Full report
Published: 6 September 2023

Annual Report 2022-2023

Preface

Chairman's Statement

Klaus Schwab, Founder and Executive Chairman

The World Economic Forum provides a global, impartial and not-for-profit platform, acting as an independent International Organization for Public-Private Cooperation. At a time of heightened turbulence and uncertainty, the Forum is instrumental to provide deeper insight into the interconnected issues we face today, serve as a platform for meaningful connection between stakeholders to establish trust, and build structured public-private initiatives for cooperation and progress. I am pleased to share our results for 1 July 2022 – 30 June 2023 in this Annual Report, demonstrating strong and sustained growth in our efforts to serve global stakeholders.

The world faces four key transformations that are interconnected and mutually reinforcing: economic and environmental, political and geopolitical, technological, and societal. Together, these four transformations create both trade-offs and opportunities for decision-makers in government, business and civil-society. The Forum supports leaders and the wider public in understanding these challenges and in coming together to design and implement solutions.

First, as global leaders seek to conserve and restore the health of our planet, they must manage a much needed but challenging shift in our economic, production and consumption patterns. At the same time, it is also imperative that these economic shifts do not widen socio-economic gaps and instead serve as a catalyst for bridging them.

Second, an increasingly multipolar world, characterized by a growing number of state and non-state actors with competing values and systems, creates a difficult backdrop for multilateralism. Navigating this heightened uncertainty and balancing national imperatives and the needs of our common global future are among the most challenging dilemmas leaders confront today.

Third, as the Fourth Industrial Revolution enters an exponential phase of development, the rise of generative artificial intelligence will significantly transform business models and societal patterns, from education and health to how information is disseminated. Other technologies – quantum computing, synthetic biology and Web3 – may be equally consequential.

Harnessing the opportunities of these technologies while mitigating societal and ecological risks is a key challenge for leaders globally.

Fourth, polarization and a sense of uncertainty is rising across societies, driven by the COVID-19 pandemic, the reshaping of global supply chains, geopolitical crises, climate change, persistent inflation and the corrosion of previous gains in development and standards of living. Leaders face the dual challenge of addressing the root causes while also dealing with the immediate effects of such division and distress.

These are formidable challenges. They require a greater balance between short-term responses and longer-term thinking, trust and objectivity, innovation and frontier thinking, and greater cooperation between governments, the private sector and civil society. These are the approaches the World Economic Forum stands for and that form the core of our work with our stakeholders.

Over the last years, we have substantially strengthened our partnerships with governments, international organizations, business and civil society. Our business partnerships grew by nearly a quarter between 2020 and 2023, reflecting the growing need for a neutral, solution-oriented platform for cooperation in the midst of global turbulence. We also renewed partnership agreements with the UN, OECD and many governments, supporting trust-based global cooperation.

The Forum’s development over the last 50 years provides the basis for this trust.

In 1971, during the first phase of our development, the Forum established itself as a not-for-profit foundation, promoting stakeholder responsibility, the concept that companies, in addition to generating economic prosperity, have a responsibility towards society and nature.

During the second phase, the Forum established sustained communities, convening top political and business leaders alongside representatives of the world’s leading non-governmental organizations, trade unions and civil society, as well as a vibrant community of youth and social innovators. Today, for example, through its Global Shapers Hubs, present in over 500 cities in more than 150 countries around the world, the Forum combines a global and local approach to community engagement.

In the third phase, the Forum added research and insight development capabilities to support a stronger foundation of data, knowledge and debate for our constituents and the wider public. Last year, we published over 100 reports and white papers. They were written together with global experts in our communities to serve as thought-provoking input into policy discussions.

In the fourth phase, we created collaboration platforms, enabling all stakeholders of global society to work together to find common solutions to global issues. Over the past year, we combined these platforms into 10 distinct centres: Advanced Manufacturing and Supply Chains; Cybersecurity; Energy and Materials; Financial and Monetary Systems; Fourth Industrial Revolution; Health and Healthcare; Nature and Climate; New Economy and Society; Regions, Trade and Geopolitics; and Urban Transformation.

