Since we published Road to 2030 in 2020, the world has changed profoundly. War and a pandemic have disrupted the global economy, while inflation has reshaped the political economy that defined the 1990s and 2000s.
Explore our evolved thinking below.
What began as the Rise of China in 2020 has evolved over the past six years. A more fragmented, politicised global system has led us to reframe this theme as the end of easy globalisation.
Easy globalisation is over: multipolarity, bottlenecks and public dissatisfaction are reshaping the world. For investors, that means old assumptions are less reliable and resilience matters more.
Road to 2030 is very much about the structural horizon. It is squarely focused on identifying multi-year structural tailwinds. The purpose of the research is to develop a medium-term roadmap where we identify themes that run through the global economy on a multi-year horizon.
From an investment perspective, we then assess these themes over two time frames, a structural and a cyclical horizon. We invest in structural tailwinds on a multi-year timescale by accumulating favourable structural allocations when they are cyclically out of favour and reducing those allocations when they are at cyclical peaks.