In the united states where we've been dealing with the last couple years various at particularly it's been very intense in the last year uh... farmers being to be demanded the u.s.d.a. mrs. demanding farmers coal their flocks due to potential bird flu outbreaks. If you only make four hundred dollars a year you're obviously not gonna have that much spend per month and so you have to basically not by expensive food. In venezuela which is sort of another quasi almost communist but it had a very big social welfare system based on oil he got really hard core into like giving out handouts to the country.
Transcript
chevron_right
Play full episode
chevron_right
Transcript
Episode notes
The exchange of goods and services has existed since the earliest forms of civilization, from simple barter arrangements at the local town square to Phoenician traders navigating the Mediterranean with goods from Europe and North Africa. Today, however, the scope of exchange is truly massive, with online commerce coming to dominate nearly all segments of retail, and the scale encompassing transoceanic trade routes totaling 11 billion tons in maritime cargoes in 2021. Underpinning all this lies an extremely complex web of producers, shippers, pipelines, warehouses, and commodities traders that include the massive concerns such as Koch Industries in energy and Glencore in metals, with over 100,000 employees each. Billions of dollars have been made and lost in commodities futures, and as volatility continues to disrupt prices of everyday items from gasoline to grain, the trend of ever tighter global trade integration seen since the end of the Cold War may start to unravel as regional blocks choose to have closer and more reliable supply chains.