From Leaders and Legends - Amos McMullian · · Johns Hopkins University
“In a global economy there are over 200 nations in the world out there so you've got corporations that are incorporated in 200 different countries with different rules and different regulations. We have to be careful that we don't trigger the law of unintended consequences in our regulatory process that gives the American business community competitive disadvantages.”
On , A. Mcmullian, Chief Executive Officer & Chairman of Board at FLOWERS FOODS INC, spoke about global economy during Leaders and Legends - Amos McMullian on Johns Hopkins University.
In a 2009 lecture at the Johns Hopkins Carey Business School, Flowers Foods Chairman Emeritus Amos McMullian discussed the relationship between business and government, arguing that U.S. policies placed American companies at a competitive disadvantage. He stated that the United States had the second-highest corporate income tax rate among 25 industrialized nations and was the only one where businesses, rather than the government, paid for healthcare. McMullian said manufacturing jobs had declined from over 40% of the workforce to 17%, and he attributed this to cost advantages held by foreign competitors, adding that those jobs would not return without policy reforms. McMullian also offered advice on management and career development. He said that "opportunities come disguised as problems" and urged leaders to "learn to be bold" after understanding the difference between boldness and recklessness. He emphasized the importance of early accountability in business, stating that his company tested employees early so that mistakes were small and costs low. McMullian criticized what he described as an adversarial relationship between government and business, and he encouraged greater political involvement, noting that only 7% of Americans were active in politics while 97% followed sports.