Avsnitt
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Listen to the live launch of the EBRD Transition Report launch.
The global shift to net zero will require major structural changes in economies, as well as extensive change in daily lives. The scale of the transition is unprecedented: from the rush to source critical raw materials to the reconfiguration of global supply chains; from the rise of green skills in the workforce to the development of environmentally sustainable housing markets.
The EBRD Transition Report 2023-24: Transitions big and small, published today, offers revealing insights into the way macro-level trends leading to carbon neutrality impact the types of job sought, household management and, ultimately, the perceived level of happiness in the regions where the Bank operates.
EBRD Chief Economist Beata Javorcik said: “The change and upheaval that stems from these trends will affect people’s lives for the foreseeable future. Policymakers will need to establish a deep understanding of those effects in order to plan future stages of the green transition, as individual attitudes will both shape and be shaped by that transition process. […]
“The success of the green transition will depend on winning their hearts and minds as we continue our journey towards a cleaner future. If there is one thing we have learned from 30 years of transition in the EBRD regions, it is that reforms will not last unless they have broad-based support.”
The discussion features
Charlotta Källbäck, Head of Internal Audit, Volvo Cars
Sandra Bates, specialist on mining and clean energy with Executive and non-Executive Director experience
Mark Keese, Head of the Skills and Employment Division, OECD
Professor Beata Javorcik, Chief Economist, EBRD
Moderated by Jonathan Charles -
Policymakers and investors need to be aware of the short and long-term challenges Ukraine faces during the war and those that the country will have to deal with in the post-war period.
This panel takes a broad look at the historical experience of war and peace and examines the impact that armed conflicts have had on economic performance and political, social and population trends, both during the wars and after they end.
This retrospective provides some indication of the sheer scale of the challenges that Ukraine has been subject to and will face during the reconstruction stage. On that basis, the panel draws conclusions that can inform policymakers’ and investors’ short- and long-term responses to those challenges.
Moderator
Jonathan Charles, Strategic Communications Consultant and Broadcaster
Speakers
Beata Javorcik, Chief Economist, EBRD
Fiona Hill, Senior Fellow - Foreign Policy, The Brookings Institution
Harold James, Professor of History, Princeton University
Thomas Kleine-Brockhoff, Guido Goldman Distinguished Scholar for Geostrategy, GMF
Peter Frankopan, Professor of Global History, Oxford University -
Saknas det avsnitt?
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The much-anticipated EBRD Regional Economic Prospects were back in the new panel discussion format for a special EBRD Annual Meeting 2023 edition. The interactive discussion covered the latest economic forecasts for the regions where the EBRD invests. EBRD Chief Economist Beata Javorcik discussed with outstanding regional experts the extraordinary challenges that policymakers are confronted with in the world of relentless inflationary pressures and repeated economic crises.
Keynote speaker
Beata Javorcik, Chief Economist, EBRD
Moderator
Jonathan Charles, Strategic Communications Consultant and Broadcaster
Speakers
Sergei Guriev, Professor of Economics, Institut d'Études Politiques
Heike Harmgart, Managing Director, Southern and Eastern Mediterranean, EBRD -
Nearly nine months after the Russian invasion, the war has seriously affected Ukraine’s economy, which is facing daunting tasks.
These tasks require collective efforts and coordination among the country’s policymakers, businesses and international community, including the EBRD. The main objective of this discussion is to bring together representatives of key stakeholders to discuss optimal policies and necessary investments to help the process of Ukraine’s stabilisation and rebuilding. -
Nearly nine months after the Russian invasion, the war has seriously affected Ukraine’s economy, which is facing daunting tasks. Macroeconomic and financial sector stability are essential for the continued functioning of the economy and maintaining the war effort. Supporting and stimulating the real economy are the key elements of its economic sustainability.
Participants:
Odile Renaud-Basso, President, EBRD
Tymofiy Mylovanov, President, Kyiv School of Economics
Torbjörn Becker, Professor of economics, Stockholm Institute of Transition Economics – SITE and CEPR
Beata Javorcik, Chief Economist, EBRD (moderator) -
This special episode in Fearonomics series looks at the economic risks of recent geopolitical turmoil.
