Geo-economic Confrontation Top Global Risk for 2026: WEF Report

Published : Jan 14, 2026, 04:30 PM IST
World Economic Forum (Photo/Press release)

Synopsis

The WEF's Global Risks Report 2026 names geo-economic confrontation as the top global risk for the next two years, surpassing armed conflict. The report highlights rising economic and geopolitical tensions as key drivers of this trend.

The World Economic Forum's Global Risks Report 2026 has identified geo-economic confrontation as the foremost global risk in the year ahead, surpassing armed conflict and environmental threats amid sharp rises in economic and geopolitical tensions, according to an official press release. The annual risk assessment, drawing on more than 1,300 global leaders and experts, shows that geo-economic confrontation, the use of economic tools such as sanctions, tariffs and investment controls as instruments of geopolitical rivalry, has climbed eight places to become the top risk on the two-year horizon. It warns that such a confrontation could disrupt supply chains and global economic stability.

Key Findings of the Report

Key findings of the report include a marked surge in short-term economic risks, with economic downturn and inflation both rising sharply in the rankings and asset bubble risk also moving up. State-based armed conflict remains severe, holding the second-highest risk position for 2026 before settling lower on the two-year outlook.

Societal, Technological and Environmental Risks

The report highlights societal fragmentation, including polarisation and misinformation and disinformation, as severe near-term threats.

Anxiety over artificial intelligence outcomes rose substantially, moving into the top risks on the long-term horizon due to concerns about labour markets, social disruption, and security implications.

Environmental risks, such as extreme weather and biodiversity loss, declined in relative importance on the two-year risk scale amid pressing economic and geopolitical concerns, though they remain dominant over a ten-year timeframe, it said.

Global Outlook and Call for Cooperation

The report also notes that only half of respondents expect a turbulent or stormy global outlook for the next two years, marking a heightened level of pessimism compared with the previous year, with 68 per cent forecasting a multipolar or fragmented world order over the decade.

President and CEO, World Economic Forum, Børge Brende emphasised that a new competitive order is taking shape and urged leaders to use dialogue and cooperation to build resilience and address emerging risks. "A new competitive order is taking shape as major powers seek to secure their spheres of interest. This shifting landscape, where cooperation looks markedly different than it did yesterday, reflects a pragmatic reality: collaborative approaches and the spirit of dialogue remain essential," noted Børge Brende,

The Global Risks Report is published ahead of the World Economic Forum's 56th Annual Meeting in Davos, scheduled for later this month, where political and business leaders will gather to discuss ways to mitigate the highlighted risks. (ANI)

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by Asianet Newsable English staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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