1. A reality check on who owns agricultural land in South Africa.
White farmers still own roughly half of the country’s land although only 7 per cent of citizens are white.
2. Tej Parikh has a very good graphical summary of America's healthcare market.
The US spends more than $4.5tn annually on healthcare — and is projected to soon account for one-fifth of its economy. Even on a per capita basis, other large, rich nations spend about half as much as America. Healthcare is the largest component of US consumer spending on services (well above expenditure on recreation, eating out and hotels)… The economy has created 3.9mn private sector jobs since the start of 2023. More than half have come from healthcare and social assistance… studies have estimated that approximately 25 to 30 per cent of health spending could be considered waste.
Underground brine reservoirs flowing across Arkansas and neighbouring states contain high concentrations of the silvery-white metal; a US Geological Survey study published in October estimated the total resource in south-west Arkansas alone at up to 19mn tonnes... “DLE could do for the US lithium industry and economy what fracking did for the US oil industry almost 20 years ago,” says Andy Robinson, a geoscientist and co-founder of Standard Lithium, which is seeking to develop a $1.5bn project near El Dorado in partnership with Norwegian energy group, Equinor.
Proponents say DLE offers a faster and less environmentally damaging alternative to existing extraction methods. For oil companies, which have extensive skills in drilling, pumping and processing fluids, it represents a useful way to diversify their businesses... But experts warn that US lithium pioneers must prove the new technology can be commercially successful at scale and compete with both existing extraction technologies and rival DLE projects in lower-cost countries...
Between 2020 and 2024 global demand for lithium tripled to around 1.2mn tonnes, according to energy research group Wood Mackenzie, which is forecasting lithium consumption will reach 5.8mn tonnes by 2050. To meet demand, producers have over the past decade expanded hard rock mining in Australia and China and lithium brine extraction in Latin America, giving these three regions control of more than 80 per cent of the extraction industry. Hard rock mining of lithium is much like any other metal production process; ores such as spodumene are excavated from open pit mines, crushed and chemically processed to separate the lithium. Brine extraction involves pumping lithium-rich brines into large ponds, typically in regions with a hot, dry climate. The water gradually evaporates, leaving behind concentrated lithium salts that can be processed...
Until recently, US-based lithium miners have struggled. They face higher costs, tougher mining regulations and less favourable geological and climatic conditions than in the “lithium triangle” in Chile, Argentina and Bolivia. The development of direct lithium extraction, which usually involves using solvents or ceramic materials to separate lithium from the brines, has changed all that. DLE takes a matter of hours to separate lithium from brines, while evaporation ponds can take as long as 18 months. Recovery rates are around 70 to 90 per cent, according to Wood Mackenzie, compared to 40 to 60 per cent for evaporation ponds, and DLE also uses less land and less water. Combined with the discovery of high concentrations of lithium in oilfield brines within the so-called Smackover Formation, which extends across Arkansas, Louisiana, Texas, Alabama, Mississippi and Florida, DLE has opened up an opportunity. Existing oil and chemical infrastructure in the formation also makes these resources more accessible than greenfield sites.
4. Great primer in NYT that has the list of all items Americans import from China. Goods that Americans import mostly from China.
The highest value of goods imported from China.And America's biggest exports to China.The company’s ambition to become an iPhone-manufacturing hub collides with the reality of high attrition, relentless production targets, and the ever-present pressure of Apple’s quality control. Inside the factory, each worker undergoes two to three weeks of intensive training before stepping onto the assembly line. Once there, their tasks are highly compartmentalised—a deliberate strategy to protect Apple’s intellectual property. Most workers only know how to assemble a specific section of the phone, with little visibility into the broader production process... An iPhone must pass through at least 600 quality checkpoints before it leaves the factory. A single defect can jeopardise an entire batch, sending costs skyrocketing and potentially damaging the supplier relationship. This is why Tata has invested heavily in automated equipment from suppliers like Delta Electronics, aiming to reduce defect rates and increase efficiency... the workers... shifts are standard eight-hour stints—6 am to 2 pm, 2 pm to 10 pm, or 10 pm to 6 am... That compartmentalised operation is about efficiency but also about Apple’s intellectual property. Keeping workers focused on their slice of the process helps prevent any accidental leaks of trade secrets.
6. Starlink compared to other telecom companies.
7. China tries to increase its soft power. The one area it appears to be having some success is gaming.
Four of the ten highest-grossing mobile games of 2024 were made in China. One such is Genshin Impact, a role-playing adventure which rakes in over $1bn a year. Last year a Chinese firm released Black Myth Wukong, the country’s first blockbuster video game. Featuring the mischievous Monkey King, it is steeped in Chinese folklore. Some 30% of its 25m players are said to be outside the country.
8. One of the genuine successes of the Indian state, the taming of the Naxalite movement, which is perhaps in its end stages.
