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News:Pak team to attend
global competitiveness moot By our correspondent ISLAMABAD: The Competitiveness Support Fund (CSF), a joint initiative of the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and the Ministry of Finance, Government of Pakistan, will lead a delegation to The Competitiveness Institute (TCI) Global Competitiveness Conference 2007 in Portland, Oregon (US) from October 8-12. According to the CSF, the five-day conference, co-chaired by the Oregon Economic and Community Development Department and the Portland Development Commission, will include an academic summit, industry cluster tours, keynote speakers and breakout sessions. Nearly 500 participants from more then 35 countries are expected at the conference that will mark TCI’s 10-year anniversary also. Comprising senior cluster experts from the public as well as private sector and leading academic institutions in Pakistan, the Pakistani delegation will be led by Arthur Bayhan, Chief Executive Officer of the Competitiveness Support Fund (CSF), who is also Vice President for TCI’s Asia-Pacific region. “Pakistan will showcase its achievements and strategy in terms of innovation and competitiveness,” said Bayhan. The Pakistani delegation will also visit the International Institute for Innovation Journalism (IIIJ) at Stanford University, where the delegation members will discuss opportunities and initiatives for improving the effectiveness of the programme for innovation and economic reporting in Pakistan. The delegation will debate on the notion of whether innovation leads journalism or journalism leads innovation. CSF will chair a conference session on “Competitiveness in the Islamic World” that will include presentations from Arthur Bayhan and other cluster experts from around the world. The conference theme of “Collaboration, Innovation, and Sustainability” will highlight Pakistan’s recent initiatives on improving its global competitiveness rankings.. Prime Minister, Shaukat Aziz, at the launch of
the State of Pakistan’s Competitiveness Report
in April this year termed competitiveness as the
cornerstone of Pakistan’s growth strategy.
Through the impact of CSF’s activities on
supporting economic development, the Pakistan government
has also included for the first time ever competitiveness
into the Poverty Reduction Strategy for the next
5 years, which includes: private sector development;
intensifying liberalization, deregulation, privatisation
and, enhancing competitiveness and productivity,
special economic zones, value-addition in agriculture
and riding the globalization wave by policy reforms
and capacity building and restructuring of the public
sector institutions. “We view the TCI conference
as a way to showcase our successes, bench mark our
policies, and gain insight from experts around the
world,” said Bayhan. Support for CSF is part
of the $1.5 billion in aid that the U.S. is providing
to Pakistan, through USAID, over five years to improve
economic growth, education, health, and governance,
and for earthquake reconstruction. |
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