![]() Year 2023 is expected to be tough year for most markets, investors and consumers. Volatile financial markets, growing trade tensions, stricter regulatory environment and pressure to mainstream climate change into economic decisions will compound the complexity of challenges faced. Fears of new COVID outbreaks and China's already uncertain post-pandemic path poses a real risk of the world experiencing more acute supply chain pain and manufacturing disruptions this year. With slower growth and high inflation, developed markets seem primed to enter into a recession. Lower capital expenditure is in the offing as companies go slow on investments, held back by inflation worries and weaker demand. As governments combat inflation by raising interest rates, new job creation will slowdown and impact economic activity and growth. Higher retail inflation will impact consumer confidence and spending. Food and fuel inflation will remain a persistent economic problem. The uncertainty around how Russia`s war on Ukraine will play out this year and the war`s role in creating global instability means that the trouble on the inflation front is not over yet. The global economy is at a critical crossroads with a number of interlocking challenges and crises running in parallel. ✺ccess to our digital archives and MarketGlass Research Platform »Online interactive peer-to-peer collaborative bespoke updates ![]() » Market presence across multiple geographies - Strong/Active/Niche/Trivial »Global competitiveness and key competitor percentage market shares ![]() »Special coverage on Russia-Ukraine war global inflation easing of "zero-Covid" policy in China and its `bumpy` reopening supply chain disruptions, global trade tensions and risk of recession. ![]()
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