Between 2022 and the first half of 2024, GCCs have leased 53 million square feet (msf) of office space. In 2024, they accounted for 36 per cent of total leasing activity, occupying 27.7 msf of the 77.2 msf transacted... The momentum has continued into Q1 CY25. Colliers reported that GCCs absorbed 6.5 msf of Grade-A office space in the quarter — constituting 41 per cent of overall office space demand across the top seven cities in India... In Q1CY25, GCCs leased 88 per cent of the total office space in green buildings as part of their broader commitment to achieving carbon neutrality...
According to Vestian’s sustainability report, green-certified office buildings commanded an average rental premium of 12–14 per cent over non-certified buildings. GCC-occupied office space in Bengaluru has been leased at a 50 per cent premium compared to non-GCC-occupied office space in FY25. The premium is 13 per cent in NCR and 9 per cent in Hyderabad... office rentals across the top Indian cities have grown between 9 to 28 per cent from 2022 to 2025, mainly driven by GCCs... real estate costs for the GCCs are not more than 6-7 per cent of their total cost of a GCC setup, which does not deter them from going for high-quality locations... According to Nasscom-KPMG report, the GCC market size in India tripled from $19.6 billion in FY15 to $64.6 billion in FY24. It is further anticipated to touch $110 billion by 2030, despite ongoing trade tensions and geopolitical frictions.
10. US-India pre-Trump merchandise trade tariffs.
On day one Tinubu removed a ruinously expensive fuel subsidy. More important still, the central bank has restored monetary policy orthodoxy after a shambolic era in which only cronies with access to cheap dollars benefited. After a dangerous overshoot, the naira has stabilised, with the gap between the official and black market rate shrinking to almost nothing. The central bank has stopped printing money to pay for government profligacy. Politicians still spend too much, often on fripperies like an extravagant presidential jet, but at least the government has begun to increase tax receipts. Investors do not live in constant fear of a devaluation and can readily access dollars. That may eventually help Nigeria to diversify, but shorter term it is positive that oil production has recovered from a nadir of 1mn barrels a day to nearly 1.5mn last month. Oil theft has been reduced and local companies are squeezing more out of marginal fields.
12. The decline of net FDI into India.
In 2020-21 and 2021-22, gross FDI inflows were adversely impacted by repatriation and outward investments to the tune of 46 per cent and 54 per cent, respectively. The extent of this impact rose sharply in the following three years — to 61 per cent in 2022–23, 86 per cent in 2023–24, and 99 per cent in 2024–25... the amount of repatriation and disinvestment in 2019-20 was about $18 billion, or about 25 per cent of gross FDI inflows. But the following two Covid years saw repatriation and disinvestment rising to account for a 33-34 per cent share of gross FDI inflows. In 2023-24, this trend became alarming, with the share of repatriation and disinvestment in gross FDI inflows jumping to 62 per cent. In 2024–25, the share inched up further to 63 per cent.
What this implied was pretty serious. Foreign investors in Indian companies were showing a marked preference for ploughing back their gains from here to reinvest in other markets elsewhere. Note that this trend has continued for the last two years... Indeed, reinvested earnings by existing foreign investors have stayed at well below a third of gross FDI inflows in these years. Nor has there been a marked desire on their part to increase reinvested earnings... Contributing to such gloomy prospects on the net FDI inflows front is last year’s data that shows how Indian companies are raising their outward FDI in a big way. Indian companies have stepped up their outward FDI during the post-Covid years — from $14 billion in 2022-23 to $16.6 billion in 2023-24, and to $29 billion in 2024-25.
In 2024-25, while India attracted $81 bn in FDI, foreign firms repatriated over $51 bn, and Indian firms' outward investment was $29.2 bn, leaving the net FDI inflows at only $0.35 bn.
13. In a bid to overturn a system that the government believes is biased against it, Mexico goes to polls on June 1 to elect judges!
In elections on June 1, Mexico will replace almost 900 judges at the federal level and hundreds more across 19 state-level jurisdictions in a voting process never tried elsewhere that was implemented in just eight months... A random lottery decided which half of federal judges would be replaced on Sunday, and which in 2027. Most candidates for the vote were chosen by the ruling party and were not allowed any public or private funding. Some are openly associated with the ruling Morena party... The electoral institute expects turnout of about 8 to 15 per cent, compared with more than 60 per cent in last year’s presidential election... “Less than 1 per cent understand what they are voting for,” Jorge Sepúlveda, vice-president of the Mexican Bar Association. “Those that’ll vote will mostly be people propelled by the government.”... In Mexico City, voters must fill out nine ballots, choosing about 50 names from a choice of almost 300. Specialist judges were assigned to certain districts, meaning voters in parts of the capital will choose all the country’s competition and telecoms judges... An all-powerful disciplinary tribunal will be able to remove judges. Of 38 candidates for that, at least 10 have ties to the ruling party, including two who worked directly for López Obrador... One anti-corruption group identified 17 “high risk” candidates in judicial elections, including one who had worked for the Sinaloa Cartel’s leader and another who had worked for the leader of the Los Zetas criminal group. Saúl López, professor at Tecnológico de Monterrey’s school of government, said that the new system would offer “the maximum degree of capture, not just by organised crime but other economic powers”.
