Saturday, May 15, 2010

May 14-16 ~ Bahrain Global Forum to play key future role ~ ‘Rebalancing Global Geo-economic Strategies for Security, Growth and Development’ ...

15 May, 2010

Bahrain Global Forum to play key future role


‘Rebalancing Global Geo-economic Strategies for Security, Growth and Development’

The IISS Bahrain Global Forum (BGF) has opened in the Kingdom of Bahrain. Key delegates from all across the globe will debate current geo-economic trends. The Forum will address critical issues including the need for a better balance in global economic relations and for strengthened global economic governance. It will encourage a global perspective in new centres of economic power.

The Bahrain Global Forum will be convened from 14 to 16 May 2010

Bahrain Global Forum - Plenary Sessions and Speeches @ http://www.iiss.org/conferences/bahrain-global-forum/speeches/
____

The first International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) forum in Bahrain is a pilot and it will be developed over time.

The Bahrain Global Forum will be a magnet for the world's top economists, business people and strategic thinkers to shape debate about the challenges to economic development, effective international financial regulation, free and fair trade, and regional and global economic governance, IISS director general Dr John Chipman told delegates at the opening session last night.


The forum runs until tomorrow at Ritz-Carlton Bahrain Hotel and Spa and has attracted leading economic experts from across the globe.

"This, in particular, needs to be a forum that gives increasing voice to the economists and entrepreneurs from the so-called emerging markets," he said.

"In this more egalitarian world order that we inhabit, discussions here should help develop a consensus on economic and financial issues that grows out of a debate that includes all relevant actors in our diverse, global financial and economic system.

"Perhaps one day, as a result of debates held here, people will not speak just of a Washington consensus, or of a Beijing consensus, but also of a Bahrain consensus, that might command wide attention.

"But before we get there, what for the moment are some of the themes that we will want to examine this weekend and the questions we will want to answer?

"First, what will be the relationship between the so-called emerging markets and the established industrialised world on the best ways to govern the now virtually indivisible and certainly interdependent global economies?

"Second, what is the right balance in this delicate economic environment between what has been styled state and private capitalism, and what are the methods by which foreign direct investment can be best encouraged today?

"Third, in what ways to various countries in the world have to diversify their economies and indeed change their national business models to adapt to the world as it is now?

"Fourth, how should countries protect the international economic recovery and also protect the open economic system that normally provides such global benefits?

"Fifth, what new dynamic relationships between regions, especially between the Middle East and Asia, can help promote growth?

"I anticipate that this forum will also throw up other important questions and that new avenues for debate will open."

http://www.iiss.org/