Aspen Ignites: The Future of Corporation

August 17, 2023

Capitalism is a bottom-line proposition, but that doesn’t mean that companies can’t be guided by a purpose other than quarterly profits. In the most recent episode of Aspen Ignites, Judy Samuelson of the Business and Society Program and Prudential Vice Chair Rob Falzon speak with The Financial Times’ Gillian Tett about how environmental, social, and corporate governance issues—known as ESG—still matter in business strategy. “Sometimes you choose and sometimes the issues choose you,” says Samuelson, “and we have an era in which it’s not really the choice of the CEO whether or not to speak up.” 

Prudential is a company whose business model requires a long view, says Falzon. “I really talk about [ESG] as a wider lens of being a purpose-led company,” he says. “We absolutely believe it has helped us from a commercial standpoint, which translates into financial success and incidentally also translates into financial resiliency.”

Watch the whole conversation here, and watch the rest of the Aspen Ignites series here.


 

We’re Ensuring South Florida Latinos are Ready for the Digital Workplace of the Future

South Florida offers a preview of what the United States will be in the coming decades,” writes Hector Mujica in a recent op-ed in the Miami Herald. “It is a majority-minority community, with more than 85% of its population being of Latino or African American descent, and over 54% are foreign born.” The city is experiencing good job growth, gaining 4,400 new tech jobs in the last five years, but the increase in the cost of living—and particularly housing—is roughly double thenational average. 

The opportunity:

With a median age of 29.8, Latinos are the youngest cohort of the US population; the US Department of Labor estimates that Latinos will represent 78% of net new workers between 2020 and 2030.

The obstacle:

While 92% of jobs in the United States require some level of digital skills, 57% of US adult Latinos have little to no digital skills training, compared to only 31% of the general population.

The plan:

In response to this challenge, the Latinos and Society Program gathered leaders and experts from the corporate, nonprofit, and public sectors to develop the Aspen Principles for Latino Digital Success. Mujica—head of Economic Opportunity for the Americas for the philanthropic Google.org and co-chair of the Latino Digital Success Task Force at the Aspen Institute—was part of that effort. “Miami’s digital inclusion ecosystem can provide valuable lessons and spark new ideas that can be scaled nationwide,” he writes. 

The video

Mujica and other leaders gathered for Pathways to Digital Skills Development for Latino Workers, a discussion about promising approaches to digital upskilling of Latino workers, students, and households. 

The event:

This September 6 and 7, Aspen Institute Latinos and Society Program will host the third annual Aspen Latino Business Summit in Washington, DC, featuring interactive plenary sessions, working sessions, and networking events—and plenty of talk about overcoming the digital divide. The Summit will examine innovative and successful efforts in growing Latino-owned businesses across crucial disciplines, and will serve as a platform for connecting local leaders to national networks, federal policy makers, and influential investors.

Read the op-ed, and register for the Summit here.

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