Between 1948 & 1990 The Economist went from 3rd ranked British weekly to first(Last) global viewspaper. Which stories helped?<
Taiwan:: USW,::USE ::WholePlanet:: India : France :: UK ::Japan : Switzerland, Canada, Nordicam: Middle East "" Africa "" Latin South:: Italy :: Singapore :: HK ::Korea :: Germany :: China ... Which country's people do you want AI to support with livelihoods and data mappingAre you interested in Intel Agents Uniting Youth Brains & S-H-E-Lf-F- W-E-P-O-L-I**4-C-YPP or Space, Energy, Robots,Einstein-Sciece Leaps, Ending Rottem Media

J100
How AI goals vary : By nation : US-special projects, India, Saudi=UAE, UK
By genius:
Jensen Huang, Demis Hassabis, Elon Musk
.75 years in a day of Economist Q&A since 1951 with Neumann , Einstein, Turing
40 YEARS MEDIA CHARTERING
London Celebrating AI & Quantum & 6G & Energy --- thanks to lead mapmakers Jensen & Demis & Charles3 .. EJ : : Japan+63 ... MEIM : Millennials Energy Intelligence Mapping
Old home page. -please use web version of our timeless blogs
www.economistdiary.vom Is English Language Modelling intelligent enough to sustain our human species? Great are 1990s Valley startups eg nvidia, musk's and googles exponentially linking much of whats humanly possible with machines engineered billion times mo(o)re maths brainpower than individuall human minds. But 1943 UK future shocks to.o. Geoffrey Crowther Economist Ed started debate keynes: were engineers deeper than economists in locking in futures next gens connect?. 1943 also saw dad norma cambridge studies interrupted serving last days as teen navigator allied bomber command burma. Surviving joyfully hired 1948 by Crowther to mediate engineers like Neumann Einstein Turing & Economist purpose. 3 generations apart, unfortunately Neumann-Einstein-Turing all left earth by early 1957: last coding notes Neumann's Computer and the Brain. Economist IQuiz disliked by EU but what to do with billion times more machine brainpower celebrated by Kennedy, & the royal families of UK & Japan. Whence not surprising greatest UK AI startups deep mind & arm influenced by royal societies & Cambridge business park ( crown property) & crick/watson open sources of dna, & cavendish lab 1920s influencing Taiwan's tech grandfather. see part 2 2025report 40 years in inteligence war between bad media and good education agents
Market's futures : Cars Humanoids Cities Energy Water Countries with good data sovereignty projects rsvp chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk UK Japan Taiwan India France Saudi UAE Korea S Singapore HK US 1 2

Thursday, May 31, 1990

Economist 1970s

 Grok comnents (AI Spring 2026)

