- How AI can empower, not replace, human creativity
Duncan Crabtree-Ireland National Executive Director and Chief Negotiator , Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists This article is part of: World Economic Forum Annual Meeting
- Future of Jobs Report 2025: The jobs of the future - The World Economic . . .
Farmworkers top the list Green transition trends, including efforts to reduce carbon emissions and adapt to the climate crisis, will drive growth that will create 34 million additional jobs by 2030, adding to the 200 million farmworkers today
- Davos 2025: What to expect and whos coming? | World Economic Forum
The 2025 Annual Meeting of the World Economic Forum takes place from 20-24 January in Davos, Switzerland The meeting convenes under the title Collaboration for the Intelligent Age, accessible to the wider public with livestreamed sessions and an overview of the themes is available on the dedicated event website
- Everything you need to know about Ireland’s economy
Without reform, Ireland was exposed in the event of a global downturn, it said The Brexit effect Although Irish life satisfaction scores remain above the OECD average, recent research by the Irish Economic and Social Research Institute (ESRI) found that Irish consumers are deeply worried
- These countries are paying people to move to the countryside
Japan, Portugal, Ireland and Australia are some of the countries offering rural relocation incentives In 2020, an Italian village with just 115 residents offered relocation grants of up to €8,000 a year for three years COVID-19 and remote working has made rural relocation more possible – and desirable – for some
- Black History Month: What is it and why do we need it?
In Canada, they celebrate it in February In countries like the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, and Ireland, they celebrate it in October In Canada, African-Canadian parliament member Jean Augustine motioned for Black History Month in 1995 to bring awareness to Black Canadians' work
- A minimum tax rate of 15% on the profits of multinationals. | World . . .
“We're very far from having solved the problem of tax justice in this world For one thing, the 15% minimum tax is still much lower than what small and medium businesses pay in most countries in this world … so we really need to fix these loopholes at the top of the tax system,” Chancel told the panel in Davos
- Irelands inspiring idea to go greener - The World Economic Forum
Ireland is among the least forested nations in the EU, with government estimates showing that in 2014, forest cover was around 11%, compared with the EU average of almost 40% The motivation to reforest isn’t just about mitigating climate change, it also wants to produce more commercial timber, provide biomass for energy production and
|