In
North America and Europe, cyber attacks were considered the
biggest risk. Environmental risks were the top concern in South
Asia, which highlighted water crises, and in East Asia and the
Pacific, which identified natural catastrophes.
Overall, the executives put fiscal crises as the top risk over
the next 10 years, followed by cyber attacks and unemployment or
underemployment, the WEF’s Executive Opinion Survey showed.
The survey of 12,897 business leaders from 133 countries makes
up part of the WEF's global competitiveness report, published
before the January Davos forum.
"At a time when global economic growth appears fragile, business
leaders are deeply concerned by their governments’ fiscal
resilience," said Emilio Granados-Franco, head of global risks
and geopolitical agenda at the World Economic Forum.
"Meanwhile, cyber threats remain a major risk due to their rapid
evolution and increasingly disruptive potential.”
The survey was published by WEF together with Marsh & McLennan
and Zurich Insurance.
(Reporting by Carolyn Cohn, editing by Larry King)
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