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HBS Working Knowledge November 5, 2007 Sarah Jane Gilbert |
The Changing Face of American Innovation Chinese and Indian scientists and engineers have made a large contribution to U.S. technology over the last 30 years, according to research by Harvard professor William R. Kerr. But that trend may be ebbing, with potentially harmful effects on American innovation. |
HBS Working Knowledge August 1, 2011 Carmen Nobel |
Immigrant Innovators: Job Stealers or Job Creators? The H-1B visa program, which enables US employers to hire highly skilled foreign workers for three years, is "a lightning rod for a very heated debate," says Harvard Business School professor William Kerr. |
HBS Working Knowledge July 28, 2006 Sean Silverthorne |
Meeting China's Need for Management Education On a recent trip to China, Steven C. Wheelwright noted an increasing interest in entrepreneurship, globalization, and competitiveness. Most of all, the Chinese have an increasing thirst for management education. |
HBS Working Knowledge March 12, 2014 Sean Silverthorne |
Entrepreneurship and Multinationals Drive Globalization Why is the firm overlooked as a contributor when we identify the drivers of globalization? Geoffrey Jones discusses his new book, Entrepreneurship and Multinationals: Global Business and the Making of the Modern World. |
HBS Working Knowledge October 24, 2005 Cynthia D. Churchwell |
IPR: Protecting Your Technology Transfers Does the presence of stronger intellectual property rights increase international technology transfer in general? It's an important question because of the potential benefits to both the companies involved and the local economies where they do business. |
HBS Working Knowledge January 19, 2004 |
How Should We Think About the Exportation of Jobs? Readers respond to the question |
HBS Working Knowledge December 7, 2009 Sean Silverthorne |
Government's Positive Role in Kick-Starting Entrepreneurship Professor Josh Lerner, author Boulevard of Broken Dreams, wonders if its time for Uncle Sam to invest in new entrepreneurial firms. |
HBS Working Knowledge January 28, 2008 Martha Lagace |
Billions of Entrepreneurs in China and India In China and India, much of entrepreneurship is in response to constraints - societal, political, or other. |
HBS Working Knowledge October 16, 2006 Sean Silverthorne |
Report from China: The New Entrepreneurs When a delegation of Harvard Business School faculty visited Chinese entrepreneurs, they came away with something unexpected: the start of what could be a fundamental rethinking of how entrepreneurship works. |
Entrepreneur January 2004 Joshua Kurlantzick |
Promised Land More and more American entrepreneurs are embarking on the road to China -- and many have already found their fortunes. |
HBS Working Knowledge July 28, 2003 Martha Lagace |
India vs. China: Who Will Win? Can India overtake China? That's the title of an influential new article in Foreign Policy magazine. A Q&A with authors Yasheng Huang of M.I.T. and Tarun Khanna of HBS. |
Inc. November 2008 Eric Schine |
Q: Is the U.S. Losing Its Economic Edge? Author and professor Amar Bhide talks about why it doesn't matter where scientific breakthroughs come from, how entrepreneurs push basic innovations forward, and why the iPod represents the triumph of the American system. |
Finance & Development March 2009 Lipschitz et al. |
The Domestic Solution Can China's growth be sustained through good-neighbor policies? |
HBS Working Knowledge January 22, 2014 Dina Gerdeman |
High-Tech Immigrant Workers Don't Cost US Jobs Hiring skilled immigrants by United States high-tech firms not only doesn't push out existing workers, it creates job opportunities for all, argues William Kerr. |
Pharmaceutical Executive December 1, 2010 Zhu Shen |
China 2020: Walled In No More Pharma sets the pace for China's ambitious new innovation agenda |
Inc. October 2005 Shramm & Litan |
Op-ed: Foreign Students Who Study Engineering Deserve Citizenship It's time that we stop envying China, and start making the U.S. a friendlier place for engineers. |
Chemistry World May 19, 2008 Hepeng Jia |
China's one stop research shop John Oyler has founded a string of startups in the US, but in 2005 he chose China as his base to launch BioDuro, a life sciences Contract Research Organisation. |
Inc. March 2005 Ted C. Fishman |
How China Will Change Your Business Fourteen things every entrepreneur should know about the capitalist explosion heading our way. But don't assume that conceding China's rise means conceding to China. |
Finance & Development March 1, 2006 Baily & Farrell |
Breaking Down Barriers to Growth Encouraging competition is key to reviving stalled industrial economies. |
BusinessWeek September 4, 2008 Pete Engardio |
Chinese Scientists Build Big Pharma Back Home In a reverse migration, U.S.-trained scientists are setting up biotech startups, contract-research companies, and university labs on the mainland. |
HBS Working Knowledge July 18, 2005 Tarun Khanna et al. |
Identify Emerging Market Opportunities Executives would do well to identify a country's power centers and figure out if there are checks and balances in place. |
Entrepreneur November 2005 Chris Penttila |
The Heat Is On How long can the U.S. maintain its innovative edge? |
HBS Working Knowledge February 2, 2009 Sarah Jane Gilbert |
The Success of Persistent Entrepreneurs When it comes to entrepreneurship, nothing says success like a track record of previous wins. |
HBS Working Knowledge February 16, 2004 Cynthia D. Churchwell |
HBS Center Focuses on Europe The Euro is changing the face of business in Europe, and Harvard Business School's Europe Research Center is right in the middle of it all. |
BusinessWeek March 15, 2004 Bruce Einhorn |
China.Net China will soon be No. 1 in Web users. That will unleash a world of opportunity |
Finance & Development December 1, 2008 Ramirez-Djumena & Rodriguez |
The Ingredients of Sustained High Growth Since 1950, 13 economies have managed to grow at an average rate of 7 percent or more for at least 25 years in a row. How did they do it? And, more important, can such high growth be repeated in other countries on a sustained basis? |
