El Salvador's Challenge

Roberto Murray Meza talked about El Salvador biggest challenges. The Salvadoran business leader considers that the country's biggest challenges are  to decrease spending, increase revenue and to concentrate resources in critical areas. 

"There is no Planet B"

Richard Branson talks about the captivating story of the Carbon War Room on the Virgin.com blog. "Together with a group of like-minded entrepreneurs, Virgin Unite founded the Carbon War Room in 2009, with a mission to stimulate business-led market interventions that advance a low-carbon economy. We started when the clean energy revolution was still thought of by many to be a dream. But we knew we had to do something."

Art Matters

During the Inter-American Development Bank's (IDB) "Idear Soluciones para Mejorar Vidas", IDB president, Luis Alberto Moreno highlighted that the creative industries are an important contributor to the global economy. "These industries generate $4.3 billion US to the global revenue and employ 144 million people", he said.

Rámirez Magaña Receives Presea CONCAMIN

President Enrique Peña Nieto gave Alejandro Rámirez Magaña the "Presea de la Confederación Nacional de Cámaras Industriales (CONCAMIN)" in early October. This prize recognizes and rewards best practices of Mexican business leaders. 

The Secret to Success

José Zaga was invited to the Asociación Mexicana de Mujeres Jefas de Empresas to talk about his secret to success: marketing. He advised every person in the room to invest money in marketing, even if its not a lot, marketing is always important. 

New Smithsonian Institution Chairman

Carlyle Group co-CEO and philanthropist David Rubenstein will step into the chairman role of the Smithsonian Institution’s Board of Regents next year. Rubenstein’s appointment was announced at last week’s annual meeting of the Smithsonian’s governing board. Read More...

WikiHillary for President

Thank God for WikiLeaks. I [Tom Friedman] confess, I was starting to wonder about the real Hillary Clinton - the one you never get to see behind closed doors- really stood for. But now that, thanks to WikiLeaks, I've had a chance to peruse her speeches to Goldman Sachs and other banks, I am more convinced than ever she can be the president America needs today. Read More...

The David Rubenstein Show

Renowned financier and philanthropist David Rubenstein travels the country talking to leaders to uncover their stories and their path to success. Each episode features an interview with one business leader. From Bill Gates to Ken Chenault, from Indra Nooyi to Warren Buffett, from Eric Schmidt to Lloyd Blankfein, David goes in search of the fundamental insights that reveal what makes a truly great leader. Watch the first three episodes here. 

Venter's New Enterprise: You

Finally, J. Craig Venter is taking the next big step. The scientist who, as president of Celera Genomics, throttled up the historic push to decode the human genome, is stepping into the realm of prevention and precision medicine. Venter's ambitions go beyond using genetic information for patient care. Through his firm Human Longevity, Inc., Venter aims to build a million-person database by 2020 as a resource to understand the complex relationship between genes and biology, including human disease. "We're rewriting the definition of health," Venter says. Read More...

On Colombia's Peace Deal

October 2 was supposed to be a celebration of peace in Colombia. After four years of painstaking negotiations, and 52 years of armed conflict, polling indicated that Colombians would approve a carefully balanced peace deal with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC. The polls were wrong. A visceral hatred toward the FARC won out over peace. Read the rest of Jason Marczak's take on the Colombia Peace Deal

The Decline of the West, and How to Stop It

For most of the last 70 years, the United States, Canada and much of Europe have constituted a vast zone of peace, prosperity and democracy. The trans-Atlantic community has grown to over 900 million inhabitants of more than 30 countries. It has set an example for regional cooperation in Africa, Latin America and Southeast Asia, and served as a mainstay of the liberal world order. That achievement is in jeopardy. The bonds within Europe have been fraying for some time, but this year has been the worst yet. Read Strobe Talbott's opinion on the decline of the West. 

On Alan Greenspan

"I [Alan Murray]  got to know Alan Greenspan in the mid-1980s, when I was cub reporter at the Wall Street Journal covering economic statistics. My predecessor had given me a list of economic sources who were ready to jump on the phone at a moment’s notice and provide instant analysis of the data. Greenspan was one. I quickly learned he was not the person to call when I needed a quick and pithy quote to support an already determined narrative. Instead, he was the person to call when I really didn’t understand what was going on. He was the man who knew." Read Alan Murray's article on Alan Greenspan's trajectory.

What you have been asking for...

You asked and we heard your pleas: We are excited to present the agenda for this year's G50 meeting. There are only 22 days left until we reconvene in Washington D.C. for another memorable occasion. If you would like to see the full agenda, participants list and other important information, please visit our website

Get Excited About These New Speakers

From the expert on gastrodiplomacy to the first U.S. deputy Chief Technology Officer, check out the newest additions to this year's lineup. 

Trump? How Could We?

Thomas Friedman's reaction to the Donald Trump-Hillary Clinton debate can be summarized with one word: "'How?' How in the world do we put a man in the Oval Office who thinks NATO is a shopping mall where the tenants aren't paying enough rent to the U.S. landlord? NATO is not a shopping mall; it is a strategic alliance that won the Cold War...Read Thomas Friedman's latest column in the New York Times. 

Sadjadpour on the Middle East

Karim Sadjadpour, an expert on the Middle East from the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace talks to Slate Magazine about Saudi Arabia’s relationship with Iran, ISIS’s lack of enemies in the region, and whether the Sunni-Shiite split can ever be fixed. Read the entire interview. 

Gastrodiplomacy

It's often said that the closest interaction many Americans have with other countries' cultures is through food. That kind of culinary diplomacy is particularly common in Washington, D.C., where immigrants from all over the world have cooked up a diverse food scene. Now one scholar-in-residence at American University is using the city's food culture to teach her students about global affairs via a course on "gastrodiplomacy" — using food as a tool to foster cultural understanding among countries.  Read more about Johanna Mendelson-Forman

Ignorance is the enemy within

In a recent blog post, Darren Walker writes: "Certainly, the events of this year have tested any commitment to hope, and to the belief that equality can triumph over indifference and injustice. We are witnessing alarming levels of racism and bigotry in the West. We feel anguished and powerless over the plight of refugees from war-torn regions in the Middle East and Africa. The world over, continued violence against women and girls, ethnic minorities, LGBTQ communities, and other vulnerable people reminds us that inequality can exact deadly consequences." Despite all this, he still has #reasonsforhope. Read his inspiring blog post.

Friedman looks back on 9/11

Ironically or not, Thomas Friedman was actually in Tel Aviv. He writes: "I had gone to Israel to report on the Intifada. And I was at Tel Aviv University, interviewing the president. And I had a regular driver who'd been with me there for many years. And I came out of the meeting. And the driver said that a plane had hit the World Trade Center..." Listen to New York Times columnist, Thomas Friedman look back on foreign policy after 9/11. Rachel Martin of NPR interviews him fifteen years after the dreadful day.

15 years after 9/11

Ambassador Yousef Al Otiba reflects on the fifteen years since the horrific 9/11 attacks and how,  "sadly, extremist brutality did not stop that day.  From San Bernardino to Yemen, Paris to Bangladesh the reach of a sophisticated and persistent enemy has only grown. The effects of Al Qaeda, ISIS, the Muslim Brotherhood, Iran and their proxies reach far into Europe, America and Asia. But in the Middle East, in the heart of the Arab world, we face an existential threat from extremism. Our communities, our families, our livelihoods, our entire way of life are exposed and under constant attack." Read the UAE ambassador's input on 9/11.