- Procurement lies at the heart of a successful green strategy.
The Next Industrial Imperative
June 10, 2008 by Peter Senge, Bryan Smith, and Nina KruschwitzFacing up to climate change requires a revolution in business thinking.The Forgotten Lessons of the Marshall Plan
June 10, 2008 by R. Glenn Hubbard and William DugganTo combat poverty in Africa, government should redirect aid to foster local business.The Making of a Market-Minded Environmentalist
June 10, 2008 by Fred KruppHow I stopped looking at industry as the enemy and enlisted it as an ally in fighting climate change.Friendlier Skies
June 3, 2008 by Jürgen Ringbeck and Stephan GrossConsolidation in the increasingly competitive European airline industry has been long delayed, but the wait is coming to an end.The Next Phase of Subprime Fallout
May 8, 2008Because the market widely corroborated the inflated values of subprime instruments, plaintiffs face an uphill battle.A Clear Look at Biofuels
April 22, 2008 by Bill Jackson, Eric Spiegel, and Leslie H. MoellerMyths abound regarding the pros and cons of biofuels. Here is a scorecard to separate truth from fiction.The Truth about Exports
April 15, 2008 by William J. HolsteinThe numbers may be rosy, but the U.S. export initiative is still hobbled.The Effect of Outside Directors on Performance
March 27, 2008The more informed the outside directors, the better they are able to help improve company governance and performance.China’s Shifting Competitive Equation
March 18, 2008 by Christoph Alexander Bliss, Ronald Haddock, and Kaj GrichnikMultinational companies must respond to China’s rising costs by bringing their own global best practices to its shores.We Are All Pirates
March 11, 2008 by Edward H. BakerAuthor Matt Mason takes a hard look at how established companies should face the growing threat of copyright piracy.Ambassador for the Asian Century
February 26, 2008 by Sheridan PrassoSingaporean diplomat Kishore Mahbubani says the West should lose its arrogance and the East should step up to global leadership.Lessons for Business Schools
February 26, 2008 by Andrea GaborNew books and revisited history illuminate the irrelevance of today’s MBA — and ways to make it compelling again.Pankaj Ghemawat: The thought leader interview
February 26, 2008 by Art KleinerThe seer of “semiglobalization” argues for appreciating regional distinctions.The Myth of Cost-Benefit Analysis
February 26, 2008 by Denise CarusoThe U.S. government’s method for evaluating risk isn’t as objective as it’s made out to be.The Effects of Bank Deregulation
January 17, 2008Contrary to some expectations, liberalizing restrictions on interstate bank branching has diminished income inequities for many workers.Taming the Urge for Instant Gratification
January 10, 2008When people make commitments about the future, they are more likely to appeal to their more rational selves. According to the authors, commitment schemes modify people’s behavior more effectively than simple incentive adjustments such as “sin” taxes on cigarettes.Best Business Books: Behavioral Theory
November 28, 2007 by Howard RheingoldHow We Know and Why We ActBest Business Books: Capitalism
November 28, 2007 by Diane CoyleSchumpeter’s LegacyThe Google Enigma
November 28, 2007 by Nicholas G. CarrShould innovation-minded managers look at the fast-growing Internet company as a model — or an anomaly?How to Be a Demographic Realist
August 29, 2007 by Lord Andrew TurnbullTo prepare for the implications of aging populations, individuals, organizations, and society as a whole must confront assumptions that are no longer valid.Shift Worker Productivity Need Not Be an Oxymoron
June 5, 2007 by John FrehseEmployees who work nontraditional schedules can create as much value as nine-to-fivers if executives can manage their expectations and special needs.Howard Gardner Does Good Work
May 29, 2007 by Lawrence M. FisherThe originator of multiple intelligence theory prescribes a code of ethics for business.Nondestructive Creation
May 29, 2007 by Glenn HubbardNobel laureate Edmund Phelps says that Joseph Schumpeter was wrong: Entrepreneurship can generate stable growth.Joseph Ellis: The Thought Leader Interview
February 28, 2007 by Art Kleiner and Melissa Master CavanaughThe author of Ahead of the Curve explains the mysteries of the business cycle.
All articles tagged: economics
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