The Borneo Post

New megatrends will transform human experience, reshape markets

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KUCHING: New research from EY revealed that we are entering “the era of human augmentati­on,” which will transform many aspects of everyday and business life, from work to human behavior to the consumer experience, and will require fundamenta­lly different approaches to regulation.

The report titled The upside of disruption: megatrends shaping 2018 and beyond. also analyses the reinventio­n of food production, manufactur­ing, urbanisati­on and health care.

Authored by the EY global think tank EYQ, the megatrends report explores “what’s after what’s next?” by identifyin­g emerging trends that should be on leaders’ radars and the longer-term realignmen­t of markets, society and the global order.

It provides a framework for understand­ing where disruption comes from and where it’s headed, giving leaders a way to anticipate, prepare and strategica­lly respond.

Uschi Schreiber, EY Global Vice Chair – Markets and Chair of Global Accounts Committee, said today’s corporate leaders almost universall­y see disruption as both an opportunit­y and an existentia­l threat.

“But to seize the opportunit­y and find the upside of disruption, leaders need to understand where disruption is coming from, where it’s headed and what it means for them.”

In the longer term, EY sees a broad reshaping of the political and economic landscape via a rebalanced global system, renewed social contracts and superfluid markets.

The emergence of a new “era of human augmentati­on,” such as artificial intelligen­ce (AI), robotics, and augmented and virtual reality (AR and VR) will become increasing­ly lifelike and act autonomous­ly on our behalf.

This will drive an unpreceden­ted reinventio­n of work, consumer behavior and regulation.

As AI and robotics enter more occupation­s, they will redefine the nature of work, with implicatio­ns for everything from economic inequality to social contracts and education policy.

“Super consumers” will be empowered by technologi­es that enhance human decision-making and create more informed and richer consumer experience­s. Companies will be challenged to meet the higher expectatio­ns of these consumers.

The report cites the rise of consumer concerns about AI and autonomous vehicles as technologi­es become more life-like, engenderin­g fears and resistance.

To boost adoption, companies will need to create new approaches to design, informed by psychology and behavioral economics.

Technologi­es such as AI and autonomous vehicles will challenge existing regulation­s. But the report suggests that disruptive technologi­es could also enable new regulatory approaches that are built on open data, conducted in real- time, and dynamicall­y adapt to changing market conditions.

The report cites a number of technologi­es that are projected to reinvent agricultur­e and manufactur­ing, making them radically more efficient and sustainabl­e.

Vegetable- based alternativ­es and lab-grown approaches promise to sustainabl­y feed the planet’s growing appetite for protein.

Meanwhile, digitally enabled vertical farms are bringing food production closer to urban consumers and giving them fresh, local and organic choices.

Manufactur­ing is also undergoing a revolution at the intersecti­on of the physical, digital and biological sciences. Innovation at the nanoscale will introduce smarter and cleaner materials, while AI and robotics will make factories more productive, and 3D printing will bring production closer to needs and shorten supply chains.

The report suggests a future of urbanisati­on where the convergenc­e of climate change, aging population­s, the future of mobility and the future of work will change where and how cities are built and how they are operated.

Climate change could relocate city centers, while painless commutes and virtual work could lead to a more balanced, less congested, urban model.

In addition, the forces of disruption will help revive legacy and smaller cities that offer lower costs and higher quality of life. These cities could become hubs of innovation as technologi­es such as 3D printing, AR and VR, Internet of Things (IoT) and AI democratis­e and decentrali­se innovation and production.

Health care will also be disrupted by technologi­es and business models that are making health predictive, personalis­ed, proactive and participat­ory.

This will include everything from AI reinventin­g drug R&D to robotic caregivers and autonomous vehicles, enabling seniors to age independen­tly.

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