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Slovenia is a country of 2.1 million people at the crossroads of Central Europe — bordered by Austria, Italy, Croatia, and Hungary. It joined the EU in 2004, adopted the euro in 2007, and has since developed one of the most stable, transparent, and b...
There is a statistic that stops people cold when they first hear it. Since 1990, Poland has grown its GDP by over 900 percent in real terms. No other country in Europe comes close. Germany grew by roughly 90 percent in the same period. France by a...
Luxembourg has the highest GDP per capita of any European Union member state — approximately €125,000–140,000 per capita, roughly four times the EU average and about twice Germany or France. It is a country of 680,000 people on 2,586 km² (slightly ...
Greece uses the euro (€) as its currency — has done since 2001 when it joined the eurozone, two years after the euro's initial launch. For travelers, this means the same currency as France, Germany, Italy, Spain, and 17 other European countries: no e...
Algeria has Africa's fourth-largest economy by GDP and the continent's largest proven oil and gas reserves. It's a member of OPEC, a major gas supplier to Europe, and a market of 46 million people. Yet Algeria remains one of the most difficult countr...
New Zealand is a country of roughly 5 million people, 15,000 kilometres from the major markets of Europe and North America, at the end of a very long supply chain from just about everywhere. These constraints — geographical isolation, small domes...
Andorra may receive 8 million visitors per year, but the people who actually live there year-round number only around 77,000 — making it one of Europe's least populous sovereign states. The story of who lives in Andorra, how they got there, and what ...
Armenia punches well above its weight in business. A landlocked country of under 3 million people with no oil wealth, Armenia has built a reputation as the Caucasus's tech and startup hub — with a well-educated workforce, favourable tax conditions, a...
While second citizenship is typically acquired by birth or through length of residence, a small number of countries have changed their policies to offer citizenship in exchange for investment or residency. Here are three of the most accessible and cr...
Singapore is one of the most remarkable economic stories of the modern era. In fewer than 60 years, this island city-state transformed itself from a colonial backwater with no natural resources into one of the wealthiest, most competitive economie...
When people ask why Chinese nationals travel to Lesotho, the assumed answer is usually tourism — and then the follow-up question is an incredulous "but why Lesotho?" A tiny, landlocked mountain kingdom completely surrounded by South Africa, with a po...
You can visit Cuba without knowing its history — but you'd be missing the point. Every crumbling mansion, every vintage car, every slogan painted on a wall tells a story that stretches back five centuries. Cuba's history is dramatic, painful, triumph...
Guinea — officially the Republic of Guinea, sometimes called Guinea-Conakry to distinguish it from its neighbours Guinea-Bissau and Equatorial Guinea — is a country of about 14 million people on the Atlantic coast of West Africa. It is largely unknow...
Saint Kitts and Nevis is a two-island federation in the Leeward Islands of the Caribbean — Saint Kitts (176 km²) and Nevis (93 km²) — with a combined population of approximately 55,000 people. It is the smallest sovereign state in the Western Hemisph...
Brazil is the ninth-largest economy in the world by nominal GDP, the largest in Latin America, and the most important business destination on the continent. It has a diversified industrial base, a massive consumer market of 215 million people, deep n...
There are not many places in the world where the country and its capital share an identical name — Montenegro and its capital Podgorica come to mind, though they are distinct. Djibouti is different: the capital city of Djibouti is simply called Djibo...
Everyone knows Los Angeles as a car city. Five-lane freeways, parking minimums, the 405 at rush hour, the assumption that no one walks anywhere. But this wasn't always the case — and the story of how Los Angeles transformed from one of the world's be...
Walk the length of Denver's 16th Street Mall today and you'll pass chain restaurants, hotel lobbies, coffee shops, street performers, and the constant swoosh of free mall ride buses. It's pleasant and busy — Denver's version of a downtown promenade. ...
Puerto Rico has been growing coffee since the 18th century. At its peak in the late 19th century, Puerto Rican coffee was served at the Vatican and to the royal families of Europe. The island's mountainous interior — the Cordillera Central — creates...