Special reports
Shaken structures
The future of banking
Special reports -
Imagining a world without banks
- The future of banking: A future with fewer banks
- Banks v big tech: How fintech will eat into banks’ business
- Debt v equity: A bigger role for venture capital
- Low interest rates: When interest rates turn negative
- Public v private money: When central banks issue digital money
- Monetary sovereignty: Will the dollar stay dominant?
- Money on my mind: A brave new world for banks
- Sources and acknowledgments
Banks v big tech
How fintech will eat into banks’ business
Bankers, once kings of capital, may be dethroned by payment platforms
Low interest rates
When interest rates turn negative
Banks do less banking with interest rates at zero
Public v private money
When central banks issue digital money
Will banks survive the transition to a new monetary system?
Monetary sovereignty
Will the dollar stay dominant?
Digital money may pose a new threat to dollar hegemony
Money on my mind
A brave new world for banks
The transition from banking may make financial services cheaper, quicker and fairer. But it will threaten privacy and sovereignty and expand the role of state
Previous report
Labour gains
The future of work
Special reports -
Workers the world over have had a torrid year. But the future is bright, argues Callum Williams
- The future of work: A bright future for the world of work
- The shock: Labour markets are working, but also changing
- Essential workers: The biggest losers from covid-19
- Home working: The rise of working from home
- Automation: Robots threaten jobs less than fearmongers claim
- Government policy: Changing central banks—and governments
- Flexicurity: The case for Danish welfare
- How to think about work: Pessimism about the labour market is overdone