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It’s become a cliché but the Covid-19 storm has not found us all in the same boat. The impact on income, on employment, even on the chances of contracting the virus and recovering, is hugely influenced by three factors – ethnicity, gender and poverty.
This year, International Women’s Day also marks roughly one year since the global emergence of the Covid-19 pandemic.
Can debt really be considered good? And do we need more of it? At Tortoise Media’s recent ‘The Future of Money’ event I was invited to consider this alongside finance coach and author of Black Girl Finance, Selina Flavius, and the co-author of Angrynomics, Eric Lonergan.
Digital continues to have a profound effect on the world. The way we live, the way we work and the way we relate to one another is changing faster than ever as a result of digital technologies, processes and capabilities.
The UK’s huge unemployment crisis is just beginning, and it is becoming clear that young people are going to be hugely impacted.
‘Super Saturday’ on 4th July heralded a new phase of Covid-19 economic recovery in the UK, as hairdressers, pubs and restaurants were able to open for the first time since lockdown began.
Innovation isn’t working. At least, the old style of innovation isn’t. It can’t be – look at the number of established, iconic brands that have fallen foul of disruption over the past few years.
World Youth Skills Day (15th July) comes as youth unemployment is soaring due to the Covid-19 pandemic.
These turbulent times might not look like the best time to invest in your workforce: an uncertain economic future paired with unpredictable future skills needs make it a risk that may not seem worth taking.
The overly optimistic amongst us may be thinking that returning to conventional working will be easy. But the situation we’re in, truly is unprecedented.