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BEIJING, April 1, 2021 /PRNewswire/ With the COVID-19 vaccine being rolled out, many local and national governments are assessing how to safely reopen their economies while curtailing the number of positive cases. Professor of Economics, Zhong Ling, at the Cheung Kong Graduate School of Business (CKGSB) has developed a model framework which takes into account multiple epicenters that allows policymakers to simulate outcomes and guide reopening strategies. The model could offer policymakers the tools to quantitatively assess reopening policies prior to implementation. Dr. Zhong s research paper, A Dynamic Pandemic Model Evaluating Reopening Strategies amid COVID-19, was published in The Public Library of Science ONE (PLOS ONE).
New Study Finds Female Executives More Resilient Than Male Executives
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BEIJING, March 8, 2021 /PRNewswire/ A new study conducted by the Cheung Kong Graduate School of Business s Associate Professor of Organizational Behavior, Zhang Xiaomeng, reveals that top Chinese women executives show higher levels of psychological resilience during the pandemic compared to their male counterparts. At the start of the Covid-19 outbreak, Zhang undertook what turned out to be a year-long research project looking at the psychological resilience among top business leaders by surveying 8,800 Chinese executives on their level of anxiety and depression.
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BEIJING, Jan. 15, 2021 /PRNewswire/ Positive investor sentiment across the board underscores China s undeniable success in controlling the spread of Covid-19. The latest Cheung Kong Graduate School of Business Investor Sentiment Survey (CKISS) 2020 Q4 data reflects survey responses from 2,500 individual and institutional investors, who feel more optimistic towards China s financial markets including China s real estate and the US-China trade war. Respondents were more optimistic about A-shares than in the previous quarter, with 67.5% expecting increases to A-share prices, an increase of 9 percentage points (pp) compared to the previous quarter.
Investor sentiment is also more optimistic towards Hong Kong share prices with 50% of respondents expected a rise, representing an increase of 15pp compared to the previous quarter. This optimism stems from confidence in the fundamental factors that underlay growth, and the controllability of risks.