If you cannot afford it, make it yourself. That's the approach a group of farmers in Limpopo have adopted to weather the costs of future fuel-price shocks
Twenty-five years ago, with an investment of just $250, a tiny software company took shape in a one-bedroom apartment in the western India city of Pune. Today, Infosys employs 58 000 people in more than two dozen countries.

Imagine making free cellphone calls to other users in South Africa and across the globe. Well, now you can... thanks to three South African business science graduates, who have launched what could be a world-first.

Two South African business schools ranked in the global top 40 Executive Education ranking, conducted by the Financial Times, with business schools in emerging markets in general ranking highly.