G-20 summit: Corruption key focus area, India works hard to get strong para into Osaka declaration
Akshay Mathur, CEO and Director of Research, Gateway House was quoted in The Indian Express. Read the full article here
Akshay Mathur, CEO and Director of Research, Gateway House was quoted in The Indian Express. Read the full article here
Neelam Deo, Director and Co-founder, Gateway House was quoted in Hindustan Times. Read the full article here
The 2019 G20 Summit in Osaka on June 28-29, is the 14th meeting of the Group of 20 leaders. The G20 is the world’s most influential economic multilateral forum. It is the agenda-setting forum that develops and guides rules of global economic governance. Under the Japanese Presidency, this summit will be the first to discuss and establish the rules for the worldwide governance of data, including current hot-button issues like data localisation and data sovereignty. India has both a preparatory and a contributory role to play in the G20 this year. For in 2022, it will be the President of the G20. India must identify its agenda early on; its a weighty responsibility but also an opportunity to set the global economic agenda.
The U.S.-China trade dispute and Australia’s concerns about China’s growing influence in its internal affairs and the neighbourhood present an opportunity for New Delhi and Canberra to step up their security engagement, bilaterally, and in the Indo-Pacific
The extradition bill for Hong Kong, which drew massive protests, has been put into suspension. The bill is not just a matter of concern for the island state, but a global signal too. The people of Hong Kong want it to withdrawn completely and are pushing for the issue to be raised at the G20 Osaka summit on 28-29 June 2019
India’s foreign minister S. Jaishankar and U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo have sorted through the India-US niggles and minutae, so that the substance of the bilateral can be advanced by their leaders who are meeting in Osaka this week
Kenya, the jewel of East Africa in many respects, has not made optimal progress due to a range of factors. But Uhuru Kenyatta, who is serving his second term as the country’s fourth president, has dedicated himself to a path of unity and more inclusive economic development. An analysis of Kenya’s ‘African destiny’
Neelam Deo, Director and Co-founder, Gateway House was quoted in an article by Reuters, which was republished in CNBC TV18. Read the full article here
Neelam Deo, Director and Co-founder, Gateway House was quoted in an article by Reuters, which was republished in Firstpost. Read the full article here
Neelam Deo, Director and Co-founder, Gateway House was quoted in an article by Reuters, which was republished in Business Standard. Read the full article here