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"The
World is Flat" was born in Tom Friedman's mind while he was in Bangalore,
the technology hub of India. It came to him after hearing an Indian
software executive explain how the 'world's economic playing field
was being leveled'. Friedman came face to face with the realization
that the world had changed - become flat- 'while he was sleeping'
(to use his own words!)
The concept Friedman paints with the words
"The world is flat" is indeed inspired and extremely ingenious.
What Friedman means by "flat" is "connected": the lowering of trade
and political barriers and the technical advances of the digital
revolution have made it possible to do business, or almost anything
else, instantaneously with billions of other people across the planet.
While demystifying the new order that is now making its presence
felt, Friedman gives due credit to the fact that the process had
been happening for a while - that the signs were clear, only, the
world had stopped paying attention to them.
What created the flat world? Friedman outlines
ten forces that have had an impact on flattening the world and stresses
technological forces. Paradoxically, the dot-com bubble played a
crucial role. Telecommunications companies like Global Crossing
had hundreds of millions of dollars of cash -- given to them by
gullible investors -- and they used it to pursue incredibly ambitious
plans to ''wire the world,'' laying fiber-optic cable across the
ocean floors, connecting Bangalore, Bangkok and Beijing to the advanced
industrial countries. The following dot-com bust, the Y2K crisis
and the resulting inflow of business processes to India and other
third world locations set the stage for the next phase of globalization
- and the flattened world. Friedman discusses at length about the
development of ''work flow platforms,'' software that made it possible
for all kinds of computer applications to connect and work together,
which is what allowed seamless cooperation by people working anywhere
in the world.
Outsourcing features in the 'World is Flat'
as a force to reckon with and which is here to stay. Friedman uses
lively examples of his experience at the 24/7 Customer Contact center
in Bangalore to illustrate how the company has adapted to the changing
world economy and its demands extremely well - effortlessly able
to prepare tax returns for Americans, take care of logistics for
customers in the UK and even those in Canada. The fact that China
and India loom large in Friedman's story because they are the two
big countries benefiting most from the flat world. Friedman understands
that China and India represent not just threats to the developed
world, but also great opportunities. After all, the changes he is
describing have the net effect of adding hundreds of millions of
people - consumers - to the world economy. That is an unparalleled
opportunity for every company and individual in the world.
He ends up, wisely, understanding that there's
no way to stop the wave. You cannot switch off these forces except
at great cost to your own economic well-being. Over the last century,
those countries that tried to preserve their systems, jobs, culture
or traditions by keeping the rest of the world out all stagnated.
Those that opened themselves up to the world prospered. But that
doesn't mean you can't do anything to prepare for this new competition
and new world - a world that has become impossibly flat and will
continue on this lateral trend.
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