以靈活應萬變:未来的工作方式
隨著新冠肺炎危機對健康和經濟的影響不斷顯現,企業所面臨的更長遠的不確定性因素很容易被忽略。在大中華地區(包括中國大陸、香港、澳門、台灣),企業領導者須應對各種問題,包括貿易波動加劇、人才短缺、科技進步日新月異、消費者行為不斷變化等。這次疫症大流行自然會促使管理層將注意力轉移到短期業務生存和恢復業務方面。不過,管理層也知道與此同時更應加強面對那些類似的長期商業挑戰。宏觀來說,那就是這次疫情危機反而更會促使企業加快采取行動,而不是被動應對。
對於經濟學人智庫調查的大中華區高級管理人員(以下簡稱「高管」)而言,客戶行為的變化,以及從而擴展到市場的變化,屬於短期內的不明朗因素,情況與疫症大流行等令人擔憂的事情相若。從比較長遠的角度來看,確保能夠保存所需人才很困難,是管理層最感不安的因素,此外還有客戶行為改變、科技更新、市場結構等因素。很多受訪公司都表示,除了一些可以預見的裁員措施,例如減少員工人數和推遲擴張計劃,他們正在採取積極措施,以提高公司的擴展能力、速度、效率。
此項研究的其他主要發現包括:
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The art of managing business uncertainty: A future of work study
As the health and economic impacts of the covid-19 crisis unfold, it is easy to lose sight of longer-standing sources of uncertainty that companies face. In the Greater China region (comprising mainland China, Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan), business leaders were already grappling with heightened trade volatility, talent shortages, rapid technology advances and the ever-changing behaviours of consumers. The pandemic has naturally pushed management’s attention to shorterterm survival and recovery. But businesses in the region know the need to address more familiar challenges cannot take a back seat for long. If anything, the pandemic crisis has added propellant to the trends driving them rather than freezing them in place.
Changes in customer behaviour—and by extension to markets—pose as much near-term uncertainty to Greater China executives surveyed by The Economist Intelligence Unit as do concerns about the pandemic. Over the longer term, the difficulties of securing and retaining talent cause the greatest degree of management unease, along with changes in customer behaviour, technology and market structure. Alongside some predictable measures of retrenchment, such as reducing headcount and postponing expansion plans, many surveyed firms say they are proactively implementing measures to increase their scalability, speed and efficiency.
Other major findings of the study are:
Amidst gloom, pockets of optimism. Hopes for business improvement this year are low across the Greater Bay Area (Hong Kong, Macau and Guangdong). Spirits are higher in Taiwan, and markedly so on the mainland. Around half (49%) of executives in mainland tier 1 (T1) and 62% in tier 2 (T2) expect industry conditions to improve in the coming months. Almost all respondents in T1 cities (96%, and 80% in T2 cities) express confidence in their firms’ ability to grow revenue in the next 12 months. Improving scalability is high on the agenda. About half of business leaders (49%) believe workforce rigidity holds back the implementation of their business strategy. To address this, the majority of respondent firms (77%) plan to increase their use of temporary or shortterm workers in the coming months. Nearly the same number say they will undertake some form of organisational restructuring and will consolidate work locations. Staff-sharing—a practice launched during the lockdown—is likely to help firms deal with future periods of volatility. Even pessimists are keeping their options open. Among the roughly 20% of respondent firms that expect business conditions to worsen in the next 12 months, only about one-third plan to reduce their spending on technology and research and development (R&D) while around one-sixth plan to increase it. Another 42% will “reorganise their workspace”, which includes redesigning, consolidating or moving offices or other work locations. Remote working is here to stay. Workers will return to their offices as the pandemic crisis recedes, but working remotely is likely to be much more commonplace. More than three-quarters of respondent firms (76%) plan to implement work-from-home and work-from-anywhere practices during the next 12 months, leveraging capabilities such as cloud computing and mobility technology.
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以灵活应万变:未来的工作方式
随着新冠肺炎危机对健康和经济的影响不断显现,企业所面临的更长远的不确定性因素很容易被忽略。在大中华地区(中国大陆、香港、澳门和台湾),商界领导者早已在努力应对贸易波动加剧、人才短缺、技术飞速发展以及消费者行为的不停变化。这次疫情自然会促使管理层专注于短期内的业务的存活和和恢复,但是管理者也知道与此同时更应加强面对那些类似的长期商业挑战。宏观来说,那就是这次疫情危机反而更会促使企业加快采取行动,而不是被动应对。
对经济学人智库调研的大中华区高管而言,消费者行为的变化、以及相应的市场变化带来的近期不确定性,与对全球疫情的担忧所造成的不确定性同等重要。从长期来看,最让管理层感到不安的是难以获得人才和保留人才,还有客户行为、技术和市场结构的变化。除了采取裁员和推迟扩张计划等可以预见的紧缩措施外,许多受访公司表示正在积极采取行动,提升可伸缩性、速度和效率。
本研究的其他主要成果包括:
市场低迷之中的转折亮点。整个粤港澳大湾区(香港、澳门和广东,简称:大湾区)对今年业务有起色的期望较低,台湾地区的情绪较为乐观,而中国大陆则信心充足。大陆一线和二线城市的高管当中,约有一半(49%)预计未来几个月行业状况会有所改善。几乎所有一线城市的受访者(96%,二线城市为80%)都表示对公司在未来12个月实现营收增长有信心。 提升灵活性是当务之急。大约半数的公司领导者(49%)认为,刚性的劳动力结构阻碍了企业战略的实施。为了解决这一问题,大多数受访公司(77%)计划在未来几个月内增加使用临时员工或短期合约员工。几乎同等比例的公司表示将进行某种形式的组织重组以及办公室地点调整。在疫情隔离封锁期间,有些公司采取“员工共享”的做法或许可以帮助公司应对未来更多不确定性。 多种预防性应付方案的准备。大约20%的受访公司预计未来12个月内经营状况将会恶化,其中只有三分之一左右的公司打算减少技术和研发的支出,而约六分之一的公司则计划增加支出。另外还有42%的公司将“重组工作空间”,包括重新设计、整合或迁移办公室或其他场所。 远程工作将成常态。随着疫情逐渐消退,员工将重返办公室,但远程工作可能变得更为普遍。超过四分之三的受访公司(76%)计划在未来12个月内、利用云计算和移动技术等实施居家办公和移动办公制度。
Steering through collaboration: CFOs driving new priorities for the future
It is well established that the modern CFO has a more strategic role to play in a business, but a clear action plan to achieve this is lacking. A key element of this is helping the business to deal with change. Some changes are planned: launching a new product or service, setting up operations in a new region or acquiring a competitor. Others may be unexpected: a major disruption to supply-chain operations, the emergence of new regulation and legal reporting requirements or the unpredictable impacts of global economic uncertainty.
Either way, when asked about the biggest challenges they face in executing their day-to-day activities, change is a recurring theme, according to a new survey of 800 CFOs and senior finance executives, conducted by The Economist Intelligence Unit. Managing unexpected changes to financial forecasts and adapting finance processes to rapidly evolving business models are top of mind.
Managing unexpected changes to financial forecasts and adapting finance processes to rapidly evolving business models are top challenges finance executives face in executing their day to-day activities.
Finance executives are also concerned with identifying how to align strategic, financial and operational plans towards common objectives and meaningfully analysing data across business units and regions. “All functions are working to meet these challenges and, as a finance head, we have to have visibility across all functions, how they are progressing [towards meeting goals] and ensuring that their direction is in line with overall strategic goals,” says Lalit Malik, CFO of Dabur, an Indian consumer goods manufacturer. It is incumbent upon CFOs therefore to be prepared not only to help their own function navigate uncharted territory, but the rest of the business too. That means breaking down the silos that commonly exist in organisations, in order to collaborate closely across functions, sharing information and data in the pursuit of common objectives.
All functions are working to meet these challenges and, as a finance head, we have to have visibility across all functions, how they are progressing [towards meeting goals] and ensuring that their direction is in line with overall strategic goals - Lalit Malik, CFO of Dabur, an Indian consumer goods manufacturer.
The clear custodian of collaboration
There are a number of reasons why the role of leading cross-company collaboration around steering should fall to the CFO and their team. First, through the activities of budgeting, the finance function is the custodian of the clear, quantitative expression of management expectations and determines how resources such as cash and people will be allocated in order to achieve them. In our survey, 90% of respondents say that finance should facilitate collaborative enterprise planning to ensure that operational plans are aligned with financial and strategic plans.
Second, through performance management, the finance function is the gatekeeper for critical data that illustrate how well—or otherwise—the company is rising to the challenge of change. That includes data relating to sales, supply chain and delivery, which need to be reported back to the business in ways that help drive improved decisionmaking. Our survey reveals that companies in which finance executives feel empowered to drive strategic decisions across business functions are more likely to report a higher financial performance in fiscal year 2016/17 and 2017/18 and anticipate higher growth rates for 2019/20.
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Remote work is here to stay
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Will the covid-19 pandemic accelerate automation?
Workers in developing countries are already jittery with worries ranging from “rebound” outbreaks and lay-offs to the onset of cabin fever.
As if workers don’t have enough on their minds, the covid-19 pandemic is resurfacing another concern: the one about technology’s impact on the future of work. Specifically, recent research suggests that the deepening recession is likely to bring a surge of labour-replacing automation.
But what’s the connection between recessions and automation? On the surface, the implacable infiltration of automation into the economy would seem to be a steady, longer-term trend rather than an immediate fact. Likewise, it might seem intuitive that any rise in unemployment in the coming months will make human labour relatively cheaper, thus slowing companies’ move to technology.
Yet that’s not actually how automation works. Unfortunately for the workers poised to be affected, robots’ infiltration of the workforce doesn’t occur at a steady, gradual pace. Instead, automation tends to happen in bursts, concentrated especially in bad times such as in the wake of economic shocks when humans become relatively more expensive as firms’ revenues rapidly decline. At these moments, employers can benefit by shedding less-skilled workers and replacing much of what they do with technology, while often investing in higher-skilled workers, which increases labour productivity as a recession tapers off.
Ultimately, such cycles of workforce reallocation may well improve the efficiency of the economy for the longer-term good of society. But along the way, and in the nearer-term, such cyclical surges of technology adoption tend to be disruptive, unequal and unhelpful to the cause of maintaining employment during a crisis.
Nor are these disruptions only speculative. Several economists have extensively documented the cyclical, selective nature of automation and employment disruption. Nir Jaimovich of the University of Zurich and Henry E. Siu of the University of British Columbia have reported that over three recessions in the past 30 years a whopping 88% of job loss took place in “routine”, highly automatable occupations—suggesting that automation accounted for “essentially all” of the jobs lost in the crises. Separately, Brad J. Hershbein of the W.E. Upjohn Institute and Lisa B. Kahn of the University of Rochester looked at almost 100m online job postings before and after the Great Recession and found that firms in hard-hit metropolitan areas were steadily replacing workers who performed automatable “routine” tasks with a combination of technology and skilled workers. So, even as robots replace workers during boom times at places such as Amazon and Walmart, their influx surges during recessions—not great news for the world’s anxious workers.
Given the importance of social distancing and sanitation it seems likely that the coronavirus recession will see an accentuated embrace of automation technologies, whether in the form of kiosk ordering in restaurants, checkout-free shopping or robotic sanitation machines. Considering that the past decade has seen more automation and artificial intelligence (AI) applications readied for effective use than ever, it seems clear that the next few years will see more rather than less automation as the economy slows.
Cyclical surges of technology adoption tend to be disruptive, unequal and unhelpful to the cause of maintaining employment during a crisis.
As to who may be vulnerable to automation-related dislocation in the recession, the reach of technology may be wider this time round.
As my 2019 assessment of US automation trends suggests, it’s likely that low-income workers, the young and workers of colour will be some of the most vulnerable. That’s because the epidemic and subsequent automation surge is likely to affect the most “routine” occupations—jobs in areas such as production, food service or transportation.
And yet that is only part of the story. During this crisis, AI may play a larger role than before as an array of algorithmic applications take on countless office functions that would be said to require higher-level “intelligence”, whether it be planning, predicting, classifying, reasoning or problem-solving. In that vein, assessments developed by Stanford scholar Michael Webb in partnership with my team suggest that if AI surges further into the economy during the crisis it may affect better-paid, white-collar or professional workers more than the less-educated, lower-wage workers who have tended to be most affected by robots and software.
Workers in higher-wage occupations will generally be more exposed to AI than lower-wage workers. The curve tapers at the 90th percentile, suggesting that the most elite workers—such as CEOs—may be somewhat protected.
That doesn’t mean that the world’s white-collar workers should all be fearing for their jobs. But it does mean that the relatively more fortunate “telework” class—market research analysts, middle managers, programmers or financial analysts—could also find themselves more involved with new and disruptive technologies. In that sense, no group of workers may be entirely immune this time around.
As to what all of this means for the future, the potential for a covid-19 automation surge reinforces the fact that the pandemic recession won’t just bring an end to a decade of plentiful jobs. More starkly, the downturn is likely to usher in a new bout of structural change in the labour market and its demand for skills.
If it continues for a while, the downturn could induce firms in food service, retail and administrative work to restructure their operations towards greater use of technology and higher-skilled workers. And it could introduce new waves of “digital transformation” into the world’s offices. From beleaguered, lower-skilled employees to professional workers, these changes will no doubt complicate an already daunting return to normality.
Mark Muro is a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution in Washington, DC.
The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Economist Group or any of its affiliates. The Economist Group cannot accept any responsibility or liability for reliance by any person on this article or any of the information, opinions or conclusions set out in the article.

