
Lo que la pandemia COVID-19 nos dice sobre la igualdad de género
Dos ministros de asuntos exteriores europeos explican por qué las mujeres necesitan protección adicional durante la pandemia de coronavirus.
Arancha Gonzalez Laya is Executive Director of the International Trade Centre and Co-chair of the World Economic Forum’s Global Future Council on the Future of International Trade and Investment. Before joining ITC, González served as Chief of Staff to World Trade Organization Director-General Pascal Lamy from 2005 to 2013. Prior to working at the WTO, she held several positions at the European Commission, conducting negotiations of trade agreements and assisting developing countries in trade-development efforts.
Dos ministros de asuntos exteriores europeos explican por qué las mujeres necesitan protección adicional durante la pandemia de coronavirus.
Two European foreign ministers explain why women need extra protection during the coronavirus pandemic.
Arancha González, ministre espagnole des affaires étrangères, affirme que la coopération internationale est le seul moyen de lutter avec succès contre la pandémie de COVID-19.
Arancha González, Ministra de Asuntos Exteriores de España, argumenta que la cooperación internacional es la única forma de afrontar con éxito la pandemia de COVID-19.
Arancha González, Spain’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, argues that international cooperation is the only way to successfully tackle the COVID-19 pandemic.
'Trade surplus good; trade deficit bad' has been a global mantra for centuries. But in reality our obsession with avoiding trade deficits could be negatively impacting growth and jobs.
Empowering women to participate equally in the global economy could add $28 trillion in GDP growth by 2025.
El Consejo Mundial Futuro sobre el Comercio Internacional y la Inversión del Foro Mundial Económico ha emitido un llamado a la acción para que los líderes del G20 mantengan y mejoren la l...
Trade expanded by more than 7% a year between 1990-2000, contributing to economic activity and helping to lift around a billion people out of poverty.
Mientras la región se recupera del fin del ciclo de las materias primas, una nueva amenaza pesa sobre las perspectivas de crecimiento: el proteccionismo y el nacionalismo económico.
After years of protectionism and economic nationalism, Latin American countries are ready to open up again – just as the rest of the world turns inwards.
We run the risk of shifting from a global trading system based on rules to one based on deals and power politics, warns ITC chief, Arancha Gonzales Laya.
Trade gives people a tangible interest in each other’s wellbeing and offers a path to inclusive economic growth, but only if we adopt the right policies.
There’s a big reason globalization is worth saving: the open global economy has helped lift over a billion people out of extreme poverty.