14. The disturbing monopoly in cloud computing.
Unlike traditional utilities, the dominant cloud providers Amazon, Google and Microsoft — which together control two-thirds of the global market — operate with minimal transparency or public oversight. This leaves governments, businesses and citizens vulnerable to systemic risks, while giving these corporations immense power to shape the digital economy to their advantage. It is no accident that the same behemoths that dominate ecommerce, digital advertising and operating systems also control the cloud computing infrastructure that underpins these services. Cloud is an extraordinarily capital-intensive business, with high barriers to entry and significant network effects. The data, technological capabilities and financial reserves controlled by these behemoths secured them advantages that smaller, independent rivals simply couldn’t match when cloud computing began to take off. But the companies haven’t just benefited from structural advantages; they’ve also engaged in anti-competitive practices, as documented by competition authorities across Europe, the US, Australia and Japan. These include opaque and discriminatory pricing, technical barriers to switching provider, excessive fees for data transfers and bundling cloud services with other products...The dependence of many nations on a small number of US cloud giants is a geopolitical threat. Several existing US laws — including the Cloud Act — require providers to hand data to the American government when asked, even if stored on foreign soil... Big Tech’s cloud oligopoly undermines innovation. In artificial intelligence, for example, tech giants have been accused of trading cut-price access to cloud resources for intellectual property rights, equity stakes and strategic influence over leading start-ups, reinforcing their dominance across the sector.
Possible responses to this monopoly
Fortunately, most of the tools we need to address these problems already exist. Established frameworks — including utility regulation, competition policy and public procurement — can be drawn on to restructure and govern cloud infrastructure in the public interest. For instance, regulators should mandate fair and non-discriminatory access to cloud services, mirroring rules already applied to telecoms. This should include transparent, consistent pricing and a ban on unfair contract terms. Providers should be required to implement robust processes to ensure the stability and security of their infrastructure, with regular audits and stress tests. Governments should also rethink their procurement practices. Public institutions should not reinforce monopoly power by defaulting to the dominant providers. Finally — and most ambitiously — governments should consider structural separation. Requiring Amazon, Google and Microsoft to spin off their cloud divisions would eliminate their ability to use this critical infrastructure to extend their dominance into new markets.
15. With high tariffs comes trade crime.
In April, for example, Chinese exports to the United States fell 21 percent from a year earlier, but Chinese exports to Southeast Asian countries rose by the same percentage... An analysis by Exiger, a data analytics firm, found that more than 3,000 companies in Mexico depended on Chinese shipments for 75 percent or more of their supply chain. Many of these companies are subsidiaries of Chinese state-owned enterprises, and most sell products to the United States, the report said.
16. As PSG faces Inter Milan in this weekend's Champion League final, Simon Kuper writes that Paris has become global football's biggest talent pool.
Paris finally acquired a serious football club in 1970, when little Paris FC and Stade saint-germanois merged into PSG. (Paris FC soon walked out again.) At the time, the city’s growing suburbs, the banlieues, were filling with kids who had few entertainments besides football. In new towns short on markers of belonging, millions grew up supporting PSG as a way to feel Parisian. The popular claim that it’s a fake club with money but no fans is nonsense. The French state funded accredited coaches and artificial pitches in the banlieues. Soon, Greater Paris was producing more top footballers than certain continents. French teams packed with Parisians have reached four of the seven World Cup finals since 1998, winning two, and losing two only on penalty shoot-outs. The previous time PSG reached the Champions League final, against Bayern Munich in 2020, they lost to a goal by Bayern’s Parisian exile Kingsley Coman, but Parisian talent goes a long way down... PSG’s rise began in 2011, when the French president Nicolas Sarkozy, a fan, encouraged a wing of Qatar’s state to buy the club for a piffling €70mn or so. Sarkozy rooted out the hooligans, and Qatar bought superstar players. Two years ago, PSG’s front three were Kylian Mbappé, Neymar and Leo Messi. Yet PSG fans (I have two in my apartment) prefer today’s younger, harder-working, less-spoilt side.
17. Manish Sabharwal has a good compilation of "regulatory cholesterol"
Can women in India work the same jobs and the same way as men? No, they are banned from 32 operations and 200 sub-processes, including pottery manufacturing, cashew-nut processing, and glass manufacturing. Can employers think about hiring men and women for night shifts similarly? No: Women attract 59 special conditions for employers across states. Can factories use all their land? No: Fifty per cent of an industrial plot is lost to just three standards; micro and small factories lose the most land to standards more stringent than those of countries 10 times richer. Can workers work the hours they want? No: A factory worker loses 270 plus hours of annual earnings to working hour restrictions, and these limits force workers to give 156 to 416 fewer hours in a quarter than in Japan. Is building one 300-worker factory cheaper than two 150-worker factories in India? No: One 300-worker factory needs 40-80 per cent more land than two 150-worker factories. Do India and Singapore require the same number of floors to build a hotel with the same number of rooms? No: The same number of rooms requires three floors in Singapore and seven in Noida. Can all of rural India industrialise? No: Fifty per cent of rural areas cannot be industrialised due to minimum road width norms.