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Dos and Don’ts im Dashboard-Design: Wie Eyetracking-Verfahren bei der Datenvisualisierung helfen
(2016)
Unternehmen müssen aufgrund hohen Wettbewerbsdrucks ihre Produktivität stetig steigern. Ein Bereich, welcher sich deren permanenter Steigerung annimmt, ist das Industrial Engineering (IE). Gerade im Zuge der Digitalisierung und Vernetzung der Unternehmensprozesse beleuchtet der folgende Beitrag, wie sich Industrie 4.0 auf das IE auswirkt. Der Ansatz ist ein Industrial Engineering 4.0 zu gestalten, das die Fortschritte von Industrie 4.0 und der Digitalen Fabrik miteinander vereint.
Creating growth through trade is an important part of the policy approach of many economies. For decades, many member countries of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) have cooperated in a fair competition for the benefit of their national exporters. The countries’ official export credit agencies (ECAs) have established and jointly improved rules and regulations for export credit and political risk insurance. However, new players such as China, Russia or other fast developing countries have now joined the list of top exporting nations. As these countries have established their own ECAs, there is a need to introduce rules and regulations on global standards for financial terms as well as truly international norms ensuring ‘ethical’ trading behaviour.
But how will government support for foreign trade look like in the future? Will global standards for export credit and political risk insurance become reality by 2020? And how will strict rules and regulations for officially supported export credits and FDI regarding ethics, human rights and the environment impact growth through trade in general, or exporters in particular? These are questions addressed by the thirty eight contributions to Global Policy’s third eBook entitled ‘The Future of Foreign Trade Support – Setting Global Standards for Export Credit and Political Risk Insurance’, guest edited by Andreas Klasen and Fiona Bannert.