She introduced herself casually - no doubt disarming everyone with her down-to-earth authenticity. Today Cathie is blazing new trails and living her own American dream.īartiromo is the anchor of ‘Mornings with Maria’ on Fox Business Network and ‘Sunday Morning Futures’ on Fox Newsīefore her first day of work as the new CEO of Walgreens Boots Alliance, Roz spent two weeks driving herself around Georgia and dropping in at local stores.
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Cathie no doubt learnt how to be one from her parents who had the vision and courage to leave a place they knew and loved in Ireland, immigrating to America for the promise of opportunity. They blaze trails and bet everything on their vision. It has been said that founders are hungrier than hired hands. Her multibillion flagship Ark Innovation Fund has returned an average of nearly 45 per cent annually over the past five years. Last year five of her seven ETFs returned an average of 141 per cent and three were the top performers among all US funds. In just seven years, she has raised and now manages more than $60bn throughout seven ETFs. She looks to invest early in the breakout stories that disrupt the status quo, the way she did in her own career. I got to know her in the 1990s during the dotcom boom and was impressed by her incredible grasp of the macro story and how to spot growth within it. Shafik is a leading economist and director of the London School of Economics and Political ScienceĬathie gained fame as a hot stockpicker with her early and aggressive call on Tesla, which she still bets will someday be worth $3tn, but her work and research go back decades. Gita proved that wrong by being the first woman to serve as chief economist at the IMF but also by showing you could take bold positions on big macroeconomic issues without being macho. I remember when I was lamenting the lack of women in macroeconomics and international finance, a previous chief economist of the IMF said to me “but macro is macho”.
She is driven by evidence and rigour, and that often means she thinks differently on issues ranging from managing international capital flows to the impact of climate change. While the world failed to deliver on this scale, Gita showed clearly that an internationally co-ordinated response would have been better for everyone. She also co-authored “The Pandemic Plan”, which showed how by vaccinating 40 per cent of the world’s most vulnerable population this year and 70 per cent by mid-2022, we could effectively end the Covid crisis with global funding of just $50bn (a rounding error compared to the amounts being spent by advanced economies on their domestic responses).
Lagarde is president of the European Central Bank She has shattered glass ceilings with her complete competence, absolute integrity and good humour, becoming the first female finance minister and foreign minister in Nigeria, where she implemented tough reforms to enhance the transparency of the country’s public finances, and is the first woman and first African to lead the WTO. Her 25 years at the World Bank demonstrated her resolve, including her handling of the food and financial crisis of 2008-09 and her determination to recover stolen assets. I have known Ngozi since 2005 and have seen her work tirelessly as a seasoned negotiator and crisis manager. With the pandemic disrupting an international trade network that was already being challenged by rising protectionism, and with vaccine nationalism a major threat to the global economy, the world needed a strong leader. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala is as fierce and talented a competitor as she is a caring friend, and it came as no surprise to me when she was appointed to the helm of the WTO in March this year.