The World
Economic Forum starts today in Davos, Switzerland, and will go through Friday,
January 20, Inauguration Day in the United States. The Forum, which describes itself as being a
unique advocate for public-private partnerships, has been meeting since 1971.
On the agenda for
this year are a number of goals intended to alleviate poverty through job
creation and retraining (which they call “reskilling”) people to qualify for
the new jobs. Specifically,
In Europe and Eurasia
·
Politicians will talk about “The Beginning of
New Europe” in which there are lots of new jobs and workers trained to do them.
·
CEOS will talk about creating new jobs and
training workers for them.
·
The European Investment Bank and Brugel, a think
tank, will talk about raising people’s living standards by creating new jobs
and training workers for them.
·
The Europe & Eurasia Regional Strategy Group
(leaders from business, government, and academia) will convene to talk about
recent developments that affect creating new jobs and training workers for
them.
Latin America
·
Columbian President Juan Manuel Santos will
receive the Forum’s Global Statesman Award for his efforts to end the civil war
in his country, thereby providing a proper environment within which new jobs
can be created and people trained to fill them.
·
The launch of the Mercosur-ESTA trade
negotiations will begin discussions on regional integration to coordinate job
creation and the training of workers to fill them.
·
Rodrigo Janot, Prosecutor General of Brazil,
will talk about the need to fight corruption to create jobs and train people
for them.
East Asia
·
Cambodia will be the first country to join the
Forum’s Sustainable Development Investment Partnership, pouring U.S.$100
billion into infrastructure investment, creating jobs and training workers to
fill them.
·
Politicians from five ASEAN countries will talk
about the future of manufacturing to create jobs and train workers to fill
them.
·
The ASEAN Regional Strategy Group will discuss
job creation and training workers to fill them.
North America
·
Joe Biden and John Kerry will give farewell
talks about their efforts to create jobs and train workers to fill them. Other participants will talk about
President-elect Trump’s priorities in creating jobs and training workers to
fill them.
·
Canada’s new trade minister will show up. This is important because of the CETA
international trade deal affecting job creation and training workers to fill
them.
The Middle East and North Africa
·
Leaders will talk about the “New Vision for Arab
Employment Project,” designed to create new jobs and train workers to fill
them.
·
The Forum and the International Finance
Corporation will talk about job creation for youth and training youths to fill them.
·
Formal and Informal talks will focus on Syria
and the Israel-Palestinian situations and the need to create jobs and train
people to fill them.
·
Forum communities will launch a new initiative,
Accelerating Economic Reforms in the Middle East and North Africa to talk about
job creation and training workers to fill them.
What you won’t hear:
·
Discussions on how to reform the global money
and credit system to provide a stable, uniform, elastic, asset-backed money
supply to enable people without capital ownership to become capital owners
through the purchase of self-liquidating assets, and enjoy the fruits of
ownership without their property rights being eroded by inflation or
depreciated by government issuance of increasing amounts of debt.
·
Discussions on how to reform the world’s tax
systems to encourage widespread capital ownership, and give tax-deferred status
to any income used to purchase self-liquidating assets up to a level of capital
self-sufficiency.
·
Discussions on how to implement the Three
Principles of Economic Justice, 1) Participative Justice, 2) Distributive
Justice, and 3) Social Justice.
·
Discussions on achieving the Four Pillars of a
Just Market Economy, 1) A limited economic role for the State, 2) Free and open
markets as the best means of determining just wages, just prices, and just
profits, 3) Restoration of the rights of private property, particularly
corporate equity, and — what nobody is talking about — 4) Expanded capital
ownership, something listed in the UN’s Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
No, all you will
hear are discussions that ultimately boil down to the presumed need to create
jobs and train workers to fill them . . . which isn’t really all that helpful
in a world in which technology is taking over more and more of the burden of
producing marketable goods and services.
People already own their labor.
What they need to own is capital.
#30#