
Hosted by Ardian Mollabeqiri & Robert Skidmore · EN

Episode 89 - Trade Finds a Way, But Your Parcel Might Not: Global Express Association's Carlos Grau on Customs, De Minimis & Global Delivery Trade has a funny way of showing up in your life. Sometimes it is tariffs, oil prices and semiconductor supply chains. Other times, it is your package sitting at the border while someone tries to decide whether “gift” and “zero value” is a legally persuasive customs strategy. In this episode of Trade Splaining, Rob and Ardian look at why global trade is still proving surprisingly resilient - even as geopolitics, shipping disruptions and rising trade costs keep trying to ruin the party. Goods trade grew strongly in early 2026, helped in part by US demand for AI-related products like servers, semiconductors and data center equipment. But that momentum is running straight into familiar risks: the Strait of Hormuz, energy prices, shipping uncertainty and the growing reality that trade may still find a way, but it might cost more and arrive later. The episode also looks at Europe’s attempt to become a more serious geopolitical actor in supply chains, with the EU preparing stronger emergency powers over semiconductor production and critical chip orders. Rob and Ardian also revisit the eternal zombie file of Brexit, asking whether “Bre-entry” - Britain eventually rejoining or moving closer to the EU - is still political fantasy, strategic inevitability, or simply the trade policy sequel nobody asked for but everyone keeps watching. The main interview features Carlos Grau Tanner, Director General of the Global Express Association, the Geneva-based association representing DHL, FedEx and UPS on global policy issues including trade, customs, aviation, air transport, security and postal regulation. Carlos explains how express delivery works behind the scenes, why customs rules matter more than most people realize, and how the explosion in low-value e-commerce parcels is putting real pressure on border agencies. As more countries move away from de minimis thresholds, governments may collect more duties and taxes - but they also risk making customs procedures far more complex than they need to be. The conversation gets into why a $20 parcel should not necessarily be treated like a container full of high-value goods, how simplified customs regimes could reduce friction, and why better data from platforms, payment systems and logistics operators could help customs authorities target risk without slowing everything down. Carlos also explains why trade fragmentation is changing the global logistics map. As companies rethink where they produce, sell and distribute, express carriers need flexible air traffic rights and modern cargo rules that allow them to adapt to shifting trade lanes. In other words: if trade patterns are changing, the rules governing cargo aircraft need to change with them. Plus: customs suspicion around gifts, why your grandmother’s sweater might need a declared value, whether kebab can be shipped internationally, Geneva’s kebab data set, Swiss cows facing cross-border restrictions, and the sad passing of Lazare, the local dog who almost made it to the world record books. Listen now for a conversation on global trade, customs, e-commerce, logistics, supply chains and why the boring stuff at the border is becoming some of the most important stuff in the world economy.

Episode 88: Hormuz Oil Shock, Airfares and the Future of Flying - IATA’s Chief Economist on the New Energy Crisis Oil shocks used to feel like something that happened in markets, headlines and awkward economist panels. Not anymore. In this episode of Trade Splaining, we look at how the latest energy shock is moving from oil markets into the parts of the economy people actually feel - airfares, airline schedules, fuel tanks, EV demand, government energy policy and, potentially, your next holiday. The Strait of Hormuz crisis is no longer just a geopolitics story. It is becoming a consumer story, a transport story and a very expensive reminder that energy security still runs through some very narrow places. This week, Marie Owens Thomsen, Chief Economist at the International Air Transport Association (IATA), joins the show to explain why aviation is facing what she calls a double energy crisis: an oil crisis and a refining crisis. Airlines do not fly on crude oil - they fly on jet fuel. And when jet fuel prices rise sharply, airlines face immediate pressure on costs, routes, pricing and survival. Marie breaks down why sustainable aviation fuel is not as simple as “just make greener jet fuel,” why refineries are far more interconnected than most people realise, and why the future of flying depends on much bigger questions around energy systems, investment, infrastructure and political timelines. In other words: aviation may be only a small slice of refined fuel output, but when the system starts creaking, everyone notices. Also in this episode: Trump and Xi apparently make trade nice again - details pending, napkins possibly missing - Europe’s airlines brace for higher costs, EVs get a crisis-driven boost, Swatch and Audemars Piguet release expensive pendant-shaped plastic, Switzerland accidentally gets a king, and Italy battles the real menace of our time: marauding peacocks. In this episode: How the Hormuz crisis is feeding into fuel prices, airline costs and travel disruption Why jet fuel is not the same thing as crude oil - and why that matters How higher fuel prices could affect airfares, routes and airline profitability Why Europe may be especially exposed to aviation fuel shocks Marie Owens Thomsen on IATA, sustainability and the future of air transport Why sustainable aviation fuel requires a whole energy-system rethink How refinery economics shape the future of aviation Whether this crisis could accelerate renewable energy and alternative fuels The strange incentives now facing governments, airlines and consumers Switzerland’s self-declared king and Italy’s peacock problem Featured guest Marie Owens Thomsen is Chief Economist at the International Air Transport Association (IATA), where she is also responsible for environmental and sustainability activities and serves on IATA’s Management Committee. She previously worked at Lombard Odier as Head of Global Trends and Sustainability and has held senior roles across investment banking, private banking and international economics. Keywords Trade Splaining, IATA, Marie Owens Thomsen, aviation, airfares, jet fuel, oil shock, Strait of Hormuz, energy crisis, sustainable aviation fuel, SAF, airline industry, global trade, energy security, transport, geopolitics, supply chains, renewable energy, refining crisis, airlines, EV demand, global economy.

