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World Economic Forum Gravity Themes

World Economic Forum Gravity Themes. Presenter’s name Presenter’s title or date. Annual Meeting 2002 Gravity Themes. Restoring Sustained Growth Achieving Security and Addressing Vulnerability Reducing Poverty and Improving Equity Re-evaluating Leadership and Governance

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World Economic Forum Gravity Themes

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  1. World Economic ForumGravity Themes Presenter’s name Presenter’s title or date

  2. Annual Meeting 2002Gravity Themes • Restoring Sustained Growth • Achieving Security and Addressing Vulnerability • Reducing Poverty and Improving Equity • Re-evaluating Leadership and Governance • Sharing Values and Respecting Differences • Redefining Business Challenges

  3. Restoring Sustained Growth • Predictions for Global Growth • Growth and Equity • U.S. Dominance • The Future of Europe • Japan’s Malaise • The Rise of China • Concerns about China • Emerging Markets • Wild Cards and External Shocks

  4. Restoring Sustained Growth:Predictions for Global Growth • “A slump and recovery in Internet time,” Alan Greenspan • A “lazy L”, “V” or “W”-shaped recovery? • In 2002, the global economy is expected to grow between • 2.8 and 2.5 percent • The U.S. economy is expected to grow by 2.3 percent and • Europe by 1.8, while Japan’s will likely contract by • between 0.9 or 1.3 percent

  5. Restoring Sustained Growth:Predictions for Global Growth

  6. Restoring Sustained Growth:Growth and Equity • Sustainable growth “…meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.” • Principles for equitable growth: • equitable access to and use of production factors, such as land, capital, knowledge and labor; • market-driven, effective private sector development that beneftis the poor and free public resources for improving social development and reducing poverty; • socioeconomic development through regional and subregional cooperation without macroeconomic constraints such as inflation, tariffs and other barriers to trade

  7. Restoring Sustained Growth:Parameters of Growth • Industrialised countries account for 70% of the global economic output • Increasing productivity leading growth: 8.6% more in 2001 • Growth also driven by increasing consumer confidence • China leads Asia’s recovery with 7.6% in the first quarter largely due to higher government spending and a 9.9% increase in exports • Unemployment rates are finally going down after steady increases over the last 12 months

  8. Restoring Sustained Growth:U.S. Dominance • Stability of the dollar • World’s largest economy: 34% of global GDP • Highest market capitalization: 50% of global equities • Size of debt: $400 Billion in 2001 • Level of capital inflows: $150 Billion in 2001--down from $295 Billion in 1999 • Is U.S.-centric global growth sustainable?

  9. Restoring Sustained Growth: The Main Parameters for Sustaining Growth in Europe • U.K. is driving growth while Germany is preventing the Eurozone from overtaking the U.S. • Lack of integration and liberalization despite the emergence of the euro • M&A capital flows are still largely Europe to U.S • Principles of the EU’s Lisbon Agreement: • open markets, rigorous competition policy and • targeted subsidies • invest in small businesses and public services • encourage a culture of risk-taking (e.g. venture capital) • facilitate innovation and greater R&D

  10. Restoring Sustained Growth: Japan’s Malaise • Japan’s full decade of recession; government unwilling to act decisively due to lack of broad political coalition • Investment redirected from Japan to China • Danger zones of the Japanese economy: • banking sector--capped depositor insurance at $10 million • corporate bankruptcies--19,000 in 2001 • rising unemployment--1 million out of work • large public debt--130% of GDP • Priorities: yen depreciation; mergers with European and U.S. banks; write-off bad loans; pay down public debt

  11. Restoring Sustained Growth: Japan’s Malaise

  12. Restoring Sustained Growth:The Rise of China • $1,000 Billion GDP in 2001--8% increase from 2000 • First aggressive stage of reforms is complete: • privatization of state-owned enterprises • strengthening of patent laws and customs procedures • stabilized their exchange rate • Further reforms underway: • eliminating trade barriers and tariffs • privatizing telecommunications and financial services • reducing duplicative regulations at the local level • Received $400 billion in FDI (graphics) • Regional dominance in productivity

  13. Restoring Sustained Growth:Concerns about China • Uncertainty about the political transition from pre- to post-reform leaders in the Chinese Communist Party • Mass unemployment due to liberalization, increased competition and restructuring of industry • Social stability in the interior among disenfranchised in primarily rural communities • Opposition to East Asian free trade zone (ASEAN countries + China)