How covid-19 could bring about new social contracts around data
Data has become a crucial battleground in the war against coronavirus, as many countries have used sophisticated methods for gathering and analysing information on individuals’ behaviour to monitor and manage the pandemic.
This could lead to a lasting shift in how we think about data and its governance. Here I set out what a new social contract around data might consist of—and how might move beyond the frustrating vagueness that has characterised much of the debate so far.
The binary debate of the 2010s
For the past decade the public discourse around data has been squeezed into a binary framework. On one side were big organisations—governments and large companies—harvesting data on an unprecedented scale. They provided little transparency or consideration for privacy—but demonstrated benefits in valuable products and services. Against them grew activists who argued for new rights and restrictions to put data under the control of citizens.
Covid-19 has now shown the limits of both data hubris and data restriction. Smart use of data from multiple sources can undoubtedly be in the public interest. But it’s clearer than ever that strong rules will be needed to prevent the abuse of power.
We may be headed towards a new social contract around data that combines three distinct elements: first, new norms of data minimisation and privacy by design; second, strong laws to punish abuses; and third, a new generation of regulators and institutions charged with maximising the public value derived from data. If we can get this right, we’ll see radically more data sharing where there is a public interest in doing so, and less where there isn’t. But the details will be all-important.
Innovations in the crisis
The prompt is the extraordinary innovation fuelled by the crisis. China moved first, using mobile phone data to track the millions who left Wuhan in the hours before the city was cut off. Alipay and WeChat’s HealthCode (which also drew on self-reporting and medical records) were then used to give people red, yellow or green status to determine their freedom of movement depending on whether they had been near infected individuals. Taiwan also used mobile phone data to track people who had been infected and manage their quarantines.
Singapore relied on a combination of its TraceTogether app and teams performing investigations and interviews to determine who needed to be tested. South Korea used smartphone data, credit card payments and other sources to trace contact between individuals (and sparked controversy when transparency about people’s travel patterns uncovered illicit affairs).
Covid-19 has shown the limits of both data hubris and data restriction. Smart use of data from multiple sources can undoubtedly be in the public interest, but it’s clearer than ever that strong rules will be needed to prevent the abuse of power.
Each approach was slightly different. But all of these countries were aggressive in pulling data together to contain the crisis. Nothing comparable has been implemented by Western countries, but many are now trying to copy them. In the UK, for example, much effort is going into an NHS app that asks people to report their symptoms (or lack thereof) on a regular basis. It’s hoped that a majority of the population will engage with the scheme to accelerate the end of lockdown.
New apps aren’t technically needed since smartphones automatically know where they are. Intelligence agencies and phone companies can easily track the proximity of individuals (and in Israel the intelligence agency Shin Bet has been active in using location data to track infections).
Design dilemmas
Despite these existing capabilities, the crisis is introducing important design and technical choices. Tracing can be done using either Bluetooth or phone network geolocation. Bluetooth is, in principle, more decentralised and leaves more control in the hands of citizens, though it creates its own problems if it’s always on—a challenge Google and Apple are working on.
Another choice is whether to anonymise the data that’s collected. Europe’s DP-3T (Decentralised Privacy-Preserving Proximity Tracing) project is attempting to shield the identities of those affected by covid-19 using randomisation and Bluetooth technology. The initiative aims to allow those with the virus to anonymously alert others of exposure risk while keeping their own identity hidden from the authorities. This is appealing—but at a certain point there is no avoiding the need to identify people and ensure that they are showing up for tests. Here we come up against the unavoidable tension between individual rights and the collective interest, and the need for governance mechanisms to judge how that trade-off should be made in different conditions. There will be even harder judgments to make about using data to manage certification of immunity.
As these experiments unfold in front of our eyes the crisis is bringing to the surface all the big questions that will need to be answered if we’re to make the most of data and AI over the next decade. It has already prompted some hand-wringing by prominent thinkers such as Yuval Harari and Shoshana Zuboff, though it’s striking that they have very little to say about possible solutions. So what could a more permanent settlement around data look like?
A new social contract around data
I expect that it will combine three apparently very different, but complementary, elements. First, we will need new approaches to technology design that build in data minimisation. We have become used to digital tools that gather and share data on an extraordinary scale, but mainly for the benefit of a handful of big commercial platforms. Google really does know more about you than you do. But this is not inevitable; it is the result of choices. The alternative route promotes data minimisation and says that companies and governments should only gather what they need. Some of the projects in the EU’s DECODE programme have been experimenting with ways of doing this—for example, allowing that if you book a hotel room there is no need for the hotel to know all of your passport or banking details. My guess is that data minimisation and privacy by design will increasingly become the norm, but with clear provisions of greater data gathering where there is clear-cut public interest.
Second, we will continue to need laws that are strong enough to penalise abuses and flexible enough to adapt to changing pressures and technologies. The EU's General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), implemented in 2018, has become a de facto standard and, contrary to the complaints of Silicon Valley, has turned out to be quite flexible. It allows, for example, employers to gather data on which employees need to be self-isolating because of symptoms but with strict rules as to what they can do with it. The European Data Protection Board acknowledged that an emergency like this is a "legal condition which may legitimise restrictions of freedoms provided these restrictions are proportionate and limited to the emergency period" and Article 9 allows the processing of personal information without consent if it’s necessary to protect “against serious cross-border threats to health”. It’s clearer than ever that every country will need laws of this kind, and there is now little chance of the UK, post-Brexit, moving far away from GDPR.
Third, we will need new institutions, design to protect trust and make judgments about trade-offs. The crisis has confirmed the glaring lack of institutions with the skills and authority to be trusted guardians of data and data linking, including the kinds of data that are being gathered for covid-19 responses. Currently this is an empty space. Although some countries have information commissioners, they hardly ever appear on the evening news discussing big events or privacy trade-offs in this space. Consider revelations like the Cambridge Analytica scandal which have all been driven by whistleblowers and the media not by public regulators.
The crisis has confirmed the lack of institutions with the skills and authority to be trusted guardians of data.
Yet history tells us that when powerful new technologies arise we cannot rely solely on law or design, which on their own cannot help us make judgments about trade-offs. Instead it’s the combination of law, design and accountable institutions that gives us confidence our interests are being protected.
We take the role of institutions for granted in relation to now-quotidian technologies like the car, and in finance—where complex ecosystems of regulation and law manage the subtleties of pensions, insurance, equities, savings and banking. I expect that we will see a comparable complexity in data to provide visible institutions to work out, in the public interest, the balance of issues around options like an NHS app.
The solutions will have to be complex because the issues are. Some data we can control, such as choosing whether to have an app that for the public benefit tracks our human contact. But other data we can’t control, including the traces our phones leave automatically. There is a similar complexity in the latent value of data. Some of it is only valuable to me, like most of what’s on a Fitbit health and activity tracker. But other data has huge public value, including tracing the behavioural patterns of the virus to help us be better prepared next time.
Into this space I expect we will see the creation of an array of different kinds of data trust, including trusts responsible for the myriad decisions needing to be made concerning health data. During crises it is public data trusts that become all the more important, requiring visible and accountable bodies in positions of management.
This is a debate that has hardly started, as the still vague comments from many leading opinion-formers confirms. Hopefully covid-19 will force the pace to a more sophisticated public debate and towards a more durable social contract that gives us the benefits of smart technologies as well as reliable protections against misuse.
Geoff Mulgan CBE is professor of collective intelligence, public policy and social innovation at the University College London department of science, technology, engineering and public policy, and the former chief executive of Nesta, the UK's innovation foundation.
The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Economist Group or any of its affiliates. The Economist Group cannot accept any responsibility or liability for reliance by any person on this article or any of the information, opinions or conclusions set out in the article.

