Color

#B4BA39

Hero Carousel

Spotlight

Bringing free education to township girls and women

YouTube

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCQDMOSbJtqrtNzif5rS22OQ

Slideshare

http://www.slideshare.net/economistintelligenceunit

Pinterest

https://www.pinterest.com/theeiu/

For Folk's Sake

When Obama talked of 'working folks' and 'folks coming here legally' in his latest state of the union address it signalled the US president's return to one of his favourite terms of address. The word 'folk' was notably missing from his second inauguration speech in January, but had been previously used with such abandon during the re-election campaign that it became an object of comment for more than one political watcher.

Still a man's world

Indra Krishnamurthy Nooyi and Marjorie Scardino are a testament to what women might achieve in the corporate world. Cases like these, however, are few and far between.

The business case for diversity and inclusion

There is strong agreement that diversity and inclusion (D&I) is good for business: CEB research finds that in a diverse workforce where the perspectives of diverse and non-diverse employees are valued, employee performance improves by 12 percent and intent to stay by 20 percent.

Every leader is an artist

My co-author Michael and I don’t just believe that business leaders can learn a lot from great artists. We believe that business leaders, and indeed leaders in all fields, are themselves artists.

The Secret to Leading

Use your brain (and all of it).

The secrets of Asia's education success

In our recently published global education index – one component of The Learning Curve programme of research – three Asian nations (South Korea, Japan and Singapore) and one territory (Hong Kong) take four of the top five places. (Finland occupies the pole position.) Why, we ask in an accompanying article, are Asian nations such strong education performers?

Improving education: what really matters

Many experts see education as a black box: inputs such as government spending or teacher training go in, with the hope that positive outputs such as improved student test results or higher graduation rates come out at the other end.

Unlocking human potential

Inadequacies in talent management are hurting the competitiveness and financial performance of firms. According to a survey conducted by the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) in July 2012, 43% of senior executives partially attribute the failure of their firms to achieve key financial targets to ineffective talent management, and two in five say it has also reduced their company's ability to innovate.

MBA Programmes

In March 2013 the EIU will name its business professor of the year. Here, Bill Ridgers, The Economist's Business Education Editor and one of the judges, says that what universities and students want from a professor are two different things.

Aligning talent and strategy – how to make it work

Do companies think about their broader strategic picture when recruiting talent? And does their talent strategy tie into this? Of course it wouldn’t be good form to admit otherwise, but what does this look like in practice?

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