PARIS – Chinese President Xi Jinping is slated today to open an all-virtual World Economic Forum, with his country still appearing on track to emerge stronger from the coronavirus pandemic that continues to wreak havoc elsewhere.
Today’s schedule echoes the global economic picture, with Xi headlining as European policymakers – including European Central Bank chief Christine Lagarde and French and German economy ministers Bruno Le Maire and Peter Altmaier – discuss “restoring economic growth”.
United States President Joe Biden will be absent from the week-long online gathering, as he tackles urgent and daunting challenges at home.
The January 2020 WEF, which took place in its usual Swiss Alpine resort of Davos, saw the global elite just starting to worry about a pandemic that surfaced in China a month earlier.
A year on, the coronavirus is leaving a mounting death toll, upending economies and depriving millions of people of work.
And initial optimism about a swift, smooth vaccine rollout ending the pandemic has ebbed in the face of distribution hiccups and new virus variants.
But China and Asian countries in 2021 are making a strong comeback from the virus that hit them first.
In virtual format because of the pandemic, this week’s event is headlined: “A Crucial Year to Rebuild Trust”.
The big names from Europe will be German Chancellor Angela Merkel, French President Emmanuel Macron and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, who heads the European Union executive.
Biden will not appear at the virtual Davos, which has never been a fixture on the White House calendar – even if the new administration has pledged to revive a US multilateral foreign policy after four years of Donald Trump’s America First approach.
Trump had been an exception as he stopped in Davos twice, with the real estate billionaire enjoying mixing with the global business elite.
Biden is nevertheless sending John Kerry, the special climate envoy who will be welcomed after the new Democratic president brought Washington back into the Paris climate accord.
Showing up from Asia are China’s and South Korea’s presidents as well as the prime ministers of India and Japan.
Following the first virtual session, Davos will move in May to Singapore, far from the luxury Swiss ski resort where it has taken place since it was launched in 1971, the brainchild of German professor Klaus Schwab.
The stated reason for the change is health and safety, as the city-state has recorded just 29 Covid-19 deaths.
And a virtual forum is not particularly attractive for the world’s well-heeled movers and shakers, who value huddles behind closed doors in fancy hotels over meetings in formal settings. – AFP, January 25, 2021