Welcome to McKinsey Quarterly, the business journal of McKinsey & Company.
JANUARY 2009
Tarun Khanna says their common optimistic entrepreneurialism makes them a formidable force.
NOVEMBER 2008
The world’s great cities and the professionals who live in them are linked more tightly to one another than they are with their own rural hinterlands. Yet true prosperity starts in the countryside.
OCTOBER 2007
Executives in India are consistently the world’s most optimistic about their country’s economic prospects, McKinsey research shows.
SEPTEMBER 2005
India could be a global leader in education and financial services, to name just two possibilities, asserts the IMF's chief economist—but not until it opens up to the world.
Because it has made tremendous progress—and there's more to come.
JULY 2006
A new methodology for measuring the performance of remote providers shows that while clients are mostly satisfied, there is significant room for improvement.
MAY 2006
Romi Malhotra shares insights on recruitment, retention, and developing talent.
As competition intensifies, the industry must go global.
The country must not only produce more top-quality engineers but also show the world the depth and quality of its talent in other fields—and in cities beyond Bangalore and Mumbai.
A graphic look at India's economic progress and problems.
JANUARY 2008
Affordable care, preventive medicine, and healthy behavior must be the pillars of India’s health care reform.
Award-winning photographer Swapan Parekh portrays a workforce poised between old ways and new as it faces the challenges and opportunities of making India's economy grow.
DECEMBER 2001
AUGUST 2007
Over the next two decades, the country’s middle class will grow from about 5 percent of the population to more than 40 percent and create the world’s fifth-largest consumer market.
NOVEMBER 2006
Reducing government interference in the financial sector and strengthening its market orientation are essential to make it allocate capital efficiently and meet the needs of savers.
AUGUST 2006
A stronger financial system would make the economy grow more quickly and ensure higher tax revenues—without higher tax rates.
Demand is outstripping supply. Will the country find the reserves it needs to fuel its growth engine?
Multinationals that successfully adapt their products to India's largely untapped market will have the advantage.
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