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Global Issues, Local Readers Business and economics are global, but they affect your local audience. Example: A Nigerian cotton farmer can’t sell his crop profitably because U.S. subsidies make the global price too low. Example: Euro falls apart because Greeks, Italians spend more than they earn. Jobs lost. Example: Global bank stocks fall because banks bought too many European government bonds. Investors everywhere
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Global Issues, Local Readers Business and economics are global, but they affect your local audience. Example: A Nigerian cotton farmer can’t sell his crop.

Apr 01, 2015

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Sydnie Maw
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Page 1: Global Issues, Local Readers Business and economics are global, but they affect your local audience. Example: A Nigerian cotton farmer can’t sell his crop.

Global Issues, Local Readers• Business and economics are global, but they affect your local audience.• Example: A Nigerian cotton farmer can’t sell his crop profitably because U.S. subsidies make the global price too low.• Example: Euro falls apart because Greeks, Italians spend more than they earn. Jobs lost.• Example: Global bank stocks fall because banks bought too many European government bonds. Investors everywhere lose money.

Page 2: Global Issues, Local Readers Business and economics are global, but they affect your local audience. Example: A Nigerian cotton farmer can’t sell his crop.

More Examples• Example: American middle class falls apart because manufacturing work moves to cheaper countries.• Example: People can’t afford gasoline because Iran threatens to close Hormuz Straits.• Example: Hong Kong people have bad air because China’s factories are dirty.• Example: People in Cambodia lose jobs because Westerners stop buying their goods.• Your challenge is to understand and explain all this and much more.

Page 3: Global Issues, Local Readers Business and economics are global, but they affect your local audience. Example: A Nigerian cotton farmer can’t sell his crop.

Issues We’ll Highlight• In 12 weeks, 10 broad topics.• No way we’ll cover everything.• No way we’ll be 100% right about what’s most important.• In 2010, collapse of the Euro wasn’t on the syllabus as a topic.• Develop a routine for staying on top of what’s important.• When you stop learning, you fall behind as an investor and as a journalist!

Page 4: Global Issues, Local Readers Business and economics are global, but they affect your local audience. Example: A Nigerian cotton farmer can’t sell his crop.

Issue 1: Crazy Debt Levels• The global financial crisis began in 2007 and isn’t over yet.• Main problem: too much debt.• Not enough money to pay it off.• Huge trade imbalances.• Weird “derivatives” didn’t eliminate risk.• Problem began in U.S. with subprime mortgages.• Now it’s spread to European governments.

Page 5: Global Issues, Local Readers Business and economics are global, but they affect your local audience. Example: A Nigerian cotton farmer can’t sell his crop.

Source: World Economic Forum, 2011

Page 6: Global Issues, Local Readers Business and economics are global, but they affect your local audience. Example: A Nigerian cotton farmer can’t sell his crop.

Source: globalissues.org

Page 7: Global Issues, Local Readers Business and economics are global, but they affect your local audience. Example: A Nigerian cotton farmer can’t sell his crop.

Issue 2: No Global Regulation• Economic system is global.• Regulatory systems are national.• International regulators have no teeth.• Bank for International Settlements can’t impose new rules to lower bank risk.• Financial Stability Board hasn’t stabilized anything.• Doha global trade negotiations have gone nowhere.• Politicians won’t give up sovereignty.

Page 8: Global Issues, Local Readers Business and economics are global, but they affect your local audience. Example: A Nigerian cotton farmer can’t sell his crop.

3. Economics & the Environment• The world is growing hotter, getting more polluted, using up all the hydrocarbons.• Economic activity is the main reason.• Kyodo Protocols haven’t worked.• U.N. climate talks stall year after year.• Problem: How to make environmental change profitable for business?• Problem: How to get governments to cooperate on pollution of all kinds?• Business needs incentives to respond properly.

Page 10: Global Issues, Local Readers Business and economics are global, but they affect your local audience. Example: A Nigerian cotton farmer can’t sell his crop.

4. Poverty & Development• U.N. “Millennium Development Goals”:--Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger.--Achieve universal primary education.--Promote gender equality and empower women.--Reduce child mortality.--Improve maternal health.--Combat HIV/AIDS, malaria and other diseases.--Ensure environmental sustainability.--Develop a global partnership for development.

Page 11: Global Issues, Local Readers Business and economics are global, but they affect your local audience. Example: A Nigerian cotton farmer can’t sell his crop.

At least 80% of humanity lives on less than $10 a day.

Page 12: Global Issues, Local Readers Business and economics are global, but they affect your local audience. Example: A Nigerian cotton farmer can’t sell his crop.

Puzzle for Business• So many potential customers, so little income.• How can the economy be channeled to bring people out of poverty and sickness?• China is most successful so far, but is command economy. • How can developed nations invest when they are broke?• How can business, capitalism play a role in development, jobs and poverty eradication?• Where will enough jobs come from?

