Remove 2013 Remove GDP Remove Globalization Remove Leadership
article thumbnail

Are CEOs Really India’s Leading Export?

Harvard Business Review

A systematic analysis of mid-2013 data on the world’s largest firms by revenue, the Fortune Global 500, shows that at that time only three non-Indian firms were led by Indian CEOs: Arcelor Mittal (Lakshmi Mittal), Deutsche Bank (Anshu Jain), and PepsiCo (Indra Nooyi). Not necessarily. firms lie in between European and Japanese firms.

CEO 13
article thumbnail

The Three Reforms China Must Enact: Land, Social Services, and Taxes

Harvard Business Review

China’s global economic power continues to grow, yet the decision-making dynamics of its top leadership remain a mystery. China Economy Global business' This complicates the ability of outsiders to understand the purpose for and implications of policy changes. What Needs to Change. Do You Really Want to Bet Against China?

GDP 8
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Priorities for Jumpstarting the U.S. Industrial Economy

Harvard Business Review

Indeed, in a world where globalization and rapid technological changes are the norm, manufacturing, high-tech development, and innovation clearly require a different level of support. trillion in output annually, adding up to 17% of GDP. competitiveness and growth in the 21 st century. They employ 12.3 employment, and they generate $2.7

article thumbnail

China Can’t Be a Global Innovation Leader Unless It Does These Three Things

Harvard Business Review

Some argue that China is already well on its way to becoming a global innovation power that will rival the US and Europe. of GDP in 2012 from 1.1% Thomson Reuters’ 2013 ranking of the world’s top 100 innovators doesn’t include a single company from China. in 2002, and should touch 2.0% by 2020, according to the World Bank.

article thumbnail

60 Countries’ Digital Competitiveness, Indexed

Harvard Business Review

Cross-border flows of digitally transmitted data have grown manifold, accounting for more than one-third of the increase in global GDP in 2014, even as the free-flow of goods and services and cross-border capital have ebbed in the aftermath of the 2008 recession. In 2013 85% of the world’s transactions were in cash.