Policy uncertainty has become a defining feature of the contemporary corporate environment. Elections, trade disputes, geopolitical realignments, and rapidly shifting regulatory regimes force firms across industries and geographies to reconsider how they govern themselves and how they manage relationships with employees, stakeholders, and the broader institutional environment. This paper examines how corporations restructure their governance strategies in response to policy uncertainty, with particular attention to the trust deficits that emerge within organizations during periods of regulatory volatility. Drawing on resource dependence theory, institutional theory, and agency theory, the paper traces how uncertainty affects corporate decision-making, board composition, risk governance, and internal communication structures. Real-world examples from firms operating under Brexit-related disruption, geopolitical trade tensions, and pandemic-era regulatory flux illustrate the mechanisms through which governance changes occur. The paper concludes with a set of practical advisories for workplace managers who must maintain functional, trust-based work environments even when the external policy landscape is unstable.
Yusuf Ahmed Al Binali (Sun,) studied this question.