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Ep 1: Kwasi Kwarteng: Sovereignty, Tax, and the UK’s Place in a Multipolar World

Borders: Conversations on Global South Capital and Geopolitics

Release Date: 03/17/2026

Ep 6: Einars Garoza: Investing in East Africa Before the Crowd Arrives show art Ep 6: Einars Garoza: Investing in East Africa Before the Crowd Arrives

Borders: Conversations on Global South Capital and Geopolitics

East Africa is one of the fastest-growing regions in the world, yet remains largely overlooked by international investors. While attention often focuses on established markets, countries like Tanzania are benefiting from rising tourism, expanding infrastructure, population growth, and increasing flows of global capital. In this episode of Borders, Andrew Henderson sits down with entrepreneur Einars Garoza, founder of Conserved Safaris, to discuss why he relocated his family to East Africa, how he transitioned from carbon credits into safari hospitality, and why he believes Tanzania represents...

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Ep 5:  Dilhan Fernando: Why Sri Lanka Exports Tea But Imports Poverty show art Ep 5: Dilhan Fernando: Why Sri Lanka Exports Tea But Imports Poverty

Borders: Conversations on Global South Capital and Geopolitics

Andrew Henderson sits down with Dilhan Fernando, CEO of Dilmah, to explore why so many countries in the Global South remain trapped exporting raw commodities while others capture the branding, distribution, and profits downstream. Using Sri Lanka’s tea industry as a case study, Dilhan explains how colonial trade structures still shape modern supply chains — and why value addition, storytelling, and brand ownership are becoming essential for smaller nations trying to compete globally. They discuss Sri Lanka’s transformation from a colonial export economy into an emerging tourism,...

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Ep 4: Cyrus Janssen: The Biggest Lie About China’s Middle Class show art Ep 4: Cyrus Janssen: The Biggest Lie About China’s Middle Class

Borders: Conversations on Global South Capital and Geopolitics

Mr. Henderson sits down with China analyst and investor Cyrus Janssen to examine one of the most misunderstood narratives in global economics: the supposed stagnation of China’s middle class. While Western commentary often focuses on decline, debt, and demographic headwinds, the lived economic reality inside China tells a more complex story. From digital infrastructure and consumer confidence to domestic brand dominance and capital flows, structural shifts are underway that investors and policymakers cannot afford to ignore. Rather than debating ideology, this conversation analyzes systems...

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Ep 3: Cheta Nwanze: The Real Constraint on Nigeria’s Upside show art Ep 3: Cheta Nwanze: The Real Constraint on Nigeria’s Upside

Borders: Conversations on Global South Capital and Geopolitics

Mr. Henderson sits down with Cheta Nwanze, a Nigerian political activist who studies how power, money, and incentives actually function inside the country. Cheta talks about what outsiders routinely miss about Nigeria: the real story isn’t “potential,” it’s the missing foundations that make long‑term planning possible.   Early in the conversation, Cheta points to rule of law, including property rights, as the most under‑discussed driver of stability and investment confidence. From there, they move through the realities that shape policy, markets, and everyday life: Nigeria as...

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Ep 2: Erick Brimen: The Radical Bet Behind Honduras’ Private City show art Ep 2: Erick Brimen: The Radical Bet Behind Honduras’ Private City

Borders: Conversations on Global South Capital and Geopolitics

Mr. Henderson sits down with Erick Brimen, co-founder and CEO of Prospera, a privately governed jurisdiction on the Honduran island of Roatán. Rather than debating politics inside fixed national rules, Prospera asks a more radical question: what if the rules themselves are the product? If governance can be redesigned like software or a company, can better law actually outperform the nation‑state? Early in the conversation, Erick explains how Honduras’ post‑crisis search for investment opened the door to a Hong Kong–style special jurisdiction, backed by private capital but embedded in...

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Ep 1: Kwasi Kwarteng: Sovereignty, Tax, and the UK’s Place in a Multipolar World show art Ep 1: Kwasi Kwarteng: Sovereignty, Tax, and the UK’s Place in a Multipolar World

Borders: Conversations on Global South Capital and Geopolitics

Andrew Henderson sits down with former UK Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng to explore how tax policy, rule of law, and geopolitics are reshaping Britain’s role in the world. Kwasi lays out why the UK’s rising tax burden – from the new mansion tax to tighter non‑dom rules and higher employer contributions – is changing the country’s appeal to entrepreneurs and investors, even as its legal system, universities, and property rights remain world‑class.   They discuss why London looks cheap but unloved as an equity market, the decline in London IPOs, and the shift of ambitious founders...

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Andrew Henderson sits down with former UK Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng to explore how tax policy, rule of law, and geopolitics are reshaping Britain’s role in the world. Kwasi lays out why the UK’s rising tax burden – from the new mansion tax to tighter non‑dom rules and higher employer contributions – is changing the country’s appeal to entrepreneurs and investors, even as its legal system, universities, and property rights remain world‑class.

 

They discuss why London looks cheap but unloved as an equity market, the decline in London IPOs, and the shift of ambitious founders either to New York or to staying private. Kwasi explains the politics behind buy‑to‑let crackdowns, regional disparities between London and the rest of the UK, and how Britain is trying to keep London relevant as a listings venue, including courting Chinese companies. Along the way, they dig into the UK’s complex relationship with China, the rise of rival hubs like Dubai and Abu Dhabi, the growing importance of African and diaspora capital, and why Britain’s brand – from education to common law – still carries weight in an increasingly multipolar world.

In this episode, Andrew and Kwasi discuss:

● Why rising UK tax levels – including the mansion tax and changes to non‑dom rules – are reshaping Britain’s appeal to entrepreneurs and investors.

● How the UK’s rule of law and deep property rights tradition still underpin its global brand, even as other centers compete for capital.

● Regional disparities between London and the rest of the UK, and where real estate and buy‑to‑let still make economic sense.

● Why UK equities are historically cheap, what’s gone wrong with London IPOs, and why many founders now look to New York or stay private.

● How London is trying to remain a global listings hub, from alternative exchanges to efforts to attract Chinese companies.

● The UK’s complicated relationship with China, balancing human rights concerns with educational, financial, and strategic ties.

● The rise of rival financial centers like Dubai and Abu Dhabi, and what that means for African, Gulf, and frontier‑market capital.

● How Britain can stay “open for business” while managing domestic politics around welfare, migration, and national identity.

Follow Kwasi: LinkedIn

About Borders

Borders is a long-form audio series hosted by Andrew Henderson, exploring how capital, power, and opportunity are reorganizing beyond the Western mainstream.

Each episode features an unscripted conversation with founders, policymakers, investors, and thinkers operating at the edges of conventional narratives. The focus is structural clarity — not headlines.

Produced by Vesper. Hosted by Mr. Andrew J. Henderson: Website