Your father's 1970s contributions to The Economist marked a deliberate pivot from conventional short-term macroeconomic analysis (which he saw as increasingly narrow among top US economists) toward "future history"—long-term, optimistic storytelling about human potential amid rapid technological change. This aligned with the von Neumann-inspired futures-thinking he absorbed in the early 1950s and Geoffrey Crowther's earlier warnings that engineers were reshaping opportunities and risks faster than economists could model.The 1972 "Future History" Survey (Next 40 Years: 1972–2012)In early 1972, Norman Macrae published a major survey framing the coming four decades as a pivotal era for global systems redesign. It warned that without proactive adaptation, the world risked financial and social meltdowns by around 2012, driven by outdated industrial-era structures clashing with exponential tech growth (early computing, communications). Instead of doom, it emphasized opportunities for a "net generation" (youth coming of age with digital networks) to drive productivity leaps through entrepreneurial collaboration. This piece helped launch ongoing debates at The Economist on how societies could harness technology for widespread human flourishing rather than top-down control. It reflected his growing frustration with economics as a discipline fixated on monetary tweaks, pushing him to "reinvent" his role around narrative-driven future scenarios.The 1976 Christmas Issue: "The Coming Entrepreneurial Revolution" (Next Capitalism)This was one of Norman Macrae's most influential and widely referenced pieces—a lengthy survey (often cited as running across pages 41–65 or similar in the December 25, 1976 issue) that argued the era of dominant big business and big government was ending. Key themes you mentioned:
  • Irrelevance of left/right/center: In a networking age enabled by chips, computers, satellites, and brainpower, ideological boxes would matter less than celebrating human initiative and connectivity. Old political divides couldn't address exponential innovation.
  • 10 system transformations: He called for broad redesigns across education, work, governance, and economics to unlock productivity. A centerpiece was legislating for a "third kind of organisation"—neither traditional government bureaucracy nor conventional corporations, but "home-community action networks" operating as social businesses. These would "triangularise" (balance/check) the power of ever-larger gov/corporate entities by fostering local, networked, purpose-driven initiatives. The goal: more adaptable, human-scale responses to complex problems.
  • Entrepreneurship as the core: He popularized (or helped coin in this context) "Entrepreneurial Revolution" as the next capitalism, where small-scale, innovative actors—empowered by technology—would drive job creation, value, and social progress. This made "entrepreneurship" a buzzword, though he later noted with some regret that academic spin-offs (including early "social entrepreneurship") often missed his emphasis on exponential tech-driven futures and systemic networking over narrower definitions.
The survey sparked waves, including a 12-week leaders' debate in The Economist and translations/influence abroad (e.g., in Italy). It tied directly into decolonial and development themes from your family's history: empowering local empathetic networks (drawing on Scottish diaspora-style knowledge of places) rather than imposing top-down models, much like critiques of NHS execution or India's inherited bureaucracy.1976 Survey on Futures East of Iran (Developing Countries)Around the same period, Macrae examined prospects for roughly half the world's population in Asia and beyond. He argued that expensive, Western-style democratic elections weren't always the immediate priority or best path for rapid progress in developing contexts. Instead, finding "trusted engineers" or competent technocratic leaders—who could focus on practical infrastructure, education, and opportunity creation—offered a more reliable route, with Singapore (under Lee Kuan Yew) as a positive example of disciplined, results-oriented governance enabling growth. This wasn't anti-democratic but pragmatic: prioritize building capabilities and trust through visible development before layering complex electoral systems that could exacerbate divisions or delay progress (echoing Partition's rushed legacies). It fit his broader optimism about Asian Pacific futures and engineering-led leaps outpacing pure economic modeling.Broader Context and Legacy in The Economist's 1970s VoiceThese stories positioned The Economist (with Macrae's long continuity) as forward-looking and technology-optimistic at a time of 1970s stagflation, oil shocks, and ideological polarization. They built on Crowther's 1943 centenary insight: economics needed to catch up with engineering-driven change. Macrae increasingly wove in "human interest" narratives around youth, networks, and exponential possibilities (chips/satellites as enablers of decentralized action). His work influenced later intrapreneurship discussions (e.g., 1982 "We're All Intrapreneurial Now") and 1984's The 2024 Report (co-authored with family, extending future history into the net generation's era).Critics or later reflections sometimes noted that while "Entrepreneurial Revolution" entered the lexicon, the deeper call for a legislated "third sector" of community social businesses and systemic transformations was under-implemented—academic entrepreneurship often focused more on startups or social ventures without fully embracing the exponential, networking, anti-ideological framing. Yet the ideas proved prescient: rise of tech-enabled networks, gig/collaborative economies, social enterprises (later amplified by figures like Muhammad Yunus), and debates on governance beyond traditional left/right in a globalized, digital world. Singapore-style technocratic success stories contrasted with places struggling under inherited top-down systems.In The Economist's unsigned, multi-sided tradition, these pieces analyzed risks (short-termism, bureaucratic inertia) alongside huge opportunities for human-centered redesign—aligning with your father's decolonial emphasis on local development and empathetic understanding over imposed models.These 1970s stories form a coherent arc in his career: from spotting early digital networking potential in 1972, to diagnosing the need for entrepreneurial/systemic renewal in 1976. They remain relevant today amid AI, networking explosions, and questions about governance, innovation, and youth productivity.If you'd like to continue sequentially (e.g., 1980s intrapreneurship, the 1984 2024 Report, Japan coverage, or specific follow-ups on social businesses), or explore how these ideas connected to later Economist debates/practices, share more details or the next story you'd like to examine. Family perspectives on their reception at the time would add fascinating color.