After last year’s Tariffs, will hyperinflation become the next worldwide concern?
With the latest war in the Middle East continuing, the resultant oil and gas shock has started to cripple the developing world, with implications that could threaten more than just livelihoods New Delhi [India], March 23: Throughout the years, we’ve filled up our tanks or our gas cylinders as soon as we needed one without [...]
With the latest war in the Middle East continuing, the resultant oil and gas shock has started to cripple the developing world, with implications that could threaten more than just livelihoods
New Delhi [India], March 23: Throughout the years, we’ve filled up our tanks or our gas cylinders as soon as we needed one without battling an eyelid. That’s changed in the last two weeks, as people across the developing world now wonder how they’ll travel to work or cook their next meal, given the astronomical price rises or limited supply of petrol and CNG gas available.
Until February 28, no one cared about geopolitics, and how it could affect literally everyone around them. The US and Israel’s attacks on Iran and the subsequent bombing campaigns engulfing the Middle East is now a global concern, threatening the global economy as we know it.