Post
Topic
Board Economics
Re: The Future of the Global Economy
by
slapper
on 02/07/2025, 17:16:00 UTC
I will say it is a revolution, it is not just something like a replacement. Yeah, AI or Robot systems could contribute global economy nearly $19 trillion by 2030-35. Job disruption may occur near round 85 million, but keep in mind nearly 97 million new ones will head up alongside them.

You know, Quantum computing is real now, no more scifi. Maybe very soon we will see it being used for most business purposes. And what about blockchain? Did you hear about RWAs? ? If not, then Google it. This transparent supply chain could unlock 100 trillion in value.

Could you imagine a day will come when farmer track everything of food delivery over blockchain, AI or automation optimizing yield, a stable UBI protects the transition. Dude, it is not 2k50 dream, it is becoming 2035‑40 reality. Want to know why I'm so confident? its geopolitical instability and inflation rate, that pushes us toward such tech fixes, dude.

A revolution that would ultimately give more power to governments and corporations alike. It will mark the rise of a full-fledged surveillance/totalitarian state. Our life would be more convenient (faster payments, cost-efficiency, etc), but at the cost of limited privacy (if any) and freedom. That's how the future of the global economy will look like. And yes, geopolitical instability and high inflation rates will enable extraordinary advances in tech.

With AI, Robotics, Quantum Computing, and Blockchain, the need for humans would be completely replaced. Well, not 100% because some tasks can only be performed by humans. Perhaps, the only relevant jobs in the future would be Programmers/Developers, and AI/Computer Engineers. Just my two sats. Grin
There are not enough people who want to discuss the paradox at the core of this: yes, we will have faster payments, hyper-optimized supply chains, perhaps even smart cities, but at the cost of our own unpredictability. Surveillance states do not come out of the blue. They creep in when everyone is busy with the next big upgrade. The irony is, the smoother tech becomes, the more our data becomes the only thing left that’s valuable, except that it is owned and sold by another party