Vol. 1, No. 21 | September
1, 2015 | AAI Foresight
News for the Foresight Community:
> Publication: State of the Future’s Special Focus on
Work
> Opinion: Bob Chernow on U.S. Polarization
> Transition: Pardee Center for International Futures
> Update: “Why Aren’t There More Women Futurists?”
> News from AAI Foresight: Welcoming Three New Partners
> Results: Foresight Signals Reader Survey
Publication: 2015-16 State of the Future’s Special Focus on Work
The latest edition of The Millennium Project’s annual State
of the Future series includes
the results of the group’s Delphi survey on the future of work, which focuses particularly
on the impacts of technology on the workplace and workforce.
Synthetic biology, computational science, nanotechnology,
quantum computing, 3-D printing, the Internet of Things, self-driving vehicles,
robotics, and other developments “will have fundamental impacts on the nature
of work, economics, and culture by 2050,” write Jerome C. Glenn and Elizabeth
Florescu in the chapter titled “Future Work/Technology 2050 Real-Time
Delphi Study.”
Whether these developments will create more jobs than they
destroy is debatable, but we are already seeing jobless economic growth as the
new norm, as well as increasing concentration of wealth and widening income
gaps and long-term structural unemployment as a “business as usual” scenario,
the authors write.
The chapter presents the responses of the nearly 300 Delphi
participants, predominantly North American and European professionals with “medium”
to “high” levels of futures research expertise. Among the findings:
- If current trends remain unchanged, average unemployment will grow to 11 percent by 2020 and to 24 percent by 2050.
- Robotics is the technology rated most likely to replace more jobs than it creates.
- Factors most likely to create jobs (or reduce mass unemployment) are new economic and work concepts and increased self-employment, freelancing, and DIY support systems.
- Retraining programs for more-advanced skills and STEM requirements in all levels of education are the actions thought most likely to be deployed and to be effective for creating new employment or income by 2050.
- A guaranteed lifetime income will be “absolutely necessary” or “very important” by 2050, according to more than half (59 percent) of the respondents.
The next step for the Delphi project, according to Glenn, “will
be to write alternative scenarios and roadmaps to 2050.” The 2015-16 State of the Future also
provides the latest trends on 28 indicators of progress and regress and updates
the 15 Global Challenges.
Details: 2015-16 Stateof the Future by Jerome C. Glenn, Elizabeth Florescu, and The Millennium
Project Team (2015, The Millennium Project).
Signals: Delphi
poll, economy, employment, technology, work
Opinion: Bob Chernow on U.S. Polarization
In an editorial for the Milwaukee
Business News blog, futurist Bob
Chernow predicts that the polarization clouding much of U.S. society today will
evaporate in the next five to seven years. The roots for this polarization, he
writes, “can be found in the changes in our economy and the shifts in power
that many sense, but find difficult to express.”
Ongoing waves of rapid change have unnerved many, whose “objective,
stated and unstated, is to stop perceived changes in status, power and wealth,”
Chernow says. But demographic factors, such as increased ethnic and racial
diversity and the rise of the powerful millennial generation (and its more secular
values), may narrow many of the divides now keenly felt in U.S. society.
“Yes, we have deep racial divides in our country, but much
of this has to do with age,” Chernow writes. “Young people, defined as 40 years
or younger, do not care about race, religion or national origin. They are more
likely to see the divide between left and right, which describes values.”
The growing influence of the millennials could manifest in
increased tolerance, relaxing those tensions between left and right. “I believe
we are five to seven years away from an end to the polarization we are
witnessing,” Chernow writes. “We have begun to see signs already in the greater
acceptance of the change and by compromise to accomplish collective ends that
have been absent in our dialogues.”
Reference: Bob Chernow, “Severe
polarization in U.S. could end in 5-7 years,” BizTimes.com (July 9, 2015).
