Easily to the new novices led to believe that this is supposed to be a nice interactive forum.
In particular, those who have the socialist's backgrounds, usualy have low self-esteem, and so they want to please the rich.
Some research has focused on this group. One is Ian Richardson, the Director of Executive Education at SU Business School and a Visiting Fellow at Cranfield University School of Management.
The United States and western Europe have been for the past 20-30 years very good places for the ultra-rich to live in. Do you see any connection to that with the Bilderberg group, asked Yle MOT's reporter.
Richardson:
Is the role of Bilderberg to represent the interests of these people? No.According to Richardson it's belief in certain policies, but the group's belief for instance in a free market, globalization, these processes have winners and losers.
Is Bilderberg representing the interests of these people? Ofcourse, yes. But largely unconsciously so.
And the jury is still out, but certainly most reports on globalization, economic globalization, indicate that there appear to be more losers than winners.Sure, the gap between the rich and the poor is widening, not just in developing countries but also in developed countries.
Ian Richardson is also an Assistant Professor at Stockholm University Business School. His research interests include global governance, transnational policy networks, business and political elites, multi-stakeholder collaboration, power and consensus, and political marketing.
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