Into the New World: The Covid-19 Pandemic’s Impact on Innovation

The Covid-19 pandemic is the most significant global disruption since World War II and the first truly global public health crisis in the modern era. Entire industries have ground to a halt; international travel has receded to its lowest level in 75 years; nearly all of the world’s leading economies are in recession; and at the time of publication, more than one million people have died from the virus and its complications. As the pandemic forces profound change in all aspects of society, technology is playing a starring role in enabling organisations to respond to disruption.

Digital inclusion: The policy journey towards greater opportunities

Digital inclusion can stimulate economic growth and development. During the current covid-19 pandemic, countries are looking to seize on digital opportunities to maintain services and build for the future. An increase in online connectivity based on new technology infrastructure, such as 5G networks, is necessary from a supply-side perspective, while the demand-side, in terms of raising awareness and enhancing digital skills, is important to reap the full benefifits of access.
 

Digital Technology: Trade challenges and opportunities post pandemic

As a driver of economic growth and competitiveness, however, the science and production of digital technologies are also becoming an area of fierce competition between countries. Global spending on ICT (information and communication technology) has increased steadily at 4% annually for several years, reaching a total of US$4.9trn in 2019.1 Despite the pandemic-related slowdown in momentum for traditional type of hardware and enterprise software, spending on newer technologies such as IoT (Internet of Things), robotics, 3D printing, AI and VR is expected to grow a

Which covid-19 digital health workarounds should translate into permanent service provision?

Covid-19 has accelerated the implementation of digital technologies across healthcare systems. Here we look at a few recently completed EIU projects that focus on how digital technologies have been used to mitigate the challenges created by the pandemic but also have great potential to address current and future healthcare challenges.

Branching out: can banks move from city centres to digital ecosystems?

  • As the branch closures of covid-19 accelerate consumer shifts to online banking, 65% of bankers now believe that the branch-based model will be “dead” within five years, up from 35% four years ago, according to new research from The Economist Intelligence Unit.
  • Four in five (81%) bankers believe that banks will seek to differentiate on customer experience rather than products. Mastering both customer experience and digital marketing are ranked as top strategic priorities over the next four years.

South Africa’s post-pandemic consumer: Building on new foundations

When South Africa entered one of the world’s strictest lockdowns on March 27th, its economy was already in recession and unemployment stood at 30%.1 In a bid to curb the spread of coronavirus among the country’s 60m people,2 the government banned sales of all but essential items—mainly food, medicine and hygiene products—until early May.

The UAE’s omni-channel consumer: Striking a balance between online and in-store shopping experiences

The UAE’s retailers faced a quadruple blow as a result of the coronavirus restrictions: the temporary closure of non-essential shops at the start of lockdown, a fall in consumer confidence, loss of foreign tourists and a drop in resident numbers as expatriates left the country. 

Madder Men

Does the digital advertising industry need a shake-up?

Taxing times

Would levies on data correct imbalances in the digital economy?

A Whole New World: How technology is driving the evolution of intelligent banking in Asia-Pacific

Across the Asia-Pacific region, governments and regulators are already implementing new strategies to digitise their economies and boost social inclusion. Faster payment networks are spreading, facilitating the adoption of mobile payments and the development of open banking. With mobile payment infrastructure and services already embedded in major economies, Asia-Pacific banks are looking to the next challenge.

Enjoy in-depth insights and expert analysis - subscribe to our Perspectives newsletter, delivered every week