Leadership Skills
A New Metric Yields a New Perspective
MIT Sloan Management Review’s summer 2025 issue includes articles that examine how business and society measure success.
MIT Sloan Management Review’s summer 2025 issue includes articles that examine how business and society measure success.
The widespread assumption that leaders should prioritize business growth is a factor in global environmental degradation.
The U.S. must examine its cultural ideals, in the context of its economic rivalry with China and within its own borders.
The resilient, knowledge-based economy; a COVID-19 data disaster; smart buildings; and democratized AI.
Past pandemics changed the course of history, but our knowledge economy may limit the impact of COVID-19.
COVID-19’s impact on in-person work and global value chains may slow down innovation, too.
Fifty years after Apollo 11, will commercial companies be the next big success for space activity?
Strategy experts weigh in on possible impacts of a complete U.K. separation from the European Union.
AI has driven soaring expectations and stock prices. So why has productivity growth declined?
While U.S. research efforts are rising substantially, research productivity is sharply declining.
Many countries with aging populations are also experiencing growth in their gross domestic product.
An excerpt from The Innovation Illusion contrasts expanding innovation with declining GDP.
How can the digital economy move forward when the GDP underestimates the value of digital goods and services?
As China takes center stage as an international economic powerhouse, it stands to benefit by implementing integrated reporting. Will it succeed?
After a period of remarkable growth, China now faces substantial economic and political challenges.
General Electric argues that productivity growth will increase as the industrial Internet emerges.
Logistics clusters create jobs that are difficult to move offshore and lead to economic growth.
Research shows that poor, developing countries had much slower growth in years with higher temperatures.
Innovation coupled with voluntary “limits to growth” are key to creating a more sustainable world.