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Countries like Argentina or Iran, facing extreme economic pressure and isolation from global markets, are forced to build bespoke financial systems from scratch. This necessity drives leapfrogging innovation not seen in more stable, developed economies.

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Poland's status as a technological latecomer became an advantage. Without sunk costs in legacy systems that hindered Western European incumbents (like German automakers slow to adopt EVs), Poland could adopt modern tech like 5G and digital payments directly, accelerating its growth.

While international markets have more volatility and lower trust, their biggest advantage is inefficiency. Many basic services are underdeveloped, creating enormous 'low-hanging fruit' opportunities. Providing a great, reliable service in a market where few things work well can create immense and durable value.

Corporate creativity follows a bell curve. Early-stage companies and those facing catastrophic failure (the tails) are forced to innovate. Most established companies exist in the middle, where repeating proven playbooks and playing it safe stifles true risk-taking.

In markets like the Congo, the smartest graduates lack local Big Tech options. They flock to the most stable and lucrative industries, often banks. This results in executive teams at emerging market banks that can be superior to their Western counterparts.

The creation of the Bank of England and John Law's monetary schemes were not academic exercises. They were desperate measures to solve the massive national debts accumulated by England and France from decades of war, showing how fiscal crisis is a powerful catalyst for financial innovation.

The Great Depression paradoxically created more millionaires than other periods. Extreme hardship forces a subset of people into a "hunger mode" where their backs are against the wall. This desperation fuels incredible innovation and company creation, provided the government clears regulatory hurdles for rebuilding.

Western investors are unskilled in navigating environments where governments actively manipulate savings and capital allocation. Portfolio managers from emerging markets like Brazil and South Africa, where financial repression is the norm, possess the necessary experience to thrive.

The US banking system is technologically behind countries in Eastern Europe, Asia, and Latin America. This inefficiency stems from a protected regulatory environment that fosters a status quo. In contrast, markets like the UK have implemented fintech-friendly charters, enabling innovators like Revolut to thrive.

The immediate value for crypto is lower in the US, where traditional finance offers decent consumer protection. In countries with less reliable banking systems, crypto provides a much larger, more immediate leap in security and efficiency, accelerating its adoption.

In markets like Latin America, founders cannot rely on existing infrastructure. Success requires creating foundational systems like payments and logistics from scratch. This means building several parallel businesses just to enable the core consumer-facing product to function effectively.