McKinsey Quarterly is the business journal of McKinsey & Company.
AUGUST 2011
The CEO of a global staffing firm and a Nobel laureate economist discuss the changing face of US employment and the obstacles to job creation.
SEPTEMBER 2011
Change will require lighter balance sheets, cost cuts, and finding ways to grow safely in a more heavily regulated world.
NOVEMBER 2011
US consumers were feeling better about the economic outlook six months ago. Now they are not so sure—and they are changing the way they shop.
MAY 2011
The United States faces a future in which the elements of economic leadership are moving abroad. Reversing these trends will require the private and public sectors to collaborate.
JUNE 2011
It could take more than five years—longer than after any postwar downturn—to replace the millions of jobs lost to the 2008–09 recession. How can the US rev up its job creation engine?
MARCH 2011
The country has come a lot further than most people realize. Long-term development is the new challenge.
JULY 2010
A faster pace of economic development calls for microlevel reforms to help specific sectors and companies become more competitive in global markets.
APRIL 2011
The ability to retain and promote more women middle managers is a key point of leverage.
APRIL 2012
Global pharma companies are missing a chance to serve Brazil’s increasingly prosperous and growing middle class.
FEBRUARY 2012
To become more responsive and effective, governments are experimenting with the way they monitor services (Indonesia) and work with the private sector to expand the economy (Colombia).
JANUARY 2012
Investors want radical plans to boost ROE above the cost of capital.
The region’s prosperity depends on how its urban areas address economic and quality-of-life challenges.
JULY 2011
Chile’s president has taken a businesslike approach to recovering from an earthquake, rescuing miners, and rejuvenating his country’s economy.
The CEO of Mexico’s Grupo Bimbo reflects on the growth path of one of the world’s biggest packaged-goods companies.
America’s economic health depends on additional college-trained workers. Some universities are showing how to graduate more students at lower cost.
A pace-setting university president explains why US universities need to become more productive, and how to advance reforms.
How PT rose from the ashes of a hostile-takeover bid and then the loss of its all-important subsidiary in Brazil.
MARCH 2007
Michelle Bachelet discusses her views on the roots of political upheaval in Latin America, and the link between economic development and the fight against poverty.
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