Episode 87 - USMCA Uncertainty, Trade Fragmentation & the Future of Supply Chains Global trade is shifting - and not everyone agrees on where it’s heading. In this episode, we break down the growing uncertainty around USMCA, the rise of trade fragmentation, and what it means when the system moves away from efficiency toward resilience. We also sit down with Will Petty, Global Head of Product Development at A.P. Moller - Maersk Trade & Customs Consulting, to understand how companies are actually responding on the ground - from navigating tariffs to rethinking supply chains and compliance. Key topics include: Is USMCA at risk - and what happens if it unravels Why the US is pushing bilateral over regional trade deals The shift from “just in time” to “just in case” supply chains Commodity fragmentation - from copper pricing gaps to stockpiling Why resilience comes with real economic costs (inflation, inefficiency, volatility) How companies are adapting to tariff complexity and geopolitical disruption The growing importance of supply chain data, traceability, and compliance Will supply chains get shorter - or just more complicated? With Will Petty (Maersk), we discuss: How businesses are reacting to constant disruption The real-world impact of tariffs and shifting trade flows Why understanding your supply chain is now a competitive advantage The risk - and opportunity - of shrinking supply chains Plus: Expat insights Geneva kebab rankings And the unexpected return of… mall culture

Episode 86 – Is the WTO Still Relevant? MC14, Trade Chaos & a Surprisingly Resilient System | Peter Foster (FT) 🎧 Listen: t.ly/K4Jnc Has the global trading system fundamentally broken — or is it proving more resilient than expected? In Episode 86 of Trade Splaining, we sit down with Peter Foster, World Trade Editor at the Financial Times, to unpack the real outcomes of WTO Ministerial Conference 14 (MC14) and what they reveal about the future of global trade. 🌍 What we cover: MC14: What actually happened The conference ended with limited concrete outcomes, highlighting deep divisions — particularly around the e-commerce moratorium and broader reform efforts. Is the WTO still relevant? We explore whether the WTO is adapting to a new global reality or slowly drifting toward irrelevance in a world dominated by great power politics. Rise of regional and plurilateral deals As consensus becomes harder, countries are increasingly turning to smaller coalitions and regional agreements to move forward. Trade policy chaos From “napkin deals” to unpredictable negotiations, the current trade environment is becoming harder for governments and businesses to navigate. The big paradox: trade resilience Despite rising tariffs and geopolitical tensions, global trade flows have remained surprisingly stable — raising questions about how much has really changed. 🔑 Key takeaway: Even in a more fragmented and politically charged world, global trade continues to function — not because the system is strong, but because the incentives to keep it going are still stronger. ⏱️ Timestamps 00:00 – Intro & episode 86 (Radon edition) 03:20 – Interview with Peter Foster 05:00 – MC14 recap 10:00 – WTO relevance debate 16:00 – Trade resilience vs tariffs 20:00 – Future of global trade 24:00 – Local news (Swiss cheese diplomacy 🧀) 📢 Follow & support Twitter/X: @TradeSplaining Instagram: @TradeSplaining Email: tradesplaining@gmail.com

