Events and Webinars

We run a worldwide programme of insightful conferences, roundtables, webinars and podcasts presented by our economic experts.

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Webinar
Investment and innovation opportunities from a net zero energy transition

with Felicity Hannon | Online | January 18, 2022

Achieving net zero carbon emissions by 2050 will require a radical transformation of the whole economy. But it also creates a unique opportunity to boost private investment and innovation. In this webinar Felicity will present Oxford Economics' new Net Zero Transformation scenario which explores some of the potential upside risks from the transition to net zero emissions by 2050. We assume that prevailing market inefficiencies are eliminated, and private investors grow confident that they can generate profits on green investment. This demand stimulus boosts long run productivity through improved resource allocation, reduced environmental damages and greater innovation.

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Webinar
Climate Change: Why knowing your supply chain is important

with Pete Collings | Online | December 22, 2021

COVID-19 has demonstrated the fragility of supply chains. Globalisation has seen supply chains become longer and longer, and reach the furthest corners of the world economy. Knowing where your supply chain goes is of increasing importance to not only help guard against risk, but also for companies to see the composition of their environmental footprint, and potentially take actions to change it.

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Webinar
High conviction global strategy calls for 2022

with Javier Corominas, Daniel Grosvenor and Regis Chatellier | Online | December 15, 2021

In our final webinar for the year, our strategists Javier Corominas, Daniel Grosvenor and Regis Chatellier will discuss our highest conviction calls across bonds, currencies and equities, both in DM and EM markets. 2021 has proved to be a year of twists and turns, as we moved from early to mid-cycle, reflation to stagflation concerns, amid ever present Covid-19 risks. We expect 2022 to bring challenges and increased opportunities for investors as policy differentiation takes hold and economic performance varies across markets, geographies and thus asset classes.

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Webinar
Key trends for global tourism in 2022

with Dave Goodger and Adam Sacks | Online | December 9, 2021

Tourism sectoral recovery began in earnest in mid-2021, lead by domestic activity, as travel restrictions eased following vaccination roll-out. In this session, we will describe our baseline outlook as well as major risks and emerging trends for 2022. This will include thoughts on recovery in international travel for major markets and routes, plus prospects for business and events activity as well as any risks from higher pricing.

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Webinar
Global scenarios: Supply-chain crisis

with Jamie Thompson and Chris Parfitt | Online | December 6, 2021

The global economic outlook has become less positive over the past three months and downside risks to the global economy have increased. Against this backdrop, we highlight the results from our latest global scenarios, which explore the potential fall-out from the ongoing supply-chain crisis and other key economic risks.

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Webinar
Key trends for Emerging markets in 2022

with Gabriel Sterne and Marcos Casarin | Online | December 3, 2021

We discuss the key issues that make 2022 such an important phase of EMs’ bumpy ride back to its future of a grating kind of stability. EMs will no longer be able to count on booming terms of trade and peaking external demand as tailwinds in 2022. But it is not all bad news. Inflation will fall next year, boosting fixed income returns as elevated term premia fall back. Marcos and Gabriel will pick out winners and losers from the perspective of economy and asset markets.

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Webinar
Can the strength in Australian industrial property be sustained?

with Lee Walker | Online | December 2, 2021

Industrial property across Australia’s eastern seaboard markets has been a standout performer over the last few years. In the occupancy markets, demand is strong, supercharged by pandemic related drivers. Industrial property construction is also high, but not enough to prevent a rapid reduction in vacancies, driving rental growth.

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Webinar
The future of interest rates and inflation in the eurozone

Online | December 1, 2021

We look beyond the pandemic to discuss where eurozone inflation and interest rates are heading over the next decades. The bloc’s real neutral interest rate has been on a consistent downward trend since 1980 and our analysis shows that it will remain negative for our entire forecast to 2050. This goes hand-in-hand with a weakness of eurozone aggregate demand which will depress inflation. We quantify and explain how nine secular forces are behind this, both historically and in our forecast.

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Webinar
Global Cities: The urban economic landscape in 2040

Online | November 30, 2021

The population living in the world’s 900 major cities has risen by more than 600 million over the last 20 years and we project a similar increase by 2040. But future growth trends vary significantly across the world, which will cause a further shift in the economic power of cities by 2040. In this webinar, we will present which cities are leading the race to join today’s urban superpowers at the top of the rankings, as well as other highlights from our annual Global Cities release based on new research into harmonised city definitions.

