Introduction: Zelenskiy, Scholz, Stoltenberg and Guterres on agenda
Good morning from Davos, where the second day of the World Economic Forum is getting underway.
Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelenskiy will address today’s Annual Meeting this afternoon, by video call, and he’s expected to call for more heavy weaponry to help push Russian forces back.
This could pile even more pressure on Germany to allow the re-export of its Leopard 2 tanks, with Andrzej Duda, the Polish president, telling Davos yesterday that a positive decision from Berlin was “very, very, very, very needed”.
German chancellor Olaf Scholz will speak before Zelenskiy, the only G7 leader expected to take the stage at this year’s WEF.
Yesterday, Scholz declared he was “absolutely convinced” that Germany will avoid a recession this year, despite Russia’s energy squeeze.
Zelenskiy will be followed on stage by Jens Stoltenberg, secretary-general of NATO.
As we blogged last night, former US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger said Ukraine joining NATO could be an “appropriate outcome” of Russia’s invasion, as he reiterated his call for a negotiated solution to the conflict.
“The idea of a neutral Ukraine under these conditions is no longer meaningful,” Kissinger, 99, told WEF delegates by video link.
Ukraine’s First Lady Olena Zelenska made a surprise appearance here yesterday, urging political leaders and chief executives to use their influence to help her country.
Zelenska brought a letter from her husband for China’s Xi Jinping (to be taken back from Davos by Chinese vice-premier Liu He), plus letters for European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and Swiss president Alain Berset.
Zelenska warned delegates that the war “could go further” unless Russia is stopped.
António Guterres, Secretary General of the United Nations, also addresses the annual meeting today. He may focus on the climate crisis. Last weekend Guterres called for a renewable energy ‘revolution’, saying this was the only credible path to avoid climate catastrophe.
The agenda
10.00am Davos / 9am GMT: Global Cybersecurity Outlook 2023, with Interpol secretary-general Jürgen Stock, Accenture’s CEO Julie Sweet, and Nikesh Arora, CEO and chairman of Palo Alto Networks
11:15am Davos / 10.15am GMT: Special Address by António Guterres, Secretary General of the United Nations
3:45pm Davos / 2.45pm GMT: Special Address by Olaf Scholz, Chancellor of Germany
5pm Davos / 4pm GMT: Special Address by Volodymyr Zelenskiy, president of Ukraine
5.15pm: Restoring Security and Peace, with Andrzej Duda, president of Poland; Jens Stoltenberg, Secretary-General NATO
6.30pm Davos / 5.30pm GMT: Uk-Ukraine-Swiss press conference on the Ukraine recovery conference, with UK business secretary Grant Shapps
Key events
Ultra-rich call on governments to introduce wealth taxes
Rupert Neate
More than 200 members of the super-rich elite are calling on governments around the world to “tax us, the ultra rich, now” in order to help billions of people struggling with cost of living crisis.
The group of 205 millionaires and billionaires, including the Disney heiress Abigail Disney and The Hulk actor Mark Ruffalo, on Wednesday called on world leaders and business executives meeting in Davos for the World Economic Forum (WEF) to urgently introduce wealth taxes to help tackle “extreme inequality”.
In an open letter published on Wednesday, they say:
“The current lack of action is gravely concerning. A meeting of the ‘global elite’ in Davos to discuss ‘cooperation in a fragmented world’ is pointless if you aren’t challenging the root cause of division.
Defending democracy and building cooperation requires action to build fairer economies right now – it is not a problem that can be left for our children to fix.
Zambia debt talks 'moving more slowly than hoped - finance minister
Larry Elliott
Zambia’s finance minister Situmbeko Muskotwane has admitted his country’s protracted debt negotiations are taking longer than hoped and that the delay is preventing the mineral-rich African country from taking advantage of the transition to net-zero.
Negotiations have been under way since Zambia’s $18b default in 2021 and have been seen as a test case of whether a G20 initiative to ease debt burdens on poor countries can work.
The International Monetary Fund has provided an assessment of how much debt Zambia could service but there has been resistance from China and private bondholders to the level of debt reduction they are expected to accept.
“Negotiations are still going on”, Muskotwane said during an interview in Davos.
Muskotwane tells us:
“They are moving more slowly than I hoped for. But they are still going on and I hope that by the end of the first quarter there could be some positive news.”
The IMF is worried about the debt problems facing a number of countries, and thinks China and the private sector bondholders are blaming each other for the lack of progress. An IMF-convened debt round table will take place on the fringes of the meeting of G20 finance and central bank governors in India next month.
Muskotwane said the IMF had been clear about the level of debt Zambia could sustain, and that once a deal had been done his government would stick to it.
“We want to be a country that when it borrows pays back.”
He said the world would need Zambia’s resource wealth if it was to make good on commitments to net zero targets, noting that his country was rich in copper, nickel, manganese and cobalt.
“People are looking for green energy and the resources needed are all in Zambia. The challenge is to get investors to help us exploit those resources and get the economy to be stronger.”
Introduction: Zelenskiy, Scholz, Stoltenberg and Guterres on agenda
Good morning from Davos, where the second day of the World Economic Forum is getting underway.
Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelenskiy will address today’s Annual Meeting this afternoon, by video call, and he’s expected to call for more heavy weaponry to help push Russian forces back.
This could pile even more pressure on Germany to allow the re-export of its Leopard 2 tanks, with Andrzej Duda, the Polish president, telling Davos yesterday that a positive decision from Berlin was “very, very, very, very needed”.
German chancellor Olaf Scholz will speak before Zelenskiy, the only G7 leader expected to take the stage at this year’s WEF.
Yesterday, Scholz declared he was “absolutely convinced” that Germany will avoid a recession this year, despite Russia’s energy squeeze.
Zelenskiy will be followed on stage by Jens Stoltenberg, secretary-general of NATO.
As we blogged last night, former US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger said Ukraine joining NATO could be an “appropriate outcome” of Russia’s invasion, as he reiterated his call for a negotiated solution to the conflict.
“The idea of a neutral Ukraine under these conditions is no longer meaningful,” Kissinger, 99, told WEF delegates by video link.
Ukraine’s First Lady Olena Zelenska made a surprise appearance here yesterday, urging political leaders and chief executives to use their influence to help her country.
Zelenska brought a letter from her husband for China’s Xi Jinping (to be taken back from Davos by Chinese vice-premier Liu He), plus letters for European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and Swiss president Alain Berset.
Zelenska warned delegates that the war “could go further” unless Russia is stopped.
António Guterres, Secretary General of the United Nations, also addresses the annual meeting today. He may focus on the climate crisis. Last weekend Guterres called for a renewable energy ‘revolution’, saying this was the only credible path to avoid climate catastrophe.
The agenda
10.00am Davos / 9am GMT: Global Cybersecurity Outlook 2023, with Interpol secretary-general Jürgen Stock, Accenture’s CEO Julie Sweet, and Nikesh Arora, CEO and chairman of Palo Alto Networks
11:15am Davos / 10.15am GMT: Special Address by António Guterres, Secretary General of the United Nations
3:45pm Davos / 2.45pm GMT: Special Address by Olaf Scholz, Chancellor of Germany
5pm Davos / 4pm GMT: Special Address by Volodymyr Zelenskiy, president of Ukraine
5.15pm: Restoring Security and Peace, with Andrzej Duda, president of Poland; Jens Stoltenberg, Secretary-General NATO
6.30pm Davos / 5.30pm GMT: Uk-Ukraine-Swiss press conference on the Ukraine recovery conference, with UK business secretary Grant Shapps