COVID-19: Implications for business
In this note McKinsey & Company offers its latest insights on the COVID-19 pandemic, starting with a survey of the current epidemiology and the five dynamics leaders need to watch.
European real GDP is now projected to contract by 7 per cent in 2020, its biggest decline since World War II, followed by a rebound of 4.7 per cent in 2021. But the recovery’s strength will depend crucially on the course of the pandemic, people’s behavior, and the degree of continued economic policy support.
In this note McKinsey & Company offers its latest insights on the COVID-19 pandemic, starting with a survey of the current epidemiology and the five dynamics leaders need to watch.
This paper argues that the COVID-19 pandemic is an inevitable result of globalisation and that the pandemic, in turn, has seriously threatened the world’s globalisation, but adverse effects on globalisation will be temporary.
Could COVID-19 be the event that finally forces many companies, and entire industries, to rethink and transform their global supply chain model?
Academics at Chicago Booth looks at three important pillars of the economic policy response to the COVID-19 crisis.
The scenarios in this paper demonstrate that even a contained outbreak could significantly impact the global economy in the short run.
COVID-19 Research Hub