Why coronavirus will accelerate the fourth Industrial Revolution
The theory of punctuated equilibrium, proposed in 1972 by biologists Stephen Jay Gould and Niles Eldredge, holds that populations of living organisms tend to experience a significant amount of evolutionary change in short, stressful bursts of time. 1Gould and Eldredge argued that evolution isn’t a constant, gradual process—it occurs during episodes when species are in environments of high tension or especially crisis.
The human species is going through such a period right now: the covid-19 pandemic. The profound pressures that individuals, organisations and societies face in this crisis are accelerating the fourth Industrial Revolution (4IR), blurring the boundaries between the physical, digital and biological worlds.2 The current state of emergency compels us to consider the necessity of structural shifts in our relationship with the environment and how we conduct ourselves as a global community.
The pandemic is forcing all of us to appreciate how much we rely on 21st-century technologies—artificial intelligence, the internet of things, social media, digital learning platforms, augmented and virtual reality, drones, 3D printing and so much more—to keep us healthy and to transform economies. The unprecedented context is simultaneously driving us to become far more reliant on breakthrough digital, biological and physical technologies and far more inventive about how we can use these emerging technologies to create value in new ways.
More than 7bn people live in countries that have implemented extraordinary restrictions on the movement of people,3 and more than a third of the world is under stringent lockdown.4 In response, systems that have resisted change for decades have gone virtual. Video conferencing as the primary means of co-working? Old news. Remote learning? More than 1.5bn students are doing that today.5 Organisations from all sectors are building new technical capabilities, harnessing digital technologies and evolving their business models at a pace unimaginable only months ago.
The virus is crowding new technology paradigms into healthcare everywhere. Networks of epidemiologists are tracking the coronavirus using low-cost gene-sequencing technologies6 which are also driving some of the most promising vaccine candidates.7 Researchers and medics are using machine learning to search repositories of scholarly articles published about covid-19, such as the 47,000 articles indexed by the covid-19 Open Research Dataset (CORD-19) Explorer.8 Informal networks of hobbyists and manufacturing firms are using 3D printers to make tens of thousands of face shields to help protect front-line medical workers.9 And in an unprecedented move, Apple and Google have partnered to invent a contact tracing application embedded in the operating systems for smartphones.10
This explosion in innovation started when covid-19 threw humankind into uncharted waters. During historical periods where the equilibrium has been dramatically disturbed, organisations and economies have struggled to survive.
But we are technological beings who purposefully—and at scale—adapt the environment to our needs. Scientists have called our current epoch “the Anthropocene” because humans are the overwhelming force shaping the planet’s ecosystems. Hence, those who successfully adapt won’t just thrive in the accelerated 4IR—they will shape it.
The question is, into what?
A critical choice that humans will have to make is how to re-engage with a natural world that has been better off as a result of the pandemic.
Environmental activist Greta Thunberg was “striking to disrupt the system”. 11 The pandemic has done just that and is revealing what it means—and what it costs—to dramatically drop carbon emissions.12 Passing one of our climate’s “tipping points” could involve costs that are orders of magnitude higher.13
Will the massive stimulus packages being rolled out by governments around the world include significant 4IR re-skilling for the newly unemployed, advancing a global green economy?14
Or, in the frantic rush to get “back to normal,” will nations relax environmental standards and justify wastefulness in the name of short-term economic growth?
The pandemic is demonstrating the extent to which high levels of collaboration are required for deeply interconnected societies to manage—and recover from—complex, exponential systemic crises. The fact that viruses are borderless is just another reason why humans need to invest in dramatically re-tooled principles and mechanisms for global co-operation.
This crisis should spur us all to explore a new form of globalisation for the 21st century, one that prioritises collective investment in global public goods—including technological and ethical goods—to the benefit of all.15 Such global integration must enable diverse stakeholders from across the public, private and non-profit sectors worldwide to work more effectively and sustainably together.
The pandemic has several silver linings. One of them is the chance to experiment with technologies and co-operative approaches across borders that could lead to safer, more sustainable and more inclusive global futures.
The scientific collaboration, purpose-driven hacking16 and political leadership that will bring us out of the pandemic are precisely the tools that can unlock success in reducing inequality, adapting societies to the impacts of climate change and restoring our natural environment to a more balanced state. We must create a new punctuated equilibrium that maximizes 4IR benefits inclusively and sustainably.
The covid-19 pandemic is a major test for us as a species: a transformational window of opportunity. Will we seize it?
Sanjeev Khagram would like to thank co-author Nicholas Davis. As a professor of practice at Thunderbird School of Global Management at Arizona State University and managing director of SWIFT Partners, a technology and innovation consultancy, Davis focuses on supporting organizations by finding value-creating opportunities to put humans at the centre of the Fourth Industrial Revolution.
[1] S J Gould, N Eldredge, “Punctuated Equilibria: The Tempo and Mode of Evolution Reconsidered”, Paleobiology, Vol. 3, No. 2, pages 115-151, 1977. http://www.johnboccio.com/courses/SOC26/Bak-Sneppan/07_Gould.pdf [2] K Shwab, “The Fourth Industrial Revolution: what it means, how to respond”, World Economic Forum, January 14th 2016. https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2016/01/the-fourth-industrial-revolution-what-it-means-and-how-to-respond/ [3] P Connor, “More than nine-in-ten people worldwide live in countries with travel restrictions amid COVID-19”, Pew Research Centre, April 1st 2020. https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2020/04/01/more-than-nine-in-ten-people-worldwide-live-in-countries-with-travel-restrictions-amid-covid-19/ [4] J Kaplan, L Frias, M McFall-Johnsen, “A third of the global population is on coronavirus lockdown — here's our constantly updated list of countries and restrictions”, Business Insider, [Accessed April 21st 2020]. https://www.businessinsider.com/countries-on-lockdown-coronavirus-italy-2020-3?r=DE&IR=T [5] “COVID-19 Educational Disruption and Response”, UNESCO, [Accessed April 21st 2020]. https://en.unesco.org/covid19/educationresponse [6] K Finley, “Data Sharing and Open Source Software Help Combat Covid-19”, Wired, March 13th 2020. https://www.wired.com/story/data-sharing-open-source-software-combat-covid-19/ [7] T Thanh Le, Z Andreadakis, A Kumar et al., “The COVID-19 vaccine development landscape”, Nature, April 9th 2020. https://www.nature.com/articles/d41573-020-00073-5 [8] “CORD-19 Explorer”, Allen Institute for AI, [Accessed April 21st 2020]. https://cord-19.apps.allenai.org [9] N Frandino, “3D printers forge face shields for fight against the coronavirus”, Reuters, April 3rd 2020. https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-3d-printing-volunt/3d-printers-forge-face-shields-for-fight-against-the-coronavirus-idUSKBN21L1EU [10] M Gurman, “Apple, Google Bring Covid-19 Contact-Tracing to 3 Billion People”, Bloomberg, April 10th 2020. https://apple.news/AHY0me9nbTnequX80tNawgw [11] ““We Are Striking to Disrupt the System”: An Hour with 16-Year-Old Climate Activist Greta Thunberg”, Democracy Now!, September 11th 2019. https://www.democracynow.org/2019/9/11/greta_thunberg_swedish_activist_climate_crisis [12] M Stone, “Carbon emissions are falling sharply due to coronavirus. But not for long.”, National Geographic, April 3rd 2020. https://www.nationalgeographic.com/science/2020/04/coronavirus-causing-carbon-emissions-to-fall-but-not-for-long/ [13] T M Lenton, J Rockström, O Gaffney et al., “Climate tipping points—too risky to bet against”, Nature, November 27th 2019. https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-019-03595-0 [14] S Khagram, “Global Climate Restoration for People, Prosperity and Planet: $Trillions in Market Opportunities and Economic, Social, Environmental Benefits”, Thunderbird School of Global Management, January 2020. https://thunderbird.asu.edu/sites/default/files/khagram-gcr-market-report-2020_0.pdf [15] See for example https://www.weforum.org/whitepapers/global-technology-governance-a-multistakeholder-approach [16] “Fighting a Global Crisis”, Global Hack, April 9-12th 2020. https://theglobalhack.com
The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Economist Group or any of its affiliates. The Economist Group cannot accept any responsibility or liability for reliance by any person on this article or any of the information, opinions or conclusions set out in the article.
Ox, Bees or Elephant? Three scenarios examining the socio-economic impacts of artificial intelligence on Thailand
To support Thai policymakers in navigating this transition, the Institute of Public Policy and Development commissioned The Economist Intelligence Unit to conduct a foresight exercise that investigates how AI could affect key social and economic metrics in Thailand across three scenarios. In each of these scenarios, we have assumed that AI technology will substantially increase the use of computers and raise productivity. We focused our analysis on two critical and uncertain factors: the effectiveness of industrial policy and the extent of skills development in an AI-augmented economy.
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Accelerating urban intelligence: People, business and the cities of tomorro...
About the research
Accelerating urban intelligence: People, business and the cities of tomorrow is an Economist Intelligence Unit report, sponsored by Nutanix. It explores expectations of citizens and businesses for smart-city development in some of the world’s major urban centres. The analysis is based on two parallel surveys conducted in 19 cities: one of 6,746 residents and another of 969 business executives. The cities included are Amsterdam, Copenhagen, Dubai, Frankfurt, Hong Kong, Johannesburg, London, Los Angeles, Mumbai, New York, Paris, Riyadh, San Francisco, São Paulo, Singapore, Stockholm, Sydney, Tokyo and Zurich.
Respondents to the citizen survey were evenly balanced by age (roughly one-third in each of the 18-38, 39-54 and 55 years and older age groups) and gender. A majority (56%) had household incomes above the median level in their city, with 44% below it. Respondents to the business survey were mainly senior executives (65% at C-suite or director level) working in a range of different functions. They work in large, midsize and small firms in over a dozen industries. See the report appendix for full survey results and demographics.
Additional insights were obtained from indepth interviews with city officials, smart-city experts at NGOs and other institutions, and business executives. We would like to thank the following individuals for their time and insights.
Pascual Berrone, academic co-director, Cities in Motion, and professor, strategic management, IESE Business School (Barcelona) Lawrence Boya, director, Smart City Programme, city of Johannesburg Amanda Daflos, chief innovation officer, city of Los Angeles Linda Gerull, chief information officer, city of San Francisco Praveen Pardeshi, municipal commissioner, Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (Mumbai) • Brian Roberts, policy analyst, city of San Francisco Sameer Sharma, global general manager, Internet of Things (IoT), Intel • Marius Sylvestersen, programme director, Copenhagen Solutions Lab Tan Kok Yam, deputy secretary of the Smart Nation and Digital Government, Prime Minister’s Office, SingaporeThe report was written by Denis McCauley and edited by Michael Gold.

