Among the many casualties of the global financial crisis have been the economies of New York and London. As the two dominant free-market, democratic, Western cities, London and New York have for years benefitted from their cultural diversity, intellectual capital and commercial dynamism to forge immensely successful entrepreneurial strategies that must now be reformulated in light of critically changed economic conditions. Ferocious competitors in the past, their leaders have now decided they must work together, learning from one another, to climb back to the top.
The September 15 program was the keystone of a three-day conference in New York, planned as the kickoff for continuing discussion between these two great cities. During the conference and beyond, invited participants focus on major issues facing New York and London: the future of their financial sectors, the diversification of their economies, building and maintaining their capital plants, and expanding housing affordability.
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Leading Back to the Top
1. Welcome and Opening Remarks from Mike Bloomberg & Boris Johnson
2. Bloomberg and Johnson Discussion and Q&A
Michael Bloomberg
Mayor, City of New York
Boris Johnson
Mayor, London
Moderator: Julia Vitullo-Martin
Director, Center for Rethinking Development, Manhattan Institute
Welcome: Ester Fuchs
Professor of International and Public Affairs and Political Science, Columbia University
Opening Remarks: Lawrence J. Mone
President, Manhattan Institute
Panel: Planning to Compete in the Global Marketplace
1. Ken Jackson; Sir Simon Milton; Amanda Burden
2. Rosemarie MacQueen; Robert Yaro
3. Panel Q&A
Amanda Burden
Chair, City Planning Commission
Director, Department of City Planning, New York
Kenneth T. Jackson
Jacques Barzun Professor in History and the Social Sciences, Columbia University
Rosemarie MacQueen
Strategic Director of Built Environment, City of Westminster
Sir Simon Milton
Deputy Mayor and Chief of Staff, London
Robert Yaro
President, Regional Plan Association
Moderator: Hope Cohen
Deputy Director, Center for Rethinking Development, Manhattan Institute













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