Black swans, gray rhinos, and silver linings: Anticipating geopolitical risks
ALOK SHARMA Chartered Accountant, IIM A
AI /GenAI focussed Finance Transformation and Practice lead- Director @ Accenture | Chartered Accountant, Process Transformation
The need for board-level strategic conversations on geopolitical risk is urgent.
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine?in February 2022 triggered more than 1,000 companies to curtail their operations in the world’s 11th biggest economy, revealing an imperative for global firms to bolster their ability to anticipate geopolitical risk and build resilience
The global order still reels from disruption related to the war in Ukraine, including those in energy, food security, supply chains, and more. A central concern among global CEOs is whether and how they will contend with additional geopolitical ruptures when they occur.
In between navigating the fallout from Europe and unfolding strategic competition in Asia, multinational corporations must also manage a host of long-tail political risks and conflicts across other geographies, including Africa and South Asia.
Even as boards and CEOs work to buildcapabilities in managing such risks?and developing geopolitical resilience, the imperative to lift one’s gaze and look around the corner has become key to strategy and performance. Scenario planning is squarely back.
The imperative to lift one’s gaze and look around the corner has become key to strategy and performance—scenario planning is squarely back.
To facilitate such reperceiving, we can follow a framework for geopolitical scenario planning that categorizes geopolitical events in three ways:?black swans,?gray rhinos,?and?silver linings.
Evolving from scanning to planning across these categories, leaders should develop lookouts as an early-warning system and full-scale contingency plans for a core subset of geopolitical risks.
The concepts “black swan” and “gray rhino” are widely known and intuitively understood by many corporate leaders.
Reperceiving with multiple lenses
In scanning for scenarios, organizations must first purposefully cast a wide net, rounding out their thinking with an appropriate mixture of internal and external perspectives.
Internal perspectives may combine expertise in the organization from country team leadership with that from internal public affairs, legal, risk, and security professionals. External perspectives may range from retaining a political risk advisory group that has an arm’s-length view; to scanning public source materials, such as the World Economic Forum’s Global Risk Report or governmental sources such as the US National Intelligence Council’s Global Trends and similar strategic assessments commissioned by EU institutions; to leveraging insights from academic, policy, media, and nonprofit arenas.
The resulting scenarios can be viewed through three lenses:
Black swans
Black swans are commonly known as unpredictable events with high impact. Notwithstanding Russia’s overt military buildup in 2021, its proceeding to a full-scale invasion of Ukraine was arguably the core case study in 2022. While black swans are inherently unpredictable, pushing one’s thinking to anticipate as wide a range of scenarios as possible is critical for sound planning and preparedness. Potential black swans could run the gamut from the political implosion of a major economy; the forcible removal of a leader or a government; a significant regional military conflict; an unprecedented climate event that results in mass casualties, waves of migration, and famine; to another pandemic.
Gray rhinos
In contrast to the unpredictable nature of black swans, gray rhinos are probable events with high impact. We see these risks out there in the distance, but we don’t clearly perceive their full dimensions. We can be sure they will charge at us, causing material damage, but we don’t know precisely when or how much. Organizations must ensure that they have a framework in place to clear out of the way of gray rhinos when they charge. Sometimes, multiple gray rhinos may stampede simultaneously, resulting in an even more appropriately termed “crash” of rhinos (as a group of rhinos is called).
Among the gray rhinos on the global radar is the risk of regional conflicts in Asia escalating amid broader strategic competition. Other imminently charging rhinos may include a major escalation in the Middle East, with cooling relationships and international and domestic pressure against specific regimes that cause an uptick in direct or proxy conflict.
Silver linings
In the maelstrom of geopolitical risks, organizations must step back and calmly assess openings and opportunities that allow them to operate in a safe zone and potentially garner competitive advantage. These “silver linings,” as we call them, can be fragile and readily blurred out by storm clouds, and yet they are within the reach of leaders who exhibit strategic courage?amid the volatility.
For example, one opening around Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has been a material disruption of Europe’s energy market and the opportunity for an accelerated renewable-energy transition, whereby Europe can potentially lead the world. Another silver lining when geopolitical tensions constrain supply chains is the emergence of pivot geographies, such as India and Vietnam, as additional opportunities for investment amid “friend shoring.”
From scanning to planning
A strategic conversation about black swans, gray rhinos, and silver linings should lead to an aligned understanding within an organization of which two to three scenarios have the most material effect on an organization. Teams supporting leadership should develop a set of clear lookouts for tracking the risk scenarios and trends, whether in a positive or a negative direction. The lookouts might include key economic, political, military, and regulatory developments.
Equipped with a targeted set of scenarios with key lookouts, we recommend narrowing down to one to two scenarios that fuse thought with action. Specifically, the organization should engage in active contingency planning on a host of dimensions that include data and networks, internet protocols, people, partnerships, repatriation of funds, and security.
领英推荐
Shape or be shaped?
Anticipating the environment that can shape an organization is critical, but many leaders we speak with also think about defining their role in shaping the geopolitical environment around them.
Indeed, CEOs increasingly expect to take positions on geopolitical matters. The need to address geopolitics is a top priority for business. The point, however, is not simply about taking a stand. Leaders within multinational corporations also are reflecting on appropriate ways to inform policy in a more polarized geopolitical environment.
The CEO of a leading Asian company, for example, shared that how his country’s national-security leadership invited him to a briefing where the central point of discussion was “which country poses the biggest threat” to their own country. He shared his bemusement at the question, saying “Armies are always searching for enemies,” but also reflected philosophically on his own role, as one of his country’s top business leaders, in informing the discussion.
As such, an organization should also consider how to employ its voice, whether through its board, CEO, public or government affairs, or business associations—and how best to inform policy makers about diligently thinking through the potential consequences of their decisions.
An organization should consider how to employ its voice and how best to inform policy makers about diligently thinking through the potential consequences of their decisions.
All the notions we thought solid, all that made for stability in international relations, all that made for regularity in the economy . . . in a word, all that tended happily to limit the uncertainty of the morrow, all that gave nations and individuals some confidence in the morrow . . . all this seems badly compromised. Never has humanity combined so much power with so much disorder, so much knowledge with so much uncertainty.
—Paul Valéry, “Historical Fact” (1932)
These words, penned in an essay nearly a century ago by French poet Paul Valéry (and excerpted from the opening of?The Art of the Long View), resonate today. Valéry was associated with the Symbolist movement in poetry, a group of late 19th-century French writers who favored imagination over realism in poetry in order to access “greater truths.”
In our era of volatility, the need for board-level strategic conversations on geopolitical risk is vital. These discussions should channel all participants’ imagination and analysis.
Doing so, of course, requires not just a compelling framework. It also demands professionals who have the trust of the leadership—and a leadership team with a common understanding of the geopolitical context. This understanding, refreshed through briefings and policy papers, enables the decision makers to think broadly, creatively, and deliberatively.
Regards, Alok
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Excerpts borrowed from Mckinsey research
MARK J. GUAY, P.C. - We Build Great Teams?
1 年Good summmary of familiar constructs (post Taleb and Wucker books) for end of year resiliency testing. I wrote a Link Artice on this topic in January, 2020 and posed several questions for directors to ask their board members.
AI /GenAI focussed Finance Transformation and Practice lead- Director @ Accenture | Chartered Accountant, Process Transformation
1 年thoughts invited