Globalisation, Corporate Leadership & Inclusive Growth: An Agenda for India
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China is now the biggest IT exporter to America. It accounts for 27% of all American IT imports (from only 10% in 2000), which last year created a trade surplus of $34 billion.

China overtakes US as world's leading exporter of IT goods, OECD, 12 December 2005

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BIBLIOGRAPHY

Inclusive Growth and Education

Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, Globalisation and higher Education, by Prof. Dr. Simon Marginson, 2007
The paper explores the issues for national policy and for individual institutions. It provides an overview of globalisation and higher education and the global responses of national systems and individual institutions of higher education It also focuses on certain areas of policy with a strong multilateral dimension: Europeanisation, institutional rankings and typologies and cross-border mobility.

Guy Pfeffermann, “Into Africa”, EFMD Global Focus, Vol. 02, Issue 02, 2008
Guy Pfeffermann explains why business schools are key to achieving development goals in Africa and why they are starting to take a growing interest in the continent.

Bruce Stokes, “When Childhood is denied”, National Journal, 28 June, 2008
The journalist denounces child labour in India, which traps millions of young Indians. He proposes to put in place a system similar to Bolsa Escuela, which takes place in Brazil: for more than a decade, the Brazilian government has paid parents a small stipend—$4.50 a month per child—to send their kids to school rather than to work. More than 1 million children now participate in the program.