Megachange - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 50
About This Presentation
Title:

Megachange

Description:

Death of distance 'The earth is flat' Three ages of globalisation - 22 ... Disney. McDonald's. Toyota. Marlborough - 47 - Globalcorp 2066? Exxon-Hydro. Tatasoft ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:145
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 51
Provided by: Sheila132
Category:
Tags: megachange

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Megachange


1
Megachange 1946-2066 Business intelligence in a
changing world Daniel Franklin Baltimore, June
2006
2
The excuse a 60th birthday
  • The Economist Intelligence Unit was formed out of
    The Economist in 1946, advertising for its first
    Director of Intelligence in October of that
    year.

3
When we were born
  • Britain still had an empire, running India and a
    large chunk of Africa
  • Food rationing was still in place
  • The Economist Intelligence Unit started writing
    reports on subjects like
  • The control of nationalised industries (1948)
  • Forecast of traffic through the Suez canal
    (1956)
  • The effect of the Common Market on major British
    industries (1959)
  • The climate for entry of major British
    contractor in Iraq (1961)

4
How has the world changed in 60 years? What about
the next 60?
5
1. People
6
Global swarming
  • Global population expands by over 150 since
    1950, from 2.55 billion people to 6.47 billion,
    with 80 living in less developed regions
  • In 2050, according to UN projections, the world
    will have 9.08 billion people, 40 more than
    today
  • Europes share declines rapidly, from 22 in 1950
    to 11 today and 7 in 2050. Africas share
    rises, N. Americas falls only slightly

7
Bigger, smaller, longer
  • People have got bigger in the late 1970s, less
    than half American adults were overweight or
    obese, now two out of three are
  • Families have got smaller couples in developing
    countries now have three children each on
    average, compared with six in 1970
  • Globally, life expectancy has increased by 20
    years since 1950, to 66 years

8
and much more urban
  • In 2006, for the first time in 25,000 years of
    human history, more than half the worlds
    population is urban, rather than rural

9
Long-term world population growth, 1750 - 2050
Billions
Millions
Population size
Annual increments
Source United Nations Population Division
10
Share of world population,
Source United Nations
11
A grey future
  • Over the coming decades, the world will get
    older the median age of the worlds population
    will rise from 28 today to 38 in 2050
  • Some countries will shrink Italy will lose 7m
    people (12 of its population today), Japan will
    lose 16m (12), and Russia 43m (22)
  • Age dependency ratios will rise sharply in many
    places, including China
  • At the other end of the spectrum, in some parts
    of the world, especially Africa (Benin,
    Mozambique, Tanzania, Congo, Niger), nearly half
    the population under 15 in 2015

12
Population aged 15-64
of total population
Source United Nations
13
2. The world economy
14
For richer, for poorer
  • The world economy is nearly ten times bigger in
    2006 than 60 years ago
  • Real GDP per head is 3.6 times bigger
  • In the G7, real GDP is five times bigger
  • The share of people living on less than 1 a day
    (PPP) fell from 40 to 21 between 1981 and 2001,
    thanks to progress in Asia
  • BUT
  • In sub-Saharan Africa the proportion of people
    living in extreme poverty rose from 42 to 46

15
Money matters
  • Enter the euro (and the lit, the lat, the som etc
  • Exit cash?
  • The number of debit-card transactions in the UK
    was ten times higher in 2004 than in 1991, and
    credit-card usage increased threefold
  • And inflation?

