1.5 The Synergy between Globalization, Competitiveness and Governability
CHAPTER 2 GLOBALIZATION
2.1 A Brief History
2.2 The 21st century – An Era of Digital Globalization
2.3 Features of Globalization
2.4 Multinational Corporations and Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs)
2.5 Risks and Opportunities with Globalization
2.6 Multinational Corporations and Globalization
2.7 Branding in the Era of Globalization
2.8 Glocalization
2.9 Measuring Globalization
2.10 Challenges and Reflection
CHAPTER 3 COMPETITIVENESS
3.1 A Definition and Understanding of Competitiveness
3.2 Measuring Competitiveness
3.3 Advantages and Disadvantages of Competitiveness
3.4 Direct Link between Competitiveness and Governability
3.5 The Four Primary Drivers of Competitiveness
3.6 Challenges and Reflection
CHAPTER 4 GOVERNABILITY
4.1 A Brief History
4.2 Direct Link between Governability and Globalization
4.3 A Conceptual Basis of Governability
4.4 Measuring Governability
4.5 Governance versus Government
4.6 Corruption
4.7 The Power of Good or Transformative Governance
4.8 Regulatory Bodies
4.9 Challenges and Reflection
CHAPTER 5 THE TECHNOLOGY JUGGERNAUT
5.1 Brief History
5.2 The 21st century – An Era of Digital Globalization (20th/21st Century)
5.3 Disruptive Technologies of Future
5.4 Technology and Globalization
5.5 Technology and Competitiveness
5.6 Technology and Governability
5.7 A Major Transformation in Interconnectivity
5.8 Technology’s Future
CHAPTER 6 SUPPLY CHAINS
6.1 Connecting It All Through Supply Chain Management
6.2 The Challenge of Global Supply Chains
6.3 SCM and Globalization
6.4 SCM and Competitiveness
6.5 SCM and Governability
6.6 Companies with Supply Chain in Focus
CHAPTER 7 FINANCIAL SERVICES
7.1 FinTechs – The Future of Global Banking
7.2 Financial Services and Globalization
7.3 Financial Services and Competitiveness
7.4 Financial Services and Governability
7.5 The Next Revolution in Financial Services – Blockchain
CHAPTER 8 CONCLUSIONS
CHAPTER 9 SUGGESTED ADDITIONAL READING FROM THE GCG JOURNAL
Ricardo Ernst is the Baratta Chair in Global Business and Professor of Operations and Global Logistics, Managing Director of the Global Business Initiative, Managing Director of the Latin American Board and former Deputy Dean, all at the McDonough School of Business, Georgetown University, USA. He is co-author of Innovation in Emerging Markets and Global Operations and Logistics.
Jerry Haar is a professor of international business and director of Executive & Professional Education in the College of Business at Florida International University, USA. He is also a Global Fellow of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars and a senior research fellow at Georgetown’s McDonough School of Business. He is the author/editor of 17 books, including The Future of Entrepreneurship in Latin America and Innovation in Emerging Markets.
“Ricardo Ernst and Jerry Haar make a compelling case that three transformative forces—globalization, competitiveness and governability—are collectively impacting the 21st century business environment and especially disrupting technology, supply chains, and financial services.”
—César Cernuda, President, Microsoft Latin America
“This book places competitiveness at the top of the business and policy agendas, making the case for smart governance to align interests and efficiency considerations. A must read for global managers.”
—Mauro F. Guillén, Zandman Professor, The Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania, USA
“Ricardo Ernst and Jerry Haar are the first scholars to illuminate synergies between globalization, competitiveness and governability. Their analysis offers remarkable insights to business firms, policy officials and academics.”
—Gary Clyde Hufbauer, Senior Fellow, Peterson Institute for International Economics.
This book argues that three powerful symbiotic forces (globalization, competitiveness, and governability) are disrupting business in the 21st century, resulting in an impact on the economic and business environment far greater than the effects of any of these three individually. Both globalization and competitiveness are governed essentially by market forces that force the introduction of significant changes aimed at increasing efficiency so that a better use may be made of the advantages of globalization (i.e., the traditional “invisible” hand). Responsibility for bringing about these changes lies not only with the private sector but also with the government (i.e., the “visible” hand).
Readers will find in this book an explanation of how globalization, competitiveness, and governability define the context of global business.