Urban World: The Shifting Global Business Landscape - McKinsey Global Institute, Richard Dobbs, Jaana Remes, Sven Smit, James Manyika, Jonathan Woetzel & Yaw Agyenim-Boateng

Urban World: The Shifting Global Business Landscape

By McKinsey Global Institute, Richard Dobbs, Jaana Remes, Sven Smit, James Manyika, Jonathan Woetzel & Yaw Agyenim-Boateng

  • Release Date: 2013-10-03
  • Genre: Economics

Description

Emerging markets are changing where and how the world does business. For the last three decades, they have been a source of low-cost but increasingly skilled labor. Their fast-growing cities are filled with millions of new and increasingly prosperous consumers, who provide a new growth market for global corporations at a time when much of the developed world faces slower growth as a result of aging. But the number of large companies from the emerging world will rise, as well. This powerful wave of new companies could profoundly alter long-established competitive dynamics around the world. 

The emerging economies’ share of Fortune Global 500 companies will probably jump to more than 45 percent by 2025, up from just 5 percent in 2000. That’s because while three-quarters of the world’s 8,000 companies with annual revenue of $1 billion or more are today based in developed economies, we forecast that an additional 7,000 could reach that size in little more than a decade—and 70 percent of them will most likely come from emerging markets. 

The rebalancing of the global business landscape will probably be even faster and more dramatic than the shift of economic growth to emerging regions. Large companies matter, and not just for their ability to create jobs and generate higher incomes; they are also forces for increased productivity, innovation, standard setting, and the dissemination of skills and technology. Their geographic shift will have profound implications for the nature of competition, including not only the race for resources and talent but also, more broadly, the emerging markets’ efforts to reach the next level of economic development and prosperity. 

Comments