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Terrorists And Hackers Worry CEOs More Than Rising Taxes

Economic growth and volatile exchange rates take a backseat to terrorism and cyber threats on CEO’s 2018 worry list.

The face of an attendee is reflected in a laptop computer screen alongside code as he participates in the TechCrunch Disrupt London 2015 Hackathon in London, U.K. (Photographer: Luke MacGregor/Bloomberg)  
The face of an attendee is reflected in a laptop computer screen alongside code as he participates in the TechCrunch Disrupt London 2015 Hackathon in London, U.K. (Photographer: Luke MacGregor/Bloomberg)  

Terror attacks and cybersecurity attacks give a growing number of chief executives of global firms more sleepless nights than higher taxes, uncertain economic conditions or rising automation.

Forty-one percent of the 1,293 CEOs surveyed said they are “extremely concerned” about terrorism, while 40 percent said the same for cyber threats, according to a survey by tax and audit firm PricewaterhouseCoopers. This is much higher than last year when terrorism didn’t appear in the list of top 10 threats to an organisation’s growth prospects.

Over-regulation, according to the survey, continues to be the top concern for CEOs.

Terrorists And Hackers Worry CEOs More Than Rising Taxes

There was a spike in terror attacks, mostly lone wolf hits, last year. From a van ramming on the Westminster Bridge in the U.K., a subway bombing in Saint Petersburg, a blast at a pop concert in Manchester and a shooting at a concert in Las Vegas, more than a 100 people died in nine such attacks.

The year also saw one of the worst cyberattacks. WannaCry ransomware affected more than three lakh computers across 150 countries, personal data of more than 800 million individuals was compromised in hack at U.S.-based Equifax. Even HBO's popular show Game of Thrones wasn't spared with nearly 1.5 terabytes of data stolen and leaked. Research firm Cybersecurity Ventures expects cybercrime to cost more than $6 trillion by 2021.

While every region has a different mix of concerns, CEOs across the board are “increasingly anxious about broader societal threats” like terrorism, climate change and geopolitical uncertainty rather than “direct business risks such as changing consumer behaviour or new market entrants”, PwC said in its report.

The threats that trouble CEOs are increasingly existential.
PwC Annual Global CEO Survey

Climate change was an new feature on their worry list this year, with 36 percent of respondents “extremely concerned” about what it could mean for businesses.

A region-wise breakdown of concerns of CEOs throws up a slightly varied picture. “Regional overlaps are interesting, but so are the differences in terms of top threats,” the report said, noting that while cybersecurity is the top threat in North American, it ranks eleventh in Central Europe and fifteenth in Latin America.

Populism was the biggest concern for chief executives in Western Europe and Latin American regions. Lack of the availability of “key skills” was the top concern for CEOs in Asia-Pacific, Central and Eastern European regions. For the Middle East, the biggest worry was geopolitical uncertainty, while African CEOs saw their biggest risk coming from social instability.

Another interesting feature of the survey was that CEOs in Asia-Pacific region were “worried about everything”. At least 20 percent “are extremely concerned about every threat on the list”.