Talent for innovation
Talent for innovation: Getting noticed in a global market incorporates case studies of the 34 companies selected as Technology Pioneers in biotechnology/health, energy/environmental technology, and information technology.
Leonardo Da Vinci unquestionably had it in the 15th century; so did Thomas Edison in the 19th century. But today, "talent for innovation" means something rather different. Innovation is no longer the work of one individual toiling in a workshop. In today's globalised, interconnected world, innovation is the work of teams, often based in particular innovation hotspots, and often collaborating with partners, suppliers and customers both nearby and in other countries.
Innovation has become a global activity as it has become easier for ideas and talented people to move from one country to another. This has both quickened the pace of technological development and presented many new opportunities, as creative individuals have become increasingly prized and there has been greater recognition of new sources of talent, beyond the traditional innovation hotspots of the developed world.
The result is a global exchange of ideas, and a global market for innovation talent. Along with growth in international trade and foreign direct investment, the mobility of talent is one of the hallmarks of modern globalisation. Talented innovators are regarded by companies, universities and governments as a vital resource, as precious as oil or water. They are sought after for the simple reason that innovation in products and services is generally agreed to be a large component, if not the largest component, in driving economic growth. It should be noted that "innovation" in this context does not simply mean the development of new, cutting-edge technologies by researchers.
It also includes the creative ways in which other people then refine, repackage and combine those technologies and bring them to market. Indeed, in his recent book, "The Venturesome Economy", Amar Bhidé, professor of business at Columbia University, argues that such "orchestration" of innovation can actually be more important in driving economic activity than pure research. "In a world where breakthrough ideas easily cross national borders, the origin of ideas is inconsequential," he writes. Ideas cross borders not just in the form of research papers, e-mails and web pages, but also inside the heads of talented people. This movement of talent is not simply driven by financial incentives. Individuals may also be motivated by a desire for greater academic freedom, better access to research facilities and funding, or the opportunity to work with key researchers in a particular field.
Countries that can attract talented individuals can benefit from more rapid economic growth, closer collaboration with the countries where those individuals originated, and the likelihood that immigrant entrepreneurs will set up new companies and create jobs. Mobility of talent helps to link companies to sources of foreign innovation and research expertise, to the benefit of both. Workers who emigrate to another country may bring valuable knowledge of their home markets with them, which can subsequently help companies in the destination country to enter those markets more easily. Analysis of scientific journals suggests that international co-authorship is increasing, and there is some evidence thatcollaborative work has a greater impact than work carried out in one country. Skilled individuals also act as repositories of knowledge, training the next generation and passing on their accumulated wisdom.
But the picture is complicated by a number of concerns. In developed countries which have historically depended to a large extent on foreign talent (such as the United States), there is anxiety that it is becoming increasingly difficult to attract talent as new opportunities arise elsewhere. Compared with the situation a decade ago, Indian software engineers, for example, may be more inclined to set up a company in India, rather than moving to America to work for a software company there. In developed countries that have not historically relied on foreign talent (such as Germany), meanwhile, the ageing of the population as the birth rate falls and life expectancy increases means there is a need to widen the supply of talent, as skilled workers leave the workforce and young people show less interest than they used to in technical subjects. And in developing countries, where there is a huge supply of new talent (hundreds of thousands of engineers graduate from Indian and Chinese universities every year), the worry is that these graduates have a broad technical grounding but may lack the specialised skills demanded by particular industries.
Other shifts are also under way. The increasing sophistication of emerging economies (notably India and China) is overturning the old model of "create in the West, customise for the East". Indian and Chinese companies are now globally competitive in many industries. And although the mobility of talent is increasing, workers who move to another country are less likely to stay for the long-term, and are more likely to return to their country of origin. The number of Chinese students studying abroad increased from 125,000 in 2002 to 134,000 in 2006, for example, but the proportion who stayed in the country where they studied after graduating fell from 85% to 69% over the same period, according to figures from the OECD (see page 10).
What is clear is that the emergence of a global market for talent means gifted innovators are more likely to be able to succeed, and new and unexpected opportunities are being exploited, as this year's Technology Pioneers demonstrate. They highlight three important aspects of the global market for talent: the benefits of mobility, the significant role of diasporas, and the importance of network effects in catalysing innovation.
Brain drain, or gain?
Perhaps the most familiar aspect of the debate about flows of talent is the widely expressed concern about the "brain drain" from countries that supply talented workers. If a country educates workers at the taxpayers' expense, does it not have a claim on their talent? There are also worries that the loss of skilled workers can hamper institutional development and drive up the cost of technical services. But such concerns must be weighed against the benefits of greater mobility.
There are not always opportunities for skilled individuals in their country of birth. The prospect of emigration can encourage the development of skills by individuals who may not in fact decide to emigrate. Workers who emigrate may send remittances back to their families at home, which can be a significant source of income and can help to alleviate poverty. And skilled workers may return to their home countries after a period working abroad, further stimulating knowledge transfer and improving the prospects for domestic growth, since they will maintain contacts with researchers overseas. As a result, argues a recent report from the OECD, it makes more sense to talk of a complex process of "brain circulation" rather than a one-way "brain drain". The movement of talent is not simply a zero-sum gain in which sending countries lose, and receiving countries benefit. Greater availability and mobility of talent opens up new possibilities and can benefit everyone.
Consider, for example, BioMedica Diagnostics of Windsor, Nova Scotia. The company makes medical diagnostic systems, some of them battery-operated, that can be used to provide health care in remote regions to people who would otherwise lack access to it. It was founded by Abdullah Kirumira, a Ugandan biochemist who moved to Canada in 1990 and became a professor at Acadia University. There he developed a rapid test for HIV in conjunction with one of his students, Hermes Chan (a native of Hong Kong who had moved to Canada to study). According to the United States Centers for Disease Control, around one-third of people tested for HIV do not return to get the result when it takes days or weeks to determine. Dr Kirumira and Dr Chan developed a new test that provides the result in three minutes, so that a diagnosis can be made on the spot. Dr Kirumira is a prolific inventor who went on to found several companies, and has been described as "the pioneer of Nova Scotia's biotechnology sector".
Today BioMedica makes a range of diagnostic products that are portable, affordable and robust, making them ideally suited for use in developing countries. They allow people to be rapidly screened for a range of conditions, including HIV, hepatitis, malaria, rubella, typhoid and cholera. The firm's customers include the World Health Organisation. Providing such tests to patients in the developing world is a personal mission of Dr Kirumira's, but it also makes sound business sense: the market for invitro diagnostics in the developing world is growing by over 25% a year, the company notes, compared with growth of only 5% a year in developed nations.
Moving to Canada gave Dr Kirumira research opportunities and access to venture funding that were not available in Uganda. His innovations now provide an affordable way for hospitals in his native continent of Africa to perform vital tests. A similar example is provided by mPedigree, a start-up that has developed a mobile-phone-based system that allows people to verify the authenticity of medicines. Counterfeit drugs are widespread in the developing world: they are estimated to account for 10-25% of all drugs sold, and over 80% in some countries. The World Health Organisation estimates that a fake vaccine for meningitis, distributed in Niger in 1995, killed over 2,500 people. mPedigree was established by Bright Simons, a Ghanaian social entrepreneur, in conjunction with Ashifi Gogo, a fellow Ghanaian. The two were more than just acquaintances having met at Secondary School. There are many high-tech authentication systems available in the developed world for drug packaging, involving radio-frequency identification (RFID) chips, DNA tags, and so forth.
The mPedigree system developed my Mr Gogo, an engineering student, is much cheaper and simpler and only requires the use of a mobile phone — an item that is now spreading more quickly in Africa than in any other region of the world. Once the drugs have been purchased, a panel on the label is scratched off to reveal a special code. The patient then sends this code, by text message, to a particular number. The code is looked up in a database and a message is sent back specifying whether the drugs are genuine. The system is free to use because the drug companies cover the cost of the text messages. It was launched in Ghana in 2007, and mPedigree's founders hope to extend it to all 48 sub-Saharan African countries within a decade, and to other parts of in the developing world.
The effort is being supported by Ghana's Food and Drug Board, and by local telecoms operators and drug manufacturers. Mr Gogo has now been admitted into a special progamme at Dartmouth College in the United States that develops entrepreneurial skills, in addition to technical skills, in engineers. Like Dr Kirumira, he is benefiting from opportunities that did not exist in his home country, and his country is benefiting too. This case of mPedigree shows that it is wrong to assume that the movement of talent is one-way (from poor to rich countries) and permanent. As it has become easier to travel and communications technology has improved, skilled workers have become more likely to spend brief spells in other countries that provide opportunities, rather than emigrating permanently.
And many entrepreneurs and innovators shuttle between two or more places — between Tel Aviv and Silicon Valley, for example, or Silicon Valley and Hsinchu in Taiwan — in a pattern of "circular" migration, in which it is no longer meaningful to distinguish between "sending" and "receiving" countries.
The benefits of a diaspora
Migration (whether temporary, permanent or circular) to a foreign country can be facilitated by the existence of a diaspora, since it can be easier to adjust to a new culture when you are surrounded by compatriots who have already done so. Some observers worry that diasporas make migration too easy, in the sense that they may encourage a larger number of talented individuals to leave their home country than would otherwise be the case, to the detriment of that country.
But as with the broader debate about migration, this turns out to be only part of the story. Diasporas can have a powerful positive effect in promoting innovation and benefiting the home country. Large American technology firms, for example, have set up research centres in India in part because they have been impressed by the calibre of the migrant Indian engineers they have employed in America. Diasporas also provide a channel for knowledge and skills to pass back to the home country.
James Nakagawa, a Canadian of Japanese origin and the founder of Mobile Healthcare, is a case in point. A third-generation immigrant, he grew up in Canada but decided in 1994 to move to Japan, where he worked for a number of technology firms and set up his own financial-services consultancy. In 2000 he had the idea that led him to found Mobile Healthcare, when a friend was diagnosed with diabetes and lamented that he found it difficult to determine which foods to eat, and which to avoid.
The rapid spread of advanced mobile phones in Japan, a world leader in mobile telecoms, prompted Mr Nakagawa to devise Lifewatcher, Mobile Healthcare's main product. It is a "disease selfmanagement system" used in conjunction with a doctor, based around a secure online database that can be accessed via a mobile phone. Patients record what medicines they are taking and what food they are eating, taking a picture of each meal. A database of common foodstuffs, including menu items from restaurants and fast-food chains, helps users work out what they can safely eat. Patients can also call up their medical records to follow the progress of key health indicators, such as blood sugar, blood pressure, cholesterol levels and calorie intake.
All of this information can also be accessed online by the patient's doctor or nutritionist. The system allows people with diabetes or obesity (both of which are rapidly becoming more prevalent in Japan and elsewhere) to take an active role in managing their conditions. Mr Nakagawa did three months of research in the United States and Canada while developing Lifewatcher, which was created with support from Apple (which helped with hardware and software), the Japanese Red Cross and Japan's Ministry of Health and Welfare (which provided full access to its nutritional database).
Japanese patients who are enrolled in the system have 70% of the cost covered by their health insurance. Mr Nakagawa is now working to introduce Lifewatcher in the United States and Canada, where obesity and diabetes are also becoming more widespread — along advanced mobile phones of the kind once only found in Japan. Mr Nakagawa's ability to move freely between Japanese and North American cultures, combining the telecoms expertise of the former with the entrepreneurial approach of the latter, has resulted in a system that can benefit both.
The story of Calvin Chin, the Chinese-American founder of Qifang, is similar. Mr Chin was born and educated in America, and worked in the financial services and technology industries for several years before moving to China. Expatriate Chinese who return to the country, enticed by opportunities in its fast-growing economy, are known as "returning turtles". Qifang is a "peer to peer" (P2P) lending site that enables students to borrow money to finance their education from other users of the site. P2P lending has been pioneered in other countries by sites such as Zopa and Prosper in other countries.
Such sites require would-be borrowers to provide a range of personal details about themselves to reassure lenders, and perform credit checks on them. Borrowers pay above-market rates, which is what attracts lenders. Qifang adds several twists to this formula. It is concentrating solely on student loans, which means that regulators are more likely to look favourably on the company's unusual business model. It allows payments to be made directly to educational institutions, to make sure the money goes to the right place. Qifang also requires borrowers to give their parents' names when taking out a loan, which increases the social pressure on them not to default, since that would cause the family to lose face.
Mr Chin has thus tuned an existing business model to take account of the cultural and regulatory environment in China, where P2P lending could be particularly attractive, given the relatively undeveloped state of China's financial-services market. In a sense, Qifang is just an updated, online version of the community group-lending schemes that are commonly used to finance education in China. The company's motto is that "everyone should be able to get an education, no matter their financial means".
Just as Mr Chin is trying to use knowledge acquired in the developed world to help people in his mother country of China, Sachin Duggal hopes his company, Nivio, will do something similar for people in India. Mr Duggal was born in Britain and is of Indian extraction. He worked in financial services, including a stint as a technologist at Deutsche Bank, before setting up Nivio, which essentially provides a PC desktop, personalised with a user's software and documents, that can be accessed from any web browser.
This approach makes it possible to centralise the management of PCs in a large company, and is already popular in the business world. But Mr Duggal hopes that it will also make computing more accessible to people who find the prospect of owning and managing their own PCs (and dealing with spam and viruses) too daunting, or simply cannot afford a PC at all. Nivio's software was developed in India, where Mr Duggal teamed up with Iqbal Gandham, the founder of Net4India, one of India's first internet service providers. Mr Duggal believes that the "virtual webtop" model could have great potential in extending access to computers to rural parts of India, and thus spreading the opportunities associated with the country's high-tech boom. A survey of the bosses of Indian software firms clearly shows how diasporas can promote innovation.
It found that those bosses who had lived abroad and returned to India made far more use of diaspora links upon their return than entrepreneurs who had never lived abroad, which gave them access to capital and skills in other countries. Diasporas can, in other words, help to ensure that "brain drain" does indeed turn into "brain gain", provided the government of the country in question puts appropriate policies in place to facilitate the movement of people, technology and capital.
Making the connection
Multinational companies can also play an important role in providing new opportunities for talented individuals, and facilitating the transfer of skills. In recent years many technology companies have set up large operations in India, for example, in order to benefit from the availability of talented engineers and the services provided by local companies. Is this simply exploitation of low-paid workers by Western companies?
The example of JiGrahak Mobility Solutions, a start-up based in Bangalore, illustrates why it is not. The company was founded by Sourabh Jain, an engineering graduate from the Delhi Institute of Technology. After completing his studies he went to work for the Indian research arm of Lucent Technologies, an American telecoms-equipment firm. This gave him a solid grounding in mobile-phone technology, which subsequently enabled him to set up JiGrahak, a company that provides a mobile-commerce service called Ngpay.
In India, where many people first experience the internet on a mobile phone, rather than a PC, and where mobile phones are far more widespread than PCs, there is much potential for phone-based shopping and payment services. Ngpay lets users buy tickets, pay bills and transfer money using their handsets. Such is its popularity that with months of its launch in 2008, Ngpay accounted for 4% of ticket sales at Fame, an Indian cinema chain.
The role of large companies in nurturing talented individuals, who then leave to set up their own companies, is widely understood in Silicon Valley. Start-ups are often founded by alumni from Sun, HP, Oracle and other big names. Rather than worrying that they could be raising their own future competitors, large companies understand that the resulting dynamic, innovative environment benefits everyone, as large firms spawn, compete with and acquire smaller ones.
As large firms establish outposts in developing countries, such catalysis of innovation is becoming more widespread. Companies with large numbers of employees and former employees spread around the world can function rather like a corporate diaspora, in short, providing another form of network along which skills and technology can diffuse. The network that has had the greatest impact on spreading ideas, promoting innovation and allowing potential partners to find out about each other's research is, of course, the internet. As access to the internet becomes more widespread, it can allow developing countries to link up more closely with developed countries, as the rise of India's software industry illustrates. But it can also promote links between developing countries.
The Cows to Kilowatts Partnership, based in Nigeria, provides an unusual example. It was founded by Joseph Adelagan, a Nigerian engineer, who was concerned about the impact on local rivers of effluent from the Bodija Market abattoir in Ibadan. As well as the polluting the water supply of several nearby villages, the effluent carried animal diseases that could be passed to humans. Dr Adelagan proposed setting up an effluent-treatment plant.
He discovered, however, that although treating the effluent would reduce water pollution, the process would produce carbon-dioxide and methane emissions that contribute to climate change. So he began to look for ways to capture these gases and make use of them. Researching the subject online, he found that a research institution in Thailand, the Centre for Waste Utilisation and Management at King Mongkut University of Technology Thonburi, had developed anaerobic reactors that could transform agro-industrial waste into biogas. He made contact with the Thai researchers, and together they developed a version of the technology
suitable for use in Nigeria that turns the abattoir waste into clean household cooking gas and organic fertiliser, thus reducing the need for expensive chemical fertiliser. The same approach could be applied across Africa, Dr Adelagan believes. The Cows to Kilowatts project illustrates the global nature of modern innovation, facilitated by the free movement of both ideas and people. Thanks to the internet, people in one part of the world can easily make contact with people trying to solve similar problems elsewhere.
Lessons learned
What policies should governments adopt in order to develop and attract innovation talent, encourage its movement and benefit from its circulation? At the most basic level, investment in education is vital. Perhaps surprisingly, however, Amar Bhidé of Columbia University suggests that promoting innovation does not mean pushing as many students as possible into technical subjects.
Although researchers and technologists provide the raw material for innovation, he points out, a crucial role in orchestrating innovation is also played by entrepreneurs who may not have a technical background. So it is important to promote a mixture of skills. A strong education system also has the potential to attract skilled foreign students, academics and researchers, and gives foreign companies an incentive to establish nearby research and development operations.
Many countries already offer research grants, scholarships and tax benefits to attract talented immigrants. In many cases immigration procedures are "fast tracked" for individuals working in science and technology. But there is still scope to remove barriers to the mobility of talent. Mobility of skilled workers increasingly involves short stays, rather than permanent moves, but this is not yet widely reflected in immigration policy. Removing barriers to short-term stays can increase "brain circulation" and promote diaspora links.
Another problem for many skilled workers is that their qualifications are not always recognised in other countries. Greater harmonisation of standards for qualifications is one way to tackle this problem; some countries also have formal systems to evaluate foreign qualifications and determine their local equivalents. Countries must also provide an open and flexible business environment to ensure that promising innovations can be brought to market. If market access or financial backing are not available, after all, today's global-trotting innovators increasingly have the option of going elsewhere.
The most important point is that the global competition for talent is not a zero-sum game in which some countries win, and others lose. As the Technology Pioneers described here demonstrate, the nature of innovation, and the global movement of talent and ideas, is far more complicated that the simplistic notion of a "talent war" between developed and developing nations would suggest. Innovation is a global activity, and granting the greatest possible freedom to innovators can help to ensure that the ideas they generate will benefit the greatest possible number of people.

