The event, running since 2011, brings together entrepreneurs and business professionals for networking opportunities and practical workshops in the small and medium-sized firms sector.
Focus this year is on rising business costs, recruitment and retention, cybersecurity, digitalisation, access to finance and sustainability.
Keynote speakers include broadcaster and businessman Ivan Yates.
On the financial front, the Central Bank of Ireland’s Financial Industry Forum International Subgroup meets tomorrow.
It will bring together senior industry representatives to discuss international regulation, policy implementation and market developments relevant to firms operating global services from Ireland.
Midweek, Ibec will host its human resource and leadership summit in the Royal Convention Centre, Dublin, to explore how artificial intelligence and the next generations in the workforce are reshaping talent strategies.
Speakers include Matt Elliott, chief people officer at Bank of Ireland Group, and Nicola McSweeney, director of people at Gas Networks Ireland.
The fifth Global Tax Policy Conference takes place on Thursday and Friday in the Radisson Blu Hotel in central Dublin.
The conference, jointly hosted by the Irish Tax Institute and Harvard Universities’ Centre for International Development, will hear from an international mix of high-level tax experts, policymakers, academics, and senior officials from finance ministries among others.
The event will include panel discussions on issues in international taxation.
There are a number of statistical releases due from the Central Statistics Office (CSO).
The Government Finance Statistics for this year will be released today covering revenue, expenditure and debt from January onwards.
The CSO will also publish Young People in the Labour Market data for 2024 and the Wholesale Price Index across September over the week.
Finally, the Irish presidential election on Friday will dominate national attention as the Heather Humphreys and Catherine Connolly campaigns will be in full swing building up to election day.
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