The Flip

The Flip The Flip is a podcast exploring more contextually relevant insights from entrepreneurs changing the

10/06/2026

How do you fund an entire hospital when it’s completely cut off from the global banking system?

For years, these healthcare workers in had to wait months for physical cash to be driven across borders. But a tech workaround changed everything. By sending digital dollars straight to smartphones and plugging them into a thousand-year-old local financial network, a three-month delay shrank to just minutes.

This is a look at how emerging markets are quietly rewriting the rules of money out of sheer necessity.

Watch the full story on our channel to see exactly how they built it. Link in bio.

04/06/2026

A network of donor-funded hospitals is finding new ways to ensure their medical staff actually get paid.

Because local banking infrastructure has been cut off from the global system for over a decade, distributing funds safely used to be nearly impossible.

For years, healthcare workers had to drive hours to the nearest border post, waiting in lines at 2 AM just to collect their salaries in cash, only to find out the bank had run out of funds.

To solve this, organizations like UOSSM partnered with digital platforms to send earnings directly to secure digital wallets in minutes. By blending modern digital tools with trusted local community networks, doctors and nurses can finally focus on what matters most: saving lives.

Watch the full story. Link in bio.

28/05/2026

In the Philippines, going cashless doesn’t require a credit card. It just means walking to the end of your street and handing a paper bill to your neighbor.

Meet the Sari-Sari store: 1.3 million tiny neighborhood shops that have become the physical “upload button” for digital banking. Since many in the country remain unbanked, these stores act as vital human tech hubs.

You give them physical cash, and they instantly bridge the gap to the digital world to pay your bills. No ATMs or bank branches required.

Follow us to see more from the Global South.

19/05/2026

Indian households own more gold than the top 5 central banks combined.

That’s roughly 25,000 tons of gold sitting not in high-security government vaults, but in everyday family homes. But this isn’t just about aesthetic or tradition.

In India, jewelry functions as a wearable, high-yield savings account. While local currencies naturally lose value against the dollar over time, gold historically holds its ground and climbs.

That means when families gift gold for weddings or milestones, they aren’t just making a beautiful gesture—they’re actively equipping someone with wearable financial independence.

It’s a decentralized economic system that hedges against inflation, passed down through generations.

Follow us for more stories from the Global South.

14/05/2026

Imagine handing your bank card and your PIN to a stranger just to pay your bills.

In the Philippines, this is “Sangla-ATM”. Because traditional banks have such high barriers to entry, millions of workers are forced to pawn their physical ATM cards as collateral for quick loans.

On payday, the lender goes to the machine, withdraws your entire check, takes their cut plus high interest, and gives you back the leftovers. It’s a loop where workers essentially sign over their labor rights and financial identity just to cover immediate costs. Without specific consumer protection laws against this practice, the line between a financial “lifeline” and a permanent debt trap is non-existent.

Is this one way for emerging markets to function, or is it pure exploitation?

Follow to learn more about how the Global South is navigating the future of money.

12/05/2026

The secret behind AI isn’t fancy robots—it’s in the dirt.

While we focus on chatbots and code, the real race for the future is happening deep in the ground. Building AI requires physical materials that only exist in a few places on Earth: hyper-pure silicon from a single town in North Carolina, cobalt from the DRC, and massive amounts of copper from Chile.

Some countries are already restricting exports like gallium to use geology as a geopolitical weapon. It turns out that tech dominance isn’t just about who has the best engineers, it’s about who controls the resources.

Follow to see how emerging markets are building the physical backbone of the AI era.

07/05/2026

They’re surrounded by ocean…but importing salt?

The Philippines has 36,000 km of coastline, but it still brings in 90% of its salt. This is because a well-intentioned 90s law fixed a health crisis, but quietly wiped out local salt producers who couldn’t afford to comply.

Now, decades later, the reset is finally happening, this time, with a system built to actually produce.

Follow us for more stories reshaping the Global South.

05/05/2026

Nigeria’s most efficient ATM is a human being.

In Lagos, instead of searching for a bank branch, you look for a person on a plastic chair with a tiny handheld device.

There are over 2 million of these POS agents across Nigeria. It’s a massive human network that brings cash to street corners where traditional banks would never go. It’s simple: you transfer money from your phone, and they hand you the cash.

Want to keep seeing how the rest of the world actually works? Follow us to explore more emerging markets, and watch the full story about my time spent in Nigeria. Link in bio.

01/05/2026

Africa has a waste problem.

540 million tons of waste goes uncollected every year across sub-Saharan Africa. Not only does that cause a lifestyle problem, but a climate problem too, especially when so much waste ends up in our waterways.

So for our latest episode of The Flip, we investigated this problem and spoke to some founders working to address it.

In Nigeria, Boluwatife Arewa and are paying people to collect waste.

In Kenya, Robin Kariuki and Plas-tech are turning the waste into clean cooking gas.

It’s a $16 billion opportunity. But much of the infrastructure is still missing. What would it actually take to build it at scale?

This episode was produced as part of our series on climate action in Africa, The Greenprint, in partnership with and FSD Africa

Link in bio.

30/04/2026

This music genre wasn’t born in a high-end studio—it was made in the internet cafes of Davao.

This is Budots. It was once being dismissed as just a viral meme. Without expensive gear or plugins, DJ Love and local producers used 140 BPM pulses, bird chirps and various noises to build a sonic infrastructure loud enough to cut through the noise of Philippine street parties.

What started as a hyper-local subculture spread through YouTube, took over national politics, and is now hitting experimental dance floors from London to Berlin.

Budots proves that you don’t need a massive budget to change the face of electronic music; you just need a sound that’s impossible to ignore.

Save this video for your next listening party, and share it with someone who needs to hear this. Follow us for more stories from the Global South.

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