Join Books.org — it's free

Book cover of Going Global: How Europe Helps Small Firms Export
Foreign Trade Regulation, Economic Policies in Europe, Europe - International Business - General & Miscellaneous, International Exchange & Trade

Going Global: How Europe Helps Small Firms Export

by William E. Nothdurft, German Marshall Fund Of The United State
Available on Bookshop Write a review

Books.org participates in affiliate programs including Bookshop.org and the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program. We may earn a commission from qualifying purchases made through links on this page, at no additional cost to you.

Log in to track your reading progress.

Overview

In the battle for global economic competitiveness, America's small and medium-sized businesses are at a significant disadvantage. Every major industrial nation in the world has developed a well-integrated system of public and private sector export assistance programs aimed specifically at the small and medium-sized businesses that make up the foundation of any economy. Every nation, that is, except the United States. Federal and state agencies and private organizations routinely urge small firms to export, but no coherent strategies guide these exhortations, and the resources committed to the task are paltry compared with the investments made by our competitors. In this groundbreaking book, William Nothdurft explores the principles that underlie European programs to help small and medium-sized firms export, and presents practical, policy-oriented guidance for creating high-yield export assistance programs in tough economic times. In a fresh, and compelling style, Going Global addresses five key questions at the heart of the export challenge: Why don't more small and medium-sized firms export? Who should be helped with exporting? What forms of assistance work best under which conditions? Where and by whom should assistance be delivered? And how should export assistance be financed? Having analyzed some of Europe's most innovative public and private sector initiatives, Nothdurft presents ten practical lessons for creating high-yield export assistance programs. He explores each lesson in detail and presents examples of programs under way in Europe to illustrate each lesson. In concluding, Nothdurft urges government and industry officials to think strategically about trade development and begin building a public-private export assistance infrastructure capable of meeting the global trade challenge head-on.

Synopsis

In the battle for global economic competitiveness, America's small and medium-sized businesses are at a significant disadvantage. Every major industrial nation in the world has developed a well-integrated system of public and private sector export assistance programs aimed specifically at the small and medium-sized businesses that make up the foundation of any economy. Every nation, that is, except the United States. Federal and state agencies and private organizations routinely urge small firms to export, but no coherent strategies guide these exhortations, and the resources committed to the task are paltry compared with the investments made by our competitors. In this groundbreaking book, William Nothdurft explores the principles that underlie European programs to help small and medium-sized firms export, and presents practical, policy-oriented guidance for creating high-yield export assistance programs in tough economic times. In a fresh, and compelling style, Going Global addresses five key questions at the heart of the export challenge: Why don't more small and medium-sized firms export? Who should be helped with exporting? What forms of assistance work best under which conditions? Where and by whom should assistance be delivered? And how should export assistance be financed? Having analyzed some of Europe's most innovative public and private sector initiatives, Nothdurft presents ten practical lessons for creating high-yield export assistance programs. He explores each lesson in detail and presents examples of programs under way in Europe to illustrate each lesson. In concluding, Nothdurft urges government and industry officials to think strategically about trade development and begin building a public-private export assistance infrastructure capable of meeting the global trade challenge head-on.

About the Author, William E. Nothdurft

William E. Nothdurft, a policy consultant, is also the author of SchoolWorks: Reinventing Public Schools to Create the Workforce of the Future (1990).

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Log in to write one.

Book Details

Published
August 1, 1992
Publisher
Brookings Institution Press
Pages
118
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780815762034

More by William E. Nothdurft

Similar books