Page 13: Global Issues, Local Readers Business and economics are global, but they affect your local audience. Example: A Nigerian cotton farmer can’t sell his crop.

5. Illusion of Global Free Trade• World Trade Organization’s “Doha Round” began in 2001.• Intended to eliminate trade barriers worldwide.• In 2003, talks go nowhere in Cancun.• In 2005, talks fail to produce in Hong Kong.• In 2006, talks break down entirely.• In 2009, talks collapse again.• In 2011, new negotiations go nowhere in Geneva.• Does that sound like progress?

Page 14: Global Issues, Local Readers Business and economics are global, but they affect your local audience. Example: A Nigerian cotton farmer can’t sell his crop.

What’s the Problem?• Developing nations—China, India, Brazil—want to protect their manufacturers.• Developed nations—U.S., EU—want to protect their agriculture industries.• Tariffs, nontariff barriers keep products, services from flowing freely across borders.• When barriers are lowered, someone loses jobs as cheap products find customers.• Meanwhile, global trade develops chaotically.• Is global free trade really good?

Page 15: Global Issues, Local Readers Business and economics are global, but they affect your local audience. Example: A Nigerian cotton farmer can’t sell his crop.

6. Are China, Asia the Future?• China, India, Brazil, Russia—BRICs—have faster GDP growth rates than developed nations.• They also have greater threat of inflation.• They also rely on developed nations to buy their goods—what if customers dry up?• They need strong consumers at home, but people are used to saving against hard times.• As living standards in developing world rise, must standards fall in developed world?• How does business navigate this perilous economic landscape?

Page 16: Global Issues, Local Readers Business and economics are global, but they affect your local audience. Example: A Nigerian cotton farmer can’t sell his crop.
Page 17: Global Issues, Local Readers Business and economics are global, but they affect your local audience. Example: A Nigerian cotton farmer can’t sell his crop.
Page 18: Global Issues, Local Readers Business and economics are global, but they affect your local audience. Example: A Nigerian cotton farmer can’t sell his crop.
Page 19: Global Issues, Local Readers Business and economics are global, but they affect your local audience. Example: A Nigerian cotton farmer can’t sell his crop.

7. The Business of War• More than 40 armed conflicts now under way.• “Arab Spring” counts as one, though it involves many countries.• People need weapons to fight. Business and governments make weapons.• Once they’re made, they can work for 100 years or more—Kalashnikovs, mines.• Are weapons good business? Do they contribute to global sustainability, productivity?

Page 20: Global Issues, Local Readers Business and economics are global, but they affect your local audience. Example: A Nigerian cotton farmer can’t sell his crop.

Source: The Economist magazine

Page 21: Global Issues, Local Readers Business and economics are global, but they affect your local audience. Example: A Nigerian cotton farmer can’t sell his crop.

 Company(country)

Arms sales ($ m.)

Profit($ m.)

  1   Lockheed Martin 33 430   3 024

  2   BAE Systems (UK) 33 250   –70 

  3   Boeing   32 300   1 312 

  4   Northrop Grumman 27 000   1 686

  5   General Dynamics 25 590   2 394

  6    Raytheon 23 080   1 976

  7   EADS (trans-Europe) 15 930   –1 060 

  8   Finmeccanica (Italy) 13 280   997

  9   L-3 Communications 13 010   901

10   United Technologies 11 110   4 179 

The 10 largest arms producing companies, 2009Companies are US-based, unless indicated otherwise. The profit figures are from all company activities, including non-military sales.

Source: Stockholm International Peace Research Institute

Page 22: Global Issues, Local Readers Business and economics are global, but they affect your local audience. Example: A Nigerian cotton farmer can’t sell his crop.

What Other Issues?• Cybercrime and spying?• New technology?• Energy and commodities competition?• Global immigration policy?• Hedge funds, dark pools, financial engineering?• Corporate social responsibility (CSR)?• Education for new business environment?• Green energy?• Health care?• Global court system?

Page 23: Global Issues, Local Readers Business and economics are global, but they affect your local audience. Example: A Nigerian cotton farmer can’t sell his crop.

A More Abstract View of Issues• Global power shift from West to East.• Unsustainable population growth.• Uncertain economic recovery.• Economic, political inequality.• Shortage of resources, overconsumption.

Source: World Economic Forum, 2011

Page 24: Global Issues, Local Readers Business and economics are global, but they affect your local audience. Example: A Nigerian cotton farmer can’t sell his crop.

What We’ll Be Reading• Documents from official sources: IMF, ASEAN, BIS, UN, central banks, government agencies.• Documents from interest groups: Amnesty International, Greenpeace, Human Rights Watch.• Documents from experts: consultants, professors, think-tanks.• These are quotable in stories.• We’ll avoid casual blogs, “commentators,” editorial writers.• Concentrate on what journalists use!