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

Episode 84 is here — and yes, 84 is the atomic number of polonium, 1984 is Orwellian, and Van Halen absolutely peaked. You’re welcome. We’re joined again by friend of the pod Dmitry Grozoubinski, Executive Director of the Geneva Trade Platform and author of Why Politicians Lie About Trade. And we ask the big question: 👉 Has the global trading system fundamentally changed — or are we just living through noisy turbulence? We break down: Why Rob’s 2025 prediction that “everything will look mostly the same” is… under pressure Whether tariff chaos has permanently destroyed predictability Why certainty matters more than tariff levels The EU–Mercosur deal and what it really signals The weakening of Most Favoured Nation (MFN) treatment Why customs, sanctions, and rules of origin are about to get much more complicated And Dmitry’s predictions for 2026 (spoiler: more tariff threats, fewer illusions) Is this the end of the rules-based system? Or just a new phase where national security openly trumps trade orthodoxy? Also: airplanes turning around because of toilets. Again. Listen responsibly.

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

In Episode 82 of Trade Splaining, Ardian Mollabeqiri and Robert Skidmore close out the year with an end-of-year global trade reality check. This episode covers: Why Europe’s energy transition is starting to hit household wallets China’s overcapacity problem — from electric vehicles to tomato paste Why tariffs are proving inflationary (again) and failing to cut trade deficits How supply chains keep finding workarounds, no matter the policy Rising debt and capital outflows facing developing economies What “fragmentation” looks like in practice — and whether there’s a third way No guest this time — just a wide-ranging news roundup, listener feedback, and a reminder that when pizza orders start shrinking, something bigger is going on. 🎧 Available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and wherever you get your podcasts. 📩 Get in touch: tradesplaining@gmail.com 🐦 Follow us on Twitter/X & BlueSky | 📸 Instagram | 💼 LinkedIn Listen responsibly.

Trade Splaining is back! After a summer break (and one new baby later), Ardi and Rob return to make sense of what’s changed — and what hasn’t — in global trade, business, and expat life. From the latest round of tariffs and China’s “pivot” away from developing-country status at the WTO, to why AI might be the next big trade disruptor, we break down the stories shaping the global economy in 2025. We’re also joined by Neil Shearing, Chief Economist at Capital Economics and author of The Fractured Age, to unpack how geopolitical rivalries are reshaping globalization — or maybe just rearranging it. In This Episode: 🎵 Why global trade sounds like a Kelly Clarkson song 🇨🇳 China’s slowdown vs. export boom — and what Michael Pettis got right 💸 Why tariffs haven’t been inflationary (yet) 🧠 How AI is quietly rewriting the rules of services trade 🌍 Neil Shearing on the U.S.–China split, Europe’s role, and who wins in a fractured world 🕰️ Plus: Swiss MAGA farmers, salmon sperm facials as recession indicators, and the new rock-solid watch from Tissot Keywords: global trade podcast, Trade Splaining, Neil Shearing, The Fractured Age, deglobalization, US-China trade war, WTO 2025, AI and trade, services trade, tariffs inflation, global economy podcast

In Episode 80 of Trade Splaining, we’re pulling back the curtain on everything from secret sausage wars to how Apple helped build modern China. Along the way, we break down the increasingly blurry line between trade policy and geopolitics, why AI is now after your desk job, and how sober tailgates and millennial nostalgia are the new macro indicators. Special Guest: Patrick McGee, FT journalist and author of Apple in China, joins us to explain: Why Apple didn’t just outsource manufacturing to China—it helped build it How a $55B investment strategy turned into a Marshall Plan for advanced manufacturing Why decoupling is harder than we think, and what it means for the future of globalization Also in this episode: Is trade policy dead—or just dressed up as national security? The AI job shock: not just repetitive tasks, but white-collar jobs too A big new EU–Switzerland trade deal (and an even bigger name: “The Bilaterals”) Listener feedback, airline mysteries, stolen sausage secrets, and the return of All-American Rejects 🎧 Listen now on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your shows.