COVID-19

Published Date
April 01, 2020
Source
Supply Chain Management Review
Description

The army is made up of distributors’ employees, fulfillment center personnel, logistics planners, pallet manufacturing crews, procurement professionals, transportation brokers, truck drivers, truck stop attendants, warehouse workers, wholesalers, and countless other specialists.

Source
Small Business News
Edition and Date

March 30, 2020

생존 모드로 전환하고 있는 기업들은 지금 어떻게 하면 가장 건강한 비즈니스 성과를 얻을 수 있을까에 대해 생각해야 한다. 각국이 문을 닫고 주식시장이 무너지고 경제활동이 위축되면서 단기간 내에 코로나바이러스 사태가 마무리될 수 있을 것이라는 예측은 이제 믿기 어려워져 버렸다. 

{Originally published in the Wall Street Journal}

Source
Daily Beast
Edition and Date

March 29, 2020

What experts and officials are saying about the national food supply chain. “It’s a several-weeks process. The supply chain takes time to catch up,”- Professor Yossi Sheffi

Source
Bloomberg
Edition and Date

March 27, 2020

MIT Professor Yossi Sheffi speaks with Bloomberg's Scarlet Fu and Romaine Bostick on the collapse of the food supply chain from the coronavirus (Source: Bloomberg)

Source
Vice News
Edition and Date

March 27, 2020

Fear of lawsuits and red tape are keeping them out of the hands of American frontline medical workers.

Source
PHYS.org
Edition and Date

March 26, 2020

From the U.S. perspective, it depends what those goods are, according to MIT supply chain expert Yossi Sheffi. While nothing is certain, the availability of food is less of a concern in the U.S., in supply-chain terms, while access to medical supplies is a much more problematic issue.

Source
WCVB Channel 5 News
Edition and Date

March 24, 2020

Dr. Yossi Sheffi, at MIT, weighs in on supply chain shortages caused by COVID-19 and what we can expect moving forward.

Source
CNBC
Edition and Date

March 23, 2020

Once pandemic ends, businesses may take 6 months to get up and running normally, says CFO survey. The biggest task facing the world right now is stopping the spread of the coronavirus. But even when the global public health crisis is under control and global supply chain disruptions caused by COVID-19 end, many large companies expect that business will not return to normal for between three to six months.

Source
Channel News Asia: Commentary
Edition and Date

March 21, 2020

During this coronavirus outbreak, industries must find ways to make better use of idle resources to fight the virus, says the Financial Times’ Tim Harford.

Source
Bloomberg
Edition and Date

March 20, 2020

The Covid-19 crisis has reminded many in the U.S. of the dark days after Sept. 11. It is swiftly coming to resemble those after Pearl Harbor, when a Japanese attack drove a reluctant nation into World War II.