WASHINGTON: According to a study conducted by the World Economic Forum (WEF), risk experts believe that extreme weather and disinformation have the greatest potential to spark a global crisis in the coming years. In 2024, extreme weather was deemed to be the worst risk; however, during the next two years, misinformation and disinformation emerged as the most serious worldwide threat. This might be especially dangerous during the largest election year in history, when billions of people will be casting ballots. This year’s elections in several major economies, including the US, India, and Mexico, will leave business and political leaders dependent on surveys and projections to determine the nature of policy environments by 2025. “The widespread use of misinformation and disinformation, and tools to disseminate it, may undermine the legitimacy of newly elected governments,” the research stated. The research, written in collaboration with Marsh McLennan and Zurich Insurance Group, stated that “resulting unrest could range from violent protests and hate crimes to civil confrontation and terrorism” in advance of the annual WEF gathering next week. Environmental threats, such as loss of biodiversity and significant alterations to Earth’s systems, ranked highest over a ten-year horizon. Misinformation, disinformation, and unfavorable effects of artificial intelligence (AI) were closely ranked. Meanwhile, a multipolar or fragmented international order, “in which middle and great powers contest, set and enforce regional rules and norms,” is anticipated to emerge in the next ten years, according to two thirds of risk experts questioned.
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The cost of living crisis, cyberattacks, and socio-political polarization are the other three significant crises. The 54th annual WEF meeting, to be held in the Swiss ski town of Davos, will take place against the most complex geopolitical backdrop yet, with issues ranging from the wars in Gaza and Ukraine to growing debt and living expenses, according to WEF President Borge Brende during a news conference on Tuesday. According to John Scott, head of sustainability risk at Zurich Insurance Group, the survey’s negative outlook was probably brought on by the various risks that have been exposed over the past four years and have an impact on society. He brought up the COVID-19 pandemic, the lockdowns that followed, and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. “Global supply chains have been hit repeatedly,” said Carolina Klint, Marsh McLennan’s Chief Commercial Officer for Europe. Held in Switzerland from January 15–19, 2024, the 54th annual conference of the World Economic Forum will begin under the theme “Rebuilding Trust”. More than 100 nations, all of the main international organizations, 1000 forum partners, leaders from civil society, specialists, youth representatives, social entrepreneurs, and media outlets will all be present at this yearly gathering.