The Asian Wall Street Journal Weekly 1998 S. Karene Witcher |
Title | Subject | Authors |
As the region suffers, job openings boom in Australia: buoyed business optimism ushers in work opportunities in technology and export sectors. | Business, international | S. Karene Witcher, Deidre Sheehan |
Auckland is in the dark: city seeks cause for two-week power outage. (New Zealand) | Business, international | S. Karene Witcher |
Australia's competitive edge.: economy makes strides and ranks high on many international measures. | Business, international | S. Karene Witcher |
Australia's firms look abroad to recruit executives: salaries are surging as companies seek talent outside the country, specifically in America. | Business, international | S. Karene Witcher |
Banks seem in worse shape than expected.(in Indonesia) | Business, international | S. Karene Witcher |
Big bottler to reorganize. (Coca-Cola Amatil of Sydney, Australia, intends to spin off its European assets) | Business, international | Nikhil Deogun, S. Karene Witcher, Mark Todd |
Coca-Cola Amatil struggles to handle Indonesian woes. | Business, international | S. Karene Witcher |
Executive pay hits ceiling after two decades of growth. (Asia's executives) | Business, international | S. Karene Witcher |
Expatriates discover it's certainly an employers market.(expatriate employees in Indonesia) | Business, international | S. Karene Witcher |
Fairfax attracts followers, despite its recent turbulence.(John Fairfax Holdings) | Business, international | S. Karene Witcher |
Firms wrestle with layoffs. | Business, international | S. Karene Witcher |
Firms wrestle with layoffs: Motorola averted job cuts in '80s by motivating employees in Asia. (1980s) | Business, international | S. Karene Witcher |
Hero Supermarket's stores regroup after Jakarta riots. | Business, international | S. Karene Witcher |
Hero Supermarket's stores regroup after Jakarta riots: saddled with foreign debt, upscale chain still adapts better than most Indonesian companies. | Business, international | S. Karene Witcher |
Hubbing takes off in Asia as a way to centralize operations.(multinational corporations) | Business, international | S. Karene Witcher |
Investor's plight illustrates the Asian loan-recovery mess: murky bankruptcy laws put many of the region's debtors, not creditors, in the driver's seat. (Singapore, Indonesia) | Business, international | S. Karene Witcher, Darren McDermott |
Marketing strategies help Asian firms beat a downturn: brand power helps Oxy pick up market share from rivals; consumers turn to familiar names. | Business, international | S. Karene Witcher |
Mergers and acquisitions entail human costs, study shows; pitfalls include charges tied to staff turnover, with poor communication as culprit. | Business, international | S. Karene Witcher |
New bankruptcy law forces enterprises to reconfigure.(Column) | Business, international | S. Karene Witcher |
New Zealand tourism slows; Thai travelers provide glimmer of good news. | Business, international | S. Karene Witcher |
Regional downturn tightens job market: networking now is crucial, executives need to circulate before layoffs. | Business, international | S. Karene Witcher |
Some Asian firms turn to rental CEOs for quick fix. (chief executive officers) | Business, international | S. Karene Witcher |
Sydney unveils a budget that economists call prudent. | Business, international | S. Karene Witcher |
Thailand's labor law sparks concersn of costly business. | Business, international | S. Karene Witcher |
Waiting out the turbulence: business binds the ethnic Chinese to Indonesia. | Business, international | S. Karene Witcher, Darren McDermott |
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