
Consulting Research Digest — May 2026
New research from McKinsey, BCG, Accenture, and Deloitte this month, grouped by theme: AI and work, finance and wealth, consumer strategy, healthcare, and operations. Key thesis and data points for each report.

리서치 브리프
A roundup of new research from McKinsey, BCG, Accenture, and Deloitte published this month, organized by theme. Each entry covers the central argument and the numbers that matter.
AI and the future of work
McKinsey Global Institute — Agents, robots, and us: How AI reshapes work and skills in Europe (May 12)
MGI's Europe report on AI, agents, and workforce skills. 1
MGI's latest Europe-focused labor study argues that AI will not hollow out the workforce so much as restructure how skills get used. The headline finding: most skill categories will remain in demand, but the way people deploy them — increasingly in collaboration with intelligent machines — will change substantially. 1
Accenture — The age of co-intelligence
Accenture frames human-AI collaboration as a new economic unit. The report claims measurable gains when organizations pair employees with AI systems rather than substituting one for the other, and explicitly calls out the gap: only 11% of companies currently have the infrastructure to run effective "co-learning" — a sustained process of humans and AI systems adapting to each other over time. 2
Deloitte — Business and IT leaders report AI agents are scaling faster than their guardrails
Deloitte's enterprise survey puts a number on the governance gap that AI practitioners have been describing in qualitative terms: only 21% of multinational organizations have mature governance frameworks in place for agentic AI risks. The implication is that most AI deployment is outrunning the oversight structures meant to contain it. 3
Deloitte — Tech Trends 2026
Deloitte's annual technology forecast argues that 2026 marks a transition from experimentation to value delivery. The five trends the report identifies center on implementation discipline — the same tools that were "pilots" twelve months ago are now expected to produce measurable outcomes or get cut. 3
Finance and wealth management
BCG — 2026 Global Wealth Report: The Great Reordering (May 27)
BCG's flagship wealth report identifies a divergence in global financial wealth: markets that can generate wealth at scale are separating from those dragged down by political and macroeconomic uncertainty. The framing — "reordering" rather than "growth" or "contraction" — reflects a view that money is moving between markets more than it is being created or destroyed. 4
BCG — 2026 Global Wealth Report: AI and the new economics of wealth management (May 27)
A companion chapter to the main wealth report focuses on how AI is widening the gap between two business models in wealth management: practices built on repeatable, standardized advice, and those built on complex, trust-driven client relationships. AI advantages the second type more than the first, according to BCG's analysis — a counter-intuitive finding given that automation typically favors standardized processes. 4
BCG — 2026 Global Wealth Report: The Succession Reckoning (May 27)
A third chapter in the same series addresses intergenerational wealth transfer, which BCG describes as the largest in history. The argument is that this transfer will reshape both family businesses and the wealth management industry across multiple generations. 4
McKinsey — Global Banking Annual Review 2026: Precision with speed (May 21)
McKinsey's 2026 Global Banking Annual Review. 1
McKinsey's annual banking review says 2025 continued the industry's strong run and identifies a structural shift in customer ownership as the defining challenge ahead. The review's argument is that AI is pushing banks to become "multi-speed organizations" — capable of running mature, slow-changing operations and fast-moving AI deployments simultaneously. 1
Accenture — Top banking trends for 2026
Accenture's banking outlook focuses on three forces reshaping customer experience and growth: agentic AI (AI systems that act autonomously on behalf of customers), "intelligent money" (AI-managed financial products), and intensifying competitive pressure from non-bank entrants. 2
Deloitte — US Economic Forecast Q1 2026
Deloitte's quarterly U.S. outlook holds that AI investment can support near-term GDP growth, but flags that non-AI companies and households face meaningful headwinds from geopolitical friction and uncertainty. The Q1 read separates "AI-adjacent" economic actors from the broader economy, which is a useful analytical frame for understanding the divergence in corporate earnings this year. 3
Consumer and growth strategy
BCG — What Gen Z wants — and why it should inspire you (May 27)
BCG's consumer research identifies three behavioral patterns that Gen Z uses to reshape markets, with implications for brand strategy beyond that age cohort. The report argues that simplifying Gen Z to a set of cultural stereotypes misses the structural ways this cohort is changing purchasing behavior. 4
BCG — AI Isn't Keeping CEOs Up at Night — and That Could Be a Problem (May 27)
BCG's executive survey finds that CEOs are not treating AI as a primary source of strategic anxiety, even as AI accountability pressure increases. The report frames this as a risk-recognition gap — not that AI is unimportant, but that the accountability questions arriving in boardrooms have not yet translated into the same urgency as operational pressures. 4
Accenture — Growth in the age of AI
Accenture's growth strategy research puts a market-size figure on the AI realignment: $27 trillion in market opportunity will flow to companies with what the report calls "value leader" characteristics. Six behaviors are identified as the differentiators, centered on faster monetization and AI-enabled innovation velocity. 2
McKinsey — Five steps to turning geopolitical volatility into an advantage (May 19)
McKinsey's geopolitics practice argues that trade-flow disruptions and shifting strategic priorities create an opening for CEOs who can read the landscape early and reallocate capital before competitors do. The report is less about predicting geopolitical outcomes than about building the organizational muscle to act quickly when the picture becomes clear. 1
Healthcare
McKinsey — How provider-led health plans can succeed in commercial insurance (May 20)
Provider-led health plans in commercial insurance. 1
McKinsey's healthcare practice sizes the commercial group insurance opportunity for provider-led health plans at over $20 billion in potential revenue and $700 million in operating profit currently sitting uncaptured. Provider-led plans hold a small share of commercial group insurance today; the report's argument is that clinical integration advantages, if structured correctly, can close that gap. 1
Accenture — Reinventing biopharma from lab to line
Accenture's biopharma report argues that manufacturing — long treated as a back-office function — is becoming a source of competitive differentiation. The thesis is that production capabilities are now a factor in speed-to-market and regulatory positioning, not just cost management. 2
Operations and supply chain
Accenture — Turning the supply chain talent shortage into strength
This report quantifies a coming workforce gap in U.S. supply chain: demand for core roles is projected to grow 19% by 2035, while labor supply will grow only 3.2%, creating a shortfall of approximately 1 million workers. Accenture argues that talent strategy needs to be elevated to a C-suite priority now, before the gap becomes a supply chain constraint. 2
McKinsey Global Institute — Ramping up manufacturing in America (May 21)
MGI's U.S. manufacturing study asks how large a production expansion is needed to meaningfully reduce American trade dependence. The report does not argue for or against the policy goal; it calculates the scale of the industrial buildout required, which serves as a useful baseline for evaluating current industrial policy proposals. 1
Bain & Company's latest publications were not accessible via web crawl this month. BCG's data on the 2026 Global Wealth Report series reflects summaries from BCG's publications page, not the full reports. Deloitte's reports listed above are drawn from the Deloitte US thinking hub.
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