Cart
Free Shipping in Australia
Proud to be B-Corp

Revolutionizing World Trade Kati Suominen

Revolutionizing World Trade By Kati Suominen

Revolutionizing World Trade by Kati Suominen


$77.79
Condition - New
Only 2 left

Summary

This book is about the next era of globalization and the trade policies that are needed to birth it.

Revolutionizing World Trade Summary

Revolutionizing World Trade: How Disruptive Technologies Open Opportunities for All by Kati Suominen

Almost 15 years ago, in The World is Flat, Thomas Friedman popularized the latest wave of globalization as a world of giant corporate supply chains that tripled world trade between 1990 and 2010. Major corporations such as Apple, Dell, and GE offshored manufacturing to low-cost economies; China became the world's factory, mass-producing and exporting computers and gadgets to Western shoppers. This paradigm of globalization has dominated global trade policy-making and guided hundreds of billions of dollars in business investments and development spending for almost three decades.

But we are now on the cusp of a new era. Revolutionizing World Trade argues that technologies such as ecommerce, 3D printing, 5G, the Cloud, blockchain, and artificial intelligence are revolutionizing the economics of trade and global production, empowering businesses of all sizes to make, move, and market products and services worldwide and with greater ease than ever before. The twin forces of digitization and trade are changing the patterns, players, politics, and possibilities of world trade, and can reinvigorate global productivity growth. However, new policy challenges and old regulatory frameworks are stifling the promise of this most dynamic, prosperous, and inclusive wave of globalization yet. This book uses new empirical evidence and policy experiences to examine the clash between emerging possibilities in world trade and outdated policies and institutions, offering several policy recommendations for navigating these obstacles to catalyze growth and development around the world.

Revolutionizing World Trade Reviews

Suominen brilliantly explores the impact of new technologies on the patterns, players, and possibilities of world trade, and their unparalleled potential to reignite productivity, raise incomes, and empower people. She then masterfully lays down a bold and innovative blueprint to help policymakers act on this potential. In an increasingly darkening global trade policy scenario, this is a book by a modern-day Renaissance woman on the renaissance of globalization! -- Anabel Gonzalez, Nonresident Senior Fellow, Peterson Institute for International Economics, former Costa Rica Trade Minister, Senior Director of the World Bank Trade & Competitiveness * and former WTO Agriculture Director *
Kati has a wealth of experience in international trade from both a private sector practitioner perspective as well as a public sector policy perspective. Her work has taken her to the forefront of the evolving trade landscape. This book elucidates this evolution and is a great contribution to the debate about the future of trade and our ability to shape its course for the betterment of the global community. -- Steven Beck, Head of Trade and Supply Chain Finance * Asian Development Bank *
An important new book, highlighting the trading opportunities that come with new technologies. It analyzes the challenges that need to be overcome, including cross-border procedures, and makes the key point that beyond digitizing trade, we also need to digitize customs, borders, and ports. -- Jan Hoffmann, Chief, Trade Logistics Branch, Division on Technology and Logistics * UNCTAD *
Kati Suominen introduces this book as a roadmap for the far-sighted entrepreneur; however, it is much more than that. In Revolutionizing World Trade, she explores the opportunities and challenges facing businesses, policy makers, regulators, and society in general, before finally setting out her manifesto for using e-commerce as a key enabler for inclusive trade. Whatever your role or interest in e-commerce and trade, this book will help you better understand how e-commerce is shaping our world today and the benefits that it can bring tomorrow. -- Steven Pope, Vice President Customs & Regulatory Affairs * DHL Express Europe *
In a time of taking two steps back, Revolutionizing World Trade makes a bold leap into the future and the verdict is there is nothing to fear! Suominen provides a thorough review of what's to come for the global economy and while not shying from the real challenges facing consumers, governments and businesses, generates a sense of promise and optimism sorely missing from today's discourse on global affairs. -- Susan F. Stone, Senior Trade Advisor * OECD *
Professor Kati Suominen 'gets it.' Globalization, technology, and mass affluence have changed the rules for international expansion. In Revolutionizing World Trade, Suominen walks us through how these changes have upended the traditional trading world, driven by ecommerce and the Internet. Every international business should get this book. Then they can 'get it' as well. -- Frank Lavin, Chairman, Export Now, former Undersecretary for International Trade * U.S. Department of Commerce *
Revolutionizing World Trade provides an in-depth look at forces changing trade and global business and makes important recommendations for bold policy ideas which would enable outsized economic growth across global markets. A must-read for anyone driven to solve these big problems. -- Brenda Santoro, Head of Global Trade * Silicon Valley Bank *
Trade has historically been expensive, slow, and opaque. Today's disruptive technologies not only offer new solutions to old problems, but create wholly new global markets for products and services. Kati Suominen draws from her deep experience in the world of goods trade to clearly set out the parameters of this new global trading ecosystem, offering excellent insight and advice for goods producers seeking to get involved in frontier technologies like blockchain and AI. -- Dr. Alisa DiCaprio, Head of Trade and Supply Chain * R3 *
Suominen examines the opportunities that new technologies will open up in world trade, ushering in what she calls 'globalization 4.0' within a decade. This future is already apparent, in an incipient form. -- Richard N. Cooper * Foreign Affairs *
This [is a] lively, well-written book....Suominen is well versed in these issues, is at home as a policy wonk, and has all the right credentials (and she adds a welcome sense of humor and irreverence)....Highly recommended. -- I. Walter * CHOICE *

