COVID-19

The Decade of Disputes: COVID-related business disruption highlights the law of supply and demand

Download a PDF of this article

The COVID-19 pandemic has prompted a surge of supply chain disputes, according to an FTI Consulting study carried out at the end of 2020. The research sought viewpoints from over 2,700 corporate leaders of large organizations with an aggregated total global turnover of $36 trillion and employing 58 million people globally.

While business leaders started the new decade anticipating an increase in corporate disputes (see our initial Decade of Disputes report published in January 2020), COVID-19 has dramatically affected the nature of the global litigation market.  While financial services organisations, consumer goods companies and big tech businesses indicated greatest preparedness for litigation at the start of 2020, they may not have anticipated that the most common disputes of the year would arise from supply-chain disruption.

Related Articles

4th Annual Shareholder Activism State of the Market

September 8, 2025—4th Annual Shareholder Activism State of the Market Request Report The 4th Annual Shareholder Activism State of the Mark...

Use It or Lose It: U.S. Hydrogen Industry Must Act To Maintain Momentum

July 12, 2025—Key takeaway: Following the passage of the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act”, time is of the essence for hydrogen produce...

Quick Analysis: ‘One Big Beautiful Bill’ Drives More Gas and Batteries, Less Renewables

July 3, 2025—With the recent passage of the “One Big Beautiful Bill” (“OBBB” or the “Legislation”),[1] FTI Consulting’s...

FTI Consulting News Bytes – 26 June 2026

June 26, 2026—FTI Consulting News Bytes Similar to the UK weather this week, things are heating up in the tech industry – here’s w...

Global Public Affairs Newswire – 26 June 2026

June 26, 2026—Welcome to the latest instalment of FTI Consulting’s fortnightly Global Public Affairs Newswire.  This week, we bring...

ESG+ Newsletter – 25 June 2026

June 26, 2026—We open this week’s ESG+ with a look at the growing momentum behind pass-through voting, as investor appetite and ...