New WEF data shows recession fears still dominate boardrooms even as pressure grows from AI-fueled misinformation
Insurance News
By Kenneth Araullo
Dec 03, 2025ShareGlobal business leaders in G20 economies continue to view an economic downturn as their most immediate threat, but are increasingly concerned about social and technological risks, according to new research from the World Economic Forum (WEF).
The findings come from the Executive Opinion Survey 2025, conducted with more than 11,000 executives in 116 countries and released with strategic partners Marsh McLennan and Zurich Insurance Group.
Alongside fears over recession and stagnation, respondents pointed to insufficient public services and social protections, a lack of economic opportunity, and the spread of misinformation and disinformation as key risks. These issues are seen as pressures on political stability, labor markets and long-term investment planning.
Andrew George (pictured above, left), president of Marsh Specialty, said “the proliferation of misinformation and disinformation is enabling bad actors to operate more broadly” amid the rapid adoption of AI.
Read more:Insurers confront growing climate losses as capital pressures mount
He noted that AI-related cyber threats are now at the top of many board agendas and that businesses still need to focus on environmental objectives to mitigate longer-term climate risks, even as economic and geopolitical factors compete for attention.
Alison Martin (pictured above, right), CEO, EMEA & Bank Distribution at Zurich, said the survey shows that areas such as pensions and public health “are no longer just government issues – they’re boardroom priorities.”
She highlighted that in Europe there are fewer than three working-age adults for every pensioner and that more than a third of EU citizens are not saving enough for retirement, warning that these gaps threaten workforce wellbeing and social stability.
Dominant risks in a shifting landscape
The latest survey sits alongside the WEF’s Global Risks Report 2025, which flags state-based armed conflict, misinformation and environmental disasters as the dominant threats over the coming decade.
Taken together, the two publications suggest that while corporate leaders are focused on near-term economic, social and AI-driven information risks, these concerns are unfolding against a backdrop of rising geopolitical tension and strained international cooperation.
The survey found that fears over an economic downturn remain the top near-term risk for G20 business leaders for the third consecutive year, and the leading concern in both the UK and the US.
Read more:World Economic Forum reveals 2025's biggest risks
Social risks linked to insufficient public services and social protections ranked second, while lack of economic opportunity or unemployment took third place, with inflation dropping to fourth and misinformation and disinformation entering the G20 top five in fifth position.
Although extreme weather fell out of this year’s top five near-term risks for G20 executives, insurers remain exposed to escalating catastrophe losses, with first-half 2025 estimates pointing to about $162 billion in global economic losses from natural disasters and roughly $100 billion in insured losses.
For carriers and risk managers, those figures reinforce that physical climate risk continues to influence capital allocation, pricing and resilience strategies, even if it ranks behind economic and social pressures in boardroom risk surveys.
Related Stories
- Global trade fragmentation set to affect insurance costs and coverage, report finds
- Cyber market stabilizes, but risk and exposure still escalating
Top-rated Choice