Trade Splaining

Ardian Mollabeqiri & Robert Skidmore

A fun and entertaining look at global affairs, trade and the United Nations, brought to you from the perspective of two American expats living in Switzerland. They try to keep a straight face while recapping the latest in current events and the local scene in Geneva, Switzerland as well as interviews with fellow expats on the international scene and leaders in their respective fields.

  1. 18 HRS AGO

    Tariffs Struck Down… Then Came Back + A Middle East Conflict That Threatens Food Prices ft. Peter S Goodman (NYT)

    Episode 85 – Tariffs Struck Down… Then Came Back + Middle East Conflict Threatens Food Prices Have tariffs really been rolled back — or just repackaged under a different legal label? In Episode 85 of Trade Splaining, we unpack the fallout from the US Supreme Court ruling on tariffs — and why, despite the headlines, not much may have actually changed. We then turn to a fast-moving and underreported risk: how the Middle East conflict is disrupting global fertilizer supply chains — and what that could mean for food prices worldwide. We’re joined by Peter S. Goodman (New York Times) to break down why this matters more than most people think. 🔑 What we cover Why US tariffs were struck down — and how they came back almost immediately What happens to the $133 billion in tariff revenues now in legal limbo Whether trade policy has actually shifted — or just changed legal justification Why supply chains continue to reconfigure rather than truly de-risk How a third of global fertilizer supply depends on the Persian Gulf Why urea prices spiked ~45% in a week — and what that signals How fertilizer shortages translate into lower yields and higher food prices Why globalization isn’t going away — despite rising geopolitical tensions The economic incentives preventing a real shift toward resilience 💡 Key takeaways The legal basis for tariffs may have changed — but the policy hasn’t Tariffs remain a central tool of economic and geopolitical leverage Supply chains are adapting, but not necessarily becoming more resilient Global food systems remain highly exposed to geopolitical shocks Efficiency continues to win over resilience — until crisis hits 🌍 Why this matters From tariffs to fertilizers, this episode highlights just how interconnected today’s global economy really is. Disruptions in one region — whether legal, political, or military — can quickly ripple across supply chains, prices, and everyday life. And despite all the talk of “deglobalization,” the system remains deeply interdependent — and fragile. 📢 Listen & follow If you enjoyed the episode: 👉 Follow / Subscribe on your preferred platform 👉 Share with a fellow trade nerd 👉 Help us (and the algorithm) by leaving a rating or review 🔎 Keywords (for SEO) tariffs, US trade policy, Supreme Court tariffs ruling, Middle East conflict, Strait of Hormuz, fertilizer supply, urea prices, global food prices, supply chains, globalization, trade policy podcast

    35 min
  2. 27 JAN

    Trade, National Security and 2026 Walk Into a Bar

    Is everything national security now? In Episode 83 of Trade Splaining, Ardi & Rob kick off 2026 by diving head-first into the growing chaos at the intersection of trade policy, geopolitics, and national security exceptions — the legal loophole that ate the global trading system. We break down why trade is no longer just about efficiency or tariffs, but increasingly about power, leverage, and security theatre — from Greenland and semiconductors to Japan–China tensions and WTO rule-stretching. Then we’re joined (again) by two of our favourite adults in the room: Dr. Mona Paulsen (LSE) Prof. Greg Messenger (University of Bristol) Together, we unpack: Why “national security” now seems to cover everything except furniture Whether today’s chaos is a temporary shock — or a return to how trade always worked What businesses should actually watch for amid policy incoherence Whether the US is still a reliable anchor for the global trading system And why the real question isn’t what Washington does — but what everyone else does next Plus: A new 2026 format (more depth, fewer Lake Geneva anecdotes — we promise) Sleep-bro optimisation culture (yes, really) AI, soft skills, and why getting your boss coffee is apparently back Donuts, laundry, and the National Security Exception™ as a life philosophy 🎙️ No opinions. Just vibes. And trade law. 👉 Listen now wherever you get your podcasts. 📩 Questions? trade.splaining@gmail.com 🔔 Like, subscribe, follow — appease the algorithm. #TradeSplaining #GlobalTrade #NationalSecurity #Geopolitics #TradePolicy #WTO #SupplyChains #ListenResponsibly

    36 min
  3. 30/05/2025

    Shipping Goes Net Zero, Sell America and Talking Circular Economy

    Description: In Episode 79 of Trade Splaining, Rob and Ardian dive deep into the surprising relevance of decarbonizing global shipping, why GDP might not be the best metric anymore, and how the EU and UK are slowly making Brexit... not a thing. We also ask: is multilateralism really dead—or just resting? 💡 What You'll Hear in This Episode: Circular Reasoning (with actual logic): Guest Eva-Maria Bille of the European Environmental Bureau unpacks why circular economy policies matter more than ever—especially in a world of inflation, geopolitics, and defense budgets. Shipping News That Doesn’t Suck: The IMO’s historic (kind of) net-zero deal for shipping by 2050, what it means, and why it’s both hopeful and half-baked. Sell America? Moody’s downgrades the US credit rating, tourism is slowing, and Americans are quietly flocking to Swiss banks. Coincidence? We think not. GDP Is Over Party: A new push to rethink how we measure economic health. Is it time to dump GDP in favor of balance sheet metrics? Brexit: The Silent Patch-Up: A new EU-UK trade deal smooths post-Brexit trade pain. Is it a quiet realignment or political heresy? Swiss Wool Emergency & War Readiness: From Geneva’s updated war brochure to a growing sheep wool crisis, it’s your must-hear Swiss WTFs. 🔁 Also Featuring: Listener shoutouts to "Eric" and Ron "Burgundy" Michelle’s "Vibe Shift" report: Enron eggs, TikTok satire, and the birds that were never real A kebab-off between Geneva and Beirut A surprisingly accurate Bond reference and sheep-related crisis management 📬 Subscribe, review, share—and email us your feedback or best kebab takes at TSpotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.

    42 min

About

A fun and entertaining look at global affairs, trade and the United Nations, brought to you from the perspective of two American expats living in Switzerland. They try to keep a straight face while recapping the latest in current events and the local scene in Geneva, Switzerland as well as interviews with fellow expats on the international scene and leaders in their respective fields.

You Might Also Like