Unlocking innovation in China

Can China become a nation of innovators? Its government hopes so. It has a plan to make China an innovative society by 2020. Increased innovation, it argues, will be vital for China to move up the technological ladder to produce high-value goods and services. Indeed, homegrown innovation could be vital to solve many of China’s challenges, such as energy productivity and pollution, and to position Chinese companies competitively in the global market.

Staying the course?

In the business world, no aspect of company operations will emerge unscathed from the toughest economic crisis in three generations. But information technology (IT), and the hard-won influence that chief information officers (CIOs) and other leaders have gained for it, appears to be surviving the crisis with confidence largely intact in many if not most companies.

Brazil Unbound

Brazil has never been so popular among investors as it is now. Interest has risen steadily over the past 15 years as the country has managed to overcome one political, macroeconomic and business challenge after another. Privatisation, liberalisation, a new stable currency, the smooth handover of political power, to name but a few achievements, coupled with a boom in global demand for Brazil’s copious supplies of commodities, have boosted foreign currency earnings and fired up consumer spending. Brazil has been transformed from “country of tomorrow” to “once-in-a-lifetime opportunity”.

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