Business & Economics Exports & Imports
Why Mexicans Don't Drink Molson
Rescuing Canadian Business From the Suds of Global Obscurity
- Publisher
- Douglas & McIntyre
- Initial publish date
- Jul 2009
- Category
- Exports & Imports, General
-
eBook
- ISBN
- 9781926685922
- Publish Date
- Jul 2009
- List Price
- $19.95
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Where to buy it
Description
A scathing wake-up call castigating the timidity of Canadian companies in international markets, combining bracing analysis and compelling anecdotes with shrewd prescriptions for the future.
Canada has all the makings of a global leader, yet it has opted to become a laggard, frittering away its jackpot of rich resources rather than building viable multinationals that are ultimately the country's best defence in a globalized world. Andrea Mandel-Campbell interviews some of Canada's leading executives and behind-the-scenes movers and shakers to reveal the hidden challenges to Canada's global success and the perils of continued complacency.
A lively and authoritative compendium of never-before-heard tales of Canadian companies abroad, Why Mexicans Don't Drink Molson is also a hands-on guide for innovative competitiveness, helping readers to identify the nation's previously underestimated assets and abilities.
"Canada's current feel-good situation -- all those percolating economic stats and indicators -- masks a dismal reality. It's charted in Andrea Mandel-Campbell's Why Mexicans Don't Drink Molson. In this, one of the year's most important books, she makes the cogent case that we're not hot, not cool. We're peripheral, a victim of our cult of middleness." -- Globe and Mail
"In her book...Andrea Mandel-Campbell highlights a Canadian epidemic symptom. She gives evidence as to how, for very little, money, great innovations and technologies leave our country to come back to our market with high prices." -- Edmonton Journal
About the author
Andrea Mandel-Campbell was bureau chief for London’s Financial Times in Mexico and correspondent for Business Week magazine in Argentina. For ten years she was a foreign correspondent in Latin America. She has written extensively on global competitiveness issues, including business ties between Canada and China. She lives in Toronto.