Tools and Resources centre

Business Communication Skills for Managers

In Business Communication Skills for Managers, students learn how to effectively communicate in business, with an emphasis on the use of these skills as a manager. The course introduces important elements of successful communication, providing examples of effective communication and providing students opportunities to practice the same. The course covers the essentials of communication including professional writing, visual aids, presentations, speeches, phone and online communication, and both getting hired and finding new hires. This course is available on LUMEN

A quick note on the news that India’s GDP is now at 8.2%.

Well done to the fastest growing economy using a new reporting time series and methodology. Let the champagne flow into the flutes held by its 1.3 billion citizens. The country is now on course to consolidating its unique story in resurgent Asian Century.

This is the story that has been spun out. Here are some truths! Or perhaps you may wish to call them ‘alternative facts’!

1. GDP doesn’t always capture the whole story of economic growth. It represents only a snapshot of variables across a time series in a reporting economy. Libya for example has a GDP growth of 21% in 2018, even the Maldives at 8.8% statistically is better than India.
2. GDP doesn’t take into account income equality or inequality very well.
3. The Population size of a reporting economy also affects GDP increase or decrease.
4. Not all GDP reporting sectors contribute positively to the economy, e.g spending on defence services and manufacturing.
5. India’s external Debt-GDP Ratio has increased to 20%.
6. Household’s Net financial saving has decreased to 6.7% in 2017 vs the corresponding year.
7. India’s External reserves of $450 billion is high for the region. But shouldn’t this be viewed in comparison with China’s $3.6 Trillion reserves, Saudi Arabian ($486bn) , Hong Kong ($437Bn) , Japan ( $1.2 Trillion) to see how far a nation with some much potential and population should accumulate? This could be wiped out by a weakening rupee and higher oil prices.
8. Crude Oil prices in an economy that still imports over 70% of national demand will always have a major impact on inflation and GDP growth.
9. The Government ‘s fiscal deficit is rapidly increasing.
10. The unemployment rate during the first quarter of 2018-19 at 5.5% is higher than that of the corresponding year (4%).
11. One of the youngest countries in the world has failed in many sectors to take advantage of its ‘demographic dividend’.
12. The middle class is growly slowly and struggling to upskill and meet new disruptive challenges. The informal sector still dominates using a very low skill base.
13. Inequality is very real. India’s top 1% of earners control 22% of its national income. Over Rich Indians have banked over $30bn worth of assets in just Switzerland. Indian has now over 121 $ Billionaires, 19 more than in 2017. A toast to the open economy that creates 19 billionaires every year and let’s forget the 124 milion who live in absolute poverty.
14. Crony capitalism is real. One of its largest mining firms is facing a$4bn tax fraud allegation. Several high profile crony scams are still progressing through its institutional morass. Have you wondered why India’s reserve bank has mentioned Mauritius as its strongest route of inward FDI ? Coincidence?

In short, focussing on GDP as a value of economic growth is a short term and myopic misrepresentation of what really matters in a globalised world.

”The welfare of a nation can scarcely be inferred from a measurement of national income as defined by the GDP”- Simon Kuznets

NB:

Some additional reading if you are not heady yet!

A. The World economic forum has a series devoted to the misuse of GDP and why economies should move beyond GDP. It can be found https://www.weforum.org/…/what-is-gdp-and-how-are-we-misusi…

B. The great GDP swindle by Joseph Stiglitz can be found on https://www.theguardian.com/…/economics-economic-growth-and

Customs Resources

The circumnavigation of the globe in 1519

Ferdinand Magellan¹  c. 1480 – 27 April 1521) was a Portuguese explorer who organised the Spanish expedition to the East Indies from 1519 to 1522, resulting in the first circumnavigation of the Earth, completed by Juan Sebastián Elcano. You can read more about this event in Global strategy from the following sources

| The WTO report on trends in International Business which begins with a historical analysis of trade developments from pre-industrial times to the present, focusing on the key role that technology and institutions have played in the past| The West Indies & Manila Galleons: the First Global Trade RouteGlobalization, trade, and development: some lessons from history | Globalization: a short history 

 

Sources
1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferdinand_Magellan

The role of government and politics in doing business

Why should businesses care about the different political and legal systems around the world? To begin with, despite the globalization of business, firms must abide by the local rules and regulations of the countries in which they operate¹. Here are some readings on this often neglected aspect of global strategy.

Navigating the Complexities of Doing Business in Russia |Democracy Is Good for Business | The Challenges of Doing Business in Papua New GuineaTop challenges of doing business in BrazilDoing Business in Corrupt PlacesHow business interacts with government6 CHALLENGES OF DOING BUSINESS IN CHINA AND HOW TO OVERCOME THEMHow Does Government Type Affect My Business?Doing business in developing countriesBureaucrats in business : the economics and politics of government ownershipCase Study: Do Business and Politics Mix?The truth about lobbying: 10 ways big business controls governmentHow Corporate Lobbyists Conquered American DemocracyHow corporations turned into political beasts |DOES BUSINESS REALLY CONTROL GOVERNMENT ? |WHY COMPETITION IN THE POLITICS INDUSTRY IS FAILING AMERICAUK politics: can business learn to live with a ‘hard-left’ Labour?A question of trustThe Real Risks for Foreign Companies in RussiaHow Facebook’s Political Unit Enables the Dark Art of Digital PropagandaWhen Business Gets Political |

 

Source

  1. https://saylordotorg.github.io/text_international-business/s06-02-political-and-legal-factors-th.html
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