  14. Restoring Sustained Growth:Emerging Markets • Argentinean financial crisis chilling investment climate throughout Latin America and threatening the stability of neighboring South American economies • Emerging market bond insurance rates at record levels • Foreign Direct Investment only fell a small amount between 2000 and 2001 ($240 billion to $225 billion) • Proliferation of free trade areas • The Doha Round: importance of market access; reforming European CAP; increasing two-way competition

  15. Restoring Sustained Growth:Wild Cards and External Shocks • Instability of Middle East oil producing countries and the impact of a widening regional conflict • Potential U.S.-led attack on Iraq as part of the “axis of evil” and source of regional instability • Breach in U.S.-Saudi relations • Russian oil production and price spike • Another major terrorist attack • Deepening blow to consumer confidence in response to the Enron scandal

  16. Achieving Security and Addressing Vulnerability • Globalization of Vulnerability • Global Security Threats: Major Regional Conflicts • Global Security Threats: State Failure and Civil War • Global Security Threats: Asymmetric Weapons • Soft Drivers • Preventive Strategies • Risk Assessment • Cooperation between Business and Government

  17. Achieving Security and Addressing Vulnerability:Globalization of Vulnerability • New era of geopolitical and social instability: proliferating actors cause uncertainty and rapid change • “Risk Society”: security is a higher priority across all industry sectors and regions • General uncertainty and the implications on the global economy, governmental decisionmaking, allocation of resources and social behavior • Co-existence of “hard security” threats (traditional threats of war between states, WMD, terrorism) and “soft security” issues (health, poverty, environment)

  18. Achieving Security and Addressing Vulnerability:Global Security Threats -Major Regional Conflicts • Regional conflicts remain the greatest threat to • global stability: • China - Taiwan • Korean Peninsula • India - Pakistan • Arab world - Israel • Iraq - U.S.

  19. Achieving Security and Addressing Vulnerability:Global Security Threats -State Failure and Civil War • Secessionist/Irredentist conflicts • Indonesia, Philippenes • Chechnya • Colombia • Sudan • Failed states can serve as safe havens for terrorists to “export” violence, illicit drug and arms trading • International community becomes heavily involved with massive costs for peace-keeping, reconstruction, refugee resettlement, humanitarian aid, institution-building

  20. Achieving Security and Addressing Vulnerability:Global Security Threats -Asymmetric Weapons • Weapons of Mass Destruction: Nuclear, chemical, biological: • Increased availability of technology/material • Continued large nuclear weapons stockpiles; accident-prone arsenals in Russia, India, Pakistan • Communications technology empowers clandestine groups with global reach • Cyber-attacks capitalize on increasing dependence on computer technology • Manipulation of information and media channels allows for amplification of terrorist messages

  21. Achieving Security and Addressing Vulnerability:Soft Drivers • Health: 13 million preventable deaths annually from 6 diseases causing social imbalance and economic stagnation • Poverty: Greater visibility of rich-poor gap encourages resentment and opportunistic violence • Environment: Access to fresh water; control of arable land; conflict over precious natural resources • Projections indicate by 2025, 3 billion people across 26 • countries may lack access to arable land and potable water • Drug trafficking: Growing strength of global organized crime; government manipulation and corruption

  22. Achieving Security and Addressing Vulnerability:Preventative Strategies • Elimination of capabilities: International cooperation to prevent spread of weapons of mass destruction • Denial of motivation: Delegitimize global terrorism as a means of promoting a political or social agenda • Intervention: Early-warning systems and swift preventative action • Confront root causes: Social inequity, economic and political disenfranchisement, cross-cultural tension • International organizations: reassess their role and capabilities

  23. Achieving Security and Addressing Vulnerability:Risk Assessment • Corporate strategy: • Scenario-planning for evaluating risks • Policies for protecting assets and personnel management • Sharing best practices across industry sectors • Re-allocate resources for substantive, long-term protection of critical assets and interests

  24. Achieving Security and Addressing Vulnerability:Cooperation Between Business andGovernment • Western companies with investments abroad are likely targets of future terrorism • Public-private efforts to develop solutions: Customs, banking, critical infrastructure, emergency response • Cross-industry collaboration: Implementing stronger security guidelines • Regulation across borders: Comparable and compatible standards • Planning for protection of “critical infrastructure”

