BobKowalski
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 17 May 2007
- Messages
- 21,511
If you remove Africa from the equation then the global population has been in decline for most of this century.
To say that the global population will be reducing by the end of this century is akin to saying CD sales have been in decline for its first quarter. The extent of this decline will be severe, precipitous and catastrophic for many countries, and quite possibly humanity as a whole, at least for a couple of generations, if not ad infinitum. The rate of reduction is going to be mind blowing.
The impact on matters such as social care, as there simply won’t be the numbers of people of working age to deliver it, will be profound and may require a complete revaluation of how we assess matters such as ageing, euthanasia and life itself. AI may provide some solution to this issue in the form of robotics, although it’s hard to see how that will assist in making the elderly feeling less isolated and lonely, but that may be the only practical solution short of adopting a Logan’s Run type future.
The issues currently being debated in this thread are a microcosm (and the start) of what awaits us and I find myself in agreement with posters with whom I don’t always share the same political outlook, but we have to face up to reality.
Some resolution may come from taxing property and the very wealthiest in society, but to suggest that is a complete panacea, and not without risk, is completely misguided. It certainly isn’t a complete solution, despite what some posters seem to believe.
I think stagnant or weak growth are likely to be endemic going forward. It seems too embedded and long-standing now for that not to be the case. I certainly don’t think it’s wise to make any economic assumptions based around late ‘90s levels of growth as a predication for spending levels.
Defence spending absolutely has to increase along the lines already committed to, as we are currently at war with Russia and that is highly unlikely to change for the foreseeable. I don’t agree that net zero should be abandoned as I think it’s in the nation’s medium and long term strategic best interests to pursue that course, and it is achievable. I feel the issue of illegal immigration isn’t substantive enough (in financial terms) to warrant forming a significant part of this discussion. And any country that substantially reduces education spending is failing to invest in its future.
So that leaves health and welfare, not least because they represent such an overwhelming percentage of overall expenditure and one way or another this is where the savings will have to be made. Obviously this needs to be done in a way that avoids the greatest injustice, but it will be sadly painful for lots of people. The political messaging needs to be faithful to this reality, but that will require a level of courage not currently on display.
These challenges will be faced by most developed counties btw. A combination of the foregoing demographic changes and the decline in western hegemony are both combining to create a reality that has to be faced up to.
Ignoring it won’t make it go away.
Excellent summation. AI and tech is the wild card in that we have no roadmap for where that will take us. Currently we are in an AI bubble as the hype has not translated into productivity and there is no clear idea when that will happen (or even if it will happen).
Putting AI aside we need to address the failure to adequately tax larger corporations/individuals and the problem of the over accumulation of wealth by an increasingly smaller pool of people. We need to punch a hole in this - not so much a trickle down but a cascade. Accumulated wealth stagnates. Wealth and productivity needs to benefit everyone not just the few for the system to work.
If AI does boost productivity it will potentially be at the cost of needing fewer people and that will exacerbate the issues we face. The benefits of AI will need to be widely shared and not simply translate into increased profits, executive pay and corporate share buyback schemes to keep share prices high. I floated the idea of an AI tax and universal basic income as a means of circulating higher productivity more widely.
A population crunch will come at some point, but how that will impact with AI and tech advances in seventy years time is anyone’s guess. Right now we use immigration to fill our specific labour shortfall and that will continue because no one has a viable alternative that doesn’t involve collapsing our system on its arse. AI may alleviate some of this dependency over the next decade or so, but I have my doubts.
We need to reimagine our way of looking at our problems. The State cannot really find much else to realistically cut and the drive for ‘efficiency’ has left what remains - be it health, judicial, police, or whatever - on various stages of life support. Which leaves growth. I’d take a period of incremental growth right now and anything above that a bonus. I tend to be optimistic on the growth front (Trump, Putin aside), but we do need to have a serious grown up conversation about all of this and dial down the noise and the stupidity of a lot of our political discourse. I like the idea of a renewed social contract similar to the Beveridge Report in 1942 which laid the foundations of the post war State. We need some common ground a majority can coalesce around and build on.