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The World Economic Forum’s Global Risks Report 2024 says the biggest short-term risk stems from misinformation and disinformation. In the longer term, climate-related threats dominate the top 10 risks global populations will face.
The World Economic Forum's latest Global Risks Report identifies the key risks facing the world over the next decade. In the next two years, the cost-of-living crisis is seen as the biggest risk, while over the next 10 years environmental risks dominate.
The report analyzes the most severe global risks for 2023 and 2025, including cost-of-living crisis, economic downturn, geoeconomic warfare, climate action hiatus and societal polarization. It explores the trends, drivers and implications of these risks, as well as the path to 2025 and the resource rivalries of 2033.
The latest Ipsos 'What worries the world' survey shows the issues that are front of mind for people around the world. Coronavirus remains the biggest cause for concern. Climate change is also a rising concern in some countries, only eighth on the list overall.
Armed conflict, the climate crisis and economic turmoil are pushing a growing minority of the world’s population into ever deeper crisis. These countries are home to just 13% of the global population and account for just 1.6% of global GDP, but they represent 81% of the forcibly displaced, 80% of the people facing crisis or catastrophic ...
The report, released by the World Economic Forum, explores the most urgent global issues and challenges, such as climate failure, social divides, cyber threats and uneven recovery. It calls for a coordinated multistakeholder approach to tackle these risks and build resilience ahead of the next crisis.
The World Economic Forum’s Global Risks Report 2024 named three key climate issues as critical challenges facing humanity: Extreme weather events, critical change to Earth systems — which is a new entrant this year — and biodiversity loss and ecosystem collapse.
The World Economic Forum’s Global Risks Report 2024 reveals interconnected risks flowing from the misuse of AI. “Misinformation and disinformation” is the biggest risk. Risks related to the misuse of #AI are posing new threats to democracy, truth and trust in institutions.
Although we are getting closer to gender parity, change isn't happening fast enough. For the past decade, the World Economic Forum been measuring the pace of change through the Global Gender Gap Report, and at current rates, it would take the world another 118 years – or until 2133 – to close the economic gap entirely.
In an effort to alleviate concerns about AI governance globally, the World Economic Forum has established a group called the AI Governance Alliance. Consisting of industry leaders, governments, academic institutions and civil society organizations, it aims to promote the creation of transparent and inclusive AI systems globally.