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A 2016 round up on international trade

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Is 75 the new 65?

Report Summary

Historically low birth rates and increasing life expectancy mean that Europe’s working population is ageing fast. In 2012 the continent reached an inevitable demographic tipping point. The percentage of the population at working age fell for the first time in 40 years. It is now forecast to fall every year until 2060.

This inescapable trend will have profound implications for governments, citizens and companies across Europe. The fact that Europe has seen its demographic dividend expire in a time of economic frailty will only compound the challenge. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Executive summary

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A blended future: The changing mix of IT service delivery and consumption

Report Summary

"A blended future: The changing mix of IT service delivery and consumption" is a new survey of global executives. The  research confirms a changing mix in how IT services are delivered and consumed. This trend is expected to continue over the next three years.

Wind of change

Mitigating climate risks: An interview with John Firth, CEO of Acclimatise

Articles

The challenge of speed

Report Summary

The challenge of speed is an EIU research program me sponsored by Ricoh. It explores the need for greater agility in European organisations. This programme includes an economy wide briefing paper and a series of sector specific articles delving into financial services, healthcare, education and the public sector.

Bad company

Barclays is planning to open a string of bank kiosks in ASDA supermarkets, while Samsung is turning to The Carphone Warehouse to oversee its new European retails stories—supposedly to rival the Apple store. How careful should companies be about the “friends” they choose to hang out with?

Innovation ecosystems

Report Summary

The global labour market is undergoing massive structural changes that will have potentially far-reaching implications for the workforces of the future.

Mechanisation and technological adaption by companies are speeding up processes and increasing unemployment and under-employment – something the US writer and ‘futurist’ Alvin Toffler2 has described as a post-industrial ‘third wave’ of socioeconomic organisation.

Values-based diversity

Report Summary

As management guru Peter Drucker foresaw in Post-Capitalist Society, the so-called knowledge economy has put a premium on human talent, requiring businesses to compete with increasing ferocity for able and engaged people. The global nature of the economy—and the correspondingly high degree of workforce mobility—has only intensified demand.

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