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Collaboration in China

China is a jumble of networks. The country has emerged as the world’s second largest manufacturer through an intricate system of interconnected enterprises, mostly small and medium sized, each specialised at managing a portion of the giant supply chain that snakes through China and churns out everything from plastic flowers to sophisticated computer chips.

Performance agenda: an international government survey

Governments in the twenty-first century are under pressure to operate better. This has been brought about by a wide array of societal and technological changes, ranging from globalization and the information technology (IT) revolution to demographic change and rising public expectations. As citizens the world over become more demanding, public sector organizations are being forced to focus on performance.

The big tilt

The big tilt: The rise of the East and what it means for business is an Economist Intelligence Unit special report.

The East has been rising since the 1950s, and its economic ascent is entering a new phase, following the Great Recession. There are likely to be a number of differences in its evolution in the next decade compared with the ones that preceded it. All have profound implications for global business. Companies large and small should develop their strategies by bearing in mind the following themes:

A brave new world

Report Summary

The new global reality

The new global reality: how the forces of globalization are reshaping business in Latin America is an Ernst & Young report, written in co-operation with the Economist Intelligence Unit, examining the degree of globalization in Latin America. Ernst & Young selected for analysis six of the eight countries (excluding Venezuela and Ecuador) that were included in The Globalization Index created by the Economist Intelligence Unit.

Redrawing the map

Redrawing the map: Globalization and the changing world of business is an Ernst & Young report written in co-operation with the Economist Intelligence Unit.

The key survey insights are:

From West to East

With many developed countries weighed down with debt and facing years of sluggish growth, many investors are looking to the dynamic markets of emerging Asia as one of the most promising sources of long-term growth. Global financial institutions are therefore expanding their allocation to Asian asset classes in the hope of better returns and improved diversification, particularly in the context of weak growth in their domestic markets. But concerns about transparency and regulatory rigour across the region are still commonly cited as barriers to investment in Asia.

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.

Operating risk in emerging markets

Key findings from this research include:

A strengthening of emerging market investments. In the past three years the vast majority of companies that already invest in emerging markets have deepened their investment in this area. Seventy-nine percent of respondents reported an increase in investment, 14% expected their level of investment to remain the same and only 7% reported a decrease.

The GCC in 2020

Over the past ten to 12 years, the Gulf Co-operation Council (GCC) region, which comprises Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, has undergone rapid economic, demographic and social changes. Since 1998, the GCC’s real GDP has expanded by an annual average of 5.2% and by a cumulative total of 65%. Meanwhile, the population has risen from just over 28m in 1998 to an estimated 39m in 2008.

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