Ths live event, where the EBRD launched their economic forecasts, analysed the impact of recent turbulence on the economic outlook, including fallout from Russia’s war on Ukraine, the energy crisis and rising inflation.
Participants:
Beata Javorcik - Chief Economist, EBRD
Sergei Guriev – Professor, Sciences Po Provost
Heike Harmgart – EBRD Managing Director, SEMED
Jonathan Charles (Moderator) - former EBRD Managing Director, Communications -
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At a time when we’re living through the highest inflation in decades, a cost of living crisis and dramatically falling rates of growth, the new Fearonomics episode looks at the cost of discrimination to the global economy.
Despite the recent advancement in the equality of rights and inclusion, 45 per cent of American workers have experienced discrimination in the past year, according to Gallup.
The World Bank’s Women, Business and the Law 2022 report states that around 2.4 billion women of working age lack equal economic opportunities and 178 countries maintain legal barriers that prevent their full economic participation.
In early 2022,the LGBTQ+ advocacy group HRC Foundation published a study showing that LGBTQ+ workers in the US earn about 90 cents for every dollar earned by a typical heterosexual worker.
Join Jonathan Charles, the EBRD’s Managing Director of Communications, Sergei Guriev, former EBRD Chief Economist and currently Professor of Economics at Science Po, and Beata Javorcik, the EBRD’s Chief Economist who is also Professor of Economics at Oxford University, to discuss how to protect the world economy’s most vulnerable groups.
Listen to the latest episode of Fearonomics on iTunes, SoundCloud or wherever you get your podcasts.
Review our podcast on iTunes or tweet us @EBRD #Fearonomics
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The new episode of the EBRD’s Fearonomics podcast looks at the most common fears around migration.
The rate of growth of displaced people in the world is alarming. A 100 million is the latest UNHCR estimate -which equals to 1 per cent of the global population.
This stark anti-record reflects the precarious state of the world we are in.
The War on Ukraine, other conflicts, human rights violations, persecutions and violence are behind the unprecedented movement of people.
At the same, as the Covid-19 restrictions are being lifted across the world, the economic migration is expected to bounce back to pre-pandemic levels.
For centuries, the world has been living with the idea that migration has to hurt us and bring the world down. But why? Why are we so afraid of migrants?
Listen to Jonathan Charles, the EBRD’s Managing Director of Communications, in discussion with Sergei Guriev, former EBRD Chief Economist and currently Professor of Economics at Science Po, and Beata Javorcik, the EBRD’s Chief Economist who is also Professor of Economics at Oxford University.
Listen to the first episode of Fearonomics on iTunes, SoundCloud or wherever you get your podcasts.
Review our podcast on iTunes or tweet us @EBRD #Fearonomics
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The new episode of the EBRD’s Fearonomics podcast explores the risks of future pandemics.
With new cases of monkeypox globally detected, the looming risks of growing anti-microbial resistance and the impact of climate crisis, is the next pandemic just around the corner?
The IMF has recently forecasted the global cost of the Covid-19 pandemic will rise beyond $12,5 trillion through 2024, fuelled by vast gaps in vaccination rates, widening divergence between rich and poor and disproportionate gender impacts.
But we have yet to suffer many of the hidden costs of the pandemic.
Such as the impact of education missed, the toll taken on mental health, the eroding of trust in governments.
Listen to Jonathan Charles, the EBRD’s Managing Director of Communications, in discussion with Sergei Guriev, former EBRD Chief Economist and currently Professor of Economics at Science Po, and Beata Javorcik, the EBRD’s Chief Economist who is also Professor of Economics at Oxford University.
Are we ready for the next pandemic?
Listen to the first episode of Fearonomics on iTunes, SoundCloud or wherever you get your podcasts.
Review our podcast on iTunes or tweet us @EBRD #Fearonomics
You can rate, review and subscribe to Fearonomics on iTunes, Spotify and Soundcloud. -
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In the new episode of the EBRD’s Fearonomics podcast Jonathan Charles, the EBRD’s Managing Director of Communications, Sergei Guriev, former EBRD Chief Economist and now Professor of Economics at Science Po, and Beata Javorcik, the EBRD’s current Chief Economist, examine the threat to our economies from inflation and whether we risk an era of stagflation.
