
DAVOS, Switzerland (AP) — The latest on the World Economic Forum's annual meeting in the Swiss ski resort of Davos (all times local):
12:15 a.m.
Shakira is suggesting an antidote for violent conflict and divisive populism: Get more kids in pre-school.
The Colombian singer is using her distinctive voice to lobby the world's rich and powerful at the World Economic Forum in Davos for more spending on early childhood education.
Asked if she had a message for U.S. President-elect Donald Trump, she urged solid education policies that instill "inclusiveness and tolerance" for future generations.
Recalling a childhood in Colombia marred by war, she said: "If we really want peace, we need to invest in education."
Shakira and actor Forest Whitaker were given special awards at Davos on Wednesday for their humanitarian work.Whitaker noted that his charity work in societies emerging from conflict requires coordination with governments of different stripes, and he stressed the importance of grassroots activity.
___
7:45 p.m.
There's no chance that Klaus Schwab, the founder of the elite political and business gathering in Davos, will undersell the importance of the World Economic Forum.
Addressing delegates Monday in the Swiss ski resort, Schwab said this year's 47th WEF is taking place at an "extraordinary moment of history," when a "sometimes-disruptive transformation" partly related to technological advances is hitting businesses and societies.
Acknowledging a growing pessimism around the world, Schwab urged delegates to look to the future in a "self-confident way," to repair deficiencies in the capitalist system and to think in the long term.
Schwab also noted that one-third of those at this year's meeting are from the emerging world, including the largest-ever delegations from China and India.
The forum officially starts Tuesday. Chinese President Xi Jinping arrived Monday by train to a red carpet welcome.
___
7:15 p.m.
U.S. Vice President Joe Biden says his "prayer" is that the incoming Trump administration will continue to support the fight against cancer, which kept Biden from running for president after it took the life of his son, Beau.
Biden was speaking Monday before the start of the World Economic Forum in Davos to promote his "Cancer Moonshot" initiative. He hailed bipartisan support in Congress for a bill that brought in $1.8 billion for additional research at the National Cancer Institute.
Biden said he had spoken with Vice President-elect Mike Pence about his willingness to work with the new Trump administration to help it be as "committed and enthusiastic as we are in the goal of ending cancer."He urged other countries to also invest in the fight against cancer and called for greater collaboration among researchers, health care providers and drug firms.
___
6:30 p.m.
CEOs are increasingly confident about the near-term prospects of their companies despite an array of worries that includes mounting concerns over a lurch toward trade protectionism.
That's the finding from an annual survey of CEOs by global accounting and consulting firm PwC ahead of the World Economic Forum.
The survey found that 38 percent of CEOs are very confident about their company's growth prospects in the next 12 months, against 35 percent last year. Meanwhile, 29 percent of respondents believe global economic growth will pick up in 2017, up from 27 percent last year.
Bob Moritz, PwC's chairman, says one worry that has swelled over the past few months is protectionism. Fears that the era of globalization may go into reverse have been stoked by Britain's vote to leave the European Union and Donald Trump's election as U.S. president.
PwC's survey was based on 1,379 interviews across 79 countries between Sept. 26 and Dec. 5, with the majority conducted online.
___
5:45 p.m.
The chairman of global accounting and consulting firm PwC doubts that many companies will leave Britain after the country exits the European Union.
Speaking to The Associated Press in the Swiss ski resort of Davos ahead of Tuesday's official start to the World Economic Forum, Bob Moritz said he hadn't seen any institutions leave and that he doesn't expect them to do so "anytime soon."
No comments :
Post a Comment