Winning Trump's favor is one thing. Keeping it is another.Just four months after their tense Oval Office meeting on February 28, 2025, Donald Trump welcomed Volodymyr Zelensky at the NATO summit in Ankara with a noticeably warmer tone. For Ukraine, that's an encouraging shift—but hardly a guarantee of lasting American support. [...]
At the 2026 AI for Good Global Summit in Geneva, GZERO's Tony Maciulis sat down with Sangbu Kim, Vice President of Digital and AI at the World Bank Group, for a reality check on AI's actual impact on the global job market.
Kim says the picture looks very different depending on where you live. In developed economies, roughly 15% of jobs face meaningful disruption from automation. In the developing world, that figure drops to around 5% and Kim argues AI is more likely to expand opportunity than eliminate it. Rather than replacing workers, Kim says, AI is amplifying what they can do. On the anxiety gripping workers in wealthier countries, Kim draws on decades of experience in the digital economy, pointing to the introduction of email as a parallel: fears of mass job loss gave way to an explosion of new roles in logistics, e-commerce, and digital services. He believes the same pattern will hold with AI, though he acknowledges white-collar fields like law, accounting, and medical consulting face real near-term disruption.
For the 1.2 billion young people expected to enter the global workforce over the next decade, Kim says the most important investments are not purely technical. He argues that distinctly human skills like interpersonal communication and collaboration will be among the most durable assets in an AI-powered economy.
This conversation is presented by GZERO Media in partnership with Microsoft. The Global Stage series convenes global leaders for critical conversations on the geopolitical forces reshaping our world.
Vessels in the Strait of Hormuz, as seen from Musandam, Oman, on June 18, 2026.
REUTERS/Stringer/File Photo
The US and Iran are back at war.On Monday, President Donald Trump announced the United States would reimpose its naval blockade of Iran, effective Tuesday afternoon. Iran responded by declaring the Strait of Hormuz closed to all traffic that does not route through its preferred corridor and coordinate with Iranian authorities. Brent crude, which [...]
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez, Spanish Foreign Minister José Manuel Albares and Gibraltar Chief Minister Fabian Picardo attend a ceremony marking the demolition of the border fence between Spain and Gibraltar in La Línea de la Concepción, on July 15, 2026.
Samuel Vega/JNA Press/Sipa USA
A physical border falls, a digital one risesSome 118 years after it was installed, the border fence between Spain and the British overseas territory of Gibraltar fell on Tuesday, after the European Union and the United Kingdom clinched a long-awaited deal last year over how to manage the border in the wake of Brexit. But while one wall falls, [...]
China’s economy posted one of its slowest quarterly growth rates on record. The slowdown was hardly a surprise: earlier this year, Chinese officials set the country’s lowest growth target since 1991. The weak growth is not coming from a decrease in manufacturing. In fact, exports rose 27% year over year in June. Instead, it’s coming from sluggish [...]
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