Mauro Guillén on how the pandemic is accelerating history

Mauro Guillén on how the pandemic is accelerating history

It took a global pandemic and stay-at-home orders for 1.5 billion people worldwide, but something is finally occurring to us: The future we thought we expected may not be the one we get. Below is an answer from Mauro Guillén, a professor of management at the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania. All pandemics look the same to the naked eye.