Europe has been widely criticised for its slow response to the covid-19 pandemic. Christine Lagarde, president of the European Central Bank, discusses the long-term damage and whether things might have been different had there been more female leaders.
Chapter titles
00:00 - Covid-19 in Europe
00:52 - How covid-19 worsens inequality
03:35 - Why female leaders have performed better
05:10 - How to have more female leaders
06:38 - Europe’s stimulus & economic recovery
08:29 - Central banks & digital currencies
Further content:
Listen to more of this webinar in an episode of The Economist Asks podcast: [ Ссылка ]
Sign up to The Economist’s daily newsletter to keep up to date: [ Ссылка ]
Find all of our coverage of covid-19: [ Ссылка ]
See our data tracking the coronavirus across Europe: [ Ссылка ]
How covid-19 threatens Europe’s success at fighting inequality: [ Ссылка ]
Why gender equality in Europe is still a long way off: [ Ссылка ]
See our most recent glass ceiling index: [ Ссылка ]
Covid-19 school closures are widening Europe’s class divisions: [ Ссылка ]
Why Europe has fallen behind on covid-19 vaccination: [ Ссылка ]
Europe’s delays in covid-19 vaccine delivery are causing tempers to flare: [ Ссылка ]
Introducing The Jab—a new podcast about the world’s vaccination roll-out: [ Ссылка ]
How Europe is dodging responsibility for its vaccine fiasco: [ Ссылка ]
Will covid-19 vaccines work against new variants of the virus? [ Ссылка ]
There will be enough vaccines for all—but only if rich countries share: [ Ссылка ]
Germany’s economic prospects for this year have darkened: [ Ссылка ]
Read about Covid-19 and repression in Turkey: [ Ссылка ]
How the lockdown has helped Greece to digitise: [ Ссылка ]
Will central-bank digital currencies break the banking system? [ Ссылка ]
Why European banks need new chiefs: [ Ссылка ]
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