You’re even more likely to lose your job to a tech savvy worker: A staggering 70% of bosses surveyed plan to hire staff with AI skills.
More than 3,000 global leaders will meet in Switzerland next week to seek solutions for some of the most pressing issues of the day
Findings from the WEF's January 2025 report on the future of jobs highlight the anticipated impact of AI on workforce reductions and the evolving skills landscape.
The World Economic Forum’s Annual Meeting in Davos will try to make a case for collaboration by promising an AI revolution for all.
Mastering new ways of spreading the word about your business will be esssential for every entrepreneur in the not-so-distant future. Here are some first steps.
"Half of employers plan to re-orient their business in response to AI," writes the WEF in the report. "Two-thirds plan to hire talent with specific AI skills, while 40% anticipate reducing their workforce where AI can automate tasks."
Future of Jobs in India by 2030 shaped by digital access, geopolitical tensions, climate efforts, AI, robotics, and energy technologies.
Misinformation and disinformation pose the greatest risk to countries, businesses and individuals, over the next two years. The rise of fake news, the decline of fact checking on social media, and the growth of AI-generated deep fakes threaten to erode trust and deepen divisions between countries,
With a focus on melting ice caps, Joseph Fowler, the World Economic Forum’s head of arts and culture, completes an environmental trilogy of opening concerts at the forum's annual meeting in Davos
The World Economic Forum predicts that, given the meteoric rise of AI, certain long-standing professions could soon be a thing of the past.
The global job market is poised for a significant transformation by 2030, with numerous jobs facing disruption, according to the World Economic Forum.
“Extrapolating from the predictions shared by Future of Jobs Survey respondents, on current trends over the 2025 to 2030 period job creation and destruction due to structural labour-market transformation will amount to 22% of today’s total jobs,” the report states.