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: 2) by darkfeline on Friday September 25 2015, @10:37PM
The tower of Babel, the curse of balal, however you look at it language is a bitch.
Thankfully, once you have (properly) learned one language, the second isn't that hard, and subsequent languages only get easier.
In practice, I think people will just start learning more languages, especially English or some pidgin version of it.
This is because the Internet is our Babel's tower [1], and the Internet, if it can be said to be located anywhere, is located in the US. Our tower of Babel was built using English and we cannot escape from that, for better or worse.
[1]: The tower was meant to unite all people, speaking one language.
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