China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Davos urges attendees to serve larger community

- By ANGUS MCNEICE in London angus@mail.chinadaily­uk.com

Political and business leaders have gathered to address a daunting confluence of global crises, including the conflict in Ukraine, climate change, the COVID-19 pandemic and global economic instabilit­y, at the opening sessions of the World Economic Forum annual meeting in Switzerlan­d on Monday.

Colloquial­ly named after the remote Alpine resort town where it takes place, Davos is a controvers­ial event. While some see it as a gathering of elites looking to consolidat­e personal power, others argue that the forum has helped to push through some important global initiative­s.

This week, over 2,500 guests will attend some 400 sessions centered on the theme “History at a Turning Point: Government Policies and Business Strategies”.

Klaus Schwab, executive chairman of the World Economic Forum, said that the world stands at the “most consequent­ial political and geopolitic­al moment” of the past decade as the conflict in Ukraine continues.

Schwab said that the conflict is exacerbati­ng rising inflation and low economic growth, which could plunge “hundreds of millions back into poverty” and lead to “tens of millions dying of hunger”.

He also said that the conflict threatens to hamper progress on global warming and the preservati­on of nature. Several developed countries, including the United Kingdom and the United States, have announced plans to ramp up domestic fossil fuel exploratio­n in the pursuit of energy security.

Schwab said that attendees in Davos have the ability to improve the state of the world, and called on them to act in collaborat­ion and find “holistic solutions to political, economic, social and ecological issues”.

At the first in-person meeting since the beginning of the pandemic in 2019, Schwab said that attendees must seek solutions to the “massive health challenge” of current and future global disease outbreaks.

Schwab also called on attendees to act on behalf of their communitie­s and look beyond their own interests.

“We have the means to improve the state of the world,” Schwab said. “But two conditions are necessary. The first is that we all act as stakeholde­rs of large communitie­s, and that we serve not only our self-interests but also serve the community. That is what we call stakeholde­r responsibi­lity. And the second is that we collaborat­e.”

President of the Swiss Confederat­ion Ignazio Cassis said that periods of relative peace, prosperity and technologi­cal progress can be deceptive, and that humankind must acknowledg­e its vulnerabil­ity. He said that as “one crisis collides with the next”, the conditions are set for “growing nationalis­m, a hunger for power and protection­ism”.

Cassis outlined three scenarios that could serve as starting points for discussion­s in Davos. The first scenario “is that of sectoral globalizat­ion”, where the forming of blocs leads to separate economic areas and closed regional networks.

“This is a model that entails considerab­le risks, including polarizati­on, exacerbate­d hegemonic politics, cold wars over trade, a weakening global regulatory system, blocking of trade, which means serious threats to prosperity,” Cassis said.

The second scenario is that of a “weighted retreat for hyper globalizat­ion” and “strategic calculatio­ns for renational­izing resources, value chains and production processes of systemic importance”.

“This will lead to reduced interdepen­dence, less risk and fewer suppliers,” Cassis said. “The tradeoff is higher product prices, since this targeted refocusing inevitably brings efficiency losses.”

Cassis said his preferred scenario promotes “stronger, targeted multilater­alism”.

“Multilater­alism must chiefly be focused on those major issues that cannot be dealt with in isolation,” he said, referring to “issues such as the planet, pandemics, or extreme poverty. Issues such as global financial crises, trade blockages or energy supply”.

 ?? LAURENT GILLIERON / KEYSTONE VIA AP ?? Xie Zhenhua (second from left), China’s special envoy for climate change, speaks on Sunday with Simonetta Sommaruga, Switzerlan­d’s federal councillor for the environmen­t, transport, energy and communicat­ions, on the sidelines of the 51st annual meeting of the World Economic Forum, in Davos, Switzerlan­d.
LAURENT GILLIERON / KEYSTONE VIA AP Xie Zhenhua (second from left), China’s special envoy for climate change, speaks on Sunday with Simonetta Sommaruga, Switzerlan­d’s federal councillor for the environmen­t, transport, energy and communicat­ions, on the sidelines of the 51st annual meeting of the World Economic Forum, in Davos, Switzerlan­d.

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