Policymakers had to step up support for businesses and the population at large when Covid-19 was at its worse. The strain on public budgets was palpable – even before Russia’s war on Ukraine.
The latest IMF forecast sees “war-induced commodity price increases and broadening price pressures” pushing inflation in 2022 to 5.7 per cent in advanced economies and 8.7 per cent in emerging market and developing economies.
So what’s next? Destabilised financial markets? Stagflation? Is this what the future of poverty looks like?
Listen to Fearonomics on iTunes, SoundCloud or wherever you get your podcasts from.
Review our podcast or tweet us @EBRD #Fearonomics
You can rate, review and subscribe to Fearonomics on ITunes, Spotify and Soundcloud. -
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The new episode of the EBRD’s Fearonomics podcast explores the risks of rolling back globalisation.
Globalisation connected the world’s economies as never before. Cross-border trade in goods and services became a routine.
The financial crisis of 15 years ago highlighted how fast contagion can spread around the globe.
The Covid pandemic exposed how fragile supply chains can be. And now Russia’s war on Ukraine suggests that economic links can be a source of weakness, not strength.
Listen to Jonathan Charles, the EBRD’s Managing Director of Communications, in discussion with Sergei Guriev, former EBRD Chief Economist and currently Professor of Economics at Science Po, and Beata Javorcik, the EBRD’s Chief Economist who is also Professor of Economics at Oxford University.
Will the war on Ukraine – and the sanctions imposed on Russia as a result - deliver a fatal blow to the concept which has underpinned our understanding of the world economy for decades? -
Fearonomics: will global energy crisis end the shift to green?
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In its second episode the EBRD’s new Fearonomics podcast is exploring what are the risks and solutions to the global energy crisis.
Listen to Jonathan Charles, EBRD’s Managing Director, Communications, Sergei Guriev, EBRD former Chief Economist and professor of economics at Science Po and Beata Javorcik, EBRD’s Chief Economist (current) and also professor of Economics at Oxford University discussing
As Europe scrambles to find alternatives to Russian gas, some countries face the prospect of rationing and even fuel poverty.
Energy security, which had slipped down the priority lists of western policymakers, has made a big come back.
Even before the outbreak of the war on Ukraine, the hike in energy prices had brought coal use globally to record levels over last winter, whilst clean energy use decreased- a worrying tendency.
Meanwhile, the latest UN International Panel for Climate Change report warning that even if all the policies to cut carbon that governments had put in place by the end of 2020 were fully implemented, the world will still warm by 3.2C this century.
The next few years are critical, say the researchers, because if emissions aren't curbed by 2030, it will make it become impossible to limit warming up of climate.
Is there any way to avoid the climate catastrophy?
Listen to the first episode of the Fearonomics on iTunes, SoundCloud or wherever you get your podcasts from.
Review us podcast on iTunes or tweet us @EBRD #Fearonomics
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In its first episode Fearonomics: can we fix the looming food crisis? Jonathan Charles, EBRD’s Managing Director, Communications, will be discussing the most pressing issues with Sergei Guriev, EBRD former Chief Economist and professor of economics at Science Po and Beata Javorcik, EBRD’s Chief Economist (current) and also professor of Economics at Oxford University.
They will explore a wide range of economic fears from global famine to energy security and the death of globalisation.
In its first episode Fearonomics will be exploring whether the looming food crises is avoidable.
Even before the war on Ukraine and the pandemic according to the United Nation’s Food and Agriculture Organisation, 690 million people or 9% of the world’s population, were already facing food insecurity and hunger.
Now with Food Price Index reaching highest levels of all time, the consequences could be stark: from price hikes to social riots.
Is there any way to avoid the catastrophe?
Listen to the first episode of the Fearonomics on iTunes, SoundCloud or wherever you get your podcasts from.
Review us podcast on iTunes or tweet us @EBRD #Fearonomics -
System upgrade: Delivering the digital dividend
Our report explores how advanced digitalisation has affected the economies where we invest.