About Kati Suominen

Kati Suominen is Founder and CEO of Nextrade Group, a Los Angeles-based data and analytics company that helps governments, multilateral development banks, and Fortune 500s enable world trade through technology. She has ideated and built dozens of data and analytics products to understand and solve challenges to world trade and digitization, and ideated and built seven global initiatives and public-private partnerships to further ecommerce development and digitization of world trade. She is the author and editor of ten books on trade and economics, notably Revolutionizing World Trade: How Disruptive Technologies Open Opportunities for All (Stanford University Press, 2019), Peerless and Periled: The Paradox of America's Leadership in the World Economic Order (Stanford University Press, 2012) and Globalization at Risk: Challenges to Finance and Trade (Yale University Press, 2010, one of Foreign Affairs' best international affairs books of the year). She serves as Adjunct Fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), where she cofounded the Digital Trade program, and Adjunct Professor at the UCLA Anderson School, where she teaches MBA courses on international business economics and the economics of global digital disruption. She is Life Member of the Council on Foreign Relations.

Table of Contents

Contents and Abstracts1Introduction chapter abstract

This chapter presents an overview of a paradigm of globalization that has dominated public discourse in the past thirty years and shaped trade and development policies worldwide, and discusses how that paradigm is now changing due to new technologies such as ecommerce, 3D printing, robotics, blockchain, and artificial intelligence. The chapter asserts that this new paradigm of globalization can be more dynamic and inclusive than any wave of globalization preceding it, if trade and economic policies are adjusted to fuel it.

2World Economy Goes to Heaven chapter abstract

This chapter asserts that global production is on the verge of its third inflection point since World War II. In this new system of production, the world economy goes to heaven: supply chains run in the cloud. Trade is less about the flow of physical goods across borders and more about the flow of bits: digital goods, designs, and data. The driver of trade in the Flat World-imports of parts and components from around the world for assembly into iPhones, BMWs, and Sony TVs in China or Mexico or Poland-is no more: trade in intermediate products is yielding to 3D-printable products printed right where they are assembled into final products. In the coming era of global making, there is no need for trade to bring intermediate products to assemblers.

3Killer App for World Trade chapter abstract

This chapter argues that it is becoming possible for even the smallest businesses, once setting up shop on major global ecommerce platforms, to gain customers from around the world. This is transforming the long-held conventional wisdom that small businesses cannot export because of high fixed costs for them to find global clients. Ecommerce is changing the face of world trade-and with it, companies' growth prospects and global economic geography. Survey data strongly suggest that online sellers are likelier to export and grow faster than offline sellers and thus hypothetically also likelier to create new jobs, but whether that is correlation or causality is still not clear-it may well be that high-growing firms self-select into becoming online sellers.

4When Six Billion People Go to the Mall chapter abstract

According to the network company Ericsson, there were 2.6 billion smartphone subscriptions globally in 2015; by 2020, 6.1 billion people, or 70 percent of the global population, will have a smartphone and 90 percent of the planet will be in areas with mobile broadband network. The smartphone revolution unlocks mega-markets at the nexus of new-found connectivity and income growth. Soon anyone will be able to sell almost anything to almost anyone, any time: garage sales can be global. Previously run by giant retail chains, distribution channels now lead straight to individual consumers leveraging their smartphones, tablets, and laptops to buy, make, modify, and return goods and services made around the world. The smartphone revolution is also catalyzing cross-border trade in content-videos, music, books, and advertisements.

5Driverless Delivery, Door to Door chapter abstract

Sea-bound merchandise trade is bound to soar by 4.3 times between 2015 and 2050; assuming that trade coming and going through major U.S. ports grows at a rather moderate 5 percent a year, container flows will double between 2015 and 2030. The recent explosive growth in ecommerce has built a parcel mountain on top of the world's containers, pressuring customs and border agencies, postal systems, and busy urban centers. Burgeoning trade flows are a double-edged sword-trade is a fabulous source of growth for economies, businesses, and trade intermediaries from shipping lines to express shippers, banks, freight forwarders, warehouses, and more. But trade growth needs to be matched by investments in new capacity in ports, shipping, freight-forwarding, last mile delivery, and other industries.

6Finding $1.7 Trillion chapter abstract

Cross-border trade finance transactions remain paper-based and manual-and thus highly inefficient, slow, and susceptible to fraud, and also time- and labor-intensive to manage. Increasingly complex financial regulations add to a bank's already high costs of preparing the documentation for any one transaction, and incentivize banks to deal with larger companies that offer bigger deals and are a known commodity. In small transactions, banks' fixed fees for international wires and foreign exchange rate management quickly whittle away profits. As a result, the world is facing a $1.7 trillion pent-up demand for trade finance.

