Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Grim view of global future offered in intelligen­ce report

- By Eric Tucker

WASHINGTON » U.S. intelligen­ce officials are painting a dark picture of the world’s future, writing in a report released Thursday that the coronaviru­s pandemic has deepened economic inequality, strained government resources and fanned nationalis­t sentiments.

Those assessment­s are included in a Global Trends report by the government’s National Intelligen­ce Council. The reports, produced every four years, are designed to help policymake­rs and citizens anticipate the economic, environmen­tal, technologi­cal and demographi­c forces likely to shape the world through the next 20 years.

This year’s report focuses heavily on the impact of the pandemic, calling it the “most significan­t, singular global disruption since World War II, with health, economic, political, and security implicatio­ns that will ripple for years to come.”

Nations in different parts of the world set new records on Thursday for COVID-19 deaths and new infections.

“COVID-19 has shaken long-held assumption­s about resilience and adaptation and created new uncertaint­ies about the economy, governance, geopolitic­s, and technology,” the report says.

The document finds cause for concern in virtually all aspects of life.

It warns, for instance, that the effects of climate change are likely to worsen the problem of food and water insecurity in poor countries and hasten global migration. Though health, education and household prosperity have made historic improvemen­ts in recent decades, that progress will be hard to sustain because of “headwinds” not only from the effects of the pandemic but also aging population­s and “potentiall­y slower economic growth.”

Advances in technology have the potential to address problems including climate change and disease, but can also provoke new tensions, the report says.

“State and nonstate rivals will vie for leadership and dominance in science and technology with potentiall­y cascading risks and implicatio­ns for economic, military, and societal security,” the report says.

The report also warns of eroding trust in government and institutio­ns and of a “trust gap” between the general public and the better informed and educated parts of the population.

People wait in queues outside the office of the Chemists Associatio­n to demand necessary supply of the anti-viral drug Remdesivir, in Pune, India, Thursday, April 8, 2021. India is amid its worst pandemic surge, with over 100,000cases in the past 24hours. And experts concur that the worst is yet to come. Hospitals across the country, particular­ly in western Maharashtr­a state, are starting to get overwhelme­d with patients.

 ?? FELIPE DANA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? In this April 7, 2021, file photo, Mobile Emergency Care Service (SAMU) workers carry an elderly COVID-19patient to an ambulance in Duque de Caxias, Rio de Janeiro state, Brazil. Nations around the world set new records Thursday, April 8, for COVID-19 deaths and new coronaviru­s infections, and the disease surged even in some countries that have kept the virus in check. Brazil became just the third country, after the U.S. and Peru, to report a 24-hour tally of COVID-19deaths exceeding 4,000.
FELIPE DANA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE In this April 7, 2021, file photo, Mobile Emergency Care Service (SAMU) workers carry an elderly COVID-19patient to an ambulance in Duque de Caxias, Rio de Janeiro state, Brazil. Nations around the world set new records Thursday, April 8, for COVID-19 deaths and new coronaviru­s infections, and the disease surged even in some countries that have kept the virus in check. Brazil became just the third country, after the U.S. and Peru, to report a 24-hour tally of COVID-19deaths exceeding 4,000.
 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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