Executive summary: The World Future
Society's 10 forecasts for 2009 and beyond - about bioviolence, a
farewell to cars, more specialized careers and how fast knowledge will
be outdated.
Edited by Peter Horn
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"The term “futures” as used in financial
commodity markets has been of great concern to many the past few months,
because of the enormous turmoil that is assaulting the financial world today.
The insights, trends and tools offered by World Future Society can be of
assistance in understanding the nature of this turmoil, and better equip
members in facing their future, identifying critical issues, relevant early
signals and bellwethers for change that can highlight opportunities and
alert you of the rocks and shoals ahead," writes the president of WFS,
Timothy Mack, in a forecast bulletin. Some ofv the forecasts for 2009 and
beyond are:
Forecast No. 1: Everything you say and do will be
recorded by 2030.
By the late 2010s, ubiquitous unseen nanodevices will provide seamless
communication and surveillance among all people everywhere. Humans will have
nanoimplants, facilitating interaction in an omnipresent network. Everyone
will have a unique Internet Protocol (IP) address. Since nano storage
capacity is almost limitless, all conversation and activity will be recorded
and recoverable.
— Gene Stephens, “Cybercrime in the Year 2025,” THE FUTURIST
July-Aug 2008.
Forecast No. 2: Bioviolence will become a greater
threat as the technology becomes more accessible.
Emerging scientific disciplines (notably genomics, nanotechnology, and other
microsciences) could pave the way for a bioattack. Bacteria and viruses
could be altered to increase their lethality or to evade antibiotic
treatment.
— Barry Kellman, “Bioviolence: A Growing Threat,” THE FUTURIST
May-June 2008.
Forecast No. 3: The car's days as king of the road will
soon be over.
More powerful wireless communication that reduces demand for travel, flying
delivery drones to replace trucks, and policies to restrict the number of
vehicles owned in each household are among the developments that could
thwart the automobile’s historic dominance on the environment and culture.
If current trends were to continue, the world would have to make way for a
total of 3 billion vehicles on the road by 2025.
— Thomas J. Frey, “Disrupting the Automobile’s Future,” THE
FUTURIST, Sep-Oct 2008.
Forecast No. 4: Careers, and the college majors for
preparing for them, are becoming more specialized.
An increase in unusual college majors may foretell the growth of unique new
career specialties. Instead of simply majoring in business, more students
are beginning to explore niche majors such as sustainable business,
strategic intelligence, and entrepreneurship. Other unusual majors that are
capturing students' imaginations: neuroscience and nanotechnology, computer
and digital forensics, and comic book art. Scoff not: The market for comic
books and graphic novels in the United States has grown 12% since
2006.
—THE FUTURIST, World Trends & Forecasts, Sep-Oct 2008.
Forecast No. 5: There may not be world law in the
foreseeable future, but the world's legal systems will be networked.
The Global Legal Information Network (GLIN), a database of local and
national laws for more than 50 participating countries, will grow to include
more than 100 counties by 2010. The database will lay the groundwork for a
more universal understanding of the diversity of laws between nations and
will create new opportunities for peace and international partnership.
— Joseph N. Pelton, "Toward a Global Rule of Law: A Practical Step
Toward World Peace," THE FUTURIST Nov-Dec 2007.
Forecast No. 6: The race for biomedical and genetic
enhancement will — in the twenty-first century — be what the space race
was in the previous century.
Humanity is ready to pursue biomedical and genetic enhancement, says UCLA
professor Gregory Stock, the money is already being invested, but, he says,
“We'll also fret about these things — because we're human, and it's what
we do.”
— Gregory Stock quoted in THE FUTURIST, Nov-Dec 2007.
Forecast No. 7: Professional knowledge will become
obsolete almost as quickly as it's acquired.
An individual's professional knowledge is becoming outdated at a much faster
rate than ever before. Most professions will require continuous instruction
and retraining. Rapid changes in the job market and work-related
technologies will necessitate job education for almost every worker. At any
given moment, a substantial portion of the labor force will be in job
retraining programs.
— Marvin J. Cetron and Owen Davies, "Trends Shaping Tomorrow's
World, Part Two," THE FUTURIST May-June 2008.
Forecast No. 8: Urbanization will hit 60% by 2030.
As more of the world's population lives in cities, rapid development to
accommodate them will make existing environmental and socioeconomic problems
worse. Epidemics will be more common due to crowded dwelling units and poor
sanitation. Global warming may accelerate due to higher carbon dioxide
output and loss of carbon-absorbing plants.
— Marvin J. Cetron and Owen Davies, “Trends Shaping Tomorrow's World,”
THE FUTURIST Mar-Apr 2008.
Forecast No. 9: The Middle East will become more
secular while religious influence in China will grow.
Popular support for religious government is declining in places like Iraq,
according to a University of Michigan study. The researchers report that in
2004 only one-fourth of respondents polled believed that Iraq would be a
better place if religion and politics were separated. By 2007, that
proportion was one-third. Separate reports reveal a countertrend in China.
— World Trends & Forecasts, THE FUTURIST Nov-Dec 2007.
Forecast No. 10: Access to electricity will reach 83%
of the world by 2030.
Electrification has expanded around the world, from 40% connected in 1970 to
73% in 2000, and may reach 83% of the world's people by 2030. Electricity is
fundamental to raising living standards and access to the world's products
and services. Impoverished areas such as Sub-Saharan Africa still have low
rates of electrification; Uganda is just 3.7% electrified.
— Andy Hines, “Global Trends in Culture, Infrastructure, and Values,”
Sep-Oct 2008.
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Read more:
http://www.wfs.org/
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