Integrated Transformation: How rising customer expectations are turning com...
Modern customers have it good. Spoilt for choice and convenience, today’s empowered consumers have come to expect more from the businesses they interact with. This doesn’t just apply to their wanting a quality product at a fair price, but also tailored goods, swift and effective customer service across different channels, and a connected experience across their online shopping and in-store experience, with easy access to information they need when they want it.
Meeting these expectations is a significant challenge for organisations. For many, it requires restructuring long-standing operating models, re-engineering business processes and adopting a fundamental shift in mindset to put customer experience at the heart of business decision- making. Download our report to learn more.
Pride and Prejudice: Assessing progress in Asia-Pacific presentation
Acceptance of LGBT people has increased rapidly in recent years, including in the workplace as more companies take steps to provide a welcoming environment for LGBT staff. This progress is incomplete, however, particularly in Asia, where the climate for LGBT people remains frostier than in much of the Western world. The Economist Intelligence Unit presented the fourth year of Pride and Prejudice executive survey about evolving attitudes towards LGBT people in the workplace and broader society, with a particular focus on Asia.
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Pride and prejudice:Assessing progress in Asia-Pacific
The Landscape surrounding LGBT rights in Asia-Pacific is changing fast. This report, the fourth in an annual series of Economist Intelligence Unit studies addressing the business and economic case for global LGBT diversity and inclusion (D&I), focuses on the situation in Asia-Pacific and what progress has been made compared to the first Pride and Prejudice survey fielded in 2015. Based on a survey of nearly 2,000 executives and the general public on the subject of D&I in Asia-Pacific, both in the workplace and broader society, it finds that there’s clear progress in some respects and reasons for concern in others:
A virtuous circle is emerging, in which visibility for LGBT workers is rising along with the perception of bottom-line benefits to diversity and inclusion (D&I). Companies in Asia-Pacific may not be satisfying the growing appetite for corporate D&I. Business momentum is increasing hand-in-hand with greater societal openness toward SOGI in Asia-Pacific, although progress is hardly assured.

