down economics?
By Graham Vanbergen
The global pandemic has changed everything, highlighting the failures of economic policy that has dominated the Western world for the last 50...
Time for America to Modernize the African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA) – Time...
By Ivor Ichikowitz
Picture this - The tarmac of Jomo Kenyatta International Airport in Nairobi in 2020, where the ground crew of Kenya Airways loads...
When “A Little Corruption” In Mexico Goes Too Far
By Duggan Flanakin
“Corruption is not a disagreeable characteristic of the Mexican political system: it is the system.”Gabriel Zaid, La Economia Presidencial
“It is widely known,” Mexican journalist Ricardo Ravelo...
Happiness Is A Place Between Too Little And Too Much
By Danny Dorling and Annika Koljonen
School meals are never termed “free” in Finland; they are simply called “lunch”. Alongside Sweden; Finland is one of...





































































