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Sunday, 3 May 2026

Sunday, May 03, 2026

What Is Happening with Interest Rates, Credit and Investment Activity (Part 3)

By Andrii Azarov (Andrew Azarov) — Professor of Business, Economics, and the Applied Use of Artificial Intelligence in the Development of Business Process Automation Software Systems. International Business Academy Consortium (United Kingdom) 


This article is for readers who want to understand the real forces shaping the modern economy — not only as observers, but as people making financial, business and strategic decisions. It is especially valuable for entrepreneurs, investors, executives and thoughtful citizens who recognise that interest rates, credit conditions and investment activity now influence everything from household stability to global business growth. For the audience of 100news.tv, this material matters because it goes beyond headlines and helps interpret the deeper logic of economic change.

Part 3 

 <<< Part 1 

 <<< Part 2 

 

XXXV. The United States: why the world still watches the Federal Reserve first

No analysis of interest rates, credit and investment activity is complete without beginning with the United States, because the American monetary system still casts the longest shadow over global finance.

This is not merely because the Federal Reserve is powerful in a formal sense. It is because the U.S. dollar remains central to the architecture of trade, reserves, sovereign borrowing, commodity pricing, institutional portfolios and cross-border corporate finance. When American rates change, they do not remain inside America. They ripple outward through the global financial bloodstream.

That is why the Federal Reserve is watched not only by Wall Street but by exporters in Asia, borrowers in emerging markets, pension funds in Europe, central banks in Latin America, family offices in the Gulf, and entrepreneurs everywhere whose access to capital depends, directly or indirectly, on the global price of money.

Sunday, May 03, 2026

What Is Happening with Interest Rates, Credit and Investment Activity (Part 2)

By Andrii Azarov (Andrew Azarov) — Professor of Business, Economics, and the Applied Use of Artificial Intelligence in the Development of Business Process Automation Software Systems. International Business Academy Consortium (United Kingdom) 



This article is for readers who want to understand the real forces shaping the modern economy — not only as observers, but as people making financial, business and strategic decisions. It is especially valuable for entrepreneurs, investors, executives and thoughtful citizens who recognise that interest rates, credit conditions and investment activity now influence everything from household stability to global business growth. For the audience of 100news.tv, this material matters because it goes beyond headlines and helps interpret the deeper logic of economic change.

Part 2 

 <<< Part 1

 Part 3 >>> 

XXI. Mortgages: why the housing question has become the emotional centre of the rate cycle

If interest rates are the nervous system of the economy, mortgages are the point at which that system touches human life most directly. For many households, nothing makes the rate cycle feel more real than the monthly housing payment.

This is why debates about monetary policy quickly become debates about fairness, opportunity and social mobility. A percentage point on paper may look technical. In household budgeting, it can mean the difference between confidence and anxiety, ownership and exclusion, stability and deferral.

The mortgage market is where three forces collide at once.

Sunday, May 03, 2026

What Is Happening with Interest Rates, Credit and Investment Activity (Part 1)

By Andrii Azarov (Andrew Azarov) — Professor of Business, Economics, and the Applied Use of Artificial Intelligence in the Development of Business Process Automation Software Systems. International Business Academy Consortium (United Kingdom)

This article is for readers who want to understand the real forces shaping the modern economy — not only as observers, but as people making financial, business and strategic decisions. It is especially valuable for entrepreneurs, investors, executives and thoughtful citizens who recognise that interest rates, credit conditions and investment activity now influence everything from household stability to global business growth. For the audience of 100news.tv, this material matters because it goes beyond headlines and helps interpret the deeper logic of economic change.

Part 1 

There are periods in economic history when money is simply money: a neutral medium, a technical instrument, a background condition to ordinary commercial life. And then there are periods when the price of money becomes the main character in the story.

We are living through the second kind.

For several years, households, entrepreneurs, investors, bankers and governments have all been forced to relearn an old truth that many had nearly forgotten during the age of ultra-cheap liquidity: interest rates are not a detail. They are one of the most powerful organising forces in the economy. They shape mortgages and car loans, the appetite of investors, the confidence of business owners, the pace of construction, the valuation of technology firms, the sustainability of public debt, the resilience of banks, the attractiveness of bonds, and even the emotional climate of consumption.

Sunday, May 03, 2026

The Top 20 Best Countries for Business Development Today (Interactive Chart)

By Andrii Azarov (Andrew Azarov) — Professor of Business, Economics, and the Applied Use of Artificial Intelligence in the Development of Business Process Automation Software Systems. International Business Academy Consortium (United Kingdom).

Why we returned to this topic — and how this editorial assessment was built

In our previous analytical article, Top 20 Best Countries for Business Development by 2035, we set out to answer a question that has become increasingly important for entrepreneurs, investors, internationally mobile families and ambitious professionals: where in the world can a serious business not only be launched, but also protected, scaled, monetised and lived around in a sustainable way? 

