The world, explained for Australia.

The World
Gold has served as a refuge for wealth for millennia, and the logic behind its price spikes reveals how fear moves financial markets.
By The Daily World · 26 March 2026

The World
Inflation is one of the most reported numbers in economic news and one of the least understood, measuring something more specific than 'things cost more'.
By The Daily World · 22 March 2026

The World
The energy transition has made a short list of metals the most strategically contested resources on the planet, and Australia is sitting on a significant share of them.
By The Daily World · 20 March 2026

The World
A stock market index appears daily in the news as a number going up or down, but what it measures, and what it misses, is less well understood.
By The Daily World · 18 March 2026

The World
The G20 is not a world government, but it is the closest thing the world has to a room where the biggest economic decisions get pre-negotiated.
By The Daily World · 16 March 2026

The World
Migration is one of the oldest human behaviours and one of the most misunderstood, driven far more by labour demand and family ties than by crisis alone.
By The Daily World · 14 March 2026

The World
Fresh water is not running out, but it is very badly distributed, and the gap between where people live and where water falls is widening.
By The Daily World · 12 March 2026

The World
Governments around the world are asserting the right to control where their citizens' data lives, and the fight is reshaping the internet's architecture.
By The Daily World · 10 March 2026

The World
A semi-enclosed sea roughly the size of the Mediterranean sits at the intersection of the world's busiest trade lanes and the sharpest territorial disputes in Asia.
By The Daily World · 8 March 2026

The World
The pandemic exposed how fragile the world's just-in-time logistics networks really were, and countries are still reshaping them today.
By The Daily World · 4 March 2026

The World
Some of the world's smallest countries own stakes in some of the world's largest companies, because they turned a windfall into a permanent endowment.
By The Daily World · 1 March 2026

The World
Fish do not respect national borders, which is why managing them requires international cooperation that is notoriously difficult to achieve.
By The Daily World · 27 February 2026

The World
Three private companies issue judgements that affect how much every government on earth pays to borrow money, yet most people have never heard of them.
By The Daily World · 25 February 2026

The World
India now has more people than any other country and an economy growing faster than almost any other, yet its path to great-power status is neither straight nor guaranteed.
By The Daily World · 23 February 2026

The World
For the first time in human history, the number of older people is outpacing the number of children, and the economic consequences are only beginning to show.
By The Daily World · 21 February 2026

The World
Two ocean temperature patterns on the other side of the world drive Australia's cycles of drought, flood, and fire with remarkable regularity.
By The Daily World · 19 February 2026

The World
Almost everything you do online travels through cables on the ocean floor, yet this infrastructure is largely invisible and surprisingly fragile.
By The Daily World · 17 February 2026

The World
The AUKUS partnership is the most consequential defence commitment Australia has made in generations, yet its details remain largely unknown to most Australians.
By The Daily World · 15 February 2026

The World
Australia is one of the world's largest LNG exporters, yet most Australians could not explain what LNG is or how it reaches customers across Asia.
By The Daily World · 13 February 2026

The World
The WTO is not a world government, but the rules it sets touch almost every product you buy.
By The Daily World · 11 February 2026

The World
Most countries hold a large portion of their savings in a currency that is not their own, and for most of them, that currency is the US dollar.
By The Daily World · 7 February 2026

The World
Coffee travels through more hands, more borders, and more stages of transformation than almost any other everyday product, and the economics of that journey determine who profits and who struggles.
By The Daily World · 5 February 2026

The World
Central banks raising rates in Washington and Frankfurt can make groceries more expensive in Australia, through a chain of effects that is less obvious than it first appears.
By The Daily World · 3 February 2026

The World
The American presidential election is not a single national vote but a sequence of overlapping processes that can, and sometimes does, produce a winner who received fewer total votes than the loser.
By The Daily World · 1 February 2026