… She cited the World Economic Forum’s Global Risks Report, which ranked misinformation and disinformation among the most severe global risks facing the world today. …
… In fact, a World Economic Forum (WEF) report in 2020 forecasted that while 85 million jobs may be displaced by AI by 2025, 97 million new roles may emerge that are more adapted to the division of labor between humans, machines, and algorithms. …
… According to the 2025 World Economic Forum Future of Jobs Report, artificial intelligence and information processing technologies are expected to transform 86 percent of businesses by 2030. …
… The World Economic Forum has repeatedly warned that the Fourth Industrial Revolution is not merely changing technology but transforming “the way we live, work, and relate to one another.” According to Klaus Schwab, “In its scale, scope, and complexity, the transformation will be …
… The World Economic Forum’s Global Cybersecurity Outlook 2025 highlights rising state-sponsored attacks, AI-powered cybercrime, and widening cybersecurity capability gaps between developed and emerging economies. …
… The World Economic Forum’s Global Competitiveness Report consistently places regulatory burden reduction among the highest-impact levers for improving digital economy competitiveness in middle-income countries. …
… The World Economic Forum’s Global Risks Report 2026 captures the mood of this moment, noting that 50% of global leaders anticipate a turbulent or stormy outlook over the next two years, which is expected to rise further over the next decade. …
… The World Economic Forum’s Global Risks Report 2026 captures the mood of this moment, noting that 50% of global leaders anticipate a turbulent or stormy outlook over the next two years, which is expected to rise further over the next decade. …
The Second Deputy Governor of the Bank of Ghana has highlighted the importance of a free and responsible press in safeguarding public trust and promoting economic stability, warning that misinformation and disinformation pose major threats to financial sector confidence and national development.
The Second Deputy Governor of the Bank of Ghana has highlighted the importance of a free and responsible press in safeguarding public trust and promoting economic stability, warning that misinformation and disinformation pose major threats to financial sector confidence and national development.
Bernard Kelvin Clive argues that while AI and automation tools help businesses move faster and innovate, business owners risk building fast companies that cannot last if they automate everything without developing people who understand the business's roots, values, and culture. Legacy, he contends, runs through people, not systems.
An opinion piece argues that AI, as a creation of human ingenuity, cannot replace humans because it is fundamentally dependent on human minds that program and govern it. Rather than wholesale replacement, AI serves to augment human capability and only replaces those who resist adaptation.
Technology is reshaping organisations, but human creativity, judgment, ethics, and emotional intelligence provide direction that machines cannot replicate. According to the 2025 World Economic Forum Future of Jobs Report, AI and information processing technologies are expected to transform 86 percent of businesses by 2030, with an estimated net increase of 78 million jobs globally despite 92 million job displacements.
An analysis argues that while technology has transformed human civilization over three centuries, management structures have remained resistant to meaningful change, with many organizations still operating on First Industrial Revolution assumptions. The piece explores how excessive concentration of organizational authority mirrors historical dangers of absolute political power and argues modern organizations must move away from centralized control.
The internet is gradually fragmenting into multiple regional systems shaped by geopolitics and national sovereignty concerns, with Africa facing particular risks of digital dependence and economic exclusion due to weak infrastructure ownership and governance leverage.
An opinion piece argues that while Ghana's government has a valid legal basis for the National Information Technology Authority Bill 2025 under existing acts and subsidiary legislation, the country should focus on whether the approach serves a thriving digital economy, not merely on legal validity or political debate.
African universities struggle with scale—tertiary enrolment sits at around 9%, far below the global average of 38%, while capacity would need to expand nearly twelvefold by 2035 to meet demographic demand. The article also identifies a crisis of expectation, where university education has become seen as the only pathway to success, placing a burden on youth excluded from higher education.
Inspired by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie's feminist manifesto, a column addresses Maame Tiwaa on her 14th birthday with fourteen truths for girls, starting with knowledge of gender inequality and the historical women who fought for their rights.
African tertiary enrolment remains around 9% despite the continent having more than 400 million people aged 15–35, with capacity needing to expand nearly twelvefold by 2035; simultaneously, universities have become burdened as the only perceived pathway to success, creating psychological pressure on youth who don't gain admission.
An opinion piece argues that while technology secures systems, organisational culture—built through staff training, ethical data handling, and security awareness—is what truly protects organisations. Cyber risk now extends beyond hacked systems to include financial losses, operational disruption, reputational damage, and regulatory penalties.
South Africa welcomed 10.5 million international visitors last year, with three-quarters from the SADC region. President Ramaphosa said the government is intensifying efforts to expand into new global tourism markets through improved regional travel, expanded air connectivity, and visa reforms, including a proposed SADC UNIVISA system.