And then what? Globalization has been great for the professional and managerial classes and driven wealth up. But what will happen with 10s of millions of people with no job and no prospect of a job? The opioid epidemic is probably one answer, but one I don't think we should want. Guaranteed minimum income and a life of basic leisure? Some may be OK with that, but I see that as just a recipe for eventual social unrest. As a species, we don't "do nothing" very well.
You only need that if you want to compete on price. But you can also compete on quality, repairability, longevity, trust, etc. Are people ready to pay more for better goods? I don't know.
If the future were more evenly distributed, we would be seeing many, many millions and billions of people moving toward a life with minimal work required to actually produce things and keep services running and people would be free to pursue hobbies, interests, education, and art while having their basic housing and food and health care needs met. We have way more than enough productive capacity to create that world. Until such time as the billionaire class no longer determines the course of human history, we will instead have mass stagnation, unrest, and very quickly we will see mass starvation and violence as monocrop globalized agriculture fails in the face of climate change.
China isn't going to stop it--Xinping is a billionaire who doesn't care about human rights abuses or environmental abuses. They are moving toward green energy purely out of economic viability, but they still have an atrocious record when it comes to things like rare-earth metal mining and storage of hazardous waste.
See here for a recent example. China is still ruled by a handful of elites with deeply centralized hierarchical power, and while they are *more* forward-thinking than the oligarchs that rule the US and Russia, they are still ultimately oligarchs that destroy this planet for profit.
We are probably going to see a bunch of smaller revolutions this century that will culminate in a more equitable, more just world, where the desire to accumulate more resources than you and a thousand of your generations could use in their lifetimes is seen as the cancer it is on both this species and this planet. Let's not forget that we are fully in the seventh mass extinction event right now and that will continue until billionaires are not allowed to exist anymore. We either see a series of revolutions that create new organizations (probably smaller than most nation-states) that work to limit the harm any individual can cause while promoting the public and ecological good, or we all start dying en masse alongside our planet until a handful of assholes get off this planet or until our population dwindles dramatically. Those are the options in front of us. Death, or change.
@chillAtGVC--you are welcome to provide anthropological evidence that contradicts my claims. Until then, your laugh means nothing
