Thursday 10 November 2011

World Economic Forum: Global business and government experts met in Abu Dhabi to address rapid globalisation and rising sovereign debt


The UAE participated in the 2011 G20 summit in Cannes and it also hosted IRENA, the global clean energy body. This shows and indicates that the UAE is increasingly becoming a global citizen in economic affairs around the world. According to leading political figures at the third World Economic Forum Summit in Abu Dhabi last month, this is a good indication of where the UAE is headed. Over 800 leading experts in academia, business and government convened in the UAE capital to discuss new models for the world’s most pressing challenges, including public debt, climate change and food security.
The continuing uncertain global economic outlook could drive a wedge between international interests if left unchecked. Unstable financial markets combined with rapid globalization and technology uptake are all new factors stoking the need for urgent global conversations. The rise in global wealth has lead to a richer world for many, but many millions are poorer than ever. There is a global inequality. We need to rethink our global competitiveness strategy because we need to address the quality of economic growth. Velocity and country interconnectivity have become so complex at the tipping point that the whole system may collapse. We need new models to survive. The great recession has blinded us to the great revolution.
In addition to increased connectivity across countries and continents, globalization has been paralleled by a shift in power towards the East, as China continues on its incredible growth trajectory and the US buckles under debt pressure and stagnant jobs data. In the last century, global production and consumption was heavily weighted to the west, but recent years have seen a dramatic shift as the BRICS consume and produce more global resources that ever before. Only 40 percent of the worlds production output is in the West and only 43 percent of investment goes to the West. The world is changing very fast. Producers and consumers must work together at this historical juncture.
The prolonged indecision on Europe’s debt woes has also set the stage for mistrust and a need for increased global co-operation. Europe is at the epicenter of today’s crisis. It has fiscal, banking and growth problems and the Euro will not survive. The European Central Bank will have to work to find a solution. What happens in one continent affects another. In a recent WEF poll of 1500 CEOs and academics, less than 10 percent of respondents expressed confidence in the state of global governance over the next 12 months. The world urgently needs to rebuild trust in leaders, government systems and among countries if the international community is to shape new models to solve global challenges

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