Usha Haley

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Usha C. V. Haley (born Usha Venkatesan) is an influential American author and academic, and currently tenured Professor of International Business and the Director of the Global Business Center at the University of New Haven, Connecticut, United States. Born in Bombay, India, she received a Bachelor's degree in Politics at Elphinstone College, Bombay and then went on to graduate degree programs at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in Political Science, University of Wisconsin-Madison in Mass Communications and New York University, where she received Master's and PhD degrees in International Business and Strategy from the Stern School of Business. Dr. Haley has lived and worked in Mexico, Singapore, Australia, China, India, Vietnam, Thailand, Italy, Finland, Russia and several other countries.

An expert on Asian and Emerging Markets, Dr. Haley's extensive research includes over 150 articles and presentations and 6 books that explore companies and business environments in India, China, Southeast Asia and Mexico. She has also studied the effects of sanctions and trade barriers such as subsidies on the behaviors of companies and nations. Her research on boycotts, divestitures and regulations published in Multinational Corporations in Political Environments concluded that most sanctions had no effect on US corporate behaviors in South Africa [1]. Her latest book, The Chinese Tao of Business [2] highlighted the Chinese business environment and how companies operate there to enhance their profits.

She is a frequent public speaker and expert on the talk and press circuit. Her research has been regularly profiled in the major media including The Economist [3]("Survey of Asian Business", April 7-13, 2001), CNN [4](Special Report: Eye on China, May 18-19, 2005), Bloomberg News[5] (China Steel Makers get $27 Billion Subsidy, January 8, 2008), Barron's Magazine ("Foreign Carmakers keep up the Pressure on Detroit", October 22, 2001), USA Today [6] ("Tech Start-Ups Don't Grow on Trees Outside USA", June 28, 2006) the Wall Street Journal [7] ("Could the Asian Crises Repeat?", July 3, 2007), The New York Times [8] ("With New Urgency US and South Korea Seek Free Trade Deal", January 16, 2007) and BusinessWeek [9] ("The Art of Chinese Relationships", January 6, 2006).

Dr. Haley has received a life-time award for her contributions to the understanding of Business in the Asia-Pacific and serves on several corporate and governmental boards as well as academic journal editorial boards. She has also testified numerous times before US Congress on her research on China, emerging and transitional economies. Included in these testimonies, in April 2006 she testified before the US-China Economic and Security Review Commission on the effects of Chinese government subsidies on US business operations in China [10]. In March 2007, she testified before the United States House Committee on Ways and Means in support of the ground-breaking, US federal trade legislation, The Nonmarket Economy Trade Remedy Act of 2007[11].

Dr. Haley's research on Chinese subsidies to its domestic industry and China's business environment has provided support for US federal investigations and legislation on emerging markets as well as in anti-dumping litigation in the European Union and the USA. An analysis of one of her reports on subsidies to Chinese steel can be seen on CNBC's Squawk Box[12]("Steel Fortune", January 11, 2008).

[edit] Books by Haley

  • New Asian Emperors: The Overseas Chinese, their Strategies and Competitive Advantages (Butterworth-Heineman, 1998)[13]
  • Strategic Management in the Asia Pacific: Harnessing Regional and Organizational Change for Competitive Advantage (Butterworth-Heinemann, 2000) [14]
  • Multinational Corporations in Political Environments: Ethics, Values and Strategies (World Scientific, 2001, 2004) [15]
  • Asian Post-crisis Management: Corporate and Governmental Strategies for Sustainable Competitive Advantage (Palgrave, 2002) [16]
  • The Chinese Tao of Business: The Logic of Successful Business Strategy (John Wiley & Sons, 2004, 2006)[17]

[edit] Articles by Haley

  • Subsidies and the China Price, Harvard Business Review, June 2008 [18]