World Bank Investor Confidence Survey : Evidence from the Quarterly Global Multinational Enterprises Pulse Survey for the Second Quarter of 2021

As economic conditions begin to improve in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, foreign investors face new challenges that are impeding a complete recovery. Results from the latest round (Q2 2021) of World Bank Group’s quarterly pulse survey of Multi...

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Main Authors: Saurav, Abhishek, Kusek, Peter, Albertson, Mark
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/undefined/796741636359970724/World-Bank-Investor-Confidence-Survey-Evidence-from-the-Quarterly-Global-Multinational-Enterprises-Pulse-Survey-for-the-Second-Quarter-of-2021
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36581
id okr-10986-36581
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-365812021-11-18T05:10:37Z World Bank Investor Confidence Survey : Evidence from the Quarterly Global Multinational Enterprises Pulse Survey for the Second Quarter of 2021 Saurav, Abhishek Kusek, Peter Albertson, Mark MULTINATIONAL ENTERPRISE MULTINATIONAL CORPORATION GLOBAL ECONOMIC RECOVERY ENTERPRISE SURVEY INPUT COST PANDEMIC IMPACT CORONAVIRUS COVID-19 SUPPLY CHAIN LIQUIDITY INVESTMENT PLANS LABOR DEMAND EMPLOYMENT FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT FOREIGN INVESTOR As economic conditions begin to improve in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, foreign investors face new challenges that are impeding a complete recovery. Results from the latest round (Q2 2021) of World Bank Group’s quarterly pulse survey of Multinational Enterprise (MNE) affiliates suggests that despite output and demand reaching pre-pandemic levels on average, most firms are still facing adverse effects. The share of firms reporting at least one adverse impact of the pandemic continued to fall in Q2 to 73 percent compared to 93 percent in Q1 2021. Within the ten business dimensions measured, employment and investment saw the largest improvement from Q1, but new challenges are emerging. Worker productivity and liquidity have emerged, alongside input cost pressures and supply chain reliability, as areas of concern for a complete recovery. MNEs’ future investment plans have become slightly more optimistic, providing early signs of an improvement in the investment outlook. The share of surveyed MNEs expecting to increase investment over the next three years has reached a pandemic high (21 percent) – driven by changes or expected changes in regulations and policies for foreign investors as well as insourcing of production. At the same time, uncertainty remains the primary factor limiting the appetite of firms to invest. Results also show over half of surveyed firms were forced to lay off workers during the pandemic, but recruitment plans over the next three years indicate an expected net increase in workforce. MNEs are increasingly looking for highly educated workers with strong managerial, analytical, and problem-solving skills. While these survey results may not be generalizable to all developing countries, they are directionally indicative of MNEs’ experiences in developing countries. 2021-11-17T14:43:40Z 2021-11-17T14:43:40Z 2021-11-08 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/undefined/796741636359970724/World-Bank-Investor-Confidence-Survey-Evidence-from-the-Quarterly-Global-Multinational-Enterprises-Pulse-Survey-for-the-Second-Quarter-of-2021 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36581 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work Economic & Sector Work :: Investment Climate Assessment
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic MULTINATIONAL ENTERPRISE
MULTINATIONAL CORPORATION
GLOBAL ECONOMIC RECOVERY
ENTERPRISE SURVEY
INPUT COST
PANDEMIC IMPACT
CORONAVIRUS
COVID-19
SUPPLY CHAIN
LIQUIDITY
INVESTMENT PLANS
LABOR DEMAND
EMPLOYMENT
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
FOREIGN INVESTOR
spellingShingle MULTINATIONAL ENTERPRISE
MULTINATIONAL CORPORATION
GLOBAL ECONOMIC RECOVERY
ENTERPRISE SURVEY
INPUT COST
PANDEMIC IMPACT
CORONAVIRUS
COVID-19
SUPPLY CHAIN
LIQUIDITY
INVESTMENT PLANS
LABOR DEMAND
EMPLOYMENT
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
FOREIGN INVESTOR
Saurav, Abhishek
Kusek, Peter
Albertson, Mark
World Bank Investor Confidence Survey : Evidence from the Quarterly Global Multinational Enterprises Pulse Survey for the Second Quarter of 2021
description As economic conditions begin to improve in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, foreign investors face new challenges that are impeding a complete recovery. Results from the latest round (Q2 2021) of World Bank Group’s quarterly pulse survey of Multinational Enterprise (MNE) affiliates suggests that despite output and demand reaching pre-pandemic levels on average, most firms are still facing adverse effects. The share of firms reporting at least one adverse impact of the pandemic continued to fall in Q2 to 73 percent compared to 93 percent in Q1 2021. Within the ten business dimensions measured, employment and investment saw the largest improvement from Q1, but new challenges are emerging. Worker productivity and liquidity have emerged, alongside input cost pressures and supply chain reliability, as areas of concern for a complete recovery. MNEs’ future investment plans have become slightly more optimistic, providing early signs of an improvement in the investment outlook. The share of surveyed MNEs expecting to increase investment over the next three years has reached a pandemic high (21 percent) – driven by changes or expected changes in regulations and policies for foreign investors as well as insourcing of production. At the same time, uncertainty remains the primary factor limiting the appetite of firms to invest. Results also show over half of surveyed firms were forced to lay off workers during the pandemic, but recruitment plans over the next three years indicate an expected net increase in workforce. MNEs are increasingly looking for highly educated workers with strong managerial, analytical, and problem-solving skills. While these survey results may not be generalizable to all developing countries, they are directionally indicative of MNEs’ experiences in developing countries.
format Report
author Saurav, Abhishek
Kusek, Peter
Albertson, Mark
author_facet Saurav, Abhishek
Kusek, Peter
Albertson, Mark
author_sort Saurav, Abhishek
title World Bank Investor Confidence Survey : Evidence from the Quarterly Global Multinational Enterprises Pulse Survey for the Second Quarter of 2021
title_short World Bank Investor Confidence Survey : Evidence from the Quarterly Global Multinational Enterprises Pulse Survey for the Second Quarter of 2021
title_full World Bank Investor Confidence Survey : Evidence from the Quarterly Global Multinational Enterprises Pulse Survey for the Second Quarter of 2021
title_fullStr World Bank Investor Confidence Survey : Evidence from the Quarterly Global Multinational Enterprises Pulse Survey for the Second Quarter of 2021
title_full_unstemmed World Bank Investor Confidence Survey : Evidence from the Quarterly Global Multinational Enterprises Pulse Survey for the Second Quarter of 2021
title_sort world bank investor confidence survey : evidence from the quarterly global multinational enterprises pulse survey for the second quarter of 2021
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2021
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/undefined/796741636359970724/World-Bank-Investor-Confidence-Survey-Evidence-from-the-Quarterly-Global-Multinational-Enterprises-Pulse-Survey-for-the-Second-Quarter-of-2021
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36581
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