16
Dynamic markets
Real output, 2005100 E7 China, Brazil, Korea,
India, Russia, Mexico, Taiwan Source Economist
Intelligence Unit
17
The world in 2020
  • World economy will be two-thirds bigger in real
    terms in 2020 than in 2005
  • China, India and US will account for 55 of
    global GDP growth in 2006-2020
  • US will grow at 3 per year and outpace other
    rich countries
  • US to remain sole superpower
  • EU partly compensates for slower growth with
    territorial expansion
  • Average EU income per head at 56 of US level in
    2020
  • Japan in decline

18
The largest economies
US PPP trn Source Economist Intelligence Unit
19
Shares in world GDP (at PPP, )
20
3. Globalisation
Source WTO
21
Three ages of globalisation
  • 3. Make anywhere, control globally
  • 2000s onwards
  • Death of distance
  • The earth is flat
  • 2. Make globally, control at home
  • 1990s, big rise in FDI
  • Cost-cutting, outsourcing
  • Rise of anti-globalists
  • 1. Sell abroad, manufacture at home
  • 1960s-1980s
  • Global markets, standard products
  • Operations controlled from home base

22
Global direct investment inflows (US bn)
Source Economist Intelligence Unit
23
What if
  • anti-globalists gain the upper hand?
  • Main risk to benign growth scenario is that
    globalisation could be unwound
  • Scenario of descent into serious protectionism
    shaves 2 percentage points off average global
    growth (stagnant per capita income), according to
    Economist Intelligence Units long-range
    forecasts

24
4. Countries
25
Expanding country club
  • In 1946 the UN had 55 members now it has 191
  • Decolonisation break-up of federations has bred
    new countries
  • Farewell
  • Soviet Union
  • Yugoslavia
  • Czechoslovakia
  • Hello
  • Montenegro, Timor-Leste, DRC, CAR, UAE, Burkina
    Faso, Eritrea, Namibia

26
Freedoms progress
  • 63 of the worlds population now live in free
    or partly free countries

Source Freedom House
27
Future countries, future freedoms?
  • End of history?
  • Hardly nationalism could lead to further splits.
  • Some candidates
  • Kosovo, Transdniestr, Scotland, Wales, Corsica,
    Sardinia, Quebec, Kurdistan, Euskadi, Catalonia,
    Chechnya, Abkhazia, South Ossetia, Somaliland,
    Puntland, Palestine, Western Sahara, Wallonia,
    Flanders, Padania, Siberia, Tibet, Guangdong,
    Xinjiang
  • Will supply of democracy grow to meet demand?

28
5. Military power
29
Balance and imbalance of power
  • Cold War balancing act NATO/Warsaw Pact
  • Small nuclear club (US, USSR, China, UK, France)
  • Grows to India, Pakistan, Israel
  • Iran, North Korea on the fringes
  • How many nuclear states in 2066?

30
Super-dooper-power
The world's top 10 defence spenders, share of
global military spending, 2004, at market
exchange rates,
Source Stockholm International Peace Research
Institute (SIPRI) Yearbook, 2005
31

6. Life and death
32
Peace dividends
Battle-deaths
International crises plummet
Source Human Security Report 2005
33
A safer world for now
  • Fewer people are dying now from war than at
    almost any time since the 1920s
  • The 1980s were bloodier than the 1990s, but the
    1950s, 1960s and 1970s were the deadliest, with
    most of the fighting in East and South-East Asia
  • Improvement thanks to end of Cold War, wind-down
    of many conflicts in Africa, rise of peacekeeping
  • Peecekeeping peaking

34
Can it last?
  • The dark side of globalisation
  • Asymmetric conflict dirty bombs and biological
    briefcases
  • Religious wars?
  • Water wars?
  • Chinas peaceful rise?
  • Asias future flashpoints
  • India/Pakistan
  • North Korea
  • Taiwan
  • China/Japan

35
Diseases dark shadow
36
7. Social revolution
37
Womens world
  • In 1950, only one-third of American women of
    working age had a paid job now two-thirds do
  • The inactivity rate for working-age women in
    the UK fell from 41 in 1971 to 27 in 2005
  • Globally, since 1970, women have filled two new
    jobs for every one taken by a man
  • In the UK, single-parent households make up 24
    of households with children, up from 8 in 1972
    42 of births are outside marriage, up from 10
    in the early 1970s
  • The number of women MPs in the UK rose above 20
    in 1945, and above 120 in 2005

