WEF Global Risks Report 2026, Check the Complete Report Summary
The World Economic Forum (WEF) Global Risks Report 2026 (21st edition) paints a worrying picture of the coming decade. The report suggests that the world is moving into an “Age of Competition”, where rivalry between countries is intensifying—not only in the military space, but also through trade restrictions, sanctions, technology controls, and information warfare. This shift is creating a global environment where shocks spread faster, cooperation becomes harder, and societies become more vulnerable to instability.
The report ranks risks across two key time horizons—the near future (2 years) and the long term (10 years). Its core message is straightforward: the global landscape is becoming more fragmented, more unpredictable, and more exposed to multiple overlapping risks.
WEF defines a global risk as a threat or event that can cause major negative impact on a large scale, affecting:
This definition matters because it places emphasis on threats that cross borders, spread rapidly, and create ripple effects across regions.
The report is primarily based on expert perceptions collected through global surveys of leaders and specialists across sectors. It then organizes risks into categories such as:
It also studies how risks connect with each other, showing that crises rarely happen in isolation. Instead, one major event often triggers several others.
A major finding of the report is that a large share of experts expects the world to experience turbulence in both the short and long term. This suggests that many see current tensions as part of deeper structural changes rather than temporary fluctuations.
The report identifies geoeconomic confrontation as the most likely risk to trigger a global crisis in 2026.
It refers to the use of economic tools as instruments of strategic power, such as:
Geoeconomic rivalry:
In today’s world, economic rivalry is becoming as destabilizing as direct military confrontation.
Along with economic rivalry, the report highlights state-based armed conflict as a leading risk. Conflicts today have grown more complex because they often combine:
One of the strongest warnings in the report is the growing influence of misinformation and disinformation, especially through digital platforms. The report links false information with social unrest and political division.
Polarization means deep social division where people move into rigid groups and stop trusting each other.
It leads to:
The report notes that economic risks are rising sharply in importance.
Some key drivers include:
A prolonged downturn could amplify societal anger, unemployment, and political instability.
In the digital era, cyber insecurity has become one of the most immediate global risks.
Cyberattacks can cause economic loss and also shake national security.
The report emphasizes that adverse outcomes of AI technologies are among the most significant long-term threats.
AI is described as a double-edged technology—it can boost productivity, but without strong safeguards it can weaken trust, stability, and accountability.
The long-term risk ranking is dominated by environmental dangers. The report highlights that climate risks are not only continuing but intensifying.
Environmental damage creates chain reactions:
The report warns that climate stress can become a multiplier—making economic and political risks even worse.
A very important insight of the report is that inequality is one of the most “connected” risks, meaning it triggers or strengthens several other threats.
This shows that inequality is not just a social problem—it is also a governance and stability issue.
The report suggests that the world is shifting away from a single dominant power structure. Instead, it sees the future as:
This fragmentation makes collective action harder—especially on climate, global health, and conflict prevention.
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