Transcript Slide 1

Updates on State of the Future
and the Millennium Project
for the
Harvard Business School
Alumni/DC Area
Jerome C. Glenn
Director, The Millennium Project
The Future will be more complex
and change more rapidly…
…than most people think
• The factors that made such changes are
changing faster now, than 25 years ago
• Therefore, the next 25 years should make
the speed of change over the last 25 years
seem slow
• Hence, we need to upgrade futures
assessment and strategy capacities
The Millennium Project is Global...
• Geographically
• Institutionally
• Disciplinarily
• Research
focus
UN
Universities
Organizations
Millennium
Project Governments
Corporations
NGOs
… May become a TransInstitution
Millennium Project Nodes...
are groups of individuals and institutions that connect global and local
views in:
Nodes identify participants, translate questionnaires and reports, and conduct
interviews, special research, workshops, symposiums, and advanced training.
Previous and Current Sponsors
Corporations
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Applied Materials
Deloitte & Touche LLP
Ford Motor Company
General Motors
Hershey Company
Hughes Space and
Communications
Monsanto Company
Motorola Corporation
Pioneer Hi-Bred International
Shell International
Foundations/NGOs
• Alan F. Kay & Hazel Henderson
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Foundation for Social Innovation
Amana-Kay (Brazil)
Foundation for the Future (USA)
Rockefeller Foundation
Government Organizations
• Azerbaijan – Min. of Communications
• Dubai – Knowledge/Human DevAuthority
• South Korea – Ministry of Education
• South Korea – Ministry of Budget
• Kuwait Oil Company
• Kuwait Petroleum Corporation
• U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
• U.S. Army Environmental Policy Inst.
• U.S. Department of Energy
• U.S. Woodrow Wilson Center
UN & Related Organizations
• United Nations University
• UNESCO
• UNDP
• World Bank
Millennium Project
Global Challenges Assessment
1996-97
15 Issues
182 Developments
with
131 Actions
&
1999-2009
Global Challenges
15 Challenges
with
Distilled Into
213 Actions
1998-99
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General description
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Regional views

