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the.world.is.flat-第60部分
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efficient capital markets in the world for taking new ideas and turning them into
products and services。 Dick Foster; director of McKinsey & Co。 and the author of two
books on innovation; remarked to me; 〃We have an 'industrial policy' in the U。S。 …it
is called the stock exchange; whether it is the NYSE or the Nasdaq。〃 That is where
risk capital is collected and assigned to emerging ideas or growing companies; Foster
said; and no capital market in the world does that better and more efficiently than
the American one。
What makes capital provision work so well here is the security and regulation of our
capital markets; where minority shareholders are protected。 Lord knows; there are
scams; excesses; and corruption in our capital markets。 That always happens when a
lot of money is at stake。 What distinguishes our capital markets is not that Enrons
don't happen in America…they sure do。 It is that when they happen; they usually get
exposed; either by the Securities and Exchange Commission or by the business press;
and get corrected。 What makes America unique is not Enron but Eliot Spitzer; the
attorney general of New York State; who has doggedly sought to clean up the securities
industry and corporate boardrooms。 This sort of capital market has proved very; very
difficult to duplicate outside of New York; London; Frankfurt; and Tokyo。 Said Foster;
〃China and India and other Asian countries will not be successful at innovation until
they have successful capital markets; and they will not have successful capital
markets until they have rule of law which protects
minority interests under conditions of risk 。 。 。 We in the U。S。 are the lucky
beneficiaries of centuries of economic experimentation; and we are the experiment
that has worked。〃
While these are the core secrets of America's sauce; there are others that need to
be preserved and nurtured。 Sometimes you have to talk to outsiders to appreciate them;
such as Indian…born Vivek Paul of Wipro。 〃I would add three to your list;〃 he said
to me。 〃One is the sheer openness of American society。〃 We Americans often forget
what an incredibly open;
say…anything…do…anything…start…anyming…go…bankrupt…and…start…anything…ag ain
society the United States is。 There is no place like it in the world; and our openness
is a huge asset and attraction to foreigners; many of whom come from countries where
the sky is not the limit。
Another; said Paul; is the 〃quality of American intellectual property protection;〃
which further enhances and encourages people to come up with new ideas。 In a flat
world; there is a great incentive to develop a new product or process; because it
can achieve global scale in a flash。 But if you are the person who comes up with that
new idea; you want your intellectual property protected。 〃No country respects and
protects intellectual property better than America;〃 said Paul; and as a result; a
lot of innovators want to come here to work and lodge their intellectual property。
The United States also has among the most flexible labor laws in the world。 The easier
it is to fire someone in a dying industry; the easier it is to hire someone in a rising
industry that no one knew would exist five years earlier。 This is a great asset;
especially when you compare the situation in the United States to inflexible; rigidly
regulated labor markets like Germany's; full of government restrictions on hiring
and firing。 Flexibility to quickly deploy labor and capital where the greatest
opportunity exists; and the ability to quickly redeploy it if the earlier deployment
is no longer profitable; is essential in a flattening world。
Still another secret to America's sauce is the fact that it has the world's largest
domestic consumer market; with the most first adopters; in the world; which means
that if you are introducing a new product; technology; or service; you have to have
a presence in America。 All this means a steady flow of jobs for Americans。
247
There is also the little…discussed American attribute of political stability。 Yes;
China has had a good run for the past twenty…five years; and it may make the transition
from communism to a more pluralistic system without the wheels coming off。 But it
may not。 Who would want all his or her eggs in that basket?
Finally; the United States has become one of the great meeting points in the world;
a place where lots of different people bond and learn to trust one another。 An Indian
student who is educated at the University of Oklahoma and then gets his first job
with a software firm in Oklahoma City forges bonds of trust and understanding that
are really important for future collaboration; even if he winds up returning to India。
Nothing illustrates this point better than Yale University's outsourcing of research
to China。 Yale president Richard C。 Levin explained to me that Yale has two big
research operations running in China today; one at Peking University in Beijing and
the other at Fudan University in Shanghai。 〃Most of these institutional
collaborations arise not from top…down directives of university administrators; but
rather from long…standing personal relationships among scholars and scientists;〃
said Levin。
How did the Yale…Fudan collaboration arise? To begin with; said Levin; Yale professor
Tian Xu; its director; had a deep affiliation with both institutions。 He did his
undergraduate work at Fudan and received his Ph。D。 from Yale。 〃Five of Professor Xu's
collaborators; who are now professors at Fudan; were also trained at Yale;〃 explained
Levin。 One was Professor Xu's friend when both were Yale graduate students; another
was a visiting scholar in the laboratory of a Yale colleague; one was an exchange
student who came to Yale from Fudan and returned to earn his Ph。D。 in China; and the
other two were postdoctoral fellows in Professor Xu's Yale lab。 A similar story
underlies the formation of the Peking…Yale Joint Center for Plant Molecular Genetics
and Agrobiotechnology。
Professor Xu is a leading expert on genetics and has won grants from the National
Institutes of Health and the Howard Hughes Foundation to study the connection between
genetics and cancer and certain neuro…degenerative diseases。 This kind of research
requires the study of large numbers of genetic mutations in lab animals。 〃When you
want to test many genes and trace for a given gene that may be responsible for cer…
248
tain diseases; you need to run a lot of tests。 Having a bigger staff is a huge
advantage;〃 explained Levin。 So what Yale did was essentially outsource the lab work
to Fudan by creating the Fudan…Yale Biomedical Research Center。 Each university pays
for its own staff and research; so no money changes hands; but the Chinese side does
the basic technical work using large numbers of technicians and lab animals; which
cost so much less in China; and Yale does the high…end analysis of the data。 The Fudan
staff; students; and technicians get great exposure to high…end research; and Yale
gets a large…scale testing facility that would have been prohibitively expensive if
Yale had tried to duplicate it in New Haven。 A support lab in America for a project
like this one might have 30 technicians; but the one in Fudan has 150。
〃The gains are very much two…way;〃 said Levin。 〃Our investigators get substantially
enhanced productivity; and the Chinese get their graduate students trained; and their
young faculty become collaborators with our professors; who are the leaders in their
fields。 It builds human capital for China and innovation for Yale。〃 Graduate students
from both universities go back and forth; forging relationships that will no doubt
produce more collaborations in the future。 At the same time; he added; a lot of legal
preparation went into this collaboration to make sure that Yale would be able to
harvest the intellectual property that is created。
〃There is one world of science out there;〃 said Levin; 〃and this kind of international
division of labor makes a lot of sense。〃 Yale; he said; also insisted that the working
conditions at the Chinese labs be world…class; and; as a result; it has also helped
to lift the quality of the Chinese facilities。 〃The living conditions of the lab
animals are right up to U。S。 standards;〃 remarked Levin。 〃These are not mouse
sweatshops。〃
Every law of economics tells us that if we connect all the knowledge pools in the
world; and promote greater and greater trade and integration; the global pie will
grow wider and more complex。 And if America; or any other country; nurtures a labor
force that is increasingly made up of men and women who are special; specialized;
or constantly adapting to higher…value…added jobs; it will grab its slice of that
growing pie。 But
we will have to work at it。 Because if current trends prevail; countries like India
and China and whole regions like Eastern Europe are certain to narrow the gap with
America; just as Korea and Japan and Taiwan did during the Cold War。 They will keep
upping their standards。
So are we still working at it? Are we tending to the secrets of our sauce? A
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