It’s Not The Ageing, It’s The Atomisation
One of the issues that emerging technologies will be used to address is the changing demographic profile of the UK. It is simple enough to say that the Boomers are getting old and there are a lot of us. It is also simple to say that thanks in no small part to emerging technologies, we can expect to live a lot longer–and that more of this extra allotment of life will be in good health.
Some of the technologies covered by Blindside that have foreseeable impact on this include nanotechnology and location-based services, and we can expect to see new services, medicines and government policies created to cope with this phenomenon.
But the ageing of the Boomers is happening in conjunction with another societal phenomenon that is just as important. Think of it as convergence of two demographic trends.
The second trend is the atomisation of social structures, in particular the family unit. Family sizes have gotten smaller. The mobility of the workforce has led to families being separated by larger distances. The same trend has led to fewer personal connections that are local and physical. Remote working means that there are people who really don’t have to get out of the house except to buy groceries–and now, even groceries can be ordered online and delivered to your door. And there are growing numbers of people living in splendid isolation. Let’s call them the ‘isos.’ Those who remember Isaac Asimov’s R. Daneel Olivaw novels will understand quickly.
The numbers affected by these trends will be large (although they may not constitute a majority of the population). The services they will ask for will be technological ennablement for the continuation of this lifestyle. But perhaps the services they (we) will need may in fact be more sociological, in the sense that the UK may be better served if society works to draw the ‘isos’ out of their shell and back into the world.
While people will be pressuring (mostly local) governments to provide better and more services electronically, those governments that see farther may push to provide neighbourhood watch schemes, better community centres and opportunities to volunteer.
Interesting times ahead. Aristotle once wrote that man is a social animal. If he were to visit the UK twenty years down the road, I wonder if he’d change his mind? Of course, he also wrote, “Man, when perfected, is the best of animals; but when isolated he is the worst of all”

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