38
Knowledge and leisure
  • In America, 140 women enrol in higher education
    each year for every 100 men
  • In the 1960s, one-third of the South Korean
    population had completed secondary school now
    97 of 25- to 34-year-olds have high-school
    education (the highest among the industrial
    countries)
  • UK residents made 42.9m holiday trips abroad in
    2004, up from 6.7m in 1971

39
8. Technology
40
Mass markets
  • Cars 70m on the worlds roads in 1950, over 1
    billion now
  • Air travel up from 9m passengers in 1945 to 1.8
    billion in 2004
  • The Internet from zero to 1.2 billion users
  • Mobile phones from zero to 2.1 billion users

41
The next big things
  • Biotechnology comes of age
  • Death of old age
  • Technology for Africa
  • The greening of technology

42
9. Companies
43
Creative destruction speeds up
  • Of the 500 companies in the SP 500 in 1957, only
    74 remained on the list in 1997
  • In the 1920s and 1930s, turnover rate in the SP
    90 was about 1.5 a year in 1998, the turnover
    rate in the SP 500 was close to 10
  • Extrapolating, by 2020 the average lifetime of a
    corporation on the SP will be down to 10 years
  • Source Creative Destruction, by Richard Foster
    and Sarah Kaplan

44
Market moves
  • SP 500, 1980
  • IBM
  • ATT
  • Exxon Corp
  • Standard Oil, Indiana
  • Schlumberger
  • Shell
  • Mobil
  • Standard Oil of Cal
  • Atlantic Richfield
  • General Electric
  • SP 500, 2005
  • General Electric
  • Exxon Mobil
  • Microsoft
  • Citigroup
  • Procter Gamble
  • Wal-Mart
  • Bank of America
  • Johnson Johnson
  • AIG
  • Pfizer

45
From Detroit to Bentonville
  • Fortune 500, 1955
  • General Motors
  • Exxon Mobil
  • U.S. Steel
  • General Electric
  • Esmark
  • Chrysler
  • Armour
  • Gulf Oil
  • Mobil
  • Du Pont
  • Fortune 500, 2005
  • Wal-Mart Stores
  • Exxon Mobil
  • General Motors
  • Ford Motor
  • General Electric
  • ChevronTexaco
  • ConocoPhillips
  • Citigroup
  • AIG
  • IBM

46
Best global brands, 2005 (Interbrand ranking)
  • Coca-Cola
  • Microsoft
  • IBM
  • GE
  • Intel
  • Nokia
  • Disney
  • McDonalds
  • Toyota
  • Marlborough

47
Globalcorp 2066?
  • Exxon-Hydro
  • Tatasoft
  • Quaero
  • GGS (formerly Google Goldman Sachs)
  • Shanghai Automotive
  • RambaxiPfizerSmithKlineBeechamNovartis
  • OxbridgeHarvard
  • MyMcSpace
  • WholefoodsTesco
  • BollyDis

48
10. The planet
49
Warming
  • Over past 20 years, mean temperature of the
    lowest level of the atmosphere has increased by
    0.4ºC
  • Warming seems to be accelerating models suggest
    rise of 0.5ºC 1.0ºC over the next 20 years
  • Possibilities
  • Approaching a tipping point
  • Era of mass extinctions
  • Extreme weather becomes more common
  • Certainty environmentalism pervades politics,
    business

50
Fasten your seatbelts
  • Past 60 years has seen extraordinary change
  • Next 60 will see even faster change, due to
  • Rise of China and India, 2.5 billion people
  • Unprecedented spread of information, thanks to
    the internet (still in its infancy only 10 of
    worlds information available online, 80 of
    worlds population still to be connected)
  • Application of vast computer
  • power and scientific discovery
  • Prepare for a risky ride, but also
  • an exhilarating one
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com