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THE 2025 GLOBAL SUMMIT: HOW BUSINESS IS CHARTING THE FUTURE




Hundreds of influential CEOs, policymakers and world leaders are gathering at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce Global Summit this week to address global commercial challenges and opportunities.

“We all share a vision for the future—one where our industries and our countries continue benefiting from the growth and opportunity that comes from global engagement," said Chamber President and CEO Suzanne P. Clark, in her opening keynote address.

Clark described the major questions that businesses are facing, such as how to bolster certainty, the rule of law, and international order, how to minimize ripple effects of regional economic slowdowns, foster sustained global growth, and how to meet growing demand for electricity driven by AI and technology.   


“There are no easy, obvious answers to these questions,” Clark said.  “Which

is why we have brought together key leaders from the public and private sectors to help us chart the way forward. We have a measure of control over the future. As we shape that future, we should aim for one where we remain interconnected.”

 

Clark highlighted the extensive work of the Chamber’s engagement around the globe, including over 30 bilateral business councils and 130 American Chambers of Commerce overseas (AmChams). The Chamber regularly hosts heads of state, conducts commercial trade missions, and facilitates investments and dialogue in every corner of the world.  She also noted the work of the Chamber’s Global Intelligence Desk, which generates insights from top thinkers and analysts through weekly episodes of The Call.


Coming just a few months after the Chamber’s 2025 State of American Business, which showcases how all business and policy is local, the Global Summit will feature three U.S. governors – Andy Beshear of Kentucky, Wes Moore of Maryland, and Glenn Youngkin of Virginia – in addition to a robust group of diplomats and foreign ministers. The governors will discuss how reliant each of their states is on foreign direct investment, and how vital global trade is to local economies.  

 

The summit aims to address the growing geopolitical risks and uncertainties that businesses face today. "The world is becoming less predictable; the world is becoming more volatile," Clark said, underscoring the need for businesses to remain resilient and adaptive. She emphasized the importance of business-led solutions, stating, “We know businesses are tracking these risks carefully, and all of us are trying to think about how to plan and how to form strategy for the future.”

 

Chamber Foundation President Michael Carney moderated a session on "Navigating Geopolitics," where uncertainty and risk were key themes. “The big blind spot right now is that we are in the midst of such radical change that we're not really able to comprehend that things aren't going to be the same," said Beth Sanner, Director of Geopolitics and Strategy at International Capital Strategies. "We don't know where it's going, but we do know that things are really different.

 

“The biggest risk for businesses is that everybody is going to be driven by the hope that it's all just going to be fine. [They hope it is] all going to go back to be the way that it was, and it's not,” Sanner added.

 

Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis President and CEO Neel Kashkari discussed how the uncertainty is affecting the economy, saying that for the dollar to remain the world's reserve currency, then America has to remain the safest and most desirable environment for investing. “Policy choices have led to uncertainty—and policy choices can relieve the uncertainty,” he said.

 

Participants at the two-day summit will engage in discussions on a range of topics, including global risk management, the future of technology, and energy security. Clark urged attendees to approach these discussions with optimism, asserting that "solving problems is what businesses do best." She called on attendees to work together to create solutions for a brighter future, emphasizing the power of free enterprise to drive progress.

 

"We believe that free markets and economic liberalization have delivered a level of prosperity unparalleled in the history of the world," she said, reinforcing the Chamber's commitment to expanding free and fair trade and global engagement. Clark recently returned from India, where she met with Indian officials and business leaders in Delhi and Mumbai and discussed the need for a new trade deal with India that will improve access for U.S. businesses.

 

"The surest way to spur growth and opportunity is through new trade deals – not trade wars," she wrote in an op-ed for Fox News. "And nowhere is the opportunity greater – or more elusive – than with India."

 

Global leaders at the summit include H.E. Hadri Badri, CEO of the Dubai Economic Development Corporation, H.E. Jovita NeliupšienÄ—, European Union Ambassador to the United States, and the Rt. Hon. Lord Peter Mandelson, British Ambassador to the United States, all of whom are scheduled to speak about the shared benefits that come from U.S. investment abroad and the need for trade policy certainty that will ensure those investments continue.  

 

Despite the risk and uncertainty in today’s world, participants took solace in Clark’s words. 

 

“We have to strike a balance—contending with the issues of the moment and not forgetting to look forward and have a long view,” she said. “This institution has done that for over a century. Many of our members have been with us that entire time. These companies had to deal with incredible risks during the 20th century. ... They juggled business as usual and planned for the future, even as the world transformed around them and a new global order emerged.

 

“They demonstrated an incredible ability to imagine the world as it could be—and should be. And they laid the plans and led the innovations to make it so.”


Click here for online article provided by the US Chamber of Commerce

 



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Western DuPage Chamber of Commerce
306 Main St.
West Chicago, IL 60185
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