-
Business consulting
Our business consulting services can help you improve your operational performance and productivity, adding value throughout your growth life cycle.
-
Business risk services
We can help you identify, understand and manage potential risks to safeguard your business and comply with regulatory requirements.
-
Forensic Advisory
At Grant Thornton, we have a wealth of knowledge in forensic services and can support you with issues such as dispute resolution, fraud and insurance claims.
-
Transactional advisory services
We can support you throughout the transaction process – helping achieve the best possible outcome at the point of the transaction and in the longer term.
-
Talent Management
Talent Management
-
Tax advisory and planning
Our teams have in-depth knowledge of the relationship between domestic and international tax laws.
-
Fiscal transactions advisory (Due Diligence)
Fiscal transactions advisory (Due Diligence)
-
Tax returns preparation and review
Tax returns preparation and review
-
Indirect tax recovery
The laws surrounding transfer pricing are becoming ever more complex as tax affairs of multinational companies are facing media, public and regulator scrutiny.
-
International tax
International tax
-
Expats services (Global Mobility)
Through our global organisation of member firms, we support both companies and individuals, providing insightful solutions to minimise tax burdens.
-
Bookkeeping & financial accounting
Effective bookkeeping and financial accounting are essential to the success of forward-thinking organisations.
-
Corporate advisory
We can help you navigate the complexity of the corporate secretarial requirements so you can focus your time and effort on running your business.
-
Payroll
Grant Thornton’s outsourcing teams can manage your payroll commitments on your behalf, allowing you to focus on what you do best – growing your business.
-
Company start-up
Outsourcing your operations and specific business functions to Grant Thornton can not only cut costs, but also bring you new insights and experience.
The risk-reward trade-off of investing in the Growth-8 economies
One of the most interesting aspects of our recent Global Dynamism Index (GDI) was the strong performance of mature economies. It was a result Ed Nusbaum described as counterintuitive in that the word dynamism tends to be attributed to faster growing emerging markets such as the BRIC economies.
The father of the ‘BRIC’ acronym, Jim O’Neill of Goldman Sachs, now highlights the ‘Growth-8’ economies – Brazil, China, India, Indonesia, Korea, Mexico, Russia and Turkey – as being the key drivers of global growth over the next few years.
Their forecast growth rates are certainly impressive. In the period 2012-17, the IMF expects them to account for 47% of global growth, catapulting all eight into the world’s largest twenty economies.[1]
But do these rapidly expanding economies offer the best growth environments for dynamic businesses?
According to the GDI, the answer is no. The Growth-8 economies scored 55.0[2] for the overall dynamism of their economies, below the global average (57.3) and well behind the G7 (59.6). The Growth-8 come out on top in terms of the dynamism of their economics & growth, but they come third bottom in science & technology, second bottom in business operating environment, and bottom overall in financing environment.
Individually, Korea – the most advanced of the eight – ranks in the top ten and China sits in 20th place, but the remaining six rank in the bottom half of the 50 economy index. India, Indonesia and Russia sit in the bottom ten.
Of course the GDI is far more than simply another measure of growth. By considering key drivers of business location decisions such as political stability, IT infrastructure and access to finance, the index gives a much more rounded picture of the potential challenges of operating in different markets.
The key question for business leaders considering investing in the Growth-8 economies is whether the potential rewards outweigh the risks.
[1] IMF 2012
[2] Modelling the indicators and categories results in scores of 0-100 for each country, where 100 represents the most dynamic environment and 0 the least.