Signals: demography,
generations, values
Transition: Pardee Center for International Futures
Barry Hughes,
director of the Frederick S. Pardee Center for International Futures, has
announced he is “going to cut back a bit.” Taking a sabbatical next year to
write a book on world modeling and international futures, he will also lead the
search for a new director for the Pardee Center (placement effective by fall
2016). Hughes, who also is the John Evans Professor of international studies at
the University of Denver, will retain a “senior mentor” role at the Pardee
Center. Jonathan Moyer, the Center’s associate director, will be acting director.
Signals: futures
studies, international futures
Update: “Why Aren’t There More Women Futurists?”
They say everyone talks about the future but no one does
anything about it. In response to the provocative (or provoking) question “Why
Aren’t There More Women Futurists?” posted in the Atlantic technology
blog, which we discussed in the last
issue of Foresight Signals, at least one trend-watching group did
something about it.
Portland, Oregon–based market consultants Little Bird, led
by Marshall Kirkpatrick, compiled a Twitter list
of 125 women futurists as a way to identify influential voices on that social
network. The “top five” are Wendy L.
Shultz, Jennifer Jarratt, Cindy Frewen, Rachel Armstrong, Maree Conway, and
Heather Schlegel (aka
Heathervescent). AAI Foresight’s own Cindy
Wagner is also included on the list of “important women futurists online.”
In his blog post introducing the list, Kirkpatrick explains,
“Here at Little Bird, we believe that there’s fundamental business value in
listening to and learning from the very best thinkers on any topic you’re
considering. … Of course there are important women futurists who do not use
Twitter, but when looking for women futurists, we think this is a great place
to start plugging in to the conversation.”
References: Rose
Eveleth, “Why Aren’t There More Women Futurists?” Atlantic.com (posted July 31, 2015).
Marshall Kirkpatrick, “5 Top Women Futurists & The End ofBusiness as Usual,” GetLittleBird.com (posted August 19, 2015).
Signals: feminism,
futurism, influencers, marketing, trend hunting
News from AAI Foresight: Welcoming Three New Partners
AAI Foresight’s global network of experts is growing!
Managing principal Tim Mack is
pleased to welcome the following consultants as associates:
- Cornelia Daheim (Cologne, Germany), is the founder of Future Impacts Consulting and chair of The Millennium Project’s German Node. She was a managing partner with Z_punkt: The Foresight Company for four years, where she was most recently the head of international projects.
- Wendy McGuinness (Wellington, New Zealand) is founder and CEO of the McGuinness Institute (previously the Sustainable Future Institute), which focuses on the long-term future of New Zealand. She is also a Fellow Chartered Accountant, specializing in risk management.
- Carol Rieg (Washington, D.C.) is the corporate foundation officer for Bentley Systems Inc., where she established a global employee-giving program reaching 3,300 employees in 45 countries, among other accomplishments. She is also a former national director of the Future City Competition.
Learn more about
AAI Foresight and its partner consultants. To connect, please contact Tim
Mack at tcmack333@gmail.com or call 202-431-1652.
Results: Foresight Signals Reader Survey
Thank you to all who responded to Foresight Signals’ reader survey in our last issue. Based on an overwhelming (63.6 percent) preference for “all of the above,” we will continue to offer short stories on trends and forecasts as well as news about foresight professionals and projects. To this mix, we will also add longer, “deep dives” into significant issues and interviews or profiles of futurists and other forward-looking individuals and groups. Feedback is always welcome! Log in at the AAI Foresight website to post your comments or drop a line to Tim or Cindy.
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Send us your signals!
News about your work and other tips are welcome, as is feedback on Foresight Signals. Contact Cynthia G. Wagner, consulting
editor.
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Feel free to share Foresight Signals with your networks and
to submit any stories, tips, or “signals” of trends emerging on the horizon
that we can share with other stakeholders and the foresight community.
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© 2015 AAI Foresight
Foresight Signals is a publication of AAI
Foresight
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