Foreign Policy Magazine

The Productivity Imperative

Advice for the president-elect.

Ask business leaders what President-elect Donald Trump’s top economic priority should be, and you’ll get an array of predictable answers: Cut business taxes. Reduce the debt. Reform trade deals. Jeffrey Immelt, CEO of General Electric Co., has a different response. “We have to find ways to raise productivity,” Immelt told an audience at a September conference in New York. Otherwise, he warned, America could face years of below-trend growth with all the associated problems: rising debt, falling living standards, and so on. Conversely, GE economists estimate that if the world boosted industrial productivity by just 1 percent, it could add $15 trillion—yes, trillion—to the global gross domestic

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Foreign Policy Magazine

Foreign Policy Magazine1 min read
The Promise And Pitfalls Of Climate Policy
RISING GLOBAL temperatures and increasingly frequent and severe weather events make effective climate-related policy and investments ever more urgent. If unabated, severe and irreparable climate change could further destabilize food and water systems
Foreign Policy Magazine2 min read
Multidisciplinary Curriculum and Career Planning Foster Flexibility and Public-Private Sector Transitions
Amid the ever-changing terrain of international affairs careers, Julie Nussdorfer, associate director of global careers at Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS), has observed several transformative trends. Notably,
Foreign Policy Magazine2 min read
What In The World?
1. Hearings on whether Israel was committing acts of genocide in Gaza began at the International Court of Justice in The Hague in January. Which African nation petitioned the case? a. South Africa b. Nigeria c. Mozambique d. Egypt 2. How old did Nort

Related Books & Audiobooks