"With the lifting of international economic sanctions on Iran, the country's economy is forecast to grow by at least 5 per cent in 2016 and has the potential to average 8 per cent growth over the next five years," Mohammad Agha Nahavandian, Chief of Staff of the Presidency of the Islamic Republic of Iran, said.
A number of business leaders present here said they would explore opportunities with Iran, but refused to say so officially before their talks reach concrete levels.
Many of them are said to have scheduled meetings with the Iranian delegation in this Swiss ski resort town.
"Iran has quickly shifted from negative to positive growth and brought down inflation from over 35 per cent to 13 per cent today," Nahavandian said.
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Drawing parallels to the diplomacy that resulted in the nuclear deal, Nahavandian stressed that "in our economic policy we are also looking for win-win solutions".
"Our global message is that diplomacy works," added Javad Zarif, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Iran.
"That should be a very welcome message that all of us should entertain seriously when it comes to other issues."
While the nuclear deal was not perfect, it preserved Iran's right to have a nuclear programme for peaceful purposes, Zarif reckoned.
If the US and Iran, which have had tense relations for decades, were able to come together, there should be no impediment to bridging differences between Iran and its neighbours, Zarif added.
"It makes it possible for all of us to address the very serious challenge in our region - extremism. It cannot be contained in our region and has spread all across the world."
He asserted: "There is no threat from Iran to its neighbours. Confrontation is in the interests of nobody."
Answering a question about the situation in Syria, Zarif argued that "there is no military solution to the crisis. There has to be a political solution".