THE IMPACT OF GEOPOLITICAL DISRUPTION ON FAMILY BUSINESSES

Plenary Session

Speaker: Dr Merriden Varrall

Date and time: Thursday 22 May 2025, 9:50am - 10:10am

SESSION OVERVIEW

Geopolitical volatility is creating some of the biggest challenges that family businesses face today, while also opening new opportunities.

To not only survive but thrive in the years ahead, business leaders need to understand how geopolitical disruptions will shape the challenges and opportunities for their industry.

Dr. Merriden Varrall heads the Australia Geopolitics Hub at KPMG, where she helps businesses understand and navigate the complex global geopolitical environment.

Following the economic update, Merriden will provide business-relevant insights into the evolving state of world affairs and the geopolitical impact on supply chains, trade and economic policies, competition, consumers, and markets.


SPEAKER

Dr Merriden Varrall
Partner, KPMG

Dr Merriden Varrall heads up the Australia Geopolitics Hub at KPMG, where she helps business understand and navigate the complex global geopolitical environment. She provides business-relevant insights into global, regional and local geopolitical trends and works with clients to develop strategies and solutions.

A former UN diplomat based in China, Merriden is a sought-after commentator on geopolitics, East Asia, China’s foreign policy, and Australia’s bilateral relationship with China.

From 2014-2018, Merriden was the Director of the Lowy Institute’s East Asia Program. Before joining the Institute, Merriden was the Assistant Country Director and Senior Policy Advisor at United Nations Development Programme, China, where she worked on China’s role in the world, focusing on its international development cooperation policy.

Merriden spent almost eight years living and working in China, including lecturing in foreign policy at the China Foreign Affairs University and conducting fieldwork for her doctoral research.

Merriden has a PhD examining Chinese foreign policy from Macquarie University, Sydney, and the Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam. She has a Master’s Degree in International Affairs from the Australian National University, and completed her undergraduate studies in international studies at the University of Technology Sydney. Her analyses have appeared in academic journals, as well as publications such as The Quarterly, The New York Times, Nikkei Asian Review, Foreign Policy, The East Asia Forum, and the Lowy Interpreter, among others.


all sessions

Explore all the sessions on offer at this year’s Family Business Conference: Asia-Pacific. Each session has been thoughtfully crafted to provide you with real-world tools and takeaways for navigating change in the world of family business. Featuring a range of expert keynote presentations, family business stories, interactive workshops and parallel sessions, every session is designed to equip you with strategies to navigate current challenges, embrace future opportunities, and achieve sustained success for your family business.