We are entering a new phase in our development, deepening our collaboration with business, government, civil society and other stakeholders to strengthen the impact of our work, and broadening access to our endeavours through our digital platforms.

—Klaus Schwab, Founder and Executive Chairman

Today, our work in these 10 centres spans nearly 150 initiatives and provides frameworks for our Partners and constituents to take action and generate impact. These initiatives include the Reskilling Revolution, which aims to provide 1 billion people with better education and skills by 2030; the EDISON Alliance, which is focused on providing affordable access to digital services to 1 billion people by 2025; and 1t.org, which has the goal of conserving, restoring and growing 1 trillion trees by 2030. This Annual Report shares more about our approach to support holistic decision-making and strategic collaboration that helps improve the lives and livelihoods of millions of people around the globe.

Looking ahead, we are entering a new phase in our development, deepening our collaboration with business, government, civil society and other stakeholders to strengthen the impact of our work, and broadening access to our endeavours through our digital platforms. In particular, this includes the Global Collaboration Village, where we are working with over 130 partners, including top technology companies, international organizations, academic institutions and civil society organizations, to harness the power of the metaverse and artificial intelligence to facilitate global collaboration and learning experiences.

The power of human ingenuity, entrepreneurship, innovation and cooperation are central to our mission. The complex challenges the world faces need a forum for rigorous and respectful dialogue between and among leaders who have different beliefs and viewpoints, where diversity of thought is respected and all voices can be heard. Achieving this mission is made possible by all our stakeholders, who come together to find common ground and seize opportunities for positive change, and by my colleagues, who are committed to driving impact. Together, we can improve the state of the world.

President's Statement

Børge Brende, President of the Managing Board

The year was one of contrasts.

On the one hand, the world saw instances of meaningful global collaboration: trade between the largest economies reached record highs, progress was made on deepening inter-regional collaboration in Africa, ASEAN and the Middle East, and the UN Climate Conference in Egypt delivered commitments to historic “loss and damage” adaptation funding. Yet, on the other hand, war continued in Europe and economic, security and technology tensions rose between powers.

The picture of global collaboration both in retreat and advancement spoke to the current turbulent, unsettled geopolitical context and a sense that the world is moving at once in opposing directions. The resulting risk of fracture comes at the very moment that time is fast running out for addressing global priorities, when it is crucial we make progress during this “decade of action”.

It is within this period of great geopolitical uncertainty, when impactful action is most necessary, that the World Economic Forum identified and delivered avenues towards meaningful collaboration between leaders in the public and private sectors. The World Economic Forum Annual Meeting 2023 in Davos- Klosters drew over 2,700 participants, including 44 heads of state and government, under the theme, “Cooperation in a Fragmented World”.

We saw instances of cooperation during the Annual Meeting and over the course of the year, particularly on delivering equitable growth agendas, accelerating climate action and unlocking the benefit of breakthrough technologies. This was all made possible by the Forum’s close work in 845 partnerships – 62 more than the previous year – in combination with a strong retention rate (88%) of the existing partnership base and the continued development of a robust global innovator base which reached nearly 400. The healthy partnership growth meant revenue rose by 5%, placing the Forum on a strong financial footing.

With a challenging economic picture ahead, the Forum convened over 400 leaders in Geneva in May for the Growth Summit that focused on “Jobs and Opportunity for All”. The summit accelerated and launched initiatives to advance growth, trade, jobs, skills and investing. As part of this, additional countries joined the Accelerators Network, which now stands at over 30 countries working with the World Economic Forum to strengthen their economies. The Forum also redoubled efforts to help leaders deliver growth agendas by working closely with the Government of India as it held the G20 presidency. And the Forum helped strengthen regional growth agendas, with the Forum Friends of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) launching the first-ever report by global business on the opportunities presented by the AfCFTA.

