Source: Coindoo
Original Title: WEF: Trade Conflicts, AI, and Climate Risks Redefine Global Economic Outlook
Original Link:
Global economic tensions and power rivalries are now overshadowing nearly every other threat facing the world, according to the latest global risk assessment from the World Economic Forum.
The findings suggest that the coming years will be defined less by a single crisis and more by a constant state of pressure, as governments, companies, and societies struggle to navigate overlapping shocks.
Key Takeaways
Economic and trade conflicts between major powers are now the biggest global risk, putting pressure on growth and global cooperation.
The world is facing multiple crises at once, from misinformation and social division to rapid technological change.
Artificial intelligence has quickly become a major long-term concern due to job losses and rising inequality.
Extreme weather remains the most serious long-term threat, with disaster losses staying exceptionally high.
The report paints a cautious outlook for the near term. A significant share of global leaders expect instability to intensify over the next two years, with very few believing the international environment will remain calm. Instead of confidence, the dominant mood is one of preparation for disruption.
Economic rivalry replaces traditional conflict
At the top of the risk list sits what the report describes as geo-economic confrontation. Rather than relying on military force, countries are increasingly using economic tools to gain leverage. Tariffs, trade restrictions, regulatory barriers, and limits on capital flows are becoming standard tactics, reshaping global commerce and weakening cross-border cooperation.
According to Saadia Zahidi, a senior leader at the World Economic Forum, high debt levels, fragile markets, and inflation concerns are amplifying the danger. Together, these pressures raise the risk of downturns and financial instability at a time when governments have less room to respond.
A world of overlapping crises
The study was developed in collaboration with Marsh, the world’s largest insurance broker. Its chief executive, John Doyle, described today’s environment not as a single emergency but as a collection of crises unfolding at once. Trade disputes, political polarization, rapid technological change, and climate-related disasters are all colliding, making risk management far more complex for businesses.
Misinformation ranks just behind economic confrontation as an immediate danger, followed by deepening social divisions. Over the longer term, inequality emerges as the central force linking many of these risks, intensifying tensions and limiting the ability of societies to respond collectively when shocks occur.
Artificial intelligence climbs the risk rankings
One of the fastest-rising concerns in the report is artificial intelligence. In just one year, fears around AI-related disruption have surged from the margins to near the top of long-term risk rankings. Job displacement stands out as a major issue, with automation threatening to widen income gaps, fuel public anger, and suppress consumer spending – even as productivity rises.
The report also highlights the accelerating pace of technological change, as advances in machine learning converge with breakthroughs in quantum computing. This combination, it warns, could outstrip human oversight if governance frameworks fail to keep up.
Climate losses keep climbing
Despite shifting priorities, extreme weather remains the most severe long-term threat. Insurers are projected to face over $100 billion in disaster-related losses again in 2025, continuing a trend that has persisted for years. Events such as heatwaves, droughts, and wildfires are expected to grow more intense and frequent.
Doyle emphasized that insurance pricing and building standards must better reflect real-world risks, arguing that capital is available if markets adapt to changing conditions and lessons from past disasters are applied.
Cooperation as the only viable path
Interestingly, traditional environmental concerns like pollution and biodiversity loss have slipped lower in the rankings, reflecting how leaders’ anxieties have evolved amid economic and geopolitical stress.
The report ultimately calls for stronger collaboration across borders and sectors. Governments, businesses, researchers, and citizens are urged to form flexible partnerships to tackle shared challenges. In a world defined by constant strain rather than isolated shocks, the study suggests that resilience will depend less on prediction and more on cooperation.
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WEF: Trade Conflicts, AI, and Climate Risks Redefine Global Economic Outlook
Source: Coindoo Original Title: WEF: Trade Conflicts, AI, and Climate Risks Redefine Global Economic Outlook Original Link:
Global economic tensions and power rivalries are now overshadowing nearly every other threat facing the world, according to the latest global risk assessment from the World Economic Forum.
The findings suggest that the coming years will be defined less by a single crisis and more by a constant state of pressure, as governments, companies, and societies struggle to navigate overlapping shocks.
Key Takeaways
The report paints a cautious outlook for the near term. A significant share of global leaders expect instability to intensify over the next two years, with very few believing the international environment will remain calm. Instead of confidence, the dominant mood is one of preparation for disruption.
Economic rivalry replaces traditional conflict
At the top of the risk list sits what the report describes as geo-economic confrontation. Rather than relying on military force, countries are increasingly using economic tools to gain leverage. Tariffs, trade restrictions, regulatory barriers, and limits on capital flows are becoming standard tactics, reshaping global commerce and weakening cross-border cooperation.
According to Saadia Zahidi, a senior leader at the World Economic Forum, high debt levels, fragile markets, and inflation concerns are amplifying the danger. Together, these pressures raise the risk of downturns and financial instability at a time when governments have less room to respond.
A world of overlapping crises
The study was developed in collaboration with Marsh, the world’s largest insurance broker. Its chief executive, John Doyle, described today’s environment not as a single emergency but as a collection of crises unfolding at once. Trade disputes, political polarization, rapid technological change, and climate-related disasters are all colliding, making risk management far more complex for businesses.
Misinformation ranks just behind economic confrontation as an immediate danger, followed by deepening social divisions. Over the longer term, inequality emerges as the central force linking many of these risks, intensifying tensions and limiting the ability of societies to respond collectively when shocks occur.
Artificial intelligence climbs the risk rankings
One of the fastest-rising concerns in the report is artificial intelligence. In just one year, fears around AI-related disruption have surged from the margins to near the top of long-term risk rankings. Job displacement stands out as a major issue, with automation threatening to widen income gaps, fuel public anger, and suppress consumer spending – even as productivity rises.
The report also highlights the accelerating pace of technological change, as advances in machine learning converge with breakthroughs in quantum computing. This combination, it warns, could outstrip human oversight if governance frameworks fail to keep up.
Climate losses keep climbing
Despite shifting priorities, extreme weather remains the most severe long-term threat. Insurers are projected to face over $100 billion in disaster-related losses again in 2025, continuing a trend that has persisted for years. Events such as heatwaves, droughts, and wildfires are expected to grow more intense and frequent.
Doyle emphasized that insurance pricing and building standards must better reflect real-world risks, arguing that capital is available if markets adapt to changing conditions and lessons from past disasters are applied.
Cooperation as the only viable path
Interestingly, traditional environmental concerns like pollution and biodiversity loss have slipped lower in the rankings, reflecting how leaders’ anxieties have evolved amid economic and geopolitical stress.
The report ultimately calls for stronger collaboration across borders and sectors. Governments, businesses, researchers, and citizens are urged to form flexible partnerships to tackle shared challenges. In a world defined by constant strain rather than isolated shocks, the study suggests that resilience will depend less on prediction and more on cooperation.