was thinking about long term trends recently / what's coming up for the 21st century... thought I'd throw out a few possibilities... discussion anyone?
-dollar will eventually lose its hegemony (over extended period of time) when foreigners decide to stop financing unsustainable debt load
-commodity bull market (even if only brief) strong possibility when USD divestment hits panic proportions
-potential longer term commodity bull market after coming protectionism issues worked through and panic USD bounceback settles, combination of structurally lower dollar + higher demand from developing countries for metals and agricultural products as construction and discretionary income increase
-order of magnitude shift of manufacturing away from US to developing countries- protectionism backlash will threaten global trade but eventually whimper out, manufacturing will be distributed w/ rich countries moving to high tech / white collar / high end service export centers
-rich world strengths in exporting to developing world: software + expensive machinery + biotech + knowledge based consulting services
-next major equity bull market more likely to show up in China / Asia / Eastern Europe etc - lower price base, more untapped growth potential, less mature industry, lower unresolved debt burden
-mature US companies will see profits stabilize or stagnate as optimal scope and scale are reached (w/exception of those that aggressively develop globalization opportunities)
-US small businesses will increase efficiency through technological cost savings and reach extension- services improve w/ competition keeping prices low
-high end service/knowledge economy will eventually stabilize w/ renewed focus on providing localized services to itself
-US equities stagnate as bulk of capital circulation shifts to smaller, non-public entities (w/ notable exceptions)- large amount of starting capital becomes less relevant to long term success as technology lowers startup barriers and improves scalability
-Software companies morph into utility companies, providing applications on demand for defined periods of consumption, like heating oil or electricity- silicon valley gets sleepy as marketing cycle goes from explosive (move half a million units in first year to cover burn rate) to sedentary (software on demand means no need for huge upfront investment to cover marketing and sunk costs, dull and steady scale increase instead)
-Baby boomers withdraw bulk of investments, spend on healthcare and consumer goods, equities further stagnate to wall street's extreme frustration as interesting stuff continues to happen under the radar screen and overseas
-major clash between boomers and gen Xers as boomers push for government largesse at Xers expense
-age / generation financial concerns become global phenomenon as rich world gets collectively older
-rich world governments experience major revenue crisis as boomers retire and uneducated younger workers unable to fill the tax gap with their lower income jobs... america is the only rich world country not to get progressively older by 2050 due to immigration, but the new lower income jobs just don't provide enough tax base to sate the boomers... wealthy individuals targeted as last resort
-assets flee US and other rich world countries to escape predatory taxation, developing countries with guts to stand up to G8 bullying reap the benefits, huge new debate ignites (responsibility/collectivism vs sovereignty/individualism)
-possible envy fueled backlash against super concentrated pools of capital (i.e. the Wal-Mart family etc.)
-80/20 becomes 95/5 as income disparity widens...lower cost of goods and services paired with lower average incomes nationwide- purchasing power maintained, envy rising as rich begin to look even richer in comparison, $4,000 cars and $400 computers don't soothe the psychological pain
-notion of wars in national interest, and even national interest itself, eventually becomes antiquated
-nationality becomes less and less important as rule of law becomes more prevalent
-at some point in 21st century the world begins to shift and divide along economic lines, wealth congregating in areas like New Zealand and Costa Rica / leaving barren areas behind
-after peaking sometime in 21st century, governments eventually shrink and devolve into primarily local entities with local structure and reach.... OR, if angry embittered populists win, unpleasant Orwell / 1984 type scenario
-dollar will eventually lose its hegemony (over extended period of time) when foreigners decide to stop financing unsustainable debt load
-commodity bull market (even if only brief) strong possibility when USD divestment hits panic proportions
-potential longer term commodity bull market after coming protectionism issues worked through and panic USD bounceback settles, combination of structurally lower dollar + higher demand from developing countries for metals and agricultural products as construction and discretionary income increase
-order of magnitude shift of manufacturing away from US to developing countries- protectionism backlash will threaten global trade but eventually whimper out, manufacturing will be distributed w/ rich countries moving to high tech / white collar / high end service export centers
-rich world strengths in exporting to developing world: software + expensive machinery + biotech + knowledge based consulting services
-next major equity bull market more likely to show up in China / Asia / Eastern Europe etc - lower price base, more untapped growth potential, less mature industry, lower unresolved debt burden
-mature US companies will see profits stabilize or stagnate as optimal scope and scale are reached (w/exception of those that aggressively develop globalization opportunities)
-US small businesses will increase efficiency through technological cost savings and reach extension- services improve w/ competition keeping prices low
-high end service/knowledge economy will eventually stabilize w/ renewed focus on providing localized services to itself
-US equities stagnate as bulk of capital circulation shifts to smaller, non-public entities (w/ notable exceptions)- large amount of starting capital becomes less relevant to long term success as technology lowers startup barriers and improves scalability
-Software companies morph into utility companies, providing applications on demand for defined periods of consumption, like heating oil or electricity- silicon valley gets sleepy as marketing cycle goes from explosive (move half a million units in first year to cover burn rate) to sedentary (software on demand means no need for huge upfront investment to cover marketing and sunk costs, dull and steady scale increase instead)
-Baby boomers withdraw bulk of investments, spend on healthcare and consumer goods, equities further stagnate to wall street's extreme frustration as interesting stuff continues to happen under the radar screen and overseas
-major clash between boomers and gen Xers as boomers push for government largesse at Xers expense
-age / generation financial concerns become global phenomenon as rich world gets collectively older
-rich world governments experience major revenue crisis as boomers retire and uneducated younger workers unable to fill the tax gap with their lower income jobs... america is the only rich world country not to get progressively older by 2050 due to immigration, but the new lower income jobs just don't provide enough tax base to sate the boomers... wealthy individuals targeted as last resort
-assets flee US and other rich world countries to escape predatory taxation, developing countries with guts to stand up to G8 bullying reap the benefits, huge new debate ignites (responsibility/collectivism vs sovereignty/individualism)
-possible envy fueled backlash against super concentrated pools of capital (i.e. the Wal-Mart family etc.)
-80/20 becomes 95/5 as income disparity widens...lower cost of goods and services paired with lower average incomes nationwide- purchasing power maintained, envy rising as rich begin to look even richer in comparison, $4,000 cars and $400 computers don't soothe the psychological pain
-notion of wars in national interest, and even national interest itself, eventually becomes antiquated
-nationality becomes less and less important as rule of law becomes more prevalent
-at some point in 21st century the world begins to shift and divide along economic lines, wealth congregating in areas like New Zealand and Costa Rica / leaving barren areas behind
-after peaking sometime in 21st century, governments eventually shrink and devolve into primarily local entities with local structure and reach.... OR, if angry embittered populists win, unpleasant Orwell / 1984 type scenario