A focus throughout these efforts has been on helping leaders shape a more equitable economic landscape. I am so proud that more than 350 million people are being reached with better skills, jobs and education through commitments made as part of the Reskilling Revolution initiative. And the new Global Parity Consortium, a global coalition of 250 CEOs, ministers and other top leaders, is working to renew growth and resilience through diversity, equity and inclusion. To expand opportunity in today’s innovation economy and ecosystem, the EDISON Alliance is working to provide affordable access to digital services to 1 billion people by 2025. It has reached over 450 million people – almost half of its target.

On climate action, at a “now-or-never” moment for making progress on reaching emissions targets, the First Movers Coalition increased its membership from 35 to 80 companies, adding Canada and the United Arab Emirates as Government Partners. The Forum also launched a Chief Sustainability Leaders Community with 60 CSOs to advance corporate action on sustainability transformation. And, the Forum signed an agreement with the Government of the United Arab Emirates in support of the COP28 agenda. These efforts came alongside a focus on advancing nature-based solutions. The Forum signed a new partnership with the Government of Indonesia to support its ambitions to increase blue carbon restoration and ocean conservation efforts and also published the Food, Nature and Health Transitions – Repeatable Country Models report as a roadmap for investment and partnerships to increase technology innovation for regenerative food systems.

Achieving these milestones has been possible only through the active partnerships and collaboration of stakeholders from business, government and civil society.

—Børge Brende, President of the Managing Board

A crucial part of delivering growth and accelerating climate action rests on getting the energy transition right. Here, the Forum launched the Coal to Renewables Toolkit, offering pragmatic best practices from coal power producers and regions that have repurposed their coal infrastructure into clean energy. And we launched the Net-Zero Industry Tracker, the world’s first standardized cross-sectoral framework to monitor progress on hard-to-abate sectors’ decarbonization.

The revolutionary development of frontier technologies offers new opportunities, which is why the Forum introduced the Global Collaboration Village, the first global, purpose-driven metaverse platform. But some of these technologies also bring associated risks. The Forum therefore unveiled the Centre for Trustworthy Technology in Austin, Texas (US) to promote the responsible production and use of emerging technologies. We also continued to work with governments and partner institutions to expand the Centre for the Fourth Industrial Revolution Network, with other new centres opening in Telangana (India) and Malaysia. These centres join a global network of 19 worldwide, each acting as national and subnational focal points for unlocking new technology-driven opportunities in a responsible way, with a mechanism to elevate shared learnings and solutions. We also convened 135 cybersecurity leaders at Forum headquarters for the Annual Meeting on Cybersecurity to discuss steps to address global cybercrime, cyberwarfare and quantum security.

Achieving these milestones has been possible only through the active partnerships and collaboration of stakeholders from business, government and civil society. That these collaborative efforts delivered impact is testament not just to the strength of the individual efforts but to the model of multistakeholder collaboration. I am particularly proud that the members of the younger generation – the Global Shapers, Young Global Leaders and Schwab Foundation Social Entrepreneurs – have been crucial voices, helping deliver impact. This year, the Global Shapers Community reached a milestone by growing to over 500 city-based Hubs.

The foundation of the Forum’s success has been its talented staff who collaborate daily with each other and with Partners to deliver impact. The Forum has long made it a priority to foster professional growth and enrich the employee experience, which is why we increased the learning budget by 45% this past year to CHF 1.4 million. We also invested in our Early Careers Programme aimed at young professionals, hiring 45 participants. We offer an array of development programmes and encourage individuals’ flexibility in designing their development paths. The Forum is proud to be committed to fostering an environment where diversity is welcomed and success is celebrated, enabling employees to thrive and grow.

Perhaps the greatest lesson of the year was that, although the challenges before us are formidable and time is in short supply, the collective strength of stakeholders can deliver remarkable impact. The only thing required is that we work together.

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