underlying trends that are shaping our world today


 

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Underlying Trends that are Shaping our World Today

 

Welcome to our ongoing discussion of global "macro" trends that we think are the most important to keep an eye on.  We are interested in global trends, how they happened, and in predicting their likely outcome... We like debates, and we are interested in Global Issues, so we welcome a variety of viewpoints.  Inclusion of material on this website definitely does NOT equal endorsement of ideas.  

 

Trends we consider: political, economic, financial, social, international

Trends we do NOT consider: local trends, consumer trends, marketing trends, fashion trends (better to find another website for these :-) 

 

Outside-the-box thinking welcome!   Some of these potential trends may seem statistically unlikely to occur in the short term (if at all), but if they were to happen, they could cause massive global disruption to the financial and economic systems, so they are worth discussing, and taking a closer look at.  In a world where the un-thinkable seems to happen with a greater frequency, it makes sense to start looking at the "worst case" scenario, and figure out how to (a) protect yourself, and (b) position your company / portfolio / career... to profit from ongoing trends.

 

Community involvement:  This document is dynamic, so any of our community is welcome to contribute, and to help shape our views of these important developments.  Please log in to our wiki, and feel free to comment...

 

 

Table of Contents:


 

 

Potential Trends - 2012

 

 

Trends (2012) identified at Davos Economic Forum:

     "The report identified the following as important trends facing the global agenda in 2012:

 

Read more:

http://reports.weforum.org/global-agenda-survey-2011/ "We asked Global Agenda Council members to identify the most important global trends that will likely impact the global economy, society and environment in the next 12-18 months. This presentation highlights the key findings of the survey."

Outlook on the Global Agenda 2012 

 

Risks:

"The IMF sees several risks ahead: the euro crisis and fiscal austerity in the rich world, upheaval in the Middle East and the possibility of a hard landing in countries, such as China, which have seen exceptional credit growth.See article from the Economist»

 

 

Trends in-depth:

 

1. Global center-of-gravity shifts toward the East:

 

"In a new study on the economic impact of urbanisation the McKinsey Global Institute, the research arm of the eponymous consultancy, has attempted to calculate how this centre of gravity has moved since AD 1 and how it is likely to move until 2025. Although the underlying maths (which involves weighting the approximate centre of landmass of a country by its GDP) has to be taken with a pinch of salt, the calculations show that the centre is rapidly shifting east—at a speed of 140 kilometres a year and thus faster than ever before in human history, according to Richard Dobbs, one of the authors of the study. The main reason for this is rapid urbanisation in developing countries, in particular China. As people are moving into cities many are becoming richer, driving further economic growth. Most of this growth will not occur in much-hyped megacities, such as Mumbai or Shanghai, but in what the authors call "middleweight cities".   Read more from the Economist here

 

 

 

 

2.  Rise of Asia on global stage: 

"The region’s economic performance over the past few decades has been nothing short of remarkable. Asia now accounts for about a third of the global economy, up from under just a fifth in 1980. This trend has been reinforced by the crisis, with the emerging market powerhouses leading the global recovery" Dominique Strauss-Kahn, Mar 31, 2011.  

 

 

3.  Food prices are rising globally:

"Food prices around the world have been rising sharply....In January, the wholesale cost of food hit its highest monthly figure on record, according to the UN's Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). Prices were higher than their peak in 2008, when a food crisis prompted riots and demonstrations around the world."   BBC April 2011

 

"Soaring food prices worldwide and a greatly increasing global population have given way to the growing value of farmland in many countries. In the United Kingdom agricultural land prices have increased substantially this past year and many land investments have doubled in value. The country of China has recognized the trend of growing farmland prices and over the past years has targeted more than 20 million hectares of land in Africa for investment hoping land prices there will rise like other places across the globe. Many countries have followed China’s lead as Africa currently has the cheapest arable land in the world.... Land has sold at such high values around the world that some people have even argued that farmland may be the next financial bubble similar to the housing market collapse. Despite this speculation, others claim that farmland will remain a valuable asset due to the simple fact that food production must increase 70 percent by 2050 to satisfy global population growth. A global trend for years has involved land-poor countries purchasing farmland abroad in order to protect themselves from food supply scarcity. If farmland values continue to rise, these increasing prices will have great effects on land investments between land-poor nations and developing countries rich with land." source: GlobalEdge, Feb 2012

 

 

 

 

 

 

4.  Oil prices are on the rise (again):

"oil prices are also edging up, reaching their highest level in two years."   BBC April 2011

 

 

5.  Health care costs set to rise significantly:

 

Healthcare costs are rising faster than levels of available funding. The rising cost of healthcare cannot be met with current levels of public funding, raised via taxation and insurance. The main drivers of rising healthcare costs in Europe are:

 

 

 

 

6.  Other Global Macro trends we are watching include:

 

More Themes we are looking at:

  1. Global Economic Recovery (see Credit crisis 2007-2009 FOLDER)
  2. Low interest rates, cheap money
  3. Fear that recovery might be derailed by:
    1. inflation
    2. increased oil prices
    3. Egypt & Mideast unrest
    4. Japan earthquake -- leads Germany to shun Nuclear energy -- "The disaster in Japan revived German concerns over nuclear power. Angela Merkel announced a three-month moratorium on a plan to extend the lifespan of the country’s 17 nuclear-power plants, and said that seven facilities built before 1980 would be temporarily shut. The European Union announced plans to test the safety of all nuclear plants in the 27 member states and China suspended approvals for new nuclear facilities."  The Economist.com.   Nuclear power after Fukushima Will it go into reverse? Read more
  4. Low interest rates impact on Emerging markets
    1. rising inflation
    2. result of dollar peg (dollar bloc) strategy of many emerging countries
    3. likely to continue after Japan earthquake as central banks stimulate economies
  5. Other Trends: 
    1. rise in risk aversion
    2. "dollar-bloc" countries continue to keep their currencies undervalued vs the dollar

 

 

 

 

Global Issues & Great Debates

 

  

 

 

Charts, Graphs

 

To coincide with the Rio+20 conference, the Guardian recently posted very interesting presentation showing interesting global trends.  Some of these slides are shown below.  Please visit the Guardian site here to see the full report from Kiln:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Related pages from GloboTrends

 

 

 

Older Trends Reports - by year

 

See our year-by-year TRENDS reports here:

 

 

 

Trends by Topic

  1. consumer trends
  2. demographic trends
  3. predicting trends in foreign exchange rates
  4. education trends  
  5. Packenham model to predict policy changes