
Building an alliance to map global supply networks
An ASU expert investigates how a map of international supply connections could lay the foundation for economic analyses and policies.
In this story published Oct. 19, 2023, in Science:
Potential applications of a global supply chain map include monitoring and improved management of the green transition, reducing tax evasion and corruption, strengthening human rights through supply chain transparency, identifying and monitoring systemic risks and systemically important firms, and the design of globally secure basic provisioning systems for food and medication. Toward such ends, research has contributed to a better understanding of the functioning of supply chains yet has been constrained by data limitations.
– Thomas Choi, AT&T Professor of supply chain management and co-director of the Complex Adaptive Supply Networks Research Accelerator
Latest news
- The top US & European MBA programs with AI concentrations
W. P.
- ‘Big league’ or big illusion? Study calls time on splashy stock market anomalies
In his latest research, an ASU professor invents a stock market anomaly to expose the shaky…
- Why wealthy Americans work
An ASU economist’s research shows the affluent work not for more stuff, but for better stuff —…