Dr. José Luis Cordeiro, MBA
José Luis
Cordeiro, MBA, Ph.D. is a world citizen in our small planet in a big
unknown universe. He was born in Latin America, from European parents,
was educated in Europe and North America, has worked extensively in
Africa, Asia, Europe, and the Americas. He has studied, visited, and
worked in over 130 countries in 5 continents.
José studied at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
in Cambridge,
USA, where he earned his Bachelor of Science (B.Sc.) and Master of
Science (M.Sc.) degrees in Mechanical Engineering, with a minor in
Economics and Languages. His thesis consisted of a dynamic modeling for
NASA’s Freedom Space Station (the International Space Station of
today).
He later studied International Economics and Comparative Politics at
Georgetown University in Washington, USA, and then obtained his Masters
of Business Administration (MBA) at the Institut Européen
d’ Administration
des Affaires (INSEAD) in Fontainebleau, France, where he majored in
Finance and Globalization.
During his studies, he worked
with
the United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO) in
Vienna, Austria, and with the Center for Strategic and International
Studies (CSIS) in Washington, USA. He started his doctoral work at MIT,
which he continued later in Tokyo, Japan, and finally earned his Ph.D.
at Universidad Simón Bolívar (USB) in Caracas, Venezuela.
He is
a
lifetime
member of the Sigma Xi (ΣΞ, Scientific Research) and Tau Beta
Pi
(ΤΒΠ,
Engineering) Honor Societies in North America, is also a honorary member
of the Venezuelan Engineers College (CIV), and his name has been
included in the Marquis Edition of
Who’s Who in the
World.
Following his graduation, he worked as an engineer in
petroleum exploration for the French company Schlumberger. For several
years, he served as an advisor for many of the major oil companies in
the world, including Agip, BP, ChevronTexaco, ExxonMobil, PDVSA, Pemex,
Petrobras, Repsol, Shell, and Total. Later, in Paris, he initiated his
relation with the international consulting company Booz-Allen &
Hamilton, where he specialized in the areas of strategy, finance and
restructuring. In Latin America, he has served as an advisor for some of
the most important regional corporations and has taken part in the
transformation and privatization of a number of oil companies in the
continent. His experience and studies in monetary policy, currency
boards, dollarization and monetary unions have taken him to participate
in several monetary changes in Latin America and Eastern
Europe.
José is fellow at the World Academy of Art and
Science (WAAS), chair
of the Venezuelan Node of the Millennium Project,
Visiting
Research Fellow at the Institute of Developing Economies (IDE
— JETRO) in
Tokyo, Japan, and Teaching Fellow at Singularity University (SU) in
Silicon Valley, USA. He is also an independent consultant, writer,
researcher, professor and “tireless traveler”. He has lectured as an
Invited Professor at several major institutions, from MIT in the USA and
Sophia University (上 智 大 学)
in Japan to the Institute for Higher Studies in Administration (IESA)
and the Central University of Venezuela (UCV), where he created the
first formal courses of Futures Studies
(“Prospectiva”) and Austrian School of Economics in Venezuela.
José is founder of the
Sociedad Mundial del Futuro Venezuela, director
of the Single Global Currency Association
(SGCA) and the Lifeboat Foundation, cofounder of the Venezuelan
Transhumanist Association and of the Internet Society (ISOC, Venezuela
Chapter), board advisor to the Center for Responsible Nanotechnology
(CRN), member of the Academic Committee of the Center for the
Dissemination of Economic Knowledge (CEDICE), and the World Futures Studies Federation (WFSF), former director
of the World Transhumanist Association (WTA, Humanity+), the Extropy
Institute (ExI), the Club of Rome (Venezuela Chapter, where he was
active promoting classical liberal ideas) and of the Association of
Venezuelan Exporters (AVEX), where he participated in the original
negotiations of the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA). He has also
been advisor to the Venezuelan Business Association (AVE) and other
companies and international organizations.
Thanks to his extensive work in technological foresight, futures
studies, globalization, economic integration, long-term development,
energy, education and monetary policy, he has authored and
coauthored several books.
El Desafío Latinoamericano, his first
book, is
a continental bestseller originally published by McGraw-Hill and is used
in more than 100 universities in the hemisphere (see introductory
pages). Its second Spanish edition is now available completely free
in
electronic form by the author, who is also donating his book royalties.
Arturo Uslar Pietri, the most universal and respected Venezuelan of the
20th century, described other two books of José with the
following words: “as important to Venezuela as the independence battle
of
Carabobo” (The Great
Taboo) and “an impressive work that describes the
grave economic malady … of Venezuela”
(La Segunda Muerte de
Bolívar).
José
has authored other books about Ecuador
(La Segunda
Muerte de Sucre) and
Mexico (¿Pesos o Dólares?), and about special
topics
like
education
(Benesuela
vs. Venezuela), energy (Energía para el
Desarrollo de
América
del Sur and
Cenários Energéticos 2020, in Portuguese),
and transhumanism
(2020: Transhuman & Economy of the Future, in Korean). He has
written
more than 10 books and co-written over 20 more in five languages,
including sections of the
State of the Future by the Millennium Project.
He has a
fortnightly opinion column in the largest and most
prestigious Venezuelan general newspaper (El Universal) and has also
written and has been interviewed in major media (press, radio and TV)
including ABC, BBC, CNN, Chosun Ilbo (Korean Daily), El Comercio
(Ecuador), El Comercio (Peru), El Tiempo (Colombia), El Universal
(Mexico), El Universal (Venezuela), Los Andes (Argentina), O Estado de
Sao Paulo (Brazil), Mainichi Shimbun (Japan Daily News), La Tribune
(France), The New York Times, Univision, and The Washington Times (USA).
Watch
José Luis Cordeiro 5, ciudad del saber, Panama,
José Luis Cordeiro 12,
El futuro, José Luis Cordeiro, and
José Luis Cordeiro en Tribuna Liberal.
Read his
LinkedIn profile.
Visit his
Facebook page.