In The News

Farok Contractor April 20, 2009
In the past, adversarial competition and in-house design and production typified the climate and model for business success. Today, that climate has changed, according to management professor Farok Contractor. Cooperation and networks are the new tools for success in the global economy for a whole host of reasons. First, many projects are so large that one company cannot possibly shoulder the...
Louis Uchitelle April 16, 2009
A steel town whose factories are idled is not likely to welcome steel pipe from India in its backyard. And from the citizens’ initial reactions in an Illinois town, it’s not hard to see how a grassroots protectionist campaign could find strong support. But, as this article details, the issues are much more complex. First, the US has been importing 20 percent or more of its steel needs for the...
John M. Glionna March 25, 2009
Many analysts predicted problems with excessive debt and sub-prime mortgages in the US, but few expected that the woes would rapidly spill over into the world’s most successful companies. The global economic recession hits hard at company towns like Toyota City in Japan: “Unlike in Detroit, where years of steady decline preceded the current financial crisis, Toyota City's fortunes went from...
Nayan Chanda March 17, 2009
Throughout history, global crises have disrupted trade, immigration and other activities that connect far corners of the world and promote wealth. Modern-day governments in wealthy, developed countries had assumed that their institutions, regulations, stockpiles and systems would secure against problems emerging elsewhere in the world. “The acceleration of transport and communication, and reduced...
David Barboza March 10, 2009
The world’s largest economy that once thrived on consumption took a sudden turn to thriftiness. But a global slowdown in spending has hurt factory towns in China that once packed US closets at low prices. Thousands of workers have lost jobs and two out of every three textile and apparel factories in China could go out of business, reports David Barboza for the New York Times. “Experts say that...
Dinesh C. Sharma March 9, 2009
As economic crisis sweeps the globe, citizens expect their political leaders to create jobs, but it leads to other problems in the process. For example, in the US, President Barack Obama has vowed to end “tax breaks” for companies that ship jobs overseas, causing consternation among some in the Indian IT industry. Indian IT provides services to financial, banking and insurance firms around the...
Ernesto Zedillo March 9, 2009
Protectionism could derail all the efforts applied on the fiscal and monetary fronts to address the ongoing global crisis, suggests Ernesto Zedillo, director of the Yale Center for the Study of Globalization. In an essay for a new ebook published by VoxEU he writes, “Despite the multitude of statements against protectionism made by leaders and their finance and trade ministers in recent months,...