Gartner: CFOs & CEOs Eye M&A and Sustainability For Cuts
July 25, 2022
Investments in Talent and Technology Will Be
Reduced Last
A June 2022 survey of 128 CFOs and CEOs showed that
investments in mergers and acquisitions (M&A) and sustainability will be
the first areas to face cuts in organizations feeling their margins
triple squeezed by rising inflation, talent shortages and supply
constraints, according to Gartner.
“Cuts to M&A are an obvious choice after record activity in 2021 and
with rising interest rates significantly increasing the cost of
financing such deals,” said Randeep Rathindran, vice president, research
in the Gartner Finance practice. “It’s more surprising to see
sustainability so close to the chopping block because CEOs rated it as a
top strategic priority for the first time in 2022, and ESG disclosures
are increasingly becoming enshrined in legislation.”
The survey identified the most selected areas that CEOs and CFOs will
likely cut first in the face of continued economic disruption (see
Figure 1).

Figure 1: Investment Categories to Cut First
Source: Gartner (July 2022)
Forty-six
percent of CEOs and CFOs said spending on workforce and talent
development would be the last area to cut, and 45% of respondents said
they would cut digital investments last. Technology investments are also
the least likely first cut, with just 23% of respondents placing it in
their top two.
“Despite the cost, companies are turning to digital investments to
improve efficiency and protect margins,” said Rathindran. “According to
Gartner’s 2022 FinTech Bullseye Report, companies that implement
blockchain, Internet of Things (IoT), and digital twin technologies see
improvements in reporting ability, performance optimization, and
workforce efficiency. Implementing digital in a way that boosts the
productivity of workers, assets, and working capital will be a necessity
going forward.”
Although talent and workforce development was the top pick to protect
from cuts, a third of respondents also rated it as one of first areas to
cut.
“This is likely due to differences by industry, because companies in
service-based industries are most likely to reduce their investments due
to the high proportion of labor costs,” said Rathindran. “Meanwhile,
product-based industries protect these investments as a source of
advantage, helping them to maximize human capital.”