Difference between revisions of "World Economic Forum (WEF)"
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[[wikipedia:World Economic Forum]] (1971) | [[wikipedia:World Economic Forum]] (1971) | ||
+ | |||
+ | * [[Klaus Schwab]] | ||
== Related terms == | == Related terms == | ||
+ | * [[World Economic Forum Crypto Sustainability Coalition]] | ||
* [[cyberattacks]] | * [[cyberattacks]] | ||
* [[Davos]] | * [[Davos]] | ||
Line 15: | Line 18: | ||
* [[WEF 2022]] | * [[WEF 2022]] | ||
* [[Jane Goodall]] [[anthropologist]] | * [[Jane Goodall]] [[anthropologist]] | ||
+ | * [[Young Global Leader]] | ||
+ | * [[Larry Fink]] ([[Blackrock]]) | ||
== See also == | == See also == |
Latest revision as of 12:33, 27 February 2024
wikipedia:World Economic Forum (1971)
Related terms[edit]
- World Economic Forum Crypto Sustainability Coalition
- cyberattacks
- Davos
- WEF Technology Pioneer
- Richard Edelman
- Yuval Noah Harari
- Klaus Schwab
- Klaus Kleinfeld
- Henry Kissinger
- Helen E Clark (New Zealand)
- WEF 2022
- Jane Goodall anthropologist
- Young Global Leader
- Larry Fink (Blackrock)
See also[edit]
- World Economic Forum, Davos, Klaus Schwab, Mark Rutte, Hussain Najadi, WEF board, Young Global Leader (YGL), Cyber Polygon, Pascal Najadi
- Investment management, Hedge fund, AUM, Sovereign wealth fund, Private Equity, Venture capital, Index, ETF, Government bond, Stock, IFC, Compound interest, Rule of 72, CAGR, Investment banking, Passive investor
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