Pride and Prejudice: Agents of Change
The report, based on a global survey of over 1,000 executives, posits a framework toward achieving positive change for LGBT employees via three key workplace groups: leadership, young people and women.
Read the report | More about Pride and Prejudice | Watch video 阅读报告:简体中文 | 繁體中文
Pride and prejudice: The future of advocacy
This report, the third in an annual series of Economist Intelligence Unit studies addressing the business and economic case for global LGBT diversity and inclusion (D&I), assesses the future prospects for corporate advocacy in the LGBT space, given the perils that face proponents of the liberal, open-minded worldview that underpins LGBT equality. Based on a survey of over 1,000 business leaders worldwide, it finds that although some companies still prioritise LGBT advocacy, the recent rapid social progress in LGBT acceptance that is both cause and effect of this advocacy should not be taken for granted. The key findings are:
Nearly half of respondents believe companies will become more prominent as agents of progress for LGBT rights in future; however, only a third say their own companies will devote more resources to LGBT advocacy, compared with today Although companies with established public positions on LGBT rights are not likely to reverse course, companies that remain “in the shadows” on this issue are likely to stay there Future expectations for various types of advocacy activities are concentrated in North America and Europe, while other regions, where LGBT rights are less entrenched, lag Companies that engage in pro-LGBT advocacy perform better on various measures of business competitiveness compared with their peers, based on self-reported factors Though LGBT issues continue to play a role in political outcomes around the world, few believe the public will demand more progress on this issue versus other rights debates like gender and race and ethnicityRead the report | Watch highlight video | More about Pride and Prejudice
Learning to work, working to learn
The term “fourth industrial revolution” has become ubiquitous among those seeking to put a label on the constellation of changes occurring in the workplace and society as a whole, due to technology. Often discussed with equal parts trepidation and hope, this catch-all has fuelled debate about the skills that workers across a variety of fields will need to maintain—or learn for the first time—in order to stay relevant in the labour markets of tomorrow.
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It is well established that the modern CFO has a more strategic role to play in a business, but a clear action plan to achieve this is lacking. A key element of this is helping the business to deal with change. Some changes are planned: launching a new product or service, setting up operations in a new region or acquiring a competitor. Others may be unexpected: a major disruption to supply-chain operations, the emergence of new regulation and legal reporting requirements or the unpredictable impacts of global economic uncertainty.
Either way, when asked about the biggest challenges they face in executing their day-to-day activities, change is a recurring theme, according to a new survey of 800 CFOs and senior finance executives, conducted by The Economist Intelligence Unit. Managing unexpected changes to financial forecasts and adapting finance processes to rapidly evolving business models are top of mind.
Managing unexpected changes to financial forecasts and adapting finance processes to rapidly evolving business models are top challenges finance executives face in executing their day to-day activities.
Finance executives are also concerned with identifying how to align strategic, financial and operational plans towards common objectives and meaningfully analysing data across business units and regions. “All functions are working to meet these challenges and, as a finance head, we have to have visibility across all functions, how they are progressing [towards meeting goals] and ensuring that their direction is in line with overall strategic goals,” says Lalit Malik, CFO of Dabur, an Indian consumer goods manufacturer. It is incumbent upon CFOs therefore to be prepared not only to help their own function navigate uncharted territory, but the rest of the business too. That means breaking down the silos that commonly exist in organisations, in order to collaborate closely across functions, sharing information and data in the pursuit of common objectives.
All functions are working to meet these challenges and, as a finance head, we have to have visibility across all functions, how they are progressing [towards meeting goals] and ensuring that their direction is in line with overall strategic goals - Lalit Malik, CFO of Dabur, an Indian consumer goods manufacturer.
The clear custodian of collaboration
There are a number of reasons why the role of leading cross-company collaboration around steering should fall to the CFO and their team. First, through the activities of budgeting, the finance function is the custodian of the clear, quantitative expression of management expectations and determines how resources such as cash and people will be allocated in order to achieve them. In our survey, 90% of respondents say that finance should facilitate collaborative enterprise planning to ensure that operational plans are aligned with financial and strategic plans.
Second, through performance management, the finance function is the gatekeeper for critical data that illustrate how well—or otherwise—the company is rising to the challenge of change. That includes data relating to sales, supply chain and delivery, which need to be reported back to the business in ways that help drive improved decisionmaking. Our survey reveals that companies in which finance executives feel empowered to drive strategic decisions across business functions are more likely to report a higher financial performance in fiscal year 2016/17 and 2017/18 and anticipate higher growth rates for 2019/20.
Download Complete Executive Summary PDF

Transforming data into action
As businesses generate and manage vast amounts of data, companies have more opportunities to gather data, incorporate insights into business strategy and continuously expand access to data across the organisation. Doing so effectively—leveraging data for strategic objectives—is often easier said than done, however. This report, Transforming data into action: the business outlook for data governance, explores the business contributions of data governance at organisations globally and across industries, the challenges faced in creating useful data governance policies and the opportunities to improve such programmes. Learn more by downloading our whitepaper below.

Rethinking professional services in an age of disruption
Workplace Evolution: Empowering employees in a flexible work environment
The changing nature of work is in turn redefining the role of the office. Previously a space in which to concentrate on tasks for the day, it is now primarily a space for interaction with colleagues and clients to exchange ideas. In this report, we speak to architects and companies behind high-profile office developments to understand current work trends and how they are influencing a company’s approach to employees and office design.
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Safe Cities Index 2019
Cities across the globe are growing in size and in terms of how connected they are. Which cities are best at keeping their citizens safe and how do they do it? An updated version of the Safe Cities Index 2017, the 2019 index covers 60 cities across the globe and defines how to measure security in a rapidly urbanising world.
Visit the Safe Cities hub for more interactive content >>

Five-star cities: Asia’s best cities for work and recreation
The 2019 bleisure barometer: Asia’s best cities for work and recreation evaluates the bleisure potential of various cities in Asia-Pacific, based on a survey of global business travellers. It reveals that while Asia’s top bleisure destinations provide the right balance of business activity, high-quality infrastructure and top-flight leisure experiences, many less obvious choices stand out for different reasons, often involving opportunities for cultural exchange.
The key findings are:
Tokyo is Asia’s best bleisure destination, ranking first out of 26 cities in the region. The Japanese capital is joined by Singapore, Sydney, Hong Kong and Melbourne as a “five-star” bleisure city, as determined by a quantitative barometer constructed for this programme, based on survey responses. Raw scores and number of stars may not correlate perfectly, as the former is an absolute measure and the latter a relative one (see appendix I for the full methodology of barometer and star scoring). Less-affluent cities comprise most of the one-star destinations, with notable exceptions. Business travel may prove arduous in the emerging metropolises of South and South-east Asia, but greater GDP is hardly the only predictor of a high bleisure score. New Delhi and Hanoi tie for second (alongside Beijing and Hong Kong) in the category measuring opportunities for cultural experiences, providing them a leg up over cities with stronger infrastructure and a bigger international business scene. Shanghai and Beijing, often criticised for their poor urban environments, rank highly on business aspects such as quality of international links and level of digital connectivity, helping them best more ostensibly liveable cities, including Auckland, Brisbane, Seoul, Taipei and Wellington, in the overall ranking. Wealthy Adelaide falls in the one-star category, dragged down by low scores for quality of food and beverage and opportunity for cultural experiences. Ease of transportation is the top urban factor in a successful business trip. Other key aspects include street safety and quality of business venues, according to our survey. Regional differences emerge in these findings, with Asian executives prioritising transportation, while Europeans are less concerned about safety than those hailing from elsewhere. Dining out and enjoying local heritage are the chief ways busy business travellers unwind. These two factors rank well ahead of the third-place finisher, visiting an art museum or gallery. Regional nuances crop up here too: Asian executives are less likely to frequent the local drinking scene and more inclined to visit an amusement park.The report, including full scoring and star bracket methodology, as well as an infographic and video, can be found at: https://fivestarcities.economist.com/

