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The Global Risks Report 2017

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The Global Risks Report 2017

12th Edition

World Economic Forum,

15 мин на чтение
10 основных идей
Аудио и текст

Что внутри?

Extreme weather, terrorism, technology disruptions, water crises: What to look out for in 2017

автоматическое преобразование текста в аудио
автоматическое преобразование текста в аудио

Editorial Rating

8

Qualities

  • Analytical
  • Innovative

Recommendation

The world is certainly fraught with risk – humanity faces the potential for massive terrorist attacks, the use of weapons of mass destruction, climate change fallout and data manipulation, to name a few. These risks are multiplying in a global environment in which populism is on the rise, the democratic process is coming under siege, and technological change is pushing new ways to work and live. The World Economic Forum provides comprehensive, data-driven intelligence on these threats and their probabilities. getAbstract recommends this sobering analysis to risk managers, business executives and policy makers.

Summary

The Most Likely Risks and Their Impacts

Based on a survey of 750 of its members, the World Economic Forum identified the global risks most likely to occur in 2017, in order of their probability:

  1. “Extreme weather events”
  2. “Large-scale involuntary migration”
  3. “Major natural disasters”
  4. “Large-scale terrorist attacks”
  5. “Massive incident of data fraud/theft”

And the risks likely to have the most severe impacts, were they to happen, are:

  1. Use of weapons of mass destruction
  2. Extreme weather events
  3. “Water crises”
  4. Major natural disasters
  5. “Failure of climate change mitigation and adaptation”

Critical challenges for 2017 and beyond stem from five main areas: the economy, society as a whole, technology, world politics and the environment.

1. “Economy: Growth and Reform”

Following the 2008 financial crisis, nations focused their monetary policy on attempts to generate growth. But, productivity growth has been slow to materialize in the wake of the financial crisis. Instead, these measures have channeled “income toward debt servicing rather than fresh consumption...

About the Author

The World Economic Forum is an independent global organization that engages leaders of business, politics, academia and society to improve the state of the world.


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