06760nam 22006851c 450 991078917460332120200115203623.01-4729-2032-51-4729-0507-510.5040/9781472920324(CKB)3710000000074098(EBL)1580816(SSID)ssj0001154095(PQKBManifestationID)11670043(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001154095(PQKBWorkID)11153794(PQKB)10220565(MiAaPQ)EBC1580816(OCoLC)866442992(UtOrBLW)bpp09259417(MiAaPQ)EBC3003409(Au-PeEL)EBL3003409(EXLCZ)99371000000007409820150827d2014 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrCapital wars the new east-west challenge for entrepreneurial leadership and economic success /Daniel PintoLondon Bloomsbury 2014.1 online resource (257 p.)Includes index1-4729-1050-8 1-4729-0505-9 Includes bibliographical references and index.Cover; Contents; Introduction; Part One: From the capitalism of creators to the capitalism of apparatchiks: the rise and fall of the West; 1 The end of our illusions; 1. Illusions, the drivers of our decline; 2. The opposing forces; 3. 'You have the growth, we'll have the debt!'; 4. Banks and States: both arsonists and fire-fighters; 5. A rope to hang ourselves or to pull ourselves out of the rut?; 2 The impossible gamble of redistribution without growth; 1. The implosion of Western social models; 2. Powerless governments: too fast for the economy, too slow for the markets3. European deconstruction4. The crumbling city on the hill; 3 From empire-builders to administrators: chronicle of a death foretold; 1. The end of the empire-builder, the root of the West's demise; 2. Can we still make elephants dance?; 3. The rise of the nomadic investor; 4. From financial myopia to the erosion of our competitiveness; 5. Divergent interests as a system; 6. Corporate governance: when the tree hides the forest; 7. Litigation culture and risk-aversion; 8. Requiem for an entrepreneur9. The end of the partnership and the triumph of the Banker-King: 'Heads I win, tails you lose'Part Two: Their conquests, our recipes: how emerging powers made our entrepreneurial capitalism their own; 1 Emerging powers: how the war was (almost) won; 1. Two winning models, one horizon; 2. The secrets of Statentrepreneurial capitalism; 3. The comeback of family capitalism; 4. The domestic victory: the creation of the new middle class; 2 How we were robbed of our own capitalism; 1. The Entrepreneur-State-Market triangle: a Western invention; 2. The architects of yesterday and tomorrow3 The new geopolitics of money1. The weapons of financial dissuasion; 2. The assault on international organisations; 3. The dangerous temptation of protectionism; 4. Currency wars; 5. How to buy a continent: the example of Africa; 6. Intellectual property: the last bastion of the West; 7. Environmental protection: might makes right; Part Three: Rebuilding upon the ruins of Western capitalism; 1 First step: bring down the myths; 1. Emerging countries are winning the economic war, but can they reign?; 2. The economic Maginot Line fantasy: one man's wealth is not another man's poverty2 Turning the apparatchik CEO back into a real entrepreneur1. Reconciling our listed companies with the long term; 2. CEOs must think like business owners: 'put your money where your mouth is!'; 3. Appraise and compensate business leaders over time; 4. Re-energise corporate boards and redefine the 'standards of good governance'; 5. Rebuild bridges with shareholders and increase their loyalty; 3 Transforming finance from an end to a means; 1. Retool but don't punish finance; 2. Putting the client and the economy back at the heart of banking; 3. Making non-bank finance accountable too4. To stabilise the financial system, encourage competition, and bring back the partnership mindset"Just a few years is all it took for the debt crisis to bring down the mighty 'twin towers' of American and European capitalism and undo two centuries of Western dominance on the world's economic and political stage. Daniel Pinto offers a unique insight into how the East is winning the battle for economic supremacy, thereby shaping the new world order and leaving America and Europe with no choice but to reinvent themselves. Drawing on his own experience at the highest levels of business and finance, Pinto dismisses the common notion that globalisation is to blame for anaemic growth, massive unemployment and over-indebtedness. Instead, he argues that by killing our own entrepreneurial spirit, we have set the stage for the demise of the West and the rise of emerging powers. Capital Wars is a road map designed to re-energise large corporations, better control financial markets and reposition the entrepreneur at the centre of the Western capitalist model in order to regain economic dominance."--Bloomsbury PublishingJust a few years is all it took for the debt crisis to bring down the mighty 'twin towers' of American and European capitalism and undo two centuries of Western dominance on the world's economic and political stage. Daniel Pinto offers a unique insight into how the East is winning the battle for economic supremacy, thereby shaping the new world order and leaving America and Europe with no choice but to reinvent themselves. Drawing on his own experience at the highest levels of business and finance, Pinto dismisses the common notion that globalisation is to blame for anaemic growth, massive unemployment and over-indebtedness. Instead, he argues that by killing our own entrepreneurial spirit, we have set the stage for the demise of the West and the rise of emerging powers. Capital Wars is a road map designed to re-energise large corporations, better control financial markets and reposition the entrepreneur at the centre of the Western capitalist model in order to regain economic dominanceEntrepreneurshipBusiness & managementLeadershipCapitalismEntrepreneurship.Leadership.Capitalism.337Pinto Daniel774000UtOrBLWUtOrBLWUkLoBPBOOK9910789174603321Capital wars3734691UNINA