Toronto, Jan 28 (IANS) With their worst fears of a prolonged recession over, CEOs worldwide are now confident about growth bouncing back, PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) said in its annual global survey here Wednesday.
The survey found that 81 per cent of CEOs worldwide were confident about growth for the next 12 months. Only 19 percent were pessimistic about the return of growth. Thirteen percent CEOs went on to say that the global recovery has actually begun.
But amazingly 67 percents CEOs in China said that the recovery actually began in 2009 itself.
"The fears of a global economic meltdown have receded and CEOs are more upbeat about their prospects,'' said Chris Clark, CEO and senior partner of PwC, said in a statement here.
"However CEO confidence is tempered by the slow pace of recovery and the fragile state of the economy,'' he said.
The survey said the rising confidence is reflected in proposed fresh recruitments, with nearly 40 percent of CEOs saying they will increase their staffing this year.
In Canada and Asia Pacific, about half of CEOs are looking to increase employment in 2010, and this figure jumps to over 60 percent in Brazil.
On the other hand, only 25 percent CEOs said they might cut jobs over the next year, down half from those who cut staff in the past 12 months, the survey said.
As reflected by the much better performance of the Canadian economy as compared to other G8 economies, the survey found Canadian CEOs much more optimistic about short- and long-term growth than their counterparts elsewhere.
"Canadian CEOs are more optimistic than their peers in other developed nations, as many of them managed through the recession while keeping an eye to the investments needed to sustain their organizations over the longer term,'' Clark said.
As against 81 percent CEOs worldwide, 87 percent CEOs in Canada said they were confident about future prospects.