Engineers unite at GM

“Ten years ago, we were much more regionally based,” says Mary Barra, vice-president of global HR at GM, a US-based automaker. Now the company is benefiting from a strong push towards global integration. The objectives are saving money, responding faster to the market, speeding up the innovation process and producing better cars. How does the company operate globally?

Housing and education

The secret to successful urban schools is housing, argues Megan Sandel, principal investigator at Children’s Health Watch.

Teaching teachers

One of India’s great economic advantages is the relative youth of its population. By 2020 it will become the world’s youngest country, with 64% of its people at working age. To make the most of this democratic dividend, India’s children need to be educated.

Improving livelihoods in China: The challenges

How can China sustain economic growth and generate more resources to improve livelihoods?

Higher education – What’s it worth?

As university graduates box up their caps and gowns for the summer and embark on the world of work, they might be surprised to learn that senior executives value a diploma far less than skills or contacts.

Tomorrow’s workforce

I recently interviewed Charles Tilley, chief executive of the Chartered Institute of Management Accountants (CIMA), about the changing skills required of graduates to meet business needs.

HR bypass

When Ken Allen first took charge of DHL Express in 2009, the company had lost €3bn in seven years. The first step back from the brink was to pull out of the intra-US express delivery market and focus on international services.

The missing piece in the SME puzzle?

With the growing complexity of technology – and the speed, evolution and nature of new ways of working – there is a growing chasm amongst small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) between those on board the technology express and those with their heads buried in the sand waiting for the storm to pass.

For Folk's Sake

When Obama talked of 'working folks' and 'folks coming here legally' in his latest state of the union address it signalled the US president's return to one of his favourite terms of address. The word 'folk' was notably missing from his second inauguration speech in January, but had been previously used with such abandon during the re-election campaign that it became an object of comment for more than one political watcher.

The secrets of Asia's education success

In our recently published global education index – one component of The Learning Curve programme of research – three Asian nations (South Korea, Japan and Singapore) and one territory (Hong Kong) take four of the top five places. (Finland occupies the pole position.) Why, we ask in an accompanying article, are Asian nations such strong education performers?

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