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This article appeared in the July 22, 2020 edition of the Monitor Daily.

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Why the future of wealth looks very different

Edgar Su/Reuters
People cross a street at the shopping district of Orchard Road as Singapore reopens the economy amid the coronavirus disease outbreak on June 19, 2020.
Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

What does wealth look like? For most of human history, it looked a lot like shiny things that humans pulled from the ground. Wealth was built on natural resources, and if you didn鈥檛 have them, you went to get them elsewhere. This was fuel for colonialism and exploitation.

叠耻迟听聽finds something interesting. Looking forward, wealth looks less like things we take from the ground. In fact, it doesn鈥檛 鈥渓ook鈥 like anything at all because wealth is increasingly built by better thinking. 鈥淎s natural wealth is used up, economies will rely more on human capital,鈥 the article states.

In many ways, natural resources can have a regressive effect. They still generate wealth, but in many countries that leads to vast inequities, with a corrupt ruling class hoarding that wealth. In Congo, for instance, colonialism has gone but its economic spirit lingers.

On the other hand, human capital 鈥 the wealth generated by innovation, education, and opportunity 鈥 has no such effect. Singapore鈥檚 significant wealth, for example, is in its people. Its gross domestic product is under no threat from declining natural resources.

For the world, a shift is underway as economies learn that extraction is not the only 鈥 or even best 鈥 way to grow. The Economist notes: 鈥淔inancial capital tends to accumulate. Natural capital seems destined to do the opposite.鈥


This article appeared in the July 22, 2020 edition of the Monitor Daily.

Read 07/22 edition
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