Business

The seventh annual Horasis Global Meeting kicked off today in style 

In the historic city of Gaziantep today more than 400 delegates, including Ministers and business leaders, gathered for the first day of Horasis Global Meeting to discuss key global issues centered around sustainability, international relations and economic development.

The introductory sessions focused on reconstruction, with impactful data points shared by delegates. 

Former Deputy Prime Minister of Albania Senida Mesi noted that “high income countries constitute less than 16% of the world population, but receive over 50% of global investment spending,” when setting the context for increasing global distortions. 

The grand opening saw passionate and dynamic speeches from Horasis Chairman Dr. Frank Jürgen-Richter, Mayor of Gaziantep Fatma Şahin, Minister of Trade Ömer Bolat and Gaziantep Governor Kemal Çeber.

Midmorning brought about the first plenary discussions and exciting panels around fostering collaboration between nations to make countries more resilient collectively.

“Countries will need to move beyond self interest and look to their neighbours for sustained economic growth” said Business Standard Contributing Editor Pranjal Sharma, who chaired a session on the world economic outlook. 

To close the morning, Türkiye’s Minister of Finance Mehmet Şimşek gave an extensive overview of Türkiye’s current economic outlook and why international investors should look to the country as an exciting opportunity.

The afternoon sessions centered around fostering positive individual and collective change, leadership, impact-focused technology.

Havard Business School Professor John Quelch chaired an inspiring debate on the changing meaning of public goods, with award-winning journalist Jennifer Nadel citing that we should now see “truth as a public good”.

The closing plenary changed formats to a roundtable-style debate on social capital with a panel of disparate beliefs and experiences, with great accounts from the former Minister of Foreign Investment in North Macedonia, Gligor Tashkovich, and Deputy President of the African Academy of Sciences, Nkem Khumbah. 

With the meeting held by the city of Gaziantep, after England’s Liverpool and Portugal’s Cascais, more attention will be drawn to the region that has suffered one of the largest natural disasters, and commercial foundations can be further strengthened.

The meeting will likely help ensure Gaziantep is the preferred city for the regional offices of multinational companies, and can be shown as a center for global enterprises.

This article includes a partner of an Espacio portfolio company

Fraser Gillies

Recent Posts

Can Bitcoin Be the Key to Ending Perpetual War?

Every now and then, I stumble upon posts such as these here and there: And,…

2 hours ago

The Coming AI Winter: How Physics May Be Leading the Way

Winter(Physics) is Coming It now looks like Large Language Models running on the GPT technology…

2 hours ago

Top 15 LatAm tech journalists and editors of 2024

Latin America’s tech industry is booming, with innovative new startups popping up across the region.…

4 hours ago

G20 announces initiative to crackdown on climate change disinformation

The Global Initiative for Information Integrity on Climate Change claims to 'safeguard those reporting on…

6 hours ago

How GPUs, widely used in gaming, are helping doctors get better look inside us

In the late 19th Century, physicians began inserting hollow tubes equipped with small lights into…

16 hours ago

Top Five Trends Shaping Gaming in 2025

This year wasn’t exactly what the video gaming industry expected — it declined by 7%…

2 days ago