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Wriston was there at the creation of the modern wired economy, when money began turning itself into bits and bytes and started flowing around the world through satellite transponders and fiber-optic cables. At the time of Wriston's retirement, Citibank had become the world's largest bank, and its investment in computers and software surpassed $1.75 billion. Mr. Wriston is also the author of several best-selling books including In The Twilight of Sovereignty, in which he lucidly reveals the vast geopolitical implications of the massive information revolution in progress around the globe. It reaffirms Wriston's stature as one of the most cogent thinkers of our time: "Walter Wriston stimulates, educates, and excites in this original and perceptive exposition of the information and knowledge age and its profound impact on our daily lives and our traditional notions of sovereignty and the wealth of nations," wrote George Schultz. According to Henry Kissenger, "The instantaneous transmission of information will affect every aspect of life in the twenty-first century, not the least of which will be the conduct of foreign policy. Walter Wriston has written a fascinating and important book that no decision maker can afford to miss." The immediate and simultaneous availability of data to those at every level of authority within the enterprise means that in today's business world, traditional executive power is changing. Looking to the future, Wriston outlines the new management philosophies and radically changed managerial structures that will follow the end of corporate centralization. He is currently at work on his next book, The Quick and the Dead, focusing on new accounting standards for the global economy. |
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