The Washington Post has an article asking the question "Which languages will dominate the future?" The answer depends on your interests: making money in growth markets; speaking with as many people as possible; speaking only one language while traveling; or learning about culture. As you might imagine, the article concludes
There is no one single language of the future. Instead, language learners will increasingly have to ask themselves about their goals and own motivations before making a decision.
[...] In a recent U.K.-focused report, the British Council, a think tank, identified more than 20 growth markets and their main languages. The report features languages spoken in the so-called BRIC countries — Brazil, Russia, India, China — that are usually perceived as the world's biggest emerging economies, as well as more niche growth markets that are included in lists produced by investment bank Goldman Sachs and services firm Ernst & Young.
"Spanish and Arabic score particularly highly on this indicator," the British Council report concluded for the U.K. However, when taking into account demographic trends until 2050 as laid out by the United Nations, the result is very different.
Hindi, Bengali, Urdu and Indonesian will dominate much of the business world by 2050, followed by Spanish, Portuguese, Arabic and Russian. If you want to get the most money out of your language course, studying one of the languages listed above is probably a safe bet.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 25 2015, @08:45AM
Economics in the end level out. When automated manufacturing gets cheaper, labor will eventually get cheaper too. But due to both getting cheaper, products get cheaper too. However, our central banks will add sufficient amounts of money to the money supply that neither will get cheaper but instead both will get more expensive. We call that inflation.
In the end more humans will probably do other kinds of work than what robots are better at. And our economies will be flooded with cheap and easy to manufacture automated-manufacturing made products (just like today already). The specialized things that require human creativity and ingenuity, the things that are uniquely built, will (just like today already) stay super expensive.
Nothing much will change.