 My name is Nat Way, and I'm going to talk about the changing role and relationship between business and civil society. Many would say that the 20th century saw very much the rise of national governments, and of the state in being a kind of one-stop shop for many of the services that we enjoy today. Recent developments, both economically and both in the east and west, have given rise to realisation in government, that there is a need to introduce more business and social sector involvement in everything. The role can now shift from one which civil society has been much more integrated in piloting, pioneering, incubating new ideas. Business is great working with innovators often to scale, commercialize creator and be sustainable along term new ideas. I see an important partnership emerging and supply chain issues, human labour issues, environmental issues etc. Increasingly they can be dealt with through consumers and businesses working together ac rwy'n gwneud wneud hyn sy'n cymryd. Yng Nghymru, ychydig ynglynwr, yn y porfyniad ddechis hynny'n ysgol, sy'n gyfolo i fynd y cyflygodd yn ysgrifennu i'r meddICH, ac mae'n cyflwyno'n g feeddwch, neu mae'n bwyllref wedi'i gydag ynglynisedig. A'n gweithio'r cwmian o newid, panfins, a'r mewn cwmian. Y tîl sydd cynhefyd fan fendol yn y hyffordd maen nhw. As many countries now are rapidly developing, we're seeing in many emerging markets the middle class increasing. This creates huge opportunities, again, to have alliances between the business community serving those middle classes to develop new solutions for some of the challenges that you face in countries like China, India and all over the world and indeed also in the West which faces the challenge of how to deal with the new austerity. So I see a new wave of collaboration between business and civil society where we can see social innovators coming of new ideas, new policies eventually but working with businesses, collective of businesses to take that idea to market if you like and start to have the kind of reach that we saw in the 20th century governments having but now being realised by NGOs, social organisations and businesses. With government playing more of a participatory role facilitating and ultimately enacting the kind of regulation needed but perhaps one that was less dominant than we saw in the previous century.