Antoine van Agtmael (Author) Antoine van Agtmael is a senior adviser at Garten Rothkopf, a public policy advisory firm in Washington, DC. Previously, he was a founder, CEO, and CIO of Emerging Markets Management LLC; a deputy director of the capital markets department of the International Finance Corporation (IFC), the private sector oriented affiliate of the World Bank; and a division chief in the World Bank's borrowing operations. He was an adjunct professor at Georgetown Law Center and taught at the Harvard Institute of Politics. Van Agtmael is chairman of the NPR Foundation, a member of the board of NPR, and chairman of its Investment Committee. He is also a trustee of the Brookings Institution and cochairman of its International Advisory Council. He is on the President's Council on International Activities at Yale University, the Advisory Council of Johns Hopkins University's Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS), and a member of the Council on Foreign Relations.Fred Bakker (Author) Alfred Bakker, until his recent retirement, was a journalist specializing in monetary and financial affairs with Het Financieele Dagblad--the Financial Times of Holland--serving as deputy editor, editor in chief, and CEO. In addition to his writing and editing duties he helped develop the company from a newspaper publisher to a multimedia company, developing several websites, a business news radio channel, and a quarterly business magazine, FD Outlook, and was responsible for the establishment of FD Intelligence.
"van Agtmael and Bakker paint an exciting picture of the future
based on progress made possible by cooperative processes they call
'brainsharing.' Citing unheralded developments in specific places
and specific industries, this extraordinarily well researched book
challenges the conventional view of a developed world in relative
decline. The authors make a compelling case for the role of
connectors, who bring together a diverse collection of players
required for collaborative success. This compellingly argued and
lucidly written book is a must read for anyone who cares about the
future of the planet."--David F. Swensen, Chief Investment Officer
at Yale University
"A lively, lucid story of innovation and transformation powered by
brainpower and business, academe, and regional governments working
together.... The smartest book on one of the most important and
promising trends in the American and global economy."--Strobe
Talbott, President of The Brookings Institution
"An absolutely fascinating tour of cities in the United States and
Europe that were once traditional centers of manufacturing which
are now reinventing themselves as hubs of innovation. If you want
to understand how economies at the local level can transform
themselves, this is the book to read."--Liaquat Ahamed, author of
Lords of Finance
"Energetic.... Offers a hopeful perspective on how imaginative
economies can become pacesetters in the fast-forward Knowledge
Economy.... Longlisted for the Financial Times/McKinsey Business
Book of the Year Award, SMARTEST PLACES is receiving well-deserved
attention among corporate leaders and financial strategists - and
it ought to be required reading for every would-be
policymaker."--WorldBank.org
"In every chapter of economic history, unexpected places have
cultivated the dynamism that transforms society at large. Antoine
van Agtmael and Fred Bakker describe how the next generation of
emerging hotspots are located in unlikely places, as industry
connects with the energy of universities and academic medical
centers to transform rustbelts into 'brainbelts.' This scouting
report will interest students of the future taking shape
today."--Dick Brodhead, President of Duke University
"The authors make a strong case that a renaissance in the
development and manufacturing of 'chips, new materials, and
biosciences' is happening not in tech or major urban centers, but
in reclaimed factories and settings like the revitalized American
Tobacco Campus in the North Carolina Research Triangle. For anyone
looking at trends in technology or manufacturing, or at the future
of global business, this insightful work will provide food for
thought."--Publishers Weekly
"The authors offer a compelling and insightful look at how
companies and communities are turning ashes into silicon
valleys."--Harold L. Sirkin, Senior Partner, The Boston Consulting
Group (BCG)
"The book contains an abundance of insightful information.... A
strong selection for those interested in high-tech industries or
community economic revival."--Library Journal
"The perspective here on the transformation of 'rustbelts' into
'brainbelts' has an outsider's freshness toward America and an
international expansiveness...Akron glitters like never before in
these illuminating pages."--Kirkus Reviews
"The riveting story of how failing rustbelts in the Unites States
and Northern Europe have transformed themselves into emerging
brainbelts through the triumph of collaboration and ingenuity to
become promising models of bottom-up innovation."--Hilda
Ochoa-Brillembourg, Founder and Chairman, Strategic Investment
Group
"This book upends conventional wisdom about how the global economy
works and which places are primed to thrive and prosper. Van
Agtmael and Bakker capture the complex market dynamics that are
revaluing the formidable assets of U.S. and European older
industrial cities: advanced industries and networks of
universities, companies and governments that collaborate to
compete. These are refreshing insights that build on real world
experience and evidence rather than antiquated group think."--Bruce
Katz, Brookings Institution Centennial Scholar and co-author of The
Metropolitan Revolution
"This eye-opening account of innovation in unlikely places will
raise the spirits of anyone discouraged by the gurus who keep
telling us the future belongs not to the established democracies of
the capitalist world, but to emerging powers mostly in Asia. No,
Van Agtmael and Bakker tell us, the 'smartest places on earth' may
be in little-heralded cities in the United States and northern
Europe, where business people, scientists and creative managers are
inventing smart new products and ingenious new ways to manufacture
them. They tell us that many of the old economies of the developed
world 'are entering a revolutionary new phase' because 'the global
competitive advantage is shifting from cheap to smart.' I found
their arguments, and the facts they have gathered to support them,
both intriguing and convincing. And their book is fun to
read."--Robert G. Kaiser, former Managing Editor of the Washington
Post
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