Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. May 17, 2022 · We asked our 2022 cohort for their views on how technology will change the world in the next five years. From maturing of advanced technologies such as Web3 and quantum, to managing flexible grids and on-demand manufacturing, here are their predictions for our near-term future.

  2. Jan 12, 2024 · 1. Israel and its neighbors. 2. Conflict over Taiwan. 3. A post-Putin era. 4. The trajectory of US power. 5. Faith in international institutions. 6. An ungoverned nuclear age. 7. Ukraine’s future. 8. The threat of climate change. 9. The age of AI. 10. A pessimistic global outlook.

  3. Sep 8, 2020 · Big demographic, economic and technological changes are coming — from an aging population in the U.S. and the rise of sub-Saharan Africa as a compelling middle-class market to automation causing “technological unemployment,” according to Wharton management professor Mauro Guillen.

  4. Dec 21, 2021 · So what lies ahead? Well into the 2020s, COVID-19 will cast a long shadow over communities, workplaces, markets, battlefields, and negotiating rooms. But even as the centrifugal forces driving the world away from multilateralism and toward multipolarity accelerate, the future is not fixed. We humans have agency in shaping it.

  5. People also ask

  6. Jan 9, 2023 · 1. Potential Russian collapse. 2. New nuclear powers. 3. Conflict over Taiwan. 4. US-Chinese decoupling. 5. Future American power. 6. Peak carbon emissions. 7. Pandemics and economic crises. 8. Democracy vs. autocracy. 9. Democracy’s dangerous decade. 10. Global security architecture. Prepare for Russia’s coming crack-up.

  7. Feb 9, 2023 · Audio. Globalization is here to stay. Lucia Rahilly: Pundits and other public figures have wrongly predicted the demise of globalization for what seems like years. Now, given the war in Ukraine and other disruptions, many are once again sounding its death knell. What does this new MGI research tell us about the fate of globalization?

  8. Oct 26, 2022 · Humans will move, too. The I.P.C.C. estimates that more than three billion people live today in places “highly vulnerable” to climate change. How many will move? How many will adapt? How many...