Civility Marks Opening of Milken Institute Global Conference

Civility and cohesion were the overarching messages from the first day of the Milken Institute Global Conference.

Managing Director Jane Howze is again attending the annual event in Los Angeles, sharing her takeaways and insights from daily sessions featuring thought leaders, politicians, scientists, professional athletes, entrepreneurs, business leaders, and celebrities.

The Milken Institute Global Conference brings together the world’s brightest minds to address the most urgent challenges and unlock the most promising opportunities of our time. The four-day event connects individuals with the capital and influence to drive change with experts and innovators transforming health, finance, business, technology, philanthropy, industry, and society.

“The call for civility really impacts everyone,” Jane said. “Rich Ditizio’s speech was powerful. It’s energizing and hopeful to see people of different geographies and politics come together to listen and learn.”

The 28th annual Global Conference by the numbers:

  • Four Days
  • 200 Sessions
  • 300+Registered Media
  • 900 Speakers
  • 4,000+ Participants

Milken Institute CEO Richard Ditizio set the tone for the conference during his welcome speech with encouraging words and a plea for civility, despite differences.

“The future will not be built by living within our own echo chambers. It will be built by bold, inclusive coalitions that reflect the world we’re trying to realize,” said Ditizio. “And we have many past successes to lead the way—we see time and again, when capital, innovation, and collaboration come together, remarkable things happen. I know the challenges we face are enormous—but I also know that our capacity to meet them is even greater.”

Listen to Rich’s opening speech here.

Read on for highlights from various panels Jane attended throughout the first day of the Milken Institute Global Conference, covering the economy, the healthcare system and women’s health issues.

A Conversation with US Secretary of the Treasury Scott Bessent

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent spoke at the Milken Institute Global Conference on Monday. Bloomberg Media reporters noted a few key quotes from his speech below.

Bessent says the Trump administration’s goal is to make the US an even more appealing destination for international capital.

“Tariffs are engineered to encourage companies like yours to invest directly in the United States. Hire your workers here. Build your factories here. Make your products here.”

“I hope you can see the bigger picture now. The Trump economic agenda is more than the sum of its parts. Trade, tax cuts and deregulation may be three distinct policies. But each policy is mutually reinforcing. And acting in concert, they push toward the same goal — to solidify our position as the home of global capital.”

Bessent is sketching out his vision for the American dream. Asked what the next 250 years should look like, he says, “To me, it’s equal opportunity for great outcomes.”

From Experience to Excellence: Women Redefining Business and Financial Wellness

Led by Sheryl WuDunn, Co-Founder of FullSky Partners and co-owner of Kristof Wines, the session explored the impact women are having on the entrepreneurial segment, thanks to trailblazing female founders, high-profile celebrities, Fortune 500 executives, and private sector leaders. It delved into safeguarding women’s cognitive health and the importance of adopting lifelong strategies for optimizing healthy longevity. 

Jane was struck by the power and information shared during this “amazing talk.”

“The old script of how women are supposed to age is broken. Women are tearing it up midlife is no longer a winding down but actually gearing up.

Women are living longer than men, earning more degrees, starting more businesses at twice the rate of men and the fastest growing group of entrepreneurs are women over 45. That’s not a footnote that’s a power shift.

Why?

Because the system wasn’t built for women with ambition and aging parents and mortgages and hot flashes. So instead of waiting for the system to catch up women are building their own. They’re reinventing careers, demanding flexibility and bringing decades of wisdom and grit to the table. They’re not just chasing success, they are defining it on their own terms, that includes health, wealth and purpose. But here’s the kicker. For all this, women still face 2/3 of Alzheimer’s cases, we spend 23% more of our lives in poor health than men and end up with 30% less in retirement.

That’s just not unfair, that’s unsustainable.”

Watch the panel discussion here.

A Conversation with Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Administrator Mehmet Oz

Q: What have your first set of priorities been at the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services?

We’re starting off with the broad reality. We actually have objectives and key results. Start with the people–this is something I did not appreciate from the outside. I’ve never been in government before. These are highly competent, skilled individuals, very mission-driven. They come to work at HHS because they want to make America a healthier place. And many don’t feel like they’ve had the freedom to do that. So just activating the natural talent that we have within the organization is an initial focus of ours.

A: The main way we’ll deal with health care issues in America is by dealing with the 70% of the costs that are driven by chronic illness, much of it, of course, because of lifestyle choices that we’re making, sometimes without complete awareness of the impact it will have on us.

We spend twice as much as any other developed country in the world, twice as much for our health care per capita, and yet our health quality continues to drop. We have the highest mortality rate for moms delivering babies. We have a tragically dropping a differential between Europe and life expectancy. We’re now five years behind. When I was in medical school, we were equal to Europe. So we’re not getting our money’s worth; we can’t just throw money at the problem. We have to use it wisely and judiciously to make sure that vulnerable are cared for, but also we do our fiduciary responsibility to the American taxpayer.

Tap here to download the full transcript.

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