Executive Pay: The Curious Case of Carlos Ghosn’s Arrest
February 12, 2025
Why are Indian Corporates struggling? It would be an understatement to state that Indian Corporates are struggling. Saddled with huge debt that they accumulated and binged on during the “boom” years, they are now also facing the challenges of operating in a low growth environment wherein they can neither pay off the debt as they […]
The immigration conundrum has been at the center of all political campaigning in the recent past. Voters in all developed countries from Europe, United States, and even Singapore are voting for stronger immigration laws. There is an inherent feeling amongst them that they are being robbed of something they deserve by these immigrations. The winning […]
The “internet of things” is the latest buzzword that can be heard in Silicon Valley. It is the newest avenue for innovation and bright minds all over the world are moving towards this rapidly advancing sector. Almost, every business report predicts a massive rise in the value of goods and service that will be enabled […]
Any warehouse operations are measured by service levels, volume of transactions handled quality of transactions and most importantly inventory health maintained. By Inventory health in a warehouse, we are referring to Physical Inventory Accuracy, the way inventory is physically kept in locations and discipline maintained in transactions, inventory maintained in the system. Inventory Health, in […]
Introduction Last two decades have seen great stride in information technology. The development in information technology has changed the way business is getting conducted. One of the striking points about information technology is innovation. Information technology has been a driving force for product, service and process innovation. Innovation in Last Decades It has brought forward […]
In previous modules, we have alluded to the global economic crisis and the impact it had on the various sectors in the financial and manufacturing industries. This article introduces readers to the global economic crisis and subsequent articles deal with the various dimensions to the crisis and the causal factors that were responsible for the crisis.
The global economic crisis started in summer 2007, though the full impact was not felt till the bankruptcy of the investment bank, Lehmann Brothers in September 2008. The next couple of years witnessed heavy job losses and contraction in the GDP (Gross Domestic Product) of many countries in the West as well as in the developing world.
What started off with the subprime mortgage crisis quickly morphed into a full-fledged crisis of historic proportions prompting many commentators to draw parallels with the Great Depression of the 1930’s.
The global economic crisis was caused by the coming together of several structural as well as business cycle factors that conspired to produce a “perfect storm” of epic proportions. These factors ranged from the collapse of the housing market in the United States, imbalances between the West and the East in terms of trade deficits, reckless and risky speculation and finally, the sovereign debt crisis that was a culmination of years of fiscal profligacy and loose monetary policies.
The point about the global economic crisis or the Great Recession as it is also called is that the crisis exposed the chinks in the armor of the global economy and highlighted the pitfalls of too much integration and interconnectedness. Nowhere was this more apparent than in the aftermath of the collapse of Lehmann Brothers when the entire credit system froze and the global financial system came perilously close to collapse.
The global economic crisis basically originated in the West but had its effects on all economies of the world. Of course, the US and the Europe were the primary victims of the crisis and it can be said that countries like India and China were relatively unscathed in the wake of the crisis. However, this is not to say that these countries have successfully “decoupled” from the west since the tightly knit global economy and the dependence of China on exports to the US for goods and India for services means that these countries have a fair amount of work to do before they can be called safe.
The point here is that the United States and Europe were badly bruised by the crisis and it is still not clear when these countries and their economies would be out of the woods, if at all they would.
Finally, the global economic crisis has undone the many gains that have been made by globalization and hence there are renewed calls for protectionism and for erecting trade barriers in the West as well as in the East. This means that the global economic crisis has dealt a body blow to the global economy which might take years to regain its earlier prosperity.
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