The Global Cooperation Barometer 2026
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About the Global
Cooperation Barometer
The Global Cooperation Barometer is structured
along five dimensions of global connection: trade
and capital, innovation and technology, climate
and natural capital, health and wellness, and
peace and security.
These five pillars were chosen because of their
impact on global development and their explicit
dependence on cooperative efforts among nations
and economies. As a guiding element in the
analysis, the barometer identified goals that actors
are working towards in each of these themes.
In doing so, the barometer draws inspiration from
the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals
(SDGs) and the efforts of other global institutions.
To quantify change in these pillars, 41 indicators
were identified that research suggests are either
cooperative actions that advance progress towards
the goals of the pillars or demonstrate a broad
outcome from those actions. Cooperative action
metrics measure actions that provide evidence
of cooperation; these indicators (such as flows of
goods and exchange of intellectual property) are
evidence of real, manifested cooperation and do
not include “on paper” commitments. Outcome
metrics (such as life expectancy) measure the
progress of cooperation but are typically influenced
by additional factors beyond cooperation.
The metrics span countries in all geographies
and at all levels of development. The barometer
examines the period from 2012 to 2024 to
establish a trend line of cooperation. It indexes
data to 2020 for the following reason: as the
COVID-19 pandemic (hereafter referred to as
“the pandemic”) took hold, it accelerated many
existing trends in business and society and set
many new ones in motion. Indexing the time series
to 2020 highlights the trends in place before the
pandemic and those that emerged from it. Note
that some metrics have been inverted so that
any increase represents a positive development.
Though this tool is imperfect and necessarily
incomplete, it offers an overview of global
cooperation that both captures broad trends
and identifies important nuances.
This year’s report includes the results of two
surveys. The Global Cooperation Barometer
survey collected responses from 1 September
to 26 September 2025 from the World Economic
Forum’s Network of Global Future Councils through
a Qualtrics electronic platform. Current members of
the network (those who are part of the 2025–2026
term) and those who served on a council during
the previous term (2023–2024) received a link
to take part in the survey. Out of a total of 224 responses received, 171 were used based on
completeness. A second survey was conducted
online using McKinsey’s proprietary global survey
panel of industry executives and was in the field
from 27 August to 5 September 2025. It garnered
responses from 799 participants in 81 economies
representing the full range of regions, industries,
company sizes, functional specialities and tenures.
The methodology used for the metrics of the Global
Cooperation Barometer is below. Details on the
sourcing of individual metrics are in the Appendix.
Data coverage
Geography: Across all metrics, the barometer aims
to collect global data. In most cases, an aggregate
global weighted average is available. When a
global weighted average is not available, the most
comprehensive data is used – such as Organisation
for Economic Co-operation and Development
(OECD) member countries, or a sample set of
countries where data is available for all years.
Years: While the barometer measures cooperation
from 2012 through 2024, some metrics do not have
data for all years. All metrics have 2020 data to
ensure the indexed trendline can be calculated.
Index calculation
To evaluate global cooperation fairly and compare
trendlines of the action and outcome metrics across
the five pillars, the Global Cooperation Barometer
applies the following methodology:
–Indexed trendlines
Data from 2020 serves as the base year to
develop comparable trendlines, with all values
in 2020 equal to one (2020 = 1). This base
year standardization is the basis of the score
calculation, enabling a uniform reference point
for all metrics and comparability, despite
different units and datasets.
–Data normalization
Where possible, metrics are normalized
to ensure that trendlines can be assessed
independently of the effects of economic growth
or population changes. For example, trade,
capital and other financial flows are normalized
to global GDP (gross domestic product) while
migration metrics are normalized to global
population levels.
The Global Cooperation Barometer 2026
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