Actions

Indicators
1997-98
15 Opportunities
180 Developments
with
213 Actions
2000-2009
State of the Future Index (SOFI)
National SOFIs
SOFI Real Time Delphi
15 Global Challenges–the Agenda today
1
How
cancan
sustainable
development
How
sustainable development
be be
achieved
for
all?
achieved
for
all?
2
How
can
have
sufficient
How
caneveryone
everyone have
sufficient
clean
waterwithout
without conflict?
clean
water
conflict?
15
How
can
ethical
How
can
ethical considerations
considerations
3
How can
population
growth
and
How
can
population
growth
and
become
moreroutinely
routinely
become
more
resources
be
brought
into
balance?
resources be brought into balance?
incorporatedinto
into global
decisions?
incorporated
global
decisions?
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14
How
can
democracy
How
cangenuine
genuine democracy
How
can
and
How
canscientific
scientific and
emergefrom
from authoritarian
emerge
authoritarian
technological
technological breakthroughs
breakthroughs be be
regimes?
accelerated
to
improve
the
regimes?
accelerated to improve the
human condition?
5
How
Howcan
can policymaking
policymaking be be
human condition?
13
mademore
more sensitive
to to
How
can
energy
made
sensitive
How
cangrowing
growing energy
global
long-term
demandsbe
bemet
met safely
and
demands
safely
and
global long-term
perspectives?
efficiently?
efficiently?
perspectives?
How
can transnational
6
12 How can transnational
How
can
How
canthe
the global
global
organized
crime networks be
convergence of
of information
organized crime networks be
convergence
information
stopped
from
becoming
more
and communications
stopped
from
becoming more
and communications
technologies work for
powerful
and
sophisticated
powerful
and
sophisticated
technologies
work for
everyone?
global
enterprises?
global
enterprises?
everyone?
7How
11
How
thechanging
changing
ethical
market
Howcan
can the
How can
can ethical
market
status
women
improve
statusof
of women
improve
economies be
encouraged
to
economies
be
encouraged
to
the
human
condition?
help
reduce
the
gap
between
the human condition?
help reduce the gap
rich and poor?
How
can
shared
values
and
new
10 How
between rich and poor?
can shared values and new
8
thethreat
threat
of new
Howcan
can the
of new
and and
security
strategies
reduce
ethnic How
security
strategies reduce
ethnic
reemerging
diseases
and
immune
conflicts,
terrorism, and
the
useuse
of of
reemerging diseases and immune
conflicts,
terrorism,
and
the
microorganisms be reduced?
weapons
of
mass
destruction?
microorganisms
be reduced?
weapons of mass destruction?
How
can
the
capacity
to
decide
be
9 How can the capacity to decide be
improved
thenature
nature
of work
improvedas
as the
of work
and and
institutions change?
change?
institutions
Some updates:
• There are more Internet users in China than people in the USA
• March 2009 an asteroid missed the Earth by 48,000 miles, 80%
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closer to the earth than the moon. None knew it was coming.
US-China meetings on Global Climate Change collaboration (Apollolike goal and NASA-line Energy-Climate Change Agency)
China could pass US Economy by 2030, assuming it does not break
up (water, income gaps, energy, separatist Muslim region).
World pop – 6.78 billion (June 2009) and growing at 1.14% per year
(1.16% last year); hi, mid, low projections for 2050 - 10.5, 9.2, 8.0
billion, and than falls without longevity breakthroughs; Industrial
countries fertility rates UP from 1.35 projected in 2006 to 1.64
IMF: the world economy grew 5.2% in 2007, 3.4% in 2008, and is
expected to only grow 0.5% in 2009 and 3% in 2010.
7% annual growth in developing countries over past 5 years, to drop
to 3% for 2009 – still 3 billion people living on $2 or less per day;
The concept of Resilience increasing—the capacity to anticipate,
Five Key Geopolitical Energy Issues
1. G-2 Global Climate Change Apollo-like goal and
2.
3.
4.
5.
program vs. Political instability of China
Success or failure of Cap & Trade and CCS on a
scale to prevent environmental backlash
Political Islam peaceful transition vs. dirty
bombs and SIMAD (bioweapon)
Conversion to electric vehicles with Bolivian-led
Lithium Cartel and
Global wireless transmission system and Japanled Space Solar Power Cartel
Delphi Some (35) Economic Elements
Emerging over the next 20 years You are invited! Deadline: May 22nd
• Invitation: http://www.millennium-project.org and
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select What’s New
You can access the questionnaire at
www.realtimedelphi.org and register on the left
side of the front page.
After entering your email address, you will be
asked for the access code. The code is: fin09
Emerging Elements of Global
Economic System to improve the
human condition over by 2030
• Ethics in most work relations and economic exchanges.
• New GDP definitions that include all forms of national wealth: e.g.,
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energy, materials, ecosystems, social and human capital.
Simultaneous knowing – time lags changed or eliminated in information
dissemination with much greater transparency.
Global commons tax – (bees necessary for agriculture, etc.) supported
by international tax agreements on currency trading & int’l travel.
Value of natural resources used in production included in prices
Women’s political-economic roles essentially on par with men (including
recognition that women are penalized more than men in an economic
crisis).
Collective intelligence - global commons for the knowledge economy
Non-ownership, as distinct from private ownership or collective/state
ownership. A current example is open source software.
Most Controversial Elements of the
Emerging Global Economic System
(bimodal distribution)
• Global mechanisms for automatic financial stabilization; e.g.,
international convention for automated system (expert software) to
make financial policy changes as economic conditions change,
conducted initially in larger economic countries.
• Artificial life (as computers were a key element in the information
economy, so too artificial life might be a key to the next economy)
• Artificial economies emerging in virtual worlds (e.g. Second Life),
which include both mirror images of our real world economy and a
far richer palette of values and metaphors driving these virtual
economies.
• Single global currency
Collective Intelligence
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Is an emergent property
from synergies among
• data/info/knowledge
• software/hardware
• experts
that continually learns from feedback
to produce (nearly) just in time
knowledge for better decisions
than these elements acting alone.
Wikipedia is an early example. GENIS is
another.
For further information
Jerome C. Glenn
The Millennium Project
4421 Garrison Street, NW,
Washington, D.C. 20016 USA
+1-202-686-5179 phone/fax
[email protected]
WEB 1.0 www.StateoftheFuture.org
WEB 2.0 www.mpcollab.org
Second Life MP site under construction