10 things you don't know about NOKIA

anthony (Finance) (7918 Points)

28 January 2009  

When the world’s top business and political leaders begin their five-day brainstorming tomorrow at the Congress centre of the World Economic Forum (WEF) overlooking the snow-laden Alps, they would hope to get a clue on tackling the global meltdown not seen in the last 78 years.  This time around, there would be more number of heads of state — 40 as compared with 27 last year — not just listening to 1,400 global CEOs but also doing some plain-speaking to them on businesses getting it all wrong. The likes of CII President and ICICI Bank CEO and Managing Director K V Kamath, Reliance Industries Chairman Mukesh Ambani, Kumar Mangalam Birla of the Aditya Birla Group, Anil Ambani of Reliance ADAG and Nandan Nilekani of Infosys would face questions on the unsavoury Satyam episode.Commerce and Industry Minister Kamal Nath, head of the Indian delegation, is expected to give the ‘right kind of sound bytes’ to ensure that the entire India Inc is not painted with the same brush used for splashing the Satyam saga all around the world. Of course, there would be hopes hinging on the change of administration in the US. expectations are running high on President Barack Obama and his team.Whether Obama is able to do what Franklin D Roosevelt did to the sagging American economy 76 years ago would remain a hot debating point.The International Monetary Fund (IMF) and several other multilateral institutions and agencies have warned tougher weeks and months ahead. IMF projects the world economy to grow at less than 1 per cent.But that does not mean that there would be no takeaways from here. Ice on Alps would not melt soon even in the midst of a global meltdown.