If someone asks you, “What do you think the world will be like in 2050?”
Do you shrug and just think that is, “Way too far in the future…”
Really?
For anyone 35 or older, you really shouldn’t think that way. Why?
Remember 9/11? Yep, the day that ushered in a new era on that otherwise visually beautiful AM on the September 11th, 2001. Rounding up, that was 23 years ago.
Only 23 years.
The attacks of 9/11 are to 29 April 2024 what we are to 2047, just a few years short of 2050.
Pay attention and take notes people, time moves faster than you think.
Now that I’ve set the table, I want you to take a close look at the below via Virtual Capitalist:
Much faster than you think, 2047 will be here - and Nigeria and Pakistan will have the same population as the USA, the People’s Republic of China (PRC) will be a few hundred million souls smaller, and the world’s largest democracy - and by then the world’s nation with the largest number of English speakers - will be near 1.7 billion souls. That is roughly equivalent to her adding the entire population of the USA to her present population.
Demographics are the central argument for real long-term strategic thinking.
From war, to food security, energy requirement, migration pressures, and developing economic systems to support it all - this is what will drive the security environment in the future that is as close to today as we are to 9/11.
This is why AFRICOM matters. The retreat from the Sahel matters.
This is why bringing India closer matters. Helping Indonesia’s development matters.
Europe and North America need to get sober about migration policy. The pressures will only get worse.
We all need to make sure that the unprecedented societal pressures that will come from the pressures of demographic collapse in the PRC remains internalized and does not externalize. Our security policy needs to understand a similar collapse that is coming with out allies South Korea and Japan.
Macro issues are moving in directions no one is all that sure how to respond. There are no good benchmarks out there to reference.
Think smart, be agile, be humble and able to change on a dime.
Pro Chinese and russian sentiment in Indonesian grassroot society is high, hence balance is needed (this is my way of saying I agree on this article)
Demographics is destiny, in many more ways than one. Good for you for adding the subject to the (long and growing) list of what should be our most pressing concerns for the future.