Global growth is projected at 3.0 percent for 2025 and 3.1 percent in 2026, an upward revision from the April 2025 World Economic Outlook. This reflects front-loading ahead of tariffs, lower effective ...
Central banks are split over whether to collaborate with the private sector in payments, a think-tank said on Thursday, underscoring questions over the role of finance and technology firms as they ...
XI'AN, China, Sept. 21, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- A news report from CRI Online: On September 17, 2025, the World Internet Conference Cultural Heritage Digitalization Forum opened in Xi'an, Shaanxi ...
US–China rivalry is reshaping global and regional trade, pressuring ASEAN countries with transshipment rules that risk fragmenting supply chains and undermining regional integration. ASEAN countries’ ...
We know that the U.S. job market has recently hit a rough patch, but a new report from the World Economic Forum hints that a shifting labor market reflects deeper, long-term global issues. The WEF ...
HTEC, a global digital engineering and product development company, has today announced that it has joined the World Economic Forum’s (WEF) Centre for AI Excellence. HTEC will contribute to the ...
Economists and businesses criticize slow and limited reforms German business sentiment rises, economic data disappoint Failure to deliver reforms could boost far-right AfD party BERLIN, Sept 4 ...
A key leader in the world economy is warning that undue interference in the Federal Reserve's operations by President Donald Trump could pose a serious economic risk to the U.S. and the rest of the ...
Many are of the opinion that it can go either way: decline or improvement. It depends on collective choices humanity makes; and how it handles the environment, geopolitical and social issues, medical ...
(Reuters) -The World Economic Forum closed an investigation on its founder Klaus Schwab on Friday, clearing him of any wrongdoing, and appointed BlackRock CEO Larry Fink and Roche Holding's vice-chair ...
UNTIL 1700 the world economy did not really grow—it just stagnated. Over the previous 17 centuries global output had expanded by 0.1% a year on average, a rate at which it takes nearly a millennium ...
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