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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - The 2003 Economic Outlook Conference
presented by The University of Alabama’s Center
for Business and Economic Research is scheduled for
Thursday, Jan. 16 at the Embassy Suites Hotel in Montgomery.
“The globe continues to shrink,” said Dr. Carl Ferguson,
director of UA’s Center for Business and Economic Research.
“Globalization is on everyone’s mind these days and nowhere
is that more evident than right here, with the investment of
Mercedes, Hyundai, Honda, and Toyota in Alabama. Business
leaders who have an understanding of international business have
a competitive advantage over those who do not, and we expect the
state’s business community to have a considerable amount of
interest in the upcoming outlook conference and in hearing what
our speakers have to say about globalization and its
ramifications.”
Harry Harding, dean of the Elliot School of
International Affairs at The George Washington University, will
be the luncheon speaker. He will speak on “Globalization and
Conflict: The Search for a New World Order.”
In addition to Harding, speakers include:
Nariman Behravesh, chief economist for Global Insight,
who will present the United States economic outlook, and
Carl Ferguson, director of the Center for Business and
Economic Research, who will address the Alabama Outlook.
Conference sponsors this year include Alabama Power; Compass
Bank; Hyundai Motor Manufacturing Alabama; Sterne, Agee &
Leach Inc.; United Parcel Service; and Vulcan Materials Co.
The conference registration fee is $95, which includes the
Alabama Economic Outlook 2003, conference materials, and
lunch.
Registration deadline is Jan. 9, 2003. For more information
call 205-348-6191 or e-mail uacber@cba.ua.edu.
CBER is Alabama’s central reservoir for business, economic
and demographic data. Since its creation in 1930, CBER has
engaged in research programs to promote economic development in
the state, while continuously expanding and refining its broad
base of socioeconomic information. To forecast the level of
activity in Alabama, CBER developed an econometric model of the
state. Beginning in 1980, output from the model has been
published in the annual Alabama Economic Outlook series.
Visit CBER on the web at: http://cber.cba.ua.edu.
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