According to the World Economic Forum, reskilling and upskilling are critical for building a future-ready workforce.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy speaks with CNBC's Andrew Ross Sorkin at the World Economic Forum Annual Meeting in Davos, Switzerland on Jan. 16th, 2024. The World Economic Forum officially began on Monday, but it's Tuesday when the event really kicks off.
World Economic Forum founder urges 'constructive optimism', while its president highlights the need for new pathways to greater cooperation in an era
The ambitious lineup of this year's World Economic Forum’s Annual Meeting offers performances, exhibitions, and installations designed to inspire, provoke, and unify.
It means that we are in a polarized, fragmented world where we see less cooperation than in the past, and more competition. There is more focus on national interest. That is a challenge, as many of the biggest problems we face need global solutions.
The World Economic Forum’s president says U.S. President Donald Trump will take part virtually in the annual meeting in Davos just days after his inauguration.
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.
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 risk of the stock market is forming a bubble that will soon burst is higher — especially because the rich and famous don’t think so.
AI could drive a $7 trillion increase in global GDP, lifting productivity growth by 1.5 percentage points over 10 years.
Malaysia's sovereign wealth fund Khazanah Nasional Bhd is rebalancing its portfolio to invest more in developed markets, with an eye on managing expected risks from the new Donald Trump presidency in the U.