IEEE Spectrum November 2008 Hira & Ross |
R&D Goes Global Hidden in corporate research budgets is a shift of R&D work to low-cost countries, particularly China and India. |
BusinessWeek March 1, 2004 |
Outsourcing Isn't "a Zero-Sum Game" Tech entrepreneur Marc Andreessen says it's "the story of history" and that new jobs will arise in the U.S. as new industries are born. An interview with Marc about his businees philosophy is included. |
HBS Working Knowledge May 18, 2009 Sarah Jane Gilbert |
The Unseen Link Between Savings and National Growth Researchers find a little observed link between private savings and economic growth. The work may offer a simple interpretation for the East Asia "miracle" and for failures in Latin America. |
HBS Working Knowledge November 20, 2006 Martha Lagace |
Open Source Science: A New Model for Innovation Practices in the open source software community offer a model for encouraging large-scale scientific problem solving. |
HBS Working Knowledge November 14, 2005 Sarah Jane Gilbert |
How Can Start Ups Grow? Assistant Harvard professor Mukti Khaire discusses her work on the relationship between a small business' structure and its success and its implications for entrepreneurs everywhere. |
BusinessWeek December 8, 2003 Michael J. Mandel |
Commentary: Meeting the Asian Challenge As India and China ascend the economic ladder, here are steps that America can take to boost the four key components of innovation: R&D spending, education, finance for invention, and the national willingness to take risks. |
TIME Asia June 27, 2011 Bill Powell |
The End of Cheap Labor in China In what is supposed to be a land of unlimited cheap labor -- a nation of 1.3 billion people, whose extraordinary 20-year economic rise has been built first and foremost on the backs of low-priced workers -- the game has changed. |
HBS Working Knowledge December 15, 2003 Cynthia D. Churchwell |
The New Global Business Manager What are the critical skills global managers need today compared to ten years ago? An interview with Harvard Business School professor Christopher A. Bartlett. |
BusinessWeek March 27, 2006 Dexter Roberts |
How Rising Wages Are Changing The Game In China A labor shortage in China has pay soaring. That is sure to send ripples around the globe. |
HBS Working Knowledge March 17, 2008 Sean Silverthorne |
The Lessons of Business History: A Handbook A Q&A with Geoffrey Jones, coeditor of the Oxford Handbook of Business History, which provides a state-of-the-art overview of business history research worldwide. |
BusinessWeek September 1, 2010 Dexter Roberts |
A Dearth of Work for China's College Grads China's new university graduates lack the skills companies need, and there are too many of them, which is keeping salaries low. |
BusinessWeek June 20, 2005 Michael J. Mandel |
The End Of Upward Mobility? Not On Your Life Bleak stories aside, both rich and poor advanced over the past decade. |
The Motley Fool March 8, 2007 Dave Mock |
Your Guide to International Stocks China's future is not only about cheap labor, but a new wave of Chinese technical talent coming into the local economy. But how investors profit from this trend is not necessarily straightforward. |
IndustryWeek September 1, 2008 David Blanchard |
Eye On China As China rapidly evolves into a more service-oriented economy, U.S. manufacturers need to adjust their China strategy to remain competitive. |
HBS Working Knowledge November 21, 2005 Sean Silverthorne |
The Geography of Corporate Giving Why do companies support nonprofits and other socially responsible activities when there is no clear-cut evidence that corporate "do-gooding" results in greater returns for shareholders? |
HBS Working Knowledge March 30, 2009 Sean Silverthorne |
Professional Networks in China and America While American managers prefer to separate work and personal relationships, Chinese counterparts are much more likely to intermingle the two. |
HBS Working Knowledge January 25, 2012 Michael Blanding |
A Few Firms Have Outsized Influence in D.C. New research suggests the number of companies affecting government policy through lobbying may be smaller -- but more powerful -- than previously thought. |
HBS Working Knowledge January 2, 2007 Sean Silverthorne |
Most Popular Articles of 2006 Open source, innovation, and networks were three business issues that busted out in research and reader popularity in 2006. Here's a recap of twenty-five most popular stories from last year. |
BusinessWeek March 31, 2011 Charlie Rose |
Charlie Rose Talks to Lee Kwan Yew The man who shaped Singapore during 31 years in power addresses Beijing's aspirations and fears -- and the failings of state capitalism. |
HBS Working Knowledge May 3, 2004 Cynthia D. Churchwell |
Business History around the World One way to understand management trends and ideas today is to look at yesterday. Geoffrey G. Jones and Franco Amatori have done just that with their new book, Business History around the World. |
HBS Working Knowledge January 6, 2010 Jim Heskett |
Is a Stringent Climate Change Agreement a Pot of Gold? To the extent that climate change agreements alter the rules governing national policies and actions, they should represent opportunity for entrepreneurs. |
BusinessWeek November 17, 2003 Dexter Roberts |
TCL's Boss Talks Strategy The fast-rising Chinese electronics maker's Tomson Li explains his expansion plans for domestic and global growth. |
Global Services June 14, 2007 Adyasha Sinha |
Immigrant Entrepreneurs: What's their Education Quotient? A recent report tracks the educational backgrounds of immigrant entrepreneurs and found a strong correlation between educational attainment (particularly in the field of science, technology, engineering and mathematics) and entrepreneurship. |
HBS Working Knowledge November 29, 2006 Sarah Jane Gilbert |
Rich or Royal: What Do Founders Want? Entrepreneurs are often motivated by the potential of money and control, but very few ever achieve both. |