  25. Reducing Poverty and Improving Equity • Poverty: Still the Number One Issue • Government and Accountability • Modernization and Technology • Access • Conflict and Violence • The Private Sector Role • The Business Case

  26. Reducing Poverty and Improving Equity:Poverty - Still the Number One Issue • 2 billion people living in poverty • Poverty is the result of multiple hardships: Hunger, disease, oppression, conflict, lack of education, pollution, and depletion of natural resources • Income inequality between countries is declining, but rising within them • Developing countries still lack access to foreign markets for most competitive products • Developed economies spend US $ 350 billion annually on subsidies for agriculture (seven times the aid expenditures)

  27. Reducing Poverty and Improving Equity:Government and Accountability • Government must support markets as well as protect against market failure • Government must create the legal structure and economic incentives to foster entrepreneurship • Lack of transparency in government decision-making is the biggest hindrance to foreign investment • Only democratic governments will be able to limit corruption and encourage development

  28. Reducing Poverty and Improving Equity:Modernization and Technology • Integrate new technologies into infrastructure to leap-frog older technologies • New technologies: Health care, increased agricultural output and productivity, environmental protection and pollution control • Source of economic growth as developed countries outsource labour intensive product development to developing economies • IT as a cost-effective means for marketing local products to a global marketplace

  29. Reducing Poverty and Improving Equity:Access • Sources of knowledge through free and open media and information technology tools • Transfer of the latest technologies and know-how • Provision of basic healthcare, housing, and education • Availability of credit and other means for entrepreneurship • Existence of capable, democratic institutions

  30. Reducing Poverty and Improving Equity:Conflict and Violence • Armed struggle for scarce precious resources in poor countries, e.g. water, arable land, oil, diamonds • Expenditures o weapons instead of commodities and social development • Poverty and hunger breed desperation among the disenfranchised, enabling extremist opportunism • Conflict most affects the poor, old, women, and children

  31. Reducing Poverty and Improving Equity:The Private Sector Role • Business is not a social delivery vehicle, but economic growth is the best-proven path to development and poverty eradication • The long-term value of sustainable and equitable economic growth far outweighs any level of government aid or corporate philanthropy • Poverty as a business opportunity

  32. Reducing Poverty and Improving Equity:The Business Case • Healthy and prosperous communities create stable environments for business to operate and a more productive workforce • Employees look to companies to lead by example with good corporate citizenship • Consumers prefer products from companies that demonstrate a commitment to the public good; new evaluation criteria required to develop market rewards for socially responsible corporations

  33. Re-Evaluating Leadership and Governance • Complex World Order • Pressures on the Global System: Haves vs. Have-Nots • Pressures on the Global System: Institutional Inadequacy • Global Public Goods • Models of Global Governance : Institutionalist Model • Models of Global Governance : State-Centric Model • Models of Global Governance : Global Market Model • Models of Global Governance : The Network Model • Emergence of Networks: Business • Emergence of Networks: NGOs

  34. Re-Evaluating Leadership and Governance:Complex World Order • Improper management systems for more turbulent world; global governance architecture resistant to change without crisis • New shape of global governance must be determined despite prevailing uncertainty; leadership needed • Those who have knowledge lack power, those in power lack legitimacy, and those seeing themselves as legitimate lack knowledge and power (Gretschmann)

  35. Re-Evaluating Leadership and Governance:Pressures on the Global System -Haves vs. Have-Nots • Information disenfranchisement • Cultural dominance • Access to sources of wealth and natural resources

  36. Re-Evaluating Leadership and Governance:Pressures on the Global System -Institutional Inadequacy • Widespread sentiment that voices of citizens do not matter; decreased turnout in elections in democratic states • Globalization causes the erosion of sovereignty; overlapping communities and trans-border problems • Market forces create global economy, but it is managed by individual nation-states • Increasing influence on policymaking of unelected and largely unaccountable multi-national corporations

  37. Re-Evaluating Leadership and Governance:Global Public Goods • How and by whom should public goods be managed? • Most powerful countries and companies have most impact • Business has a role to play both in defining and managing public goods • Increased regulation of the environment; but need for global regulation and supervision of monopolies in areas such as communications and healthcare, as they are increasingly regarded as public goods • Do self-regulation and private sector management of public goods serve the public interest?