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Webinar
Africa going on the defence: Investments aimed at containing the ill effects of climate change

Online | November 29, 2021

For most African nations, climate change is a matter of adaptation and not mitigation. Containing the continent’s carbon footprint will have significant policy and investment implications, but putting up defences against an inevitable rise in temperatures will be a top priority. In this webinar we give our view on how global warming will affect African economic development and which areas of climate change adaptation and mitigation we consider to be most important in South Africa, Nigeria, Kenya, and Ghana.

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Webinar
China in 2022: key themes

Online | November 26, 2021

As China’s economy is slowing down amid a real estate downturn and its zero Covid tolerance is holding back a consumption recovery, we explore the outlook for the economy and policy next year. We discuss the key themes that we expect to characterize China’s economic developments and policy in 2022, as well as its relations with the rest of the world.

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Webinar
Scaling the great wall of trade barriers

with BIS Oxford Economics | Online | November 25, 2021

Australia's trade relationship with China has been rocky over the past year. When trade tensions first emerged, we quantified which products we saw as most vulnerable to trade barriers in China, and the data over 2021 to date have largely borne out these findings. However, Australia's overall export performance has weathered these disruptions reasonably well, with exporters on average able to pivot into alternate markets.

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Webinar
What should be an appropriate carbon price in the wake of COP26

Online | November 23, 2021

Arguably, carbon prices are currently too low and we should be pricing carbon much more aggressively. In this webinar, James Nixon will review the existing estimates and methodologies with a view to gauging how high carbon prices might need to go in order to limit global warming in line with the Paris agreement. He will also consider some of the implications and outcomes of the recent COP26 in Glasgow.

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Webinar
Eurozone key trends in 2022

Online | November 17, 2021

The eurozone economy experienced a strong recovery this year in line with our expectations, and we expect another year of strong growth in 2022, as strong consumers and corporates take over the baton for growth from governments, as policy starts to shift from emergency support towards fiscal sustainability. But the European economy faces increasing headwinds going into the winter, which means a choppy recovery at the start of the year. A resurgence of Covid cases, high inflation and supply chains problems will continue to act as headwinds in the near term, but we expect these will gradually dissipate as we move further into 2022.

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Webinar
What’s next for Emerging Markets?

Online | November 15, 2021

We will go over the key challenges and opportunities in EM for next year. In Brazil, we will take a close look at the political-fiscal-monetary interlinkages; in Russia, our Bloomberg Number 1-ranked economist will go over her main forecasts and key call on rouble; lastly in South Africa, we will focus on the public budget trajectory.

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Webinar
Climate scenarios: Oxford Economics’ methodological approach explained

Online | November 9, 2021

Topic: Following the launch of Oxford Economics’ new Global Climate Service we look forward to walking you through the methodological approach to our climate scenarios in detail. Our bespoke scenarios are modelled using new climate policy levers on the Global Economic Model (GEM). The GEM stimulates a connection across three key factors: the climate, the energy system and the global macroeconomy. The model’s enhanced framework draws on our econometric analysis of the climate damage function – a relationship between temperature and productivity - and our latest research on the economic impact of carbon pricing. Please note that we will be holding one webinar each for EMEA, Americas and APAC friendly time zones: EMEA - Tuesday 9th November| 10:00 GMT Americas - Tuesday 9th November | 16:00 EST APAC - Tuesday 9th November | 10:00 HKT

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Webinar
US Economic Outlook webinar: It ain’t stagflation, but it sure is M.E.S.S.I.

Online | November 9, 2021

Topic: The US economy has lost some luster, but demand appears resilient in the face of lingering supply-chain disruptions. With the health situation having improved considerably over the past few weeks, consumer spending is firming and high-frequency data points to an acceleration in employment growth. Still, there is no escaping the fact that limited supply and persistent inflation is weighing on activity. What should we expect from the economy, the Fed and fiscal policy in 2022? Please note that we will be repeating the same webinar to cater for the difference in time zones between Americas, APAC, and EMEA: Americas - Tuesday 9th November | 11:30 EST APAC - Wednesday 10th November | 10:00 HKT EMEA - Wednesday 10th November | 10:00 GMT

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