Archive for marzec, 2016

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The 2015 BCG e-Intensity Index

BCG  e-intensity  2015

The rich are getting richer, but the not-as-rich are slowly catching up. Those are the two key messages of the 2015 BCG e-Intensity Index, a tool that measures the maturity of 85 Internet economies. The index includes all 28 members of the EU, most of Latin America and Asia, and 14 African countries.
Since the publication of our first index, in 2011, the scores of the BRICI (Brazil, Russia, India, China, and Indonesia), Latin American, and African countries have risen annually by 27%, 21%, and 21%, respectively. But given their relatively low starting positions, those economies will not catch up anytime soon to the EU15 or G7 countries, whose scores have been rising by 16% and 14%, respectively. Thailand and China improved their rankings the most. Thailand moved up 12 spots, to sixty-second place, while China rose ten spots, to thirty-fifth.
The index consists of three components:

  • Enablement accounts for 50% of the total weighting; it measures various aspects of fixed and mobile infrastructure  deployment.
  • Engagement, which accounts for 25%, measures how actively businesses, governments, and consumers are embracing the Internet.
  • Expenditure, also accounting for 25%, measures the proportion of money spent on online retail and advertising.

Enablement and expenditure have powered the overall rise in index scores, while engagement has stagnated. E-commerce has become so prevalent and popular in China that it now has the fourth highest score on the expenditure component, after the UK, South Korea, and Denmark.
As one might expect, wealthy nations from northern Europe dominate the top of the index. Denmark emerged as the leading overall Internet economy, supplanting South Korea, which fell three spots. South Korea is now bracketed between Luxembourg and Sweden (above) and the Netherlands, Norway, and the UK.
More intriguing, however, are the economies that are performing better than their economic profiles would suggest. Many of the countries in Central and Eastern Europe—Latvia, Estonia, Poland, and Lithuania for example—fall into that category when e-Intensity is compared with per-capita GDP on the basis of purchasing-power parity. Many of the Latin American economies, on the other hand, are underperforming.
More: www.bcgperspectives.com

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McKinsey – Leading in the digital age

McK 2016-03 leading-in-the-digital-age 1 page

The automation of work and the digital disruption of business models place a premium on leaders who can create a vision of change and frame it positively. How disruptive will accelerating workplace automation be for organizations in the future? For decades, businesses have deployed technology to reduce costs and complexity, make better products, and develop new business models. But the new potential of artificial intelligence and advanced robotics poses major new challenges for leaders as they seek to reset their strategies for a digital age. Last November, Bloomberg chairman Peter Grauer and Nadir Mohamed, the recently retired CEO of Rogers Communications, sat down with Manfred Kets de Vries, a professor at INSEAD, and Harvard professor Robert Kegan to debate some of the issues with Claudio Feser, head of McKinsey’s leadership development initiative. Read the rest of this entry »

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BCG – Transformation in Emerging Markets: From Growth to Competitiveness

BCG 2016-02 Transformation-Emerging-Markets_190x175_tcm80-204490

Emerging markets have driven growth for many multinational corporations (MNCs) for years, and they will continue to do so. But these are turbulent times as commodity prices plunge, currencies are devalued, and equity markets gyrate. The profitability of many MNCs’ operations is already under attack, and future performance will be challenged by slower macroeconomic growth, increasing costs, and heightened competition from local companies, which are rapidly gaining scale, experience, and capability. To reduce these pressures, companies will have to focus much more on improving their competitiveness through constant productivity gains. Read the rest of this entry »

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Prawo restrukturyzacyjne otwiera nowe możliwości przed firmami zagrożonymi upadłością

EY 2016-03-24 Prawo restrukturyzacyjne otwiera nowe TABELA

Łatwiejsza i szybsza procedura, uniknięcie upadłości, możliwość normalnego prowadzenia działalności gospodarczej – to tylko kilka z rozwiązań, które wprowadza prawo restrukturyzacyjne. Pomimo że ustawa obowiązuje dopiero od początku roku, już pojawiły się pierwsze wnioski o otwarcie postępowania restrukturyzacyjnego. Read the rest of this entry »

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The China Effect on Global Innovation

The China Effect on Global Innovation 2

An aging population, rising debt, and declining returns on investment mean that the country must promote innovation to secure a high-growth future, a new McKinsey Global Institute report finds.

How innovative is the Chinese economy? On the surface, the answer seems clear: by traditional measures, China is innovating on an increasingly large scale and is close to becoming the global innovation leader. In 2014, for example, it spent nearly $200 billion on research and development, the second-largest investment by any country in absolute terms (and about 2 percent of gross domestic product). China’s universities graduate more than 1.2 million engineers each year—more than any other country. And it leads the world in patent applications, with more than 825,000 in 2013, compared with about 570,000 for the United States. Read the rest of this entry »