ESSENTIALS FOR LEADERS AND THOSE THEY LEAD
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There's something happening here. Even as the global battle against the COVID-19 pandemic continues, the application of vaccines and new therapies offers a soothing promise of return to a more familiar and predictable time. Yet it would be a mistake for leaders to lose sight of how much has already changed. Many businesses, newly agile and quick, bear scant resemblance to their former operating selves. No less dramatic has been the change in social attitudes—toward government, toward individual purpose and expression, and toward justice and equality—that took root in the past year and are building a very different business and social landscape. This week, let's look at how those changes, writ large, are forming a new social contract and altering the way you'll lead at work and beyond. |
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Large-scale policy interventions—G-20 economies have announced fiscal packages exceeding $10 trillion since the COVID-19 pandemic began—have reversed a two-decade-long trend in the social contract (the arrangements and expectations that govern how economic risks and gains are shared among individuals and institutions). On top of public-sector support, some companies in the private sector provided protection to their employees and invested in the well-being of their workforces. While such actions have clearly not tamed economic inequalities, a key question facing leaders in the months and years ahead is whether the pendulum will swing back just as sharply once the pandemic abates or whether at least some of the intervention and innovation will remain. |
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The twin global crises in healthcare and economics spawned by the COVID-19 pandemic have confronted governments around the world with an extraordinary resilience challenge. While many private-sector players were able to pivot to more agile operating modes, slower-moving government bureaucracies have struggled to sidestep catastrophic health outcomes, rewrite their social contracts with citizens and businesses, and manage an unprecedented cumulative global fiscal deficit that will reach $30 trillion in two years' time. In a recent podcast, McKinsey partners Rima Assi and Tom Isherwood break down the challenges governments face and the opportunities available in applying technology and creative financing to walk that historic tightrope. |
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“There are structural things that have nothing to do with one person's animus that enable some of us to move through the system with ease and cause some of us lots of friction.” |
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That's from Gregory Fairchild, the Isidore Horween Research Associate Professor of Business Administration at the University of Virginia Darden School. The focus in his book Emerging Domestic Markets: How Financial Entrepreneurs Reach Underserved Communities in the United States (Columbia University Press, January 2021) is the unprecedented rate of growth in some underserved US communities and the opportunity, through innovative financial services, to create new institutions, sound investments, and the next frontier in combating racial inequality. There's another underused lever that leaders can employ to add a racial-equity lens to their postpandemic return-to-work strategies: locating hubs, branches, second headquarters, factories, and other work assets in places where Black people live. |
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— Edited by Bill Javetski, an executive editor in McKinsey's New Jersey office |
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