"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

Moldova Signs Investment Agreement with Azerbaijan Companies

The Moldovan Government has accomplished negotiations with three Azerbaijan companies - Azpetrol, Azertrans, and Azpetrol - and signed with them, on Wednesday, an agreement on realization of a major investment project in Jurjulesti more »

Eureko purchases Millennium Bank's stake in PZU

Dutch insurer Eureko will purchase a stake of 10% in PZU from Bank Millennium for zł.1.6 billion more »

Warsaw stock market goes on sale

The Warsaw Stock Exchange could be privatised at the end of 2005 at the earliest, with Euronext, OMX and the Vienna, London or Frankfurt exchanges among the potentially interested parties more »

Lithuania starts closing Chernobyl-type nuclear plant

Lithuania shuts down unit one of its Chernobyl-style Ignalina nuclear power plant on New Year’s Eve, as it moves to honour a promise to the EU to close the facility in the coming years more »

Czech Republic's foreign debt on the rise

The Czech Republic's foreign debt rose 17 percent year on year to 946.1-billion koruna ($42.4-billion) in the third quarter, 137-billion koruna higher than in the same period last year more »

Foreign Direct Investment in Lithuania up by 10 Percent

Cumulative Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) in Lithuania has been consequently growing more »

The Donation for the victims of the Asian tsunamis

Mobile phone text messagers raising millions for Asian tsunami victims more »

Russia may start early debt payments to Paris club in 2005

This year Russia may start early debt payments to members of the Paris club of creditor countries assigning up to $10 billion from its stabilization fund for the purpose more »

Huge pipeline project approved

The Russian government has given the green light to a major energy project, the building of an oil pipeline to the Pacific more »

Ryanair back in court in fresh row over airport subsidies

Ryanair is in trouble again over subsidies received from continental airports, with Air Berlin suing Germany's Lübeck airport over payments of up to €10m (£7.1m) made to Ryanair since 2000 more »