Forum Invest invites you to join the second edition of Young Business Leaders` Forum that will take place on October 14-15 in Bucharest. The event will bring together top young managers, contractors, politicians and young people who proved that the initiative spirit and courage are the promoters behind their success stories.
Built on three plenary sessions --- Young Leaders in Politics, Contractors Young Leaders- My first million euro, Young Managers in action— the event will be the perfect platform to debate the business trends in Romania, considering the current global crises.
- Are the young managers prepared to face all the challenges and still be successful?
- Can we talk about a leadership crisis?
- Do we have any solutions?
Young Business Leaders` Forum has as main objective to identify the answers to these questions.
This years’ edition represents the perfect place for new business connections, the agenda of the event being conceived to offer networking opportunities between the participants.
Prepare yourself for a different type of event that shows your knowledge, experience and problems and relies on your active participation. Young Business Leaders’ Forum is the space where co-operation, exchange of ideas and dialogue are the key words.
An official UK report showed that the British industry is suffering as 540,000 of the migrants who have come from the EU new member states returned to their countries following the global crisis. How a massive reverse migration will affect the SEE?
Oct 8, 2008
The new labour force will push up the local economies
The gross domestic product will slow its growth due to the lower level of money transfers from abroad
The returning experts will lead to unstable social security system and dissatisfaction of population
The reverse migration will raise the level of business culture to the one in the countries in western Europe
The reverse migration will not provoke major changes
Before the collapse of the Soviet Union (USSR) in 1991, Moldova had the biggest number of habitants per square kilometre in USSR...
Before the collapse of the Soviet Union (USSR) in 1991, Moldova had the biggest number of habitants per square kilometre in USSR. With population of 128.2 people/sq km it was the Soviet republic with the highest population density.