Published January 13, 2015
Experts surveyed by the World Economic Forum say rising income gaps between rich and poor and burgeoning government deficits are the risks most likely to have a global impact over the next decade.
Climate change, water shortages and aging populations rounded out the WEF's top five risks.
The over 1,000 experts surveyed for the Switzerland-based forum's annual risk report also warn that risk factors could combine to produce unique problems. These risk combinations included climate change putting a heavy burden on a global economy and a declining economy in turn hurting efforts to fight global warming.
The experts also identified increasing resistance of germs to antibiotics as a global health threat. Another new worry is a "digital wildfire" of wrong or controversial information going viral across online communities.
https://www.foxnews.com/world/davos-group-sees-troubled-economies-climate-change-as-interlocking-risks-in-coming-years