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The Elephant and the Dragon: The Rise of India and China, and What it Means for All of Us

Robyn Meredith, a veteran journalist and senior editor in Asia for Forbes magazine, will talk about an era of labor unbound by geographic borders and its global impact.

When:
July 26, 2007 4:30pm to 6:00pm
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A tidal wave of change is headed for American shores as we enter an era of labor unbound by geographic borders. Although ominous for the West, the transformation has already lifted hundreds of millions of Indians and Chinese from poverty.

Robyn Meredith, a veteran journalist and senior editor in Asia for Forbes magazine, will talk about this transformation and its global impact.

Using themes from her new book, The Elephant and the Dragon: The Rise of India and China, and What it Means for All of Us, Meredith will offer her observations, including:

• How India's growing number of graduates are becoming more capable of conquering the back-office work of the world, writing legal briefs, programming computers, figuring tax returns and more – all at a fraction of Western wages.

• Why the economies of China and the United States are increasingly connected, thanks to China's huge holdings of U.S. dollars and American consumers' love of lower-cost goods.

Meredith, now based in Hong Kong, joined Forbes as its Detroit bureau manager in 2000 to write about the auto industry. One of her articles was included in the 2002 edition of the book The Best Business Stories of the Year. Previously, she was a Detroit correspondent for The New York Times, where she covered the auto industry and other Midwestern news; a business reporter for USA Today; and a reporter in the Washington bureau of the American Banker newspaper.
 
There is no charge for the Forum, but preregistration is required. To RSVP, please register online. For questions, call 310-570-4605.

Reserved seating is available for Milken Institute Associates. If you are not currently a member of the Associates, please find more information under “Support M.I.” at www.milkeninstitute.org.

Parking is not available at the Institute. Two-hour free parking is available in Public Parking Lot #1 immediately adjacent to our building.

Cost: 
Free