we will not see any normality in supply chains until well into 2022, expert says
Published 3 years ago • 116 plays • Length 3:15
Download video MP4
Download video MP3
Similar videos
-
2:40
cnbc supply chain survey: 61% percent say supply chain still not 'normal'
-
3:18
there are global supply chain disruptions in 'every major corner,' says allianz
-
2:54
china will continue to be no. 1 in the 'global supply chain order,' says strategist
-
6:46
natural gas supply is causing the most concern for industry and consumers: yergin
-
6:14
philips sells off, ceo blames supply chain issues for q1 sales drop
-
5:03
zaman: we're looking at the pullback in an opportunistic manner.
-
6:25
without one german product, modern civilization would collapse
-
2:44
focus on supply chain and manufacturing in expansion plans: telix pharma ceo
-
3:42
will see significant re-shoring in supply chains for first time in 30 years: expert
-
3:27
hsbc: short-term uncertainty but china's supply chain ripple effect to be limited
-
2:55
supply chains in china will be more predictable with reopening, says financial services firm
-
1:26
cnbc supply chain survey: 36 percent think inventories will normalize in second half of 2023
-
4:00
omicron covid variant 'really bad' news for global supply chain, logistics expert says
-
4:57
ai demand is still strong, it will probably exceed expectations, says bernstein's stacy rasgon
-
1:57
supply chain headwinds are 'pretty ominous' and disruptions could last into 2023, says research firm
-
2:07
supply chains are facing a 'perfect storm,' says international chamber of shipping
-
8:51
how china's covid shutdowns keep hitting global supply chains
-
1:55
every industrial company is talking about supply chain pressures, says rbc's deane dray
-
4:01
massive shift in supply chain issues from u.s.-china tensions is unlikely, says jpmorgan
-
2:31
supply chain snags: new issues creating hurdles in getting goods to consumers
-
3:06
developing economies need to be involved in enhancing global supply chains, says adb institute
-
2:58
there's been a shift in supply chains from 'just in time' to 'just in case,' says logistics firm
Clip.africa.com - Privacy-policy