"Regional Advantage"

Published: 27 June 1999 y., Sunday
A year after arriving in the U.S. in 1985, Sherman Tuan quit his job with Taiwan_s Acer Corp., bought a used Chevrolet van and spent six months touring the country, supporting himself by trading things at flea markets. 13 years later, Mr. Tuan heads his fourth company, AboveNet Communications Inc. of San Jose, Calif., which helps Internet-service providers and large businesses handle Web traffic. AboveNet went public in December, and its shares have more than quadrupled since then, giving the company a stock-market valuation of more than $1 billion. Wednesday, Mr. Tuan agreed to sell the company for $1.5 billion in stock to Metromedia Fiber Network Inc. Taiwan-born Mr. Tuan is just one of the immigrants who have transformed Silicon Valley over the past two decades. Long known for their engineering expertise, these immigrants also are among the region_s most active entrepreneurs, according to a new study. Ethnic Chinese and Indian immigrants run nearly 25% of the high-tech companies started in the Valley since 1980, according to the study by Anna Lee Saxenian, a professor of regional development at the University of California, Berkeley. The 2,775 immigrant-run companies had total sales of $16.8 billion and more than 58,000 employees last year. Ms. Saxenian says those figures likely understate the contributions of immigrant entrepreneurs, because many companies they started are run by native-born Americans. But there_s evidence that the traditional pattern is changing. Chinese and Indian immigrants run 29% of the companies founded between 1995 and 1998, a figure Ms. Saxenian thinks is a more accurate reflection of their influence. "The big change in the 1990s is the recognition of not just the technical, but the managerial capabilities of immigrants," says Ms. Saxenian, author of "Regional Advantage," a well-regarded book about the growth of Silicon Valley.
Šaltinis: MSNBC
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

The Economic Growth of Lithuania

Continued Strong Economic Growth of Lithuania in 2005 more »

A Limited Partnership

MIL Equity Partners to invest in Bulgaria, other European countries more »

Slovakia, once a laggard, moves ahead on euro adoption

Once the laggard among the rapidly restructuring central European economies, Slovakia now ranks as a top contender in the region's next major undertaking after joining the European Union more »

Poland Seeks Joint Ventures With Kingdom

With the balance of trade tilted heavily in favor of Poland, Saudi Arabia has decided to activate the Saudi-Polish Business Council and take other export promotion measures more »

The Russian Economic Forum in London

The European Union trade commissioner will for the first time participate in work of the Russian Economic Forum in London more »

The Stabilisation Fund war in Russia

It is the only source that can provide a chance for economic breakthrough more »

Russia, EU leaders reach agreements

European leaders formed a united front with Russian President Vladimir Putin on Friday, emphasizing their common position on Iran's nuclear ambitions and pressing Syria to withdraw from Lebanon more »

World Bank Hails 'Rapid Growth' in Russia

The Russian economy has benefited from rapid growth but government interventions in some businesses have increased uncertainty in the investment climate, the World Bank said on Thursday in a review of its lending strategy more »

Ruble surges against euro

The Russian Central Bank has set the official euro exchange rate for March 19 to 21 at 36.7 RUR/EUR more »

Ukraine to drop peg to dollar

Ukraine plans to replace its currency's peg to the dollar with a more flexible exchange rate system that includes the euro more »