129 Episodes

  1. Twitter Spaces: The Realism Debates: Malcom Kyeyune (Tinkzorg) and Elbridge Colby

    Published: 7/12/2023
  2. Let Them Eat Lidl, China’s Trade Superweapon, Deutschland für Alternative

    Published: 7/6/2023
  3. Back To The Falklands, Monetarism’s Meltdown, A New Eurozone Crisis

    Published: 6/29/2023
  4. Ranking Nanjing, Bundeswehr Backdown, Iran's Nuclear Pinball

    Published: 6/21/2023
  5. The Commercial Property Bust, Eurovision War Contest, Bitter-er Lake

    Published: 6/15/2023
  6. America’s Capitalist Missionaries, Let a Thousand Towers Bloom, Draining the Ruhr

    Published: 6/8/2023
  7. Twitter Spaces: Britain's Industrial Policy - with Miriam Cates MP, William Clouston, and Michael Taylor

    Published: 6/6/2023
  8. Turkey Elects; Micron Matters, Twitter Spaces

    Published: 5/29/2023
  9. Special Edition: Q&A - The Problem With Peter Zeihan...

    Published: 5/25/2023
  10. Piling On The Pounds, California Screaming, Marco Polo A Go Go

    Published: 5/18/2023
  11. Twenty Years of Monetary Failure, The Deindustrial Revolution, Arab Autumn

    Published: 5/11/2023
  12. Special Edition with Harvard's Neo-Realist Stephen Walt: The Balance of Threat

    Published: 5/4/2023
  13. Quit All That Yellen, The Chips Fall Where They May, Multipolar Metallurgy

    Published: 4/27/2023
  14. Avant Lagarde, The IRA Blows Up, Xi Gets A Brazilian

    Published: 4/20/2023
  15. "The Leak", Multipolar Macron, Rare Earth Getting Rarer

    Published: 4/13/2023
  16. CPTPP: Trade Deal or No Deal, Macron's Beijing Bargain, Cast No Shadow Banking

    Published: 4/6/2023
  17. Tanking Banking, French Toast, Bi Bi's Boo Boo

    Published: 3/30/2023
  18. Special Edition: A Q&A with Collingwood & Pilkington

    Published: 3/24/2023
  19. Samo Burja: The Three Mega-Trends That Will Define The 21st Century

    Published: 3/23/2023
  20. Silicon Valley Bailout, All Butter No Guns, The Art of Peace

    Published: 3/16/2023

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Charting The Rise Of A Multipolar World Order Philip Pilkington is an unorthodox macroeconomist. Andrew Collingwood is an equally skeptical journalist. Lately, both have realised that - post-Ukraine, post-Afghanistan withdrawal - the old, unipolar, US-led world order is in its death throes. In its wake, something new is being born. But what shape will that take? That will depend on a combustible combination of economics and geopolitics; trade and military muscle. Each week, our duo take three off-radar news stories and explain how each is shaping our multipolar reality.