The digitalisation process is destined to continue and will remain one of the key forces shaping developments around the world – including in the EBRD regions. It is therefore quite fitting that this year’s Transition Report is devoted to that subject. It explores the size of the digital divides in EBRD countries, the digital infrastructure and its link to firm performance, teleworking, artificial intelligence and the labour force as well as fintech and banks in transition. The report also introduces a financial market development index, and features the regular analysis of structural reform.
Speakers:
Toomas Hendrik Ilves is an Estonian politician who served as the fourth president of Estonia from 2006 until 2016.
Daron Acemoğlu is an MIT Institute Professor of Economics.
Dina Matta is the EBRD Vice President, Chief Transformation Officer.
Oleksandr Bornyakov is Deputy Minister at the Ministry of Digital Transformation of Ukraine.
Beata Javorcik is the EBRD Chief Economist and Professor of Economics at the University of Oxford. -
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COP26, or the 2021 United Nations Climate Change Conference, will bring international stakeholders together to accelerate action towards the goals of the Paris Agreement and the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change. It takes place next month in Glasgow.
The stake are very high, as the climate emergency, highlighted in the IPCC report from earlier this year, requires urgent and decisive action from the world’s governments.
The climate emergency cannot remain an abstract notion but must become a strong driver of macroeconomic policy if we are to avoid the “hell of earth,” the report concluded.
Our COP 26 special EconTalk gathered experts in the field to discuss climate action, the obstacles to achieving net-zero, and the social and economic implications of a Just Transition.
Join Jonathan Charles, EBRD Managing Director for Communications, in conversation with:
Professor Mike Spence, a Nobel Laureate in Economic Sciences (2001). He is also a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution and the Philip H. Knight Professor Emeritus of Management in the Graduate School of Business at Stanford University.
Jean Pisani-Ferry, a non-resident senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics. He holds the Tommaso Padoa-Schioppa Chair of the European University Institute in Florence and is a senior fellow at Bruegel.
Beata Javorcik, EBRD Chief Economist and Professor of Economics at the University of Oxford.
The discussion was opened by a special address from Odile Renaud-Basso, EBRD President.
Like what you hear? Review our podcast on iTunes or tweet us @EBRD #EBRDEconTalks. -
Robots v Covid-19: the future of work?
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“Telecommuting”, “quaranteams”, “doomscrolling”, “upperwear” and curating one’s Zoom background have all become a part of our new remote working reality. If we were unnerved by the way digital technology was transforming our world before the pandemic, Covid-19 has only made the speed of change even faster,
It is estimated that in the next five years close to 85 million jobs may be displaced by algorithms, artificial intelligence and robotics.
According to the World Economic Forum Jobs Report 2020, “automation, in tandem with the COVID-19 recession, is creating a ‘double-disruption’ scenario for workers. Technological adoption by companies will transform tasks, jobs and skills by 2025. Time spent on current tasks at work by humans and machines will become equal.”
The report also estimate that 97 million new roles may emerge as the new division of labour between humans, machines and algorithms emerges.
Our presenters Jonathan Charles and Kerrie Law discuss what the Covid-19 transformation means to the future of work in the latest episode of our podcast Pocket Dilemmas. They are joined by:
Jason Furman, the Aetna Professor of the Practice of Economic Policy jointly at Harvard Kennedy School (HKS) and the Department of Economics at Harvard University. He is also a nonresident senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics,
Beata Javorcik, our Chief Economist and Professor of Economics, University of Oxford.
Is the future of work already here? What is a bigger threat to our future: Covid-19 or robots? All of this and more in our latest podcast.
Like what you hear? Review our podcast on iTunes, email us at [email protected], or tweet us @EBRD #EBRDdilemmas
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With the 26th UN Climate Change Conference of the Parties (COP 26) scheduled for November, governments are under growing pressure to meet their national commitments to decarbonise.
Green transition at scale will require a lot of collaboration and, in a global economy still in the throes of the coronavirus pandemic, finance will have a key role to play in ‘building back better’ and ‘building back greener’.
For instance, one proposal as to how to fund a green recovery from Covid-19 is through carbon taxation. It can change the status quo by encouraging investments in innovation and climate friendly technologies. But without inclusive policies addressing existing inequalities it risks making the poor poorer.
