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Dean Jordi Canals
and Professor Juan José Toribio Speak in Argentina and
Chile
Alumni Meetings Examine Latin America’s Changing Economic
Scenario
IESE’s Dean, Jordi Canals, and Economics Professor
Juan José Toribio traveled to Latin America at the end
of November to take part in Regional Alumni Chapter Meetings in
Argentina and Chile. The professors’ trip began on November
25 for a meeting organized by the Argentina-Uruguay Alumni Association
Board.
The event was held at the headquarters of the IAE
Business School of Austral University and was attended by 191
alumni and local business leaders. Fernando Fragueiro, Dean of
IAE, welcomed the guests and the panel of speakers. Julio De Vido,
Minister of Planning and Government Investments, opened the session
with a presentation on the Argentinean government’s principal
investment projects, led by President Néstor Kirchner.
Jordi Canal’s speech, “Globalization
and the Changing Business Paradigm,” examined the experiences
of emerging countries such as China, Malaysia, Argentina, Brazil
and Mexico. These countries, he said, are “the protagonists
in the creation of a new world order, each in their own way.”
Canals said this shift will challenge the status quo of the 1990s:
two superpowers, the US and the former Soviet Union.
Dean Canals said that in the new world order, human
values such as ethics will be more highly regarded. “Nevertheless,
business leaders will not always practice what they preach,”
he said. He also predicted that free trade will lead to greater
tolerance between nations, and that the e-revolution will allow
consumers to buy in countries and markets that were previously
inaccessible.
One of the greatest economic challenges, he said,
is the growing volatility of countries with closed or relatively
closed economic systems and government systems. As rivalries surface
in the global economy, he believes that nations will form clusters
to maintain a competitive edge, which will lead to a greater degree
of transparency and trust.
Canals said Argentina, a country rich in natural
resources, should build an extraordinary, able workforce and a
deep pool of talented business leaders. The dean believes that
Argentina can achieve this in the next two decades by fostering
closer cooperation between government and industry and by creating
excellent learning facilities to train the next generation of
business leaders.
Dean Canals passed the baton over to Professor Juan
José Toribio who discussed “The Financial Crisis
and the Return to International Capital Markets.” Toribio
reflected on the international community’s view of the 2002
crisis before setting out his blueprint for Argentina’s
return to the world’s capital markets. The economics professor
stressed that Argentina must fulfill six conditions before this
can take place:
• Reach an agreement with the International
Monetary Fund (IMF)
• Maintain a realistic exchange rate
that assures stability in the current account
• Gain the trust of the international
community through transparency in government
• Promote sustainable growth in the
economy through government policy
• Reform those aspects of the economy
and the government that led to the crisis
• Negotiate a reasonable reduction of
the country’s debt
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Enrique Pescarmona, president of the Argentina-Uruguay
Alumni Association Board and president of Industrias Metalúrgicas
Pescarmona (MBA ’67) concluded the session. Pascarmona said,
“Argentina is on the right path now, thanks to our government’s
policies which will lead to resurgence in industry and job creation.
There is no point crying over spilled milk. If we all look to
the future and set targets for ourselves, I’m sure we can
achieve them.”
Dean Canals and Professor Toribio left Buenos Aries
for the following day’s alumni meeting in Santiago, Chile.
The event was held at the headquarters of Banco de Credito e Inversiones
(BCI) and more than 100 IESE alumni caught up with each other
in the bank’s dining room over lunch. Luis Enrique Yarur,
President of BCI and of the Chile Alumni Association Board (MBA
’75), hosted the meeting.
Yarur thanked the professors for their visit to
Chile and assured them that he continued to apply the lessons
he learned in IESE in his role as a banker, and especially, in
his dealings with colleagues. “A sign of this trust in IESE’s
ability to bring out the best in young business leaders is that
many of our team are alumni,” he said.
Jordi Canals then updated alumni about IESE’s
objectives for short and medium-term growth. His announcement
that both the Madrid and Barcelona campuses will be expanded was
met with applause.
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