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COVID-19: There is no returning to normal after the crisis This is the horizon where the public health crisis is followed by its economic impact and shaped in part by governments’ response And then there is the new third horizon – the “after” – when the reaction to the COVID-19 health crisis has been assimilated into a new normal or ceded the stage to new disruptions
A step back from the brink for the global economy, and other key . . . This regular roundup brings you essential news and updates on the global economy from the World Economic Forum’s Head of Economic Growth and Transformation Top stories: China and the US agree to sharply scale back tariffs, the most prominent of a handful of tentatively positive developments amid an otherwise gloomy economic outlook
Why humans are heading back to the Moon - and on to Mars Why are humans returning to the Moon, and will we get to Mars within a decade? NASA Chief Economist Alexander MacDonald and astrobiologist Pascale Ehrenfreud are on the latest Radio Davos podcast Listen to the podcast here, on any podcast app via this link or YouTube
To build back better, we will have to reinvent capitalism If we don’t seize this opportunity to build back better – to reset and reinvent rather than 'return to normal' – systemic risks and vulnerabilities will continue to accumulate, making future shocks both more likely and more dangerous
How – and when – is the film and TV industry going to recover from the . . . As countries begin to ease lockdown measures put in place to flatten the COVID-19 curve, film and TV studios are working out how to get back to the business of show In Australia, production is resuming on long-running soap opera Neighbours – with the cast social distancing on set and special camera angles to make characters appear closer
The Future of Jobs Report 2025 - The World Economic Forum The year 2025 unfolds amid ongoing transformations in global labour markets Since the COVID-19 pandemic, rising cost of living, geopolitical conflicts, the climate emergency and economic downturns have added further turbulence to technology-driven global employment changes While the global economic outlook appears to be stabilizing, it does so amid weaker global growth projections of 3 2%