  38. Re-Evaluating Leadership and Governance:Models of Global Governance -Institutionalist Model • Continued emphasis on multi-lateralism • Strengthen the state and reform existing institutions • Create new institutions to handle cross-border problems and emerging areas, e.g. World Environment Organization

  39. Re-Evaluating Leadership and Governance:Models of Global Governance -State-Centric Model • Interest-based coalitions, more frequently changing • Hegemony preserves global stability; Pax Americana; undemocratic • Transnational global issues not adequately addressed

  40. Re-Evaluating Leadership and Governance:Models of Global Governance -Global Market Model • Economic dominance over politics • Companies subvert international standards through loopholes in treaties; MNCs benefit from discipline imposed by IFIs • Private global governance is the chief target of the anti-globalization backlash

  41. Re-Evaluating Leadership and Governance:Models of Global Governance -The Network Model • Multistakeholder approach integrating states, private sector and international civil society • Identifying win-win opportunities for cooperation through harmonizing interests of various actors • Leveraging technology both to create and combat networks

  42. Re-Evaluating Leadership and Governance:Emergence Networks - Business • Growing power of business in a state-centric world; leadership means recognizing responsibility • Increasing need for business to consider fundamental change in role without abandoning day-to-day responsibilities • Business must have a clear and common view of responsibilities, and sense of core values in developed and developing world

  43. Re-Evaluating Leadership and Governance:Emergence Networks - NGOs • Macro: NGO emphasis on first principles - structure, power, values • Micro: UN-NGO partnerships necessary to impact situation on the ground, despite lack of macro-level reforms • Meso: New global policy-making processes involve NGOs • How to determine the democratic accountability of NGOs?

  44. Sharing Values and Respecting Differences • The Role of Values • Globalization’s Values • Globalization’s Impact on Existing Value Systems • Transnational Values of International Cooperation • The Role of Religion • Responsibility, Justice and Conflict • The Communication of Values: Education and Media • The Communication of Values: Private Sector

  45. Sharing Values and Respecting Differences:The Role of Values • Leadership increasingly needs to be networked along common values • Is there an evolving normative coherence, a set of values at the heart of governance? • Universal principles as basis for society: Democracy and rule of law, human rights and liberty, sustainable development, equitable access to opportunity • Education and media systems are mostly local, lacking global perspective; more communication required across borders

  46. Sharing Values and Respecting Differences:Globalization’s Values • Belief in technological innovation; communications technology also a driver of cultural challenges • Meritocracy and competence; but the world is not a corporation • Birth of a common world; generational values emerging, especially youth • Respect, justice and equal opportunity promoted by both religious leaders and anti-globalization movement • Assumptions of security and superiority breed arrogance and lack of respect for differences

  47. Sharing Values and Respecting Differences:Globalization’s Impact on Existing Value Systems • Clashes within civilizations result from conflict over response to other cultures • In the context of great structural inequality and unemployment, an explosion of cultural confidence • Criticisms of current form of globalization: • Cultural: under-globalized cultures not respected • Social:globalization not just disease, malnutrition, wealth distribution, education • Environmental: globalization does not dignify life; global warming, species extinction

  48. Sharing Values and Respecting Differences:Transnational Values of International Cooperation • Common humanity: 21st century will be defined by decision to join in common humanity or emphasize differences (Clinton) • Diversity: Recognition of the “other” as an asset, enriching one’s own ideas and expanding dialogue • Accommodation: How to determine which value systems should be tolerated? • Individual responsibility: Empowerment of individual to serve collective good in accordance with universal norms

  49. Sharing Values and Respecting Differences:The Role of Religion • Part of the problem and solution: self-contained value systems are dangerous in a globalized world • Major differences not between value systems, but how these values are expressed; leaders seek to protect their value systems against others • Religious responsibility needs to be emphasized like corporate social responsibility

  50. Sharing Values and Respecting Differences:The Role of Religion • Non-secular ethics - all religions share three values: • Respect: the golden rule; see the world not as categories of people but as global village of 6 billion people • Justice: Equal opportunity for all • Dignity of life: The most basic value, intuitively shared by all • No religion or civilization is monolithic: All are pluralistic and divided

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