CEOs of big US companies are increasingly expecting to end hybrid work setups in the next few years, according to KPMG US.
Confidence among company bosses in Northern Ireland has soared in the past year, a new survey suggests. The annual CEO ...
"The challenge is that soft landings are rare and as much about luck as skill," says KPMG's Diane Swonk, who expects the Fed ...
A lower policy rate should translate to cheaper borrowing costs for most kinds of loans while, on average, paychecks are now ...
Companies forcing staff back into the office full-time are “dinosaurs” who wrongly believe their staff are “snowflakes”, ...
Almost eight in 10 CEOs expect all office workers on hybrid schedules will return to working in person five days a week by ...
KPMG CEO Andrew Yates has revealed some of the big economic pressures that chief executives are currently feeling at the ...
KPMG Australia aims to have half its consulting work done out by lower-cost workers based in Australia and overseas and ...
The much-anticipated rules exclude Scope 3 emissions, which make up the bulk of a firm’s carbon footprint. A separate ...
KPMG Australia said it has launched a dedicated Microsoft Dynamics 365 technology implementation practice in Western ...
It found that 72% of Australian CEOs do not believe Gen AI will have an impact on staff levels. "I am encouraged to see that ...
Insolvency was known for an aggressive approach of “kicking down doors, banging tables”. That’s changed, and now there’s a ...