The Board of WCPS met in Bahrain to discuss the forthcoming WPC
The Board of WCPS met in Bahrain to discuss the forthcoming World Productivity Congress to be hold in Bahrain in November 2106 (from 26th - 30th).
The Board of WCPS met in Bahrain to discuss the forthcoming World Productivity Congress to be hold in Bahrain in November 2106 (from 26th - 30th).
Some of you will now that I have been in Bahrain for the last week helping prepare for the World Productivity Congress which will be held here in November. (see worldproductivitycongress.net for details.) Conversations obviously covered the productivity of Bahrain and its move towards becoming a post-oil economy. Lots of Bahrainis look at Dubai as
I am not a political animal - except insofar as I think I understand the role of government in creating the infrastructure required for productivity development (and have offered advice to quite a few governments over the years). However, I must day that I am astonished by the current political scene in the USA. The
The UK languishes at the bottom of most productivity league tables. We seem to be a low skill, low performing country. Lots of 'good' jobs have been taken out of the economy and replaced with part-time, low skill employment. The UK must start to invest in skills - and skill-based employment sectors. Otherwise it will
India has the highest population of livestock in the world and produces a whopping 147 million metric tonnes of milk, a number also unsurpassed by any other country. However, when it comes to productivity, it is way behind most other nations - Israel’s productivity is 10 times greater. India is starting to realise what it
I saw a piece on the web the other day that suggested that sensible, progressive governments should offer incentives to organisations to improve their productivity. But organisations surely want to improve their productivity because it reduces their costs, improves their performance and competitiveness and improves their profits. If this is not enough of an incentive,
The UK continues to languish behind the rest of the G7 in terms of its quoted productivity performance - yet my personal experience is that performance of the UK labour force has risen remarkably over the last few years. This suggests that either I am mistaken (certainly a possibility as mine is only anecdotal evidence)
The world is getting into another economic mess as it reacts to slowing growth in China. However, countries in the West should look to their own performance. I know China's slowdown means there is less demand for Western goods and services ... but this means that now is a good time to concentrate on building
I talked last week about the need to think about key issues well in advance of them coming to pass. (The example I used was driverless cars saying we, collectively, should be thinking now about the algorithms used to determine the action the car's systems should take in the event of a potential accident -
We are in the age of driverless cars. Experts predict that a commercial, driverless car is less than a decade away. But in the event of a potential accident, who does the car save - the driver, a pedestrian about to be hit, the occupants of another vehicle? The algorithms built into the car's systems