Bump One: a recent cautionary article in the
Washington Post warns that European Banks, which provide much of the capital
for emerging nation development programs, are severely undercapitalized and are
close to retrenchments which could bring progress in nations around the world
to a screeching halt. That in turn could
generate major civil unrest in countries around the world (think of the
situations in Greece and the Middle East where governments are buying time to
deal with the dissatisfactions of a savagely unhappy population.) A restructuring of the global financial
system is needed. Can it be done?
Bump Two: China is facing both rapidly rising
inflation and a housing bubble in an export-driven economy. Americans tend to invest in stocks and bonds
for retirement; in traditional Chinese investing, multiple houses are purchased
instead, leading to an enormous pace of building that is providing far more
housing than there are purchasers. The
high pace of inflation concurrently is driving up Chinese wages to a point
close to where China will soon lose the competitive advantages of low wages
which drive the exports on which the Chinese economy depends. A sharp decline
in the Chinese export market could thus set off a chain reaction in their
housing market that could wreck their economy for decades, and that in turn
could have major impacts both on global politics and the world economy. The solution of course is a major switch by
China to domestic consumption, but can they do that in time?
Bump Three: the U.S. is achieving maturity in the
development and use of robotic, on-demand manufacturing, just when curing the
recession requires major increases in job creation. Major manufacturers are beginning to gear up
to achieve the promises of on-demand creation of products to any customer’s
specification at low work-hour costs. New
jobs will be created by robotics, but they will be either the high tech sort
required to support a vastly changed economy, or jobs in sectors of the economy
that may not even exist yet. Large
numbers of semi-skilled workers face a lifetime of unemployment. A vast retooling education load is about to
be placed on an American educational system not yet equipped or funded to
handle it. The political process, mired in 19th century outlooks and
procedures, is at an impasse that makes it virtually impossible to achieve the
rapid changes that will be needed. How
rapidly can we change the ways we do business?
Bump Four:
Climate change is accelerating more each time a new report is issued,
yet we remain incapable of either stopping it or living with it. From drowning coastal cities to hurricane devastation
year round everywhere to even, if there’s merit in tipping-point theory, the
possibility of a rapidly approaching mini ice age, the potential hazards are
everywhere while we sit on our hands.
How to get the coping process unstuck and in gear is possibly the major
challenge of our age.
What all these “bumps”, and other as yet
unrecognized ones, share is that they generate the need for all different kinds
of people from differing political persuasions, interests, occupations, value
systems and places to work together for their solution. Evolutionary biologists claim that the major
reason for humanity’s evolution into a globally dominant species is our ability
to communicate with each other and to cooperate altruistically. It’s time for us to prove it.
1 comment:
Thx for your post, I really enjoy your blog. Long time lurker, first time commenter, you know the drill. I tried to share this one time before, I don’t think it posted correctly…hopefully it will this time!
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