Corporate executives believe that consumers will increasingly prefer locally or regionally produced products.
CFOs who don't understand the new superpower competition between the two nations are betting on a bygone era.
The volatile and uncertain global environment makes foreign direct investment (FDI) an appealing growth strategy for CFOs.
A shakeup in global trade is coming. Will it harm or help U.S. companies?
Economic theory and experience offer little reason to believe that a move towards increased protectionism will benefit the United States.
The group predicts the current "low-growth trap" will persist, in part due to lack of progress in opening markets.
The need to stay ahead or on pace with the competition is driving most companies to go global. But the journey can be bumpy, say CFOs.
With so many economies pinning their growth prospects to emerging markets, the race for resources &spamp;#8212; human and otherwise &spamp;#8212; is certain to intensify.
As the economic spotlight shifts to developing markets, global companies need new ways to manage their strategies, people, costs, and risks.