That earlier article was not written as a superficial ranking, nor as a collection of fashionable destinations. It was designed as a strategic framework to help readers understand that the best jurisdiction for business is rarely defined by one variable alone. Tax matters, but tax is not enough. Registration speed matters, but speed is not enough. 

Reputation matters, but reputation alone does not pay rent, educate children, protect health or preserve long-term savings.



Saturday, 2 May 2026

Saturday, May 02, 2026

Top 20 Best Countries for Business Development by 2035

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By Andrii Azarov (Andrew Azarov) — Professor of Business, Economics, and the Applied Use of Artificial Intelligence in the Development of Business Process Automation Software Systems. International Business Academy Consortium (United Kingdom).

Introduction

By 2035, the best country for business development will not necessarily be the country with the lowest tax rate or the fastest incorporation form. It will be the country where business can be built, financed, protected, scaled and lived around.

This means the serious founder must now ask a wider question: not merely where to register a company, but where to create a durable economic life. A truly strong jurisdiction must combine legal predictability, workable taxation, credible institutions, practical infrastructure, decent family living conditions, educational opportunity for children, acceptable healthcare, and enough economic headroom for the entrepreneur not only to survive, but to accumulate capital.

That is why this article does not offer a shallow “top list”. It offers a strategic view of 20 jurisdictions that, for different reasons, may remain among the strongest places in the world for business development by 2035. The world economy is entering a more selective era of capital, more geopolitical fragmentation, more AI-led productivity gaps, and more competition between tax systems, talent systems and quality-of-life systems. Countries that align all three — money, institutions and family life — will win the next decade.

Final Recommendation Table: Where It Is Best to Start a Business and Live

Country Best for business start Best for family life Tax attractiveness Corruption / institutional cleanliness Cost comfort Fastest path to first million Overall verdict
SingaporeExcellentGood, but expensiveStrongExcellentLowFastBest for Asian HQ and structured wealth
United StatesExceptionalVery uneven by stateModerateGoodUnevenVery fastBest for scale and venture growth
United KingdomVery strongGoodModerateStrongModerateMedium-fastBest for trusted international business
UAEExcellentGood if income is highExcellentStrongModerateFastBest for capital retention and mobility
SwitzerlandVery strongExcellentGoodExcellentExpensiveMediumBest for premium and high-trust business
SwedenStrongExcellentModerateExcellentCostlyMediumBest for innovation + social quality
CanadaStrongVery goodModerateStrongModerateMediumBest balance of North America + stability
NetherlandsStrongVery goodModerateExcellentModerateMediumBest European base for trade and HQ logic
EstoniaStrong for digitalGoodExcellent for retained profitStrongGoodMedium-fastBest lean EU digital setup
GermanyVery strongVery goodModerateStrongModerateMediumBest for serious industrial business
DenmarkStrongExcellentModerateExcellentModerateMediumBest for clean, stable long-term building
FinlandStrongExcellentModerateExcellentModerateMediumBest for technical and education-led models
South KoreaStrongGoodModerateGoodModerateMedium-fastBest for advanced tech and industrial scale
JapanStrongVery goodModerateStrongModerateMediumBest for quality-centric and premium sectors
IndiaExceptional in upsideUnevenGoodMixedGoodFastBest for scale, cost leverage and growth
FranceStrongVery goodModerateStrongModerateMediumBest for premium, AI, aerospace, deep tech
AustraliaStrongVery goodModerateStrongModerateMediumBest for APAC gateway + quality of life
IsraelStrong in techGoodGoodModerate-goodModerateFastBest for cyber, AI, defence-linked tech
PolandStrongGoodGoodModerate-goodGoodMedium-fastBest lower-cost EU expansion base
New ZealandGoodExcellentModerateExcellentModerateMediumBest for stable niche-export family life

1. Singapore 🇸🇬

Singapore remains one of the most technically efficient business jurisdictions in the world. It still functions as a compact command centre for Asian business, finance, logistics and digital trade. The real secret of Singapore is not just low friction. It is predictable excellence. Rules are clear, corruption is extremely low, infrastructure is world-class and the state behaves like an elite operating system rather than a passive bureaucracy. In a world where uncertainty is expensive, that predictability has enormous monetary value. Singapore also remains one of the most expensive places in the world to live, but the price buys security, speed and institutional trust.

Saturday, May 02, 2026

GLOBAL BUSINESS WEEK 2026 will be held in Davos

Every year, leading entrepreneurs from five continents who are interested in developing business connections, studying and supporting innovation, establishing new trade missions, and shaping a global business civilisation gather at GLOBAL BUSINESS WEEK — an international platform for a series of business forums and strategic corporate retreats.