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Conor English: " stuff happens - lets get on with it" |
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Conor English: " stuff happens - lets get on with it"
Stuff Happens – Let’s Get On
with It
If we look back over the last half century
no-one predicted the discovery of penicillin. This has had
a dramatic, positive impact on our population growth.
No-one predicted the huge inflation of the 1970s after the
Vietnam War or the fall of communism in the 1980s.
September 11 and the subsequent Global Financial Crisis
(“GFC”) were unpredicted events, the response to which
has reshaped global geo-politics. So what are just a few
things we need to look out for going forward?
Volatility: According to Morgan Stanley
executive director, Arnaud Mares, in reference to government
debt “The question is not whether they will renege on
their promises, but rather upon which of their promises they
will renege, and what form this default will take.” If
this prediction of global governments default on debt proves
to be correct then our financial markets will be buffeted
even more than they were by the GFC with inflation and
energy costs also adversely effected. Globally,
government’s response to the crisis has already seen
significantly increased volatility. With publicly acceptable
solutions difficult, there is no question that volatility -
both economic and political - is here to stay. We need to
adapt to a far more volatile world and focus much more on
risk management, in both our personal and business lives.
Shift from West to East: Those
economies who have over indulged in debt over the last
couple of decades simply have to take a drop in standard of
living. Those that lived within their means are growing. As
a result of this, we are seeing a massive shift of power
from West to East as empires decline and others rise. China
is moving back its preeminent global position that it gave
up a few centuries ago, followed by India. And with a large
emerging middle class, there is a big shift from starch to
protein, so in that the trend is our friend. So how are we
adapting our education and research systems to this
trend?
Demographic Changes: These are
driven by three key issues – globally more people, more
people living much longer, and for some - more mobility. The
metrics are phenomenal. Within and between countries there
are significant changes as some populations age and decline
while others grow. Along with ethnic and significant family
structure changes, demographics will impact significantly
both the demand and supply side of economies. For us it
means we have to compete for talent and skills, to retain
our youth, and to adapt our export product and service
offering to a predictable changing human makeup.
Ideological Change: We seem to be moving from
a global division on the basis of “democracy vs.
communism” or “left vs. right” to one more based
around religion or other religious type movements, as people
search for meaning in different ways. Coupled with
demographic change, we need to adapt our strategy to reflect
changing values and preferences. The discussion is
moving.
The unpredictable: Looking
forward, there may be an unpredicted war , assassination or
terrorist attack that will again change the course of
history as the 28 June 1914 assignation of Archduke Franz
Ferdinand of Austria, and September 11 USA attack did.
There will likely be a significant disease, either human
or animal – just as we have had AIDS and bird flu. There
will continue to be some very significant weather events –
just because there always has been for a few million years
now - the weather is the weather, not some innate object
that doesn’t change shape, or that you can regulate.
There will be an invention, or a discovery that will
have a profound impact on how we live, work, play and do
business. Broadband, the internet and the digital revolution
have already had an impact. In my view it has seen one of
the most phenomenal changes in centuries - consumers have
gone from being readers to writers. They talk back, they
upload, and they let everyone know what they think.
This makes the supply chain far more responsive and
creates significant opportunities. It allows for more
questioning of scientific and political opinion, challenges
traditional information relationships between parents and
children, and the traditional media and society.
With
multibillion dollar projects such as The Square Kilometre
Array and The Large Hendron Collider, like the space race in
the latter half of last century, you can be sure there will
be spin offs into everyday personal and business life.
People and their attitudes matter. As individuals, an agricultural sector and country we need to focus on solutions, not just the problems. Stuff happens – we need to think much more about risk, manage it, stay positive, be innovative and just get on with the job.
ENDS
Elections: Time Running Out to Take Part in Electoral Commission’s MMP Review
Christchurch: More Green Zoning And More Red Zoning
Budget 2012: Squeezing Every Drop Out Of A Zero Budget
Housing: Social Housing Money Handed Out
Budget 2012: Prescription Charges Help Fund Health
Court of Appeal: Govt Should Pay Family Caregivers
Warm Up: Insulation programme reaches 150,000 houses
Police: 120 Positions Axed In Fine Tuning
Water: Call For Quality Bottom Lines
MFaT: Cuts Scaled Back, Embassies Closed
Budget 2012: Education – Larger Classes For More Money
Industrial Relations: New Laws Proposed
