Germany has what may be the most diverse bread culture in the world. The official bread registry overseen by Germany’s national bread institute (yes, really) lists more than 3,000 types. Specialities include pumpernickel, Dreikornbrot (three-grain bread) and Kürbiskernbrot (pumpkin-seed bread). There are specific regional iterations of rolls: Brötchen in the north, Semmeln in the south. In German the word “bread” is partially interchangeable with “meal”—a working lunch is Pausenbrot (break-time bread), dinner is Abendbrot (evening bread). Bavarians, who always do things differently, add Brotzeit (bread time).
2. The number of Indians studying abroad has tripled in five years to 1.8 million in 2025.
Andhra Pradesh has promised Google, Meta, Reliance, Tata Consultancy Services, and half a dozen others a combined 5 GW of data-centre capacity in Vizag alone. That is more than three times everything India has built in 30 years, in a city that had near-zero data-centre infrastructure six months ago... (the government) has committed to 6 GW across Andhra Pradesh in five years, a cable network twice the size of Mumbai’s, and three undersea cable-landing stations—essentially building a digital future on the eastern coast... The state’s own electricity planning documents project Vizag’s peak district demand at 2.2 GW by 2029. Google alone has applied for 2.1 GW from the local distribution company...Google is building a 1 GW campus across three sites: Tarluvada, Adavivaram, and the Rambilli-Atchutapuram cluster. Meta and information-and-communications-technology company Sify are reportedly building a 500 MW facility at Paradesipalem, a village 25km from the city. Reliance and alternative asset manager Brookfield’s joint venture has signed a $11 billion MoU for another GW. TCS, Adaniconnex and real-estate developer Anant Raj round out the cluster. Even if the announced 5 GW materialises, Vizag would rank among the largest data-centre clusters in the world. Northern Virginia, the global leader, sits at 6.6 GW. Beijing, London, Tokyo, Singapore—all around 2 GW each. Mumbai, India’s current data-centre capital, has around 600 MW of operational capacity.
The emerging constraint to these ambitions is power supply.
Deloitte has warned that data centres in Andhra Pradesh alone could add 2–3 GW of peak electricity demand by 2030—up to 20% of the state’s entire current peak load—risking grid instability if transmission infrastructure doesn’t keep up... The Andhra government’s Data Centre Policy 4.0 (the “4.0” a chosen suffix for most of the current TDP government’s industrial policies) offers electricity duty waivers for five years and a Re 1 per unit discount on industrial electricity tariffs for 15 years... state has committed over Rs 22,000 crore in incentives to Google alone... Vizag’s data-centre sites are on the eastern coast, far from the state’s renewable-energy generation zones in the south and west. “You would need entirely new, dedicated high-voltage transmission infrastructure. Not an upgrade to existing lines, but new corridors built from scratch,” said a former APIIC official. “In India, this typically takes years to tender and build. And I don’t see them speeding up the process for these mega projects.”
And the solution is to outsource electricity generation or sourcing to the data centre developers themselves.
In a first for the state, it has granted a private entity, Google, a distribution company licence, allowing it to bypass the standard grid entirely and procure power directly from generators. Reliance is going further still, building its own 6 GW solar project to supply its data-centre operations... when Google contracts directly with generators at premium rates, those generators have less power to sell to the state discom at regulated prices. The discom, which still has the same demand to meet, has to make up the shortfall by either paying more on the open market (which it then recovers through higher tariffs) or simply cutting supply to consumers who have no alternative. If enough large consumers exit the grid, the discom’s revenue base shrinks while its fixed costs stay the same. Eventually, the grid gets more expensive for everyone who remains on it... The data centres planned in Vizag will operate on a hybrid model—hyperscalers will anchor the demand, local operators will build and run the physical infrastructure. Google is the end user. Adaniconnex builds the campus and co-invests in the power infrastructure. Airtel builds the cable-landing station and fibre backhaul.
4. The rise and rise of Chinese cars.
The market share of foreign firms in China has almost halved in five years, to around 30% in 2025. Moreover, in 2023 China passed Japan to become the world’s largest exporter of cars. In 2025 over 8m of its vehicles went abroad, nearly a third more than the year before. In Europe over the past five years, Chinese brands have gone from almost nowhere to nearly 9% of all sales, estimates Schmidt Automotive Research, a consultancy. Incumbents are also under siege in markets from Mexico and Brazil to Indonesia and Malaysia.
In recent weeks the State Council, or China’s cabinet, has issued two menacing decrees. One threatens trade curbs in response to actions that undermine Chinese supply chains (potentially including shifting orders to foreign factories). The other vows countermeasures against firms that apply foreign sanctions against Chinese companies, which in effect criminalises compliance with American law.
6. If the US sanctions individuals, they will be denied access to the services offered by among others, Amazon, Alphabet, Meta, Microsoft, Visa, Mastercard, Paypal, Apple, Slack, WhatsApp, Zoom, YouTube, Uber, Instagram, UPS, Fedex, Booking.com, and Expedia. FT writes about the scenario of US extending sanctions to services.
Weaponising services would mark a clear escalation from trade disputes over goods and have huge repercussions for both sides. For decades, Europe’s economic relationship with the US has been defined by deep integration: goods flowing westward across the Atlantic, services coming back the other way. The EU’s surplus for goods in 2023 was €156.6bn; the EU’s deficit for services that same year was €108.6bn. As geopolitical tensions rise, that interdependence is seen by many EU capitals as a weakness that needs to be fortified as fast as possible.
7. A New York Fed study finds that around 90% of the Trump tariffs have been borne by US consumers and companies.
As a first-best response, the Centre for Economic Policy Research’s fourth Paris Report recommends fiscal consolidation in the US, boosting household consumption in China and an increase in productive investment — modelled on former Italian premier Mario Draghi’s report — in Europe. These measures would encourage more balanced patterns of global saving and investment.
9. A ten-fold increase in export restrictions since the pandemic.
According to Global Trade Alert, the number of distortive export restrictions and bans has increased dramatically since the pandemic. Before Covid, an average of 22 export restrictions were being introduced a year. Since 2020, that average has shot up to 228.







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