The world, explained for Australia.

The World
Microfinance institutions lend small sums to the world's poorest people, unlocking economic opportunity where traditional banks won't. It's a model Australia backs, but challenges remain.
By The Daily World · 30 June 2026

The World
Diamonds are rare, valuable, and tightly controlled. Understanding who produces them, who buys them, and how the industry stays united tells you how global commodity markets really work.
By The Daily World · 30 June 2026

The World
Cobalt is the metal that powers the world's electric vehicles and renewable energy storage. Australia has little of it, and that's a problem.
By The Daily World · 30 June 2026

The World
Wine is one of the world's most traded beverages, shaped by geography, regulation, and centuries of tradition. Australia has become a major player, but faces structural disadvantages that no amount of quality can fully overcome.
By The Daily World · 30 June 2026

The World
Beneath our feet lies a vast hidden resource shared across borders. Understanding aquifers helps explain water scarcity, food security, and Australia's role in a thirsty world.
By The Daily World · 30 June 2026

The World
Nuclear power is surging as nations chase carbon-free energy. Australia holds 30% of the world's uranium but exports almost none of it. Here's the economics and geopolitics of the fuel that powers reactors across the planet.
By The Daily World · 30 June 2026

The World
Cotton is the world's most traded natural fibre, worth billions annually. Australia is a major player, but prices swing on harvests continents away and the market faces pressure from synthetics and sustainability demands.
By The Daily World · 30 June 2026

The World
Phosphorus is essential to feed the world, but unlike nitrogen it cannot be made from air. Australia relies on finite rock deposits thousands of kilometres away.
By The Daily World · 30 June 2026

The World
Three West African nations produce most of the world's cocoa. When their harvests fail or politics destabilises, chocolate prices spike everywhere, including Australia.
By The Daily World · 30 June 2026

The World
Multinational companies shift profits to low-tax countries legally. Australia is fighting back, but the game remains stacked in favour of the wealthy.
By The Daily World · 30 June 2026

The World
The ocean feeds billions of people. Understanding who catches what, where the rules break down, and why Australian waters are under pressure.
By The Daily World · 30 June 2026

The World
Discover how frost in Brazil and drought in East Africa affect Australian coffee prices and availability within months. Learn the fragile supply chain behind your daily cup.
By The Daily World · 29 June 2026

The World
The Pacific Islands Forum is the main regional body in Australia's most immediate neighbourhood, and the diplomacy around it reveals a great deal about Australian foreign policy priorities.
By The Daily World · 19 June 2026

The World
Global tourism has bounced back faster than many predicted, but it has not returned to the same shape it left, and the pressures building in popular destinations are intensifying.
By The Daily World · 17 June 2026

The World
Migrant workers send hundreds of billions of dollars home each year, making remittances one of the most important financial flows in the developing world.
By The Daily World · 14 June 2026

The World
The network of farms, ships, processors, and retailers that puts food on tables worldwide is far more complex and fragile than most people realise.
By The Daily World · 8 June 2026

The World
For low-lying Pacific nations, rising seas and intensifying storms are not future scenarios but present-day threats to land, water, and sovereignty.
By The Daily World · 6 June 2026

The World
The World Bank lends billions of dollars a year to developing countries, but its role is more complicated and more contested than its name suggests.
By The Daily World · 21 May 2026