The Governor of the Banque de France, François Villeroy de Galhau, recently called for a decarbonisation of trillions of euros worth of corporate bonds.
But how realistic it is for already struggling firms and industries to survive new heftier taxes?
This and many other questions are discussed in our latest episode of Pocket Dilemmas podcast, where Kerrie Law and Jonathan Charles are joined by:
* EBRD’s Director of Research Ralph de Haas
* Associate Professor of Economics at Imperial College London, Ralf Martin
Can finance reduce pollution during the Covid-19 crisis? Listen to our latest episode.
Read research papers related to the subject:
Like what you hear? Review our podcast on iTunes, email us at [email protected], or tweet us @EBRD #EBRDdilemmas
You can rate, review and subscribe to Pocket Dilemma on ITunes, Spotify and Soundcloud, or wherever you get your podcasts. -
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On the 15 April 1991, the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development opened its doors for business for the first time.
It was conceived by its founders as ‘a new and unique structure of co‑operation’ for a continent still recovering from the shock of the collapse of communism.
Its mission then, as now, was to further progress towards market-oriented economies and promote private and entrepreneurial initiative.
So, at the age of 30, how is the EBRD doing? What are the challenges for its future? What has the EBRD taught some of its former staff?
This special discussion brought together four EBRD Chief Economists, past and present, who shared their insights into the Bank and its influence on the countries where it works, global development and the world of international financial institutions.
The inaugural Chief Economist of Asian Infrastructure and Investment Bank, Erik Berglof, talked about the technical banking skills which are unique to the EBRD as well as its knowledge of its regions. These are particularly important as the Bank helps them overcome the impact of the Covid-19 crisis.
“Technical skills, structuring projects, infrastructure or financial… All those skills we assume in the models, but when you live with them on a daily basis…, it is both humbling and reassuring,” he said.
“At this point most economies are still on life support. Nobody knows what the real state of the economy is… Then we will see the first firms fighting for survival. And the true test will be: will the firms close to the governing elites be bailed out?,” said the current EBRD Chief Economist Beata Javorcik in a stark warning of the challenges ahead.
Lord Stern, IG Patel Professor of Economics and Government and Chairman of the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment stressed some positives that the coronavirus pandemic has brought about, such as people being less averse to change and a unified willingness to build back better.
Sergei Guriev, now Professor of Economics at Science Po in Paris, highlighted the importance of digitalisation for inclusive recovery, especially when some of the EBRD regions enjoy only partial internet coverage.
The discussion was joined by EBRD President Odile Renaud-Basso and chaired by EBRD Communications Managing Director Jonathan Charles.
Like what you hear? Review our podcast on iTunes or tweet us @EBRD #EBRDEconTalks. -
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The Multilateral development banks were set up after the Second World War to be the original impact investors, fighting poverty, inequality or more currently climate change.
“To demonstrate our impact is crucial at a time where multilateralism is often challenged, when there is a tendency to think that, we are more effective when we work at a country level than at the global level. And I think that the ability to show that and acting in this mutual framework is helpful to deliver some impacts on values because we are building on a very good experience,” said EBRD President Odile Renaud-Basso during the opening of the digital discussion.
Now more than ever, the MDBs have a very important role to play. The Covid-19 recovery will not be easy. The climate emergency is here. Furthermore, the national governments are dealing with growing mountains of debt.
How can we ensure that multilateral lending is effective to help the world emerge from this crisis? What is “iwashing” and the difficulty of attribution were all discussed by:
Dean Karlan is the Frederic Esser Nemmers Distinguished Professor of Economics and Finance at Northwestern University and President and Founder of Innovations for Poverty Action
Pavan Sukhdev is an environmental economist, banker, former Special Adviser and Head of UNEP's Green Economy Initiative, currently CEO of GIST Advisory, and President of WWF International;
Beata Javorcik- EBRD’s Chief Economist and Professor of Economics at Oxford University.
The discussion was chaired by EBRD Communications Managing Director Jonathan Charles.
Like what you hear? Review our podcast on iTunes or tweet us @EBRD #EBRDEconTalks. - Visa fler