The world, explained for Ireland.

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 · 13 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 · 11 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 · 3 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 · 28 February 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 · 26 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 · 24 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 · 22 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 · 20 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 · 18 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 · 14 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 · 12 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 · 10 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 · 2 February 2026

The World
Getting a vaccine from a laboratory to an arm on the other side of the world involves a chain of manufacturing, cold storage, and logistics that most people never see.
By The Daily World · 29 January 2026

The World
No other country shapes Australia's economic fortunes as directly as China, and understanding why reveals how exposed the Australian economy really is.
By The Daily World · 19 January 2026

The World
Wheat is one of the most traded commodities on Earth, and the price set in Chicago or on the Black Sea coast turns up, months later, in what Australians pay for bread and pasta.
By The Daily World · 16 January 2026

The World
The Australian dollar rises and falls for reasons that are partly domestic and partly global, and the direction it moves determines a surprising amount about everyday prices.
By The Daily World · 14 January 2026

The World
The jump from local outbreak to global pandemic follows a recognisable pattern, and the systems designed to catch it early are better than they were, though still imperfect.
By The Daily World · 9 January 2026

The World
The Paris Agreement is the closest the world has come to a shared climate contract, but how it works, and what it does not require, is widely misunderstood.
By The Daily World · 7 January 2026

The World
AI is moving from a research curiosity to an infrastructure technology, and the economic shifts it is triggering will play out over decades.
By The Daily World · 5 January 2026

The World
Lithium is the element at the heart of rechargeable batteries, and the countries that control its supply are shaping the energy transition and global geopolitics.
By The Daily World · 1 January 2026

The World
When the world's most powerful central bank moves its benchmark rate, Australian borrowers eventually feel it, even though Washington has no authority over the Reserve Bank of Australia.
By The Daily World · 30 December 2025

The World
A handful of narrow waterways control the flow of the goods that fill supermarket shelves worldwide, and when they seize up, prices move fast.
By The Daily World · 28 December 2025