Flexible cities: The future of Australian infrastructure
As this report finds, cities need smarter and more flexible infrastructure to address these challenges— infrastructure that can make better use of existing space and resources, and that can adapt in accordance with uncertain, fast-moving future realities.
The idea of ‘flexible’ or future-proof cities is becoming more important. Imagine a roadway that works for today’s vehicles as well as tomorrow’s autonomous cars, an energy system that can provide reliable power despite spikes in usage (such as those that may come from greater adoption of electric cars), pylons that are mindful of overhead drones, a building that transforms depending on needs of its inhabitants, or an autonomous rail system that can double its capacity simply through changes to its operating algorithms.
Delivering infrastructure that is more responsive and flexible to future needs requires technological innovation as much as it does new approaches to planning, financing and procurement.
In this report, The EIU investigates the challenges facing cities and urban infrastructure in the near future, and the global trends and innovations in infrastructure that will be crucial in response. With an eye to international best practice, it focuses on the challenges and opportunities pertinent to Australia. Here, major cities are facing significant population growth forecasts that call into question their ability to continuously provide a high quality of life for their citizens. Challenges pertain to both meeting infrastructure need, and in delivering solutions, through effective planning, financing and collaboration, in time and on budget.
The key findings of the research include:
Australia is experiencing a number of growing pains. Population growth in cities is a universal trend—urban population is expected to rise by two-thirds by 2050 globally—but it is particularly acute in Australia, where cities must meet double or greater user demand without conflicting with the global targets set by the Paris Agreement and Agenda 2030. Such growth challenges the capacity and sustainability of cities’ infrastructure and the networks that connect them. Planners must also reckon with an ageing population, deteriorating infrastructure, adverse environmental change and evolving working patterns, altering the dynamics of how people operate in and navigate cities. A failure to respond to these challenges could result in declining economic productivity and threats to the quality of life for which Australian cities are renowned. To meet future demands, infrastructure builders across the globe are considering how they can expand the capacity of existing infrastructure and bolster the flexibility of new works. Updated networks like roads, railways and pipelines often need to accommodate twice their original usage demand without changing their physical footprint. The effective adoption of digital technology will be key to this transformation, such as updating metro systems with driverless trains and automatic controls, informed by large amounts of real-time data, to allow a more efficient use of capacity. Water and energy supply systems must also prove reliable in the face of natural disasters, shifts in market prices (such as oil or gas price shocks) or changes to supply sources (backups for solar generation, for example). New technological techniques and applications can help builders work more quickly, safely and cost-effectively. The design, construction and maintenance of infrastructure projects are increasingly driven by digital technologies, unlocking cost and time savings in building roads, railways and entire city centres. The cost and energy required to build with the highest safety margins could be reduced by remote monitoring through embedded sensors. Efficient, low-impact construction techniques will be important to reduce the disruption that construction and repairs have on metropolitan areas, too. Stakeholders are increasingly reliant on data to plan, build and optimise projects. Data generated by citizens and connected infrastructure are increasingly critical in delivering and operating smarter cities. Governments and infrastructure providers increasingly benefit from adding this data to their modelling and scenario planning. Open data can also allow citizens and third parties to solve problems or invent new applications that benefit all, from crowdsourcing potholes or reporting crime, to building new navigation apps. Australia’s state and federal governments, citizens, and commercial partners are still grappling with data ownership issues, but all are working to address the challenges. Mature financing and procurement practices help Australia attract international investment. Attractive markets encourage international competition for infrastructure procurement. Indeed, many of today’s projects are contracted to international players who bring advanced, ambitious proposals to government. And as demand for more advanced, flexible projects rises, players are increasingly presenting envelope-pushing approaches to win bids. Collaboration between governments, universities and commercial players is increasing, sparking innovation. Universities are playing a larger role in the advancement and application of infrastructure technology by partnering with private companies and government. New forms of collaboration are also more apparent among federal, state and local governments, and between governments and the private sector, potentially easing the problems posed by the historically disjointed nature of decision-making and long-term planning on major infrastructure. Australia has a strong record of robust infrastructure investment. Its leaders, institutions and businesses have identified the urgency and importance of responsible and smart infrastructure initiatives. As a result, Australia is well placed to wrestle with the challenges it faces, and, as it navigates infrastructure challenges earlier and with greater urgency than some other countries, could be a model for how other countries—in the OECD and in Asia-Pacific—can build smarter, more flexible, next-generation infrastructure in their cities.
驕傲與偏見:變革的動力
2016年,經濟學人集團發起了“驕傲與偏 見:商業和經濟中男同性戀、女同性戀、雙性戀和跨性別者(LGBT)的多元化和包容性問題”計劃的第一階段。作為計劃的一部分,經濟學人智庫(The Economist Intelligence Unit/The EIU)開展了一項研究, 基於廣泛的全球調查和深入的案頭研究探討 LGBT人群在工作場所的地位。現在,在計劃 開展的第二年,這項研究涵蓋了最能為工作 場所的LGBT人群推動積極變革的群體:公司領導、年輕人和女性。
為了找出這些變革的動力,我們首先要了解企業中存在的偏見程度。儘管有一些正面的發現,例如支持一般意義上的LGBT權利的高管人員所佔比例很高,但對LGBT的敵意仍然非常普遍;每十位高管中就有一位意識到辦公場所存在對LGBT人群的某種歧視。LGBT群體通常會在工作中隱藏自己的身份,這種低調致使人們認為這並不是一個需要係統化解決的問題,專門製定計劃來不斷推進問題解決的動力少之又少。
Related content

Steering through collaboration: CFOs driving new priorities for the future
It is well established that the modern CFO has a more strategic role to play in a business, but a clear action plan to achieve this is lacking. A key element of this is helping the business to deal with change. Some changes are planned: launching a new product or service, setting up operations in a new region or acquiring a competitor. Others may be unexpected: a major disruption to supply-chain operations, the emergence of new regulation and legal reporting requirements or the unpredictable impacts of global economic uncertainty.
Either way, when asked about the biggest challenges they face in executing their day-to-day activities, change is a recurring theme, according to a new survey of 800 CFOs and senior finance executives, conducted by The Economist Intelligence Unit. Managing unexpected changes to financial forecasts and adapting finance processes to rapidly evolving business models are top of mind.
Managing unexpected changes to financial forecasts and adapting finance processes to rapidly evolving business models are top challenges finance executives face in executing their day to-day activities.
Finance executives are also concerned with identifying how to align strategic, financial and operational plans towards common objectives and meaningfully analysing data across business units and regions. “All functions are working to meet these challenges and, as a finance head, we have to have visibility across all functions, how they are progressing [towards meeting goals] and ensuring that their direction is in line with overall strategic goals,” says Lalit Malik, CFO of Dabur, an Indian consumer goods manufacturer. It is incumbent upon CFOs therefore to be prepared not only to help their own function navigate uncharted territory, but the rest of the business too. That means breaking down the silos that commonly exist in organisations, in order to collaborate closely across functions, sharing information and data in the pursuit of common objectives.
All functions are working to meet these challenges and, as a finance head, we have to have visibility across all functions, how they are progressing [towards meeting goals] and ensuring that their direction is in line with overall strategic goals - Lalit Malik, CFO of Dabur, an Indian consumer goods manufacturer.
The clear custodian of collaboration
There are a number of reasons why the role of leading cross-company collaboration around steering should fall to the CFO and their team. First, through the activities of budgeting, the finance function is the custodian of the clear, quantitative expression of management expectations and determines how resources such as cash and people will be allocated in order to achieve them. In our survey, 90% of respondents say that finance should facilitate collaborative enterprise planning to ensure that operational plans are aligned with financial and strategic plans.
Second, through performance management, the finance function is the gatekeeper for critical data that illustrate how well—or otherwise—the company is rising to the challenge of change. That includes data relating to sales, supply chain and delivery, which need to be reported back to the business in ways that help drive improved decisionmaking. Our survey reveals that companies in which finance executives feel empowered to drive strategic decisions across business functions are more likely to report a higher financial performance in fiscal year 2016/17 and 2017/18 and anticipate higher growth rates for 2019/20.
Download Complete Executive Summary PDF

Transforming data into action
As businesses generate and manage vast amounts of data, companies have more opportunities to gather data, incorporate insights into business strategy and continuously expand access to data across the organisation. Doing so effectively—leveraging data for strategic objectives—is often easier said than done, however. This report, Transforming data into action: the business outlook for data governance, explores the business contributions of data governance at organisations globally and across industries, the challenges faced in creating useful data governance policies and the opportunities to improve such programmes. Learn more by downloading our whitepaper below.

Rethinking professional services in an age of disruption
驕傲與偏見:關於工作場所中LGBT包容性的態度和意見
為了揭示當前職場中對LGBT人群的看法和態度,經濟學人智庫(The Economist Intelligence Unit/EIU)於2015年10月到11月 期間針對全球1,021名意見領袖在網上進行了「驕傲與偏見」基準調查。從他們的觀點中,我們深刻了解到了在為LGBT群體權利謀 求更多平等權利時需解決的問題。
大體上,那些調查對像看上去並沒有表現出 對LGBT人群的歧視態度。在很多時候,基於性取向和性別認同(SOGI)多樣性的進步根本還沒有成為熱門話題。這要是由於LGBT一直被視為「隱性」的少數群體。過去有研究表明,很多LGBT人士在某種程度上都會在工作中隱瞞自己的性取向,在美國這一比例高達53%。根深蒂固的規範阻止員工談論這個話題,迫使他們不得不隱瞞身份;而這方面的空白反過來又塑造了規範,迫使更多的人隱藏自己的秘密。在北美和西歐以外的寬容度不太明顯的社會中,未出櫃員工的比例很可能要比這高得多。
Related content

