Wharton's Mauro Guillen on the trends that will shape the next decade

In This Article:

Mauro Guillen, Wharton Professor and author of '2030: How Today's Biggest Trends Will Collide and Reshape the Future of Everything', joined The Final Round to discuss his new book and the biggest trends that will be shaping the next decade.

Video Transcript

MYLES UDLAND: Of course, look, 2020's not even over, right? This has certainly been the hardest year of many of our lifetimes, still have about five months to go. But our next guest has just published a book called "2030-- How Today's Biggest Trends Will Collide and Reshape the Future of Everything." And we're joined by Mauro Guillen, Professor at Wharton and the author of that book.

Mauro, great to have you back on the program. So let's start-- I guess I was thinking about this earlier today. When did you begin this project, because I don't think it started last week? And how did you maybe adjust-- as recent developments came in, or the pandemic started, all these kinds of things, how did you adjust, if at all, your thinking around the big themes you hit in this book?

MAURO GUILLEN: So Myles, thank you so much for having me. So I started doing research for this book about seven years ago, because I was making presentations, you know, with executives and my own students at Wharton, and they were always asking, where's the world headed, right, so many things changing. And you know what?

My only regret after publishing the book this week is that instead of 2030, I should have titled the book 2028, because the future is arriving faster. So in a nutshell, this pandemic accelerates most of the trends that I discuss in the book, and I've added a postscript about that, with only two exceptions. And I could tell you about them, if you're curious.

MYLES UDLAND: I'd love to hear the exceptions, because I think that-- I look at, you know, a lot of the outline, and maybe I could guess one before you told me the answer. I wonder if the rise of China, perhaps, is being rethought in the wake of the pandemic? Because I think I look at, you know, sort of the assumption, maybe a 2014, '15-type assumption, China will be the world's largest economy. Biggest middle class will overtake global primacy. I'm wondering if that's maybe something that's-- that's being rethought a little bit here?

MAURO GUILLEN: Well, a little bit. It's not the two that I had in mind. But you see, actually, China will be the largest consumer market in the world very soon, but only for about 12 years or so, because India is going to take over. And the reason is population aging in China, right, India having a much younger population.