Balancing the shift of power

Martin Wheatley, former head of the FSA, warns against oversimplifying the rise of Asia and discusses its many complexities.

Government Address

As part of The High-Growth Markets Summit 2011, Juan Carlos Echeverry, Minister of Finance and Public Credit, Government of Colombia, gives his address speaking about how politics will shape future global growth.

Opening Keynote: The High-Growth Markets Summit 2011

As part of The High-Growth Markets Summit 2011, in this video Jin Liqun, Chairman of the Board of Supervisors of the China Investment Corporation, gives the opening keynote address.

The CFO Summit panel - Opportunities in emerging markets

In this panel, part of The CFO Summit 2010, the speakers discussed issues associated with M&A targets, joint-venture partners, financial/tax/legal risk, and the transparency issues associated with operating in emerging markets.

New routes to the Middle East

Report Summary

For centuries, trade has been integral to most countries that constitute the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region. As momentum in global business shifts towards greater intra-emerging market (or “south-south”) trade and investment, the MENA economies are well positioned to benefit. But how far and fast the MENA region integrates into these new economic relationships will depend on how it is viewed by executives from other emerging markets, and how such perspectives may differ from those of their peers in the developed world.

A better life?

A better life? The wants and worries of China's consumers is an Economist Intelligence Unit report, sponsored by Bayer. It examines the aspirations of Chinese consumers, both urban and rural, looking at material wants as well as larger life concerns.

One of the legacies of the 2008-2010 global financial crisis has been a new focus on the latent power of the Chinese consumer. As demand in the United States and Europe has waned, exports have weakened as an engine of China’s economic growth, and Beijing has turned its attention to stimulating domestic demand.  

Executive Summary

Brazil, Russia, India and China, the so-called BRICs, have for some time been big, fast-growing countries that represent the primary targets for those companies seeking new sources of growth. Indeed, economists are largely united in their belief that global economic gravity is shifting from developed economies to today’s emerging markets. But the rise of the G20, which includes several non-BRIC economies, as the premier forum for discussing global economic issues, serves as a reminder that the shift of power to emerging markets is a bigger story than just the rise of the BRICs.

Great expectations

Great Expectations: Doing business in emerging markets is a UK Trade & Investment (UKTI) report, written in cooperation with the Economist Intelligence Unit. The Economist Intelligence Unit bears sole responsibility for the content of this report.The report explores the changing outlook for businesses already operating in emerging markets – or planning to expand into these markets – both in terms of which markets are presenting the best opportunities and the primary rationale for operating in these countries.

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