7The Big Query chapter abstract

We are verging on an era of mass diffusion of a technological feat: cognitive computing. Artificial intelligence makes companies better at optimizing, matching, and predicting, to a good extent without much human involvement. And it enables the extraction of information from data that are messy and unstructured and the recognition of patterns in it. It is powered by the stunning growth of qualitative and quantitative data inside and outside enterprises-33 times more than in 2008. In 2019, global Internet traffic is equivalent to 142 million people streaming Internet HD video simultaneously, all day, every day. Increase in data and computing power are rapidly disrupting world trade. Companies are far better placed than just ten years ago to spot new international markets and micromarkets, target and market to foreign customers, orchestrate their global operations, and manage their global supply chains-including to forecast and avert the next tornado or tsunami.

8Offline chapter abstract

In 1994, the United Nations launched a global drive to bridge digital divides between developed and developing countries. Over twenty years later, digital divides are digital chasms. While 90 percent of Germans and Swiss are online, in sub-Saharan Africa, only twenty out of a hundred people were netizens in 2016; in developing Asia-Pacific, only 49 percent; and in Latin America 56 percent. Of companies, it is the larger, urban, productive, and export-driven businesses that tend to have digital capabilities and transact online; many rural small businesses do not even have an Internet connection. Companies and consumers that have Internet connection face another challenge to transacting online: gaps in online payments. The risk is that widening digital divides between advanced nations and developing countries could only widen their income gap, leaving developing countries to forever play catch-up-including in the digitizing world trading system.

9Stuck in Customs chapter abstract

Trade costs, the various costs of moving cargo from one part of the Earth to another, have dropped precipitously over the past two hundred years, contributing, with trade liberalization, trade agreements, and economic growth, to the 6 percent annual growth of world trade in the second half of the twentieth century. Policy has played a major role in cutting trade costs. But still today, numerous countries' customs are bottlenecks of world trade that delay shipments and cost companies money. Worse, hungry for revenue, hounded by protectionist lobbies, and worried about national security, governments are setting up a new obstacle course for businesses to navigate. The obstacles are familiar enemies of trade: fears of terrorism, sprawling taxes, and stagnant transport. Their resurgence can make or break the future of ecommerce, the hallmark of twenty-first-century trade that promises particularly great gains from small businesses around the world.

10Splinternet chapter abstract

Unrivalled after the fall of the Berlin Wall, free market ideology forced a wave of privatizations around the world, transforming governments from managers of economies into regulators of markets. Today's global digital economy has no unifying ideology or policy framework like the one that made countries march in the same direction in the 1990s. It has no common, enforceable rules that would give certainty to businesses operating across borders. It does not even have a common set of norms everyone would roughly adhere to. Instead, countries around the world are fashioning and implementing their own digital regulations in such areas as data privacy and transfer, Internet intermediary liability rules, and taxes on digital sales. What many have called digital protectionism seems to be on the rise.

11Credit Crunch chapter abstract

Few obstacles are as thorny for small businesses trying to ride on new technologies to scale in world markets as lack of finance. Survey after survey show that capital is the number one challenge to small businesses and a top-three challenge to mid-size companies looking to grow their businesses and export; the challenges are particularly acute in Africa and developing Asia. While online lending and crowdfunding have significantly opened small businesses' access to capital, there are several policy challenges that obstruct the diffusion and use of these technologies. Small businesses have also themselves to blame for their lack of access to finance, such as limited understanding of how banks and investors view the world and assess risk.

12Techlash and Trade Wars chapter abstract

There are several challenges to the twenty-first century's technology-powered trade, such as digital divides, arcane customs procedures, and stringent data transfer rules. But no challenge is as difficult to solve as fears about the impacts of trade and technology on jobs, incomes, and equality. These fears have power-they helped produce Brexit and the election of Donald Trump. Paradoxically, while unlocking unprecedented opportunities and value creation in countries around the world, the twin forces of technology and trade are more often feared to cause unemployment and inequality than celebrated as sources of opportunity. For developing countries interested in building their own tech ecosystems, these fears are compounded by concerns about the dominant role of U.S. and Chinese tech companies and presumed winner take all dynamics in technology sectors.

13Better Trade By More People chapter abstract

Productivity growth that drives income growth has been sagging around the world over the past decade. No one knows exactly what is causing it. The past few chapters have discussed a number of bottlenecks for firms trying to take better advantage of technologies to advance their trade-regulatory uncertainty, digital divides, costs and complexities of cross-border payments and logistics, arcane customs procedures, and so on. All these areas can be improved with new policies. This chapter lays out an ambitious and wide-ranging policy roadmap for countries to make emerging technologies work for their trade and revive their productivity.

Additional information

NGR9781503610712
9781503610712
1503610713
Revolutionizing World Trade: How Disruptive Technologies Open Opportunities for All by Kati Suominen
New
Paperback
Stanford University Press
20191119
360
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a new book - be the first to read this copy. With untouched pages and a perfect binding, your brand new copy is ready to be opened for the first time

Customer Reviews - Revolutionizing World Trade