Coordinated action for 'rapid growth' concludes Wharton Global Alumni Forum
- United Arab Emirates: Saturday, March 14 - 2009 at 13:25
- PRESS RELEASE
The first-ever Wharton Global Alumni Forum held in the Middle East in Dubai concluded with the recommendation that "coordinated action to bring about rapid growth" is the way forward for the GCC region.
The final panel discussion on the 'The Impact of the Financial Crisis on the Middle East' at the forum served as an effective recap of the two-day event, reiterating the need to create job opportunities for the 5m plus Arab youth who will join the workforce in less than a decade.
Introducing the panel, Professor Richard Marston, James R. F. Guy Professor of Finance at The Wharton School, presented a stark and harsh picture of the current crisis, highlighting that the concept of other economies decoupling from the US has been "shown to be a silly idea." He said the world has seen serious deterioration in wealth.
Mr Hussein Ali Al-Abdullah, Executive Director, Qatar Investment Authority, who opened the panel, observed that in these volatile times, the best solution is "inaction" at least for the next 6 months to one year. He said that the global economic revival will take at least four years adding that the fall-out of the crisis is marked by increasing debt ratios and default rates.
Shaikh Mohammed Essa Al-Khalifa, Chief Executive, Bahrain Economic Development Board, presented a more optimistic viewpoint, saying that in the 300 year-history of capitalism, the world has seen at least 30 cycles of booms and busts. "It is a cycle and the economy will come back." He attributed three reasons for the volatility in the Middle East markets - "fall in oil prices, declining asset prices and reduced access to global credit." Explaining that the crisis in the GCC region is "not structural," he said the surpluses of the Gulf economies will drive its recovery.
Mr Ghassan Barrage, Senior Executive Advisor, Booz & Company, Saudi Arabia, underscored the need to create job opportunities for the estimated 5m Arab youth who will join the workforce in less than a decade, and recommended that GCC economies stay the course with a focus on doubling the speed of economic growth. He also urged to invest further in knowledge-based industries, with a simultaneous focus on capability building, making the economic agenda the 'national agenda' and bringing in performance management systems.
Mr Ken Costa, Chairman, Lazard International, observed that unusual means are needed to manage the crisis with the critical priority to be accorded for "restoration of confidence. He said that the GCC region came into the crisis on a much stronger note, and coordinated initiatives are now needed to restore confidence in the banking sector for economic growth.
Interacting with the audience, Prof Marston said that the real estate sector will be slower in emerging from the crisis, saying, "If we have to wait for the housing sector to recover, it will be a long recession." The equity markets, the panel observed, could recover in three years while the housing sector might take a further two years.
The panel was unanimous in the observation that the lesson from the crisis was the need to have "balance" and that "fundamentals count." Mr Al-Abdullah added that the recovery of the commodity-led GCC region will be faster than the US or Europe, principally led by the high growth rates of China and India.
The first Wharton Global Alumni Forum in Dubai, thus, worked to achieve its objective of honest discussions on the state of the economy in line with its theme "At the Crossroads of Global Economic Change."
Lead sponsors of the two-day event were Agility, M. H. Alshaya Co., Dubai Holding, Amwal Al Khaleej and Booz & Co.
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The Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania — founded in 1881 as the first collegiate business school — is recognized globally for intellectual leadership and ongoing innovation across every major discipline of business education. The most comprehensive source of business knowledge in the world, Wharton bridges research and practice through its broad engagement with the global business community. The School has more than 4,700 undergraduate, MBA, executive MBA, and doctoral students; more than 12,000 annual participants in executive education programs; and an alumni network of more than 84,000 graduates.
For more information, please contact:
Lisa George, ASDA'A Burson-Marsteller, Dubai, UAE
Tel: (+971 4) 334 4550
OR Peter Winicov, Wharton Communications, +1-215-7 46-6471
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Posted by Rima Ali Al Mashni



