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Week 1: Globalization and its impact on global business

As of today, do more people in the world live in cities or in the countryside?

Are there more people suffering from hunger or from obesity?

Are the largest consumer markets, in the U.S. and Europe, or in China and India?

What is Globalization?

A process of change that It has economic, social, political, and cultural aspects.

What is demography?

Demography is the study of human populations

What is Demography?

The systematic, often statistical, study of human populations, especially with reference to size
and density, distribution and vital statistics.

The world is changing very, very, fast

The world is forever expanding in complexity, as algorithms take over former human Jobs

This can be literally anything, like humans used to make chairs, now machines do. Humans
used to be calculators and economists. Now machines and algorithms run everything behind
our back.

The world is changing at different speeds. Human evolution is very slow, history is a lot
faster and technology change is even faster

I Think Technology is going to overpower in the very immediate run of all cultural barriers,
political and social around the world.

For example the US dollar Bill is accepted all the world as a means of payment, and that’s a
reserve currency. But the Chinese Renminbi is not accepted around the world. And, yet,
China is already the world’s largets trading nation.

I Think Technology is going to overpower in the very immediate run of all cultural barriers,
political and social around the world.

the world is becoming a much more dangerous place there are some countries out there
where there’s no order. for example in syria, and yemen the governments has lost control
There’s lawlessness.

Week 2:

Western world ? well, that’s long life and small family

And Third World is short life and large family

What has happened since 1962?

we have long live and small family and we have a completely new world

in 1800 the world’s population was 1 billion 130 year later 1930 2 billion 1960 3 billion, 1974
4 billion 1987 5 billion 1999 6 billion 2011 7 billion .
in 2045 it could be 9 billion

about every second 5 people are born 2 people die

our population has increased by 167 people

The average person lived 69 years

More of us lived in cities tan rural área.

By 2050 70% of Us Will be living in urban áreas

But, we don’t take up as much space as you’d think standing shoulder to shoulder all 7 billion
of us would fill the city of los ángeles

So it’s not space we need

It’s balance

5% of us consume

23% of the world’s energy

13% of don’t have clean drinking wáter

38% of us adequate lack sanitation

7 billion people espeaking more than 7,000 languages living in 194 countries

Week 3: Exporting companies and adaptation to market changes

How could we get best information from the consumer

I want to get a Good assessment of the Marketplace

Understand the consumer, understand the competition and understand you Know what
people would

What people would think about

Week 5: Developed, developing and emerging markets

There are basically three factors that determine whether a country Will be rich or poor.

The first is:

Institutions

Institutions are beyond important. Broadly speaking, rich countries have Good intitutions and
poor one have very, very bad ones.

The correlation between poverty and corruption is direct. The richest countries in the world
are quite simply invariably also the least corrupt ones.

And the most corrupt countries are also the poorest.

When countries are corrupt, they can’t collect enough taxes to get the Good institutions they
would need to escape the poverty trap.

There’s a second thing that keeps countries poor.


INSTITUTIONES CULTURE

What goes on in people’s minds, their outlooks and beliefs

19 of the richest countries in the world have 70% or more of their population sayin religión is
not at all important to them.

GEOGRAPHY:

Poor countries are overwhelmingly located in the tropical regions.

This isn’t a coincidence life is, in many ways, simply far far tougher there.

The problems beging with agriculture:

Tropical plants are generally a lot les packed with carbohydrates.

Poor countries have worse soil too. Also, and perhaps surprisingly, a tropical climate can be
disadvantageous to photosynthesis.

Lage domesticated animal

So, how should one weigh up the realative importance of all these different factors,
institutional, culture, and geographic in deternining the wealth of nation.

Sympathy an ability

EL PODER TRANSFORMADOR DE LA TECNOLOGÍA

the number of active broadband subscriptions in the developed countries reached a whooping
84 per 100 inhabitants. in the developing and emerging economies it was only 21 per 100, but
growing very rapidly.

what is reliable and What is not reliable?

I think that the transformative power of technology brought good and bad things.

Among the good things are the industrialization of companies and the internationalization of
these, also the use of software and hardware allowed companies to improve their processes.
for example

Speed and time,Easy storage, Information exchange improvement, and Automation

and for people the technology helped in Increase productivity, easy access to any type of
information.

Automate processes within the industry, Better communication, social interaction, Education
for everyone's access, It improves the lifestyle and promotes a better quality of life

What is not reliable?

I think, that is the use that is given to technology, for example, some countries how United
States and China. are used a lot of technology in weapons of war, but does not invest in
technologies that help reduce environmental pollution worldwide

Week 7: Eco-businesses and sustainable economies


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