MY PICK
LSE BUSINESS REVIEW
What happens when supply chains go dark
Global trade relies on supply chains with predictable routing, stable pricing, and continuous visibility. When all three break down at once, supply chains don't just fracture, they go dark. Geopolitical disruption and mid-transit changes are undermining contractual reliability, leaving companies unable to see where their goods are, what they'll cost, or when they'll arrive.
Article · 10 min
TODAY’S READING
RAND
Exploring instability risks in the US-China AI rivalry
Report · 15 min
McKinsey
Where AI will create value — and where it won’t
Article · 10 min
Peterson Institute
The EU-Mercosur trade agreement is finally happening
Analysis · 10 min
Brookings Institution
Competing AI strategies for the US and China
Analysis · 12 min
Chatham House
AI export controls are not the best bargaining chip
Analysis · 8 min
Harvard Business Review
Accountability must be chosen, not mandated
Article · 10 min
RAND
How much more power can the US grid provide for AI?
Report · 12 min
LSE Business Review
How does a country’s political system affect its incentives to attract foreign investment?
Article · 8 min
McKinsey
An executive’s survival guide to capital projects
Article · 12 min
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