Steering through collaboration: CFOs driving new priorities for the future
It is well established that the modern CFO has a more strategic role to play in a business, but a clear action plan to achieve this is lacking. A key element of this is helping the business to deal with change. Some changes are planned: launching a new product or service, setting up operations in a new region or acquiring a competitor. Others may be unexpected: a major disruption to supply-chain operations, the emergence of new regulation and legal reporting requirements or the unpredictable impacts of global economic uncertainty.
Either way, when asked about the biggest challenges they face in executing their day-to-day activities, change is a recurring theme, according to a new survey of 800 CFOs and senior finance executives, conducted by The Economist Intelligence Unit. Managing unexpected changes to financial forecasts and adapting finance processes to rapidly evolving business models are top of mind.
Managing unexpected changes to financial forecasts and adapting finance processes to rapidly evolving business models are top challenges finance executives face in executing their day to-day activities.
Finance executives are also concerned with identifying how to align strategic, financial and operational plans towards common objectives and meaningfully analysing data across business units and regions. “All functions are working to meet these challenges and, as a finance head, we have to have visibility across all functions, how they are progressing [towards meeting goals] and ensuring that their direction is in line with overall strategic goals,” says Lalit Malik, CFO of Dabur, an Indian consumer goods manufacturer. It is incumbent upon CFOs therefore to be prepared not only to help their own function navigate uncharted territory, but the rest of the business too. That means breaking down the silos that commonly exist in organisations, in order to collaborate closely across functions, sharing information and data in the pursuit of common objectives.
All functions are working to meet these challenges and, as a finance head, we have to have visibility across all functions, how they are progressing [towards meeting goals] and ensuring that their direction is in line with overall strategic goals - Lalit Malik, CFO of Dabur, an Indian consumer goods manufacturer.
The clear custodian of collaboration
There are a number of reasons why the role of leading cross-company collaboration around steering should fall to the CFO and their team. First, through the activities of budgeting, the finance function is the custodian of the clear, quantitative expression of management expectations and determines how resources such as cash and people will be allocated in order to achieve them. In our survey, 90% of respondents say that finance should facilitate collaborative enterprise planning to ensure that operational plans are aligned with financial and strategic plans.
Second, through performance management, the finance function is the gatekeeper for critical data that illustrate how well—or otherwise—the company is rising to the challenge of change. That includes data relating to sales, supply chain and delivery, which need to be reported back to the business in ways that help drive improved decisionmaking. Our survey reveals that companies in which finance executives feel empowered to drive strategic decisions across business functions are more likely to report a higher financial performance in fiscal year 2016/17 and 2017/18 and anticipate higher growth rates for 2019/20.
Download Complete Executive Summary PDF

Transforming data into action
As businesses generate and manage vast amounts of data, companies have more opportunities to gather data, incorporate insights into business strategy and continuously expand access to data across the organisation. Doing so effectively—leveraging data for strategic objectives—is often easier said than done, however. This report, Transforming data into action: the business outlook for data governance, explores the business contributions of data governance at organisations globally and across industries, the challenges faced in creating useful data governance policies and the opportunities to improve such programmes. Learn more by downloading our whitepaper below.

Rethinking professional services in an age of disruption
骄傲与偏见:变革的动力
2016年,经济学人集团发起了“骄傲与偏 见:商业和经济中男同性恋、女同性恋、 双性恋和跨性别者(LGBT)的多元化和 包容性问题”计划的第一阶段。作为计划的一部分,经济学人智库(The Economist Intelligence Unit/The EIU)开展了一项研究,基于广泛的全球调查和深入的案头研究探讨LGBT人群在工作场所的地位。现在, 在计划开展的第二年,这项研究涵盖了最能 为工作场所的LGBT人群推动积极变革的群 体:公司领导、年轻人和女性。
为了找出这些变革的动力,我们首先要了解企业中存在的偏见程度。尽管有一些正面的发现,例如支持一般意义上的LGBT权利的高管人员所占比例很高,但对LGBT的敌意仍然非常普遍;每十位高管中就有一位意识到办公场所存在对LGBT人群的某种歧视。LGBT 群体通常会在工作中隐藏自己的身份,这种低调致使人们认为这并不是一个需要系统化解决的问题,专门制定计划来不断推进问题解决的动力少之又少。
Related content

Steering through collaboration: CFOs driving new priorities for the future
It is well established that the modern CFO has a more strategic role to play in a business, but a clear action plan to achieve this is lacking. A key element of this is helping the business to deal with change. Some changes are planned: launching a new product or service, setting up operations in a new region or acquiring a competitor. Others may be unexpected: a major disruption to supply-chain operations, the emergence of new regulation and legal reporting requirements or the unpredictable impacts of global economic uncertainty.
Either way, when asked about the biggest challenges they face in executing their day-to-day activities, change is a recurring theme, according to a new survey of 800 CFOs and senior finance executives, conducted by The Economist Intelligence Unit. Managing unexpected changes to financial forecasts and adapting finance processes to rapidly evolving business models are top of mind.
Managing unexpected changes to financial forecasts and adapting finance processes to rapidly evolving business models are top challenges finance executives face in executing their day to-day activities.
Finance executives are also concerned with identifying how to align strategic, financial and operational plans towards common objectives and meaningfully analysing data across business units and regions. “All functions are working to meet these challenges and, as a finance head, we have to have visibility across all functions, how they are progressing [towards meeting goals] and ensuring that their direction is in line with overall strategic goals,” says Lalit Malik, CFO of Dabur, an Indian consumer goods manufacturer. It is incumbent upon CFOs therefore to be prepared not only to help their own function navigate uncharted territory, but the rest of the business too. That means breaking down the silos that commonly exist in organisations, in order to collaborate closely across functions, sharing information and data in the pursuit of common objectives.
All functions are working to meet these challenges and, as a finance head, we have to have visibility across all functions, how they are progressing [towards meeting goals] and ensuring that their direction is in line with overall strategic goals - Lalit Malik, CFO of Dabur, an Indian consumer goods manufacturer.
The clear custodian of collaboration
There are a number of reasons why the role of leading cross-company collaboration around steering should fall to the CFO and their team. First, through the activities of budgeting, the finance function is the custodian of the clear, quantitative expression of management expectations and determines how resources such as cash and people will be allocated in order to achieve them. In our survey, 90% of respondents say that finance should facilitate collaborative enterprise planning to ensure that operational plans are aligned with financial and strategic plans.
Second, through performance management, the finance function is the gatekeeper for critical data that illustrate how well—or otherwise—the company is rising to the challenge of change. That includes data relating to sales, supply chain and delivery, which need to be reported back to the business in ways that help drive improved decisionmaking. Our survey reveals that companies in which finance executives feel empowered to drive strategic decisions across business functions are more likely to report a higher financial performance in fiscal year 2016/17 and 2017/18 and anticipate higher growth rates for 2019/20.
Download Complete Executive Summary PDF

Transforming data into action
As businesses generate and manage vast amounts of data, companies have more opportunities to gather data, incorporate insights into business strategy and continuously expand access to data across the organisation. Doing so effectively—leveraging data for strategic objectives—is often easier said than done, however. This report, Transforming data into action: the business outlook for data governance, explores the business contributions of data governance at organisations globally and across industries, the challenges faced in creating useful data governance policies and the opportunities to improve such programmes. Learn more by downloading our whitepaper below.

Rethinking professional services in an age of disruption
骄傲与偏见:关于工作场所中LGBT包容性的态度和意见
为了揭示当前职场中对LGBT人群的看 法和态度,经济学人智库(The Economist Intelligence Unit/EIU)于2015年10月到11月 期间针对全球1,021名意见领袖在网上进行 了“骄傲与偏见”基准调查。从他们的观点 中,我们深刻了解到了在为LGBT群体权利谋求更多平等权利时需解决的问题。
大体上,那些调查对象看上去并没有表现出 对LGBT人群的歧视态度。在很多时候,基 于性取向和性别认同(SOGI)多样性的进步根本还没有成为热门话题。这要是由于LGBT 一直被视为“隐性”的少数群体。过去有研 究表明,很多LGBT人士在某种程度上都会在工作中隐瞒自己的性取向,在美国这一比例高达53%。根深蒂固的规范阻止员工谈论这个话题,迫使他们不得不隐瞒身份;而这方面的空白反过来又塑造了规范,迫使更多的人隐藏自己的秘密。在北美和西欧以外的宽容度不太明显的社会中,未出柜员工的比 例很可能要比这高得多。
Related content

Steering through collaboration: CFOs driving new priorities for the future
It is well established that the modern CFO has a more strategic role to play in a business, but a clear action plan to achieve this is lacking. A key element of this is helping the business to deal with change. Some changes are planned: launching a new product or service, setting up operations in a new region or acquiring a competitor. Others may be unexpected: a major disruption to supply-chain operations, the emergence of new regulation and legal reporting requirements or the unpredictable impacts of global economic uncertainty.
Either way, when asked about the biggest challenges they face in executing their day-to-day activities, change is a recurring theme, according to a new survey of 800 CFOs and senior finance executives, conducted by The Economist Intelligence Unit. Managing unexpected changes to financial forecasts and adapting finance processes to rapidly evolving business models are top of mind.
Managing unexpected changes to financial forecasts and adapting finance processes to rapidly evolving business models are top challenges finance executives face in executing their day to-day activities.
Finance executives are also concerned with identifying how to align strategic, financial and operational plans towards common objectives and meaningfully analysing data across business units and regions. “All functions are working to meet these challenges and, as a finance head, we have to have visibility across all functions, how they are progressing [towards meeting goals] and ensuring that their direction is in line with overall strategic goals,” says Lalit Malik, CFO of Dabur, an Indian consumer goods manufacturer. It is incumbent upon CFOs therefore to be prepared not only to help their own function navigate uncharted territory, but the rest of the business too. That means breaking down the silos that commonly exist in organisations, in order to collaborate closely across functions, sharing information and data in the pursuit of common objectives.
All functions are working to meet these challenges and, as a finance head, we have to have visibility across all functions, how they are progressing [towards meeting goals] and ensuring that their direction is in line with overall strategic goals - Lalit Malik, CFO of Dabur, an Indian consumer goods manufacturer.
The clear custodian of collaboration
There are a number of reasons why the role of leading cross-company collaboration around steering should fall to the CFO and their team. First, through the activities of budgeting, the finance function is the custodian of the clear, quantitative expression of management expectations and determines how resources such as cash and people will be allocated in order to achieve them. In our survey, 90% of respondents say that finance should facilitate collaborative enterprise planning to ensure that operational plans are aligned with financial and strategic plans.
Second, through performance management, the finance function is the gatekeeper for critical data that illustrate how well—or otherwise—the company is rising to the challenge of change. That includes data relating to sales, supply chain and delivery, which need to be reported back to the business in ways that help drive improved decisionmaking. Our survey reveals that companies in which finance executives feel empowered to drive strategic decisions across business functions are more likely to report a higher financial performance in fiscal year 2016/17 and 2017/18 and anticipate higher growth rates for 2019/20.
Download Complete Executive Summary PDF

Transforming data into action
As businesses generate and manage vast amounts of data, companies have more opportunities to gather data, incorporate insights into business strategy and continuously expand access to data across the organisation. Doing so effectively—leveraging data for strategic objectives—is often easier said than done, however. This report, Transforming data into action: the business outlook for data governance, explores the business contributions of data governance at organisations globally and across industries, the challenges faced in creating useful data governance policies and the opportunities to improve such programmes. Learn more by downloading our whitepaper below.
