A New Stage of the Global Economy is Beginning: Part Three

By Evolution Shift Archives
Cover image for  article: A New Stage of the Global Economy is Beginning: Part Three

We are entering a new stage of the rapidly evolving global economy. The first stage has lasted some 25 years, beginning in the very late 1980s. As we move from 2014 into 2015 and 2016 there will be fundamental shifts in both the global economy and almost equally importantly, how we perceive it. By 2017, this view of the second stage of the global economy having begun will largely be held by economists, business, media and, hopefully, governments

.In Part One and Part Two I looked at how the global economy started, grew and evolved. It is now time to look ahead and see what this new stage will look like. One of the issues in doing so is that, as in most areas of human endeavor, we have clear definitions and viewpoints as to what something is -- what reality is -- so it is hard to see the new approaching reality until we are fully in it. A second issue is that this transition, while inevitable, will happen gradually, and at various speeds, over a period of time. There is no clear-cut line of demarcation. So what is suggested here might be hard to see clearly for a while.

This new, second stage of the global economy will truly integrate humanity ever more globally than in the first stage. While the first stage ended the history of distinct, separate national economies to a great degree, this new stage will provide ever more global integration. Nationalism will lessen and at the same time cities will become more important. New forms of global corporations will emerge, oriented more to the cities they serve rather than the country in which they are based. Place will give way to space. Countries that have, to date, not become full players in the global economy will do so. Let’s take a quick look at some of these approaching developments.

Nationalism will Lessen

Nation states of course will continue to exist, but economic lines will further blur. This will be due to the continuing accelerating electronic connectivity I have written about for years. Capital moves around the globe at the speed of light because it can and will. A national “money supply” will become less relevant and measurable. The global money supply will start to be measured and monitored.

Now that we are ever more connected spatially via connectivity our sense of place has declined. We are the first iteration of humanity to live in a spatial way, moving away from largely defining ourselves by our place. One of the terms of the first stage of the global economy was cyberspace -- the screen reality -- a term that described another reality than our place-based physical reality. This will increasingly make us see ourselves in a global space where political boundaries become ever more just that, political boundaries, not economic or social boundaries.

At the same time, cities will become ever more important. It is widely perceived in 2014 that national governments in many of the developed countries of the world have become dysfunctional, antiquated and not leading into the future; gridlock and legacy thinking at the top. This has allowed states and even more so cities to become the new political areas of thought and action. Another trend here is the increasing concentration of humanity in urban areas. In 2013 humanity crossed the 50% threshold of people living in urban areas. By 2040-45 it is expected that this percentage will reach 70%, so ever more of us will become urban dwellers. What makes this number even more staggering to consider is that by the mid-2040s there will be 9 billion people on earth, so instead of 50% of 7.2 billion there will be 70% of 9 billion or 6.3 billion people living in urban areas -- an increase of more than 2.6 billion people! That is close to 100 million new urban residents a year. Much of this of course will be in Asia. The future of cities will become a critical issue for humanity in this second stage of the global economy.

The New Globocorp

The use of the word “multinational” began during the Cold War. As big national companies expanded “abroad” they took on this name as they had operations or sales in multiple countries. Now that there is a global economy where tens of thousands of companies operate around the world in a 24-hour marketplace it is time for a new name. The globalcorp will be an iteration of the current multi-national and will sharpen the focus to both a singular global economy and an increased emphasis on the exploding urban megacities in the world. More than thinking of nations, globalcorps will think of cities. Per capita GDP is currently higher and will become ever more so in mega-cities compared to their nation states. That is where the money will be.

The Golden Age of Africa

2020-2040 will usher in the golden age of Africa. In the first stage of the global economy the process was clear. New countries entering the global economy became low cost suppliers to the rest of the world. As these countries became economically strong they moved up the cost chain, allowing new lower cost nations to enter the game. The continent that has largely not participated in the global economy, except for mineral extraction, is Africa, the second most populous continent. By 2020 African countries will be the remaining ones to come into the global economy as the latest low cost producers. This of course will be led by the exploding mega-cities of the continent.

This Spaceship Earth

As this second stage of the global economy begins the human population is almost 50% larger than at the beginning of the global economy 25 years ago. This explosion is clearly having an effect on our planet. Climate change, sea level rise, ecological degradation, the inability for natural habitats to sustain 8 billion people let alone thousands of now extinct species, all will affect global economics. The costs of relocations, conversions, reconstructions and disruptions will be enormous. Global anticipatory planning will begin to replace ongoing expensive reactions. The growing awareness that we all live in one place, earth, and that is the only place we live will usher in a spaceship mentality to the global economy. This will dramatically increase the efficiency, productivity and non-duplicative integration of the global economy. This will add to the lessening of identity tied to countries as they become a subset to the planet.

Though impossible to forecast with certainty, I think that this new, second stage of the global economy will last until the 2030s.

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