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World Economic Forum Research Report

The World Economic Forum is also a think tank, which studies issues of concern to the forum community and publishes a wide range of research reports. It is particularly noteworthy that the "strategic analysis team" of the forum is committed to writing reports on national competitiveness assessment, global risk assessment, expected mode planning and thinking and other related fields.

The competitiveness team has written several annual economic reports (first published in brackets): Global Competitiveness Report (1979) evaluates the competitiveness of countries and economies; The Global Information Technology Report (200 1) evaluates the competitiveness of countries according to their information technology strength. The Global Gender Difference Report (2005) investigated some important aspects of gender equality; The Global Risk Report (2006) assessed the major risks in the world; The Global Tourism Competitiveness Report (2007) evaluates the tourism industry. The Global Trade Promotion Report (2008) analyzes and evaluates the factors that promote trade among countries.

"Global Risk Network" Global Risk Network publishes an annual report. The criteria for assessing risks are: these risks can have a global impact, involve cross-industry issues, are uncertain, may cause economic losses of more than $654.38+000 billion, are potentially harmful to human beings, and need the concerted efforts of multiple stakeholders to reduce risks.

Scenario Planning is an "expected mode planning group", which publishes a series of expected mode reports about regions, industries and specific topics, and puts forward scenarios different from people's assumptions, reminding people to pay attention to important potential factors and inspiring people to think about the future. [4 1] The latest report covers the global financial crisis in 2008-2009, and analyzes the possible short-term and long-term impacts of the financial crisis. The future of the global financial system: prospects and long-term expectations, near-$ TERM prospects and long-term $ TERM scenarios, and supporting the population transition: the expected model of pension and medical security in 2030 is expected to study the impact of demographic changes on pension and medical funds. Financing demographic transition: pension and health care programs to 2030.