As business leaders take stock of a previous year of growth among volatility, they look forward in 2024 to a year of significant, potential change on multiple fronts. Five trends will challenge boards and senior management teams to continue their growth trajectory and find opportunity while managing risks amid instability.
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2024 will be a huge year for geopolitical change and risk
In 2024, geopolitical developments risk impacting business beyond usual levels, potentially in terms of rules and regulations, trade conditions for goods and services, financial investment flows, property peril, commodity prices, inflation, supply chain and employee security. Several factors drive this situation:
- Wars and territory conflict continue to deepen and proliferate: the Russia-Ukraine war enters its third year, the Israel-Hamas war continues with potential to become regional or global, and China-Taiwan challenges remain a concern.
- Geopolitical alliances become increasingly unstable as we move away from traditional superpower bipolarity and hegemony and additional countries such as China, Iran, North Korea, Brazil and India gain influence. For example, BRICS (an intergovernmental organization comprising Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) has added Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates for 2024.
- 2024 will be what the Economist has called “the biggest election year in history,” with national elections scheduled in at least 64 countries plus the EU, representing close to half the global population.
Many will prove consequential for years to come. National elections will be held in the U.S., Russia, Ukraine, Mexico, Finland, India, Indonesia, Pakistan, Belarus, Croatia, Lithuania, Bangladesh, Iran, Taiwan, Rwanda, South Africa and South Korea. Effective leaders are monitoring global events – and risks – closely to identify opportunities for growth while preparing to act quickly and decisively when events occur.
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Labor markets and work arrangements continue to catch up
Labor markets are more stable than they were at this time last year: The Great Resignation is likely over, with quit rates and labor participation rates in the U.S. tracking to where they would have been without a pandemic, the number of job openings far lower than at the start of last year and unemployment backing off its structural lows. Nevertheless, permanent demographic shifts have created long-term shortages for certain jobs and skills that could persist for years, and companies are still catching up to find the workers they need.
Leaders have made progress with efforts on how to balance the often-conflicting needs between remote/hybrid work arrangements and in-person interaction, but recognize they are not done. Data suggest manufacturing employees are working more hours but are less productive and are more susceptible to burnout, while non-manufacturing employees are also working more hours but are more productive.