Think of Steve Jobs launching the iPhone in 2007 and then, by 2017, Apple had sold its first billion iPhones,” said Michael Bassett, the Conference Board’s director of research impact and content strategy. “Ten years is not a lot of time - yet it is enough time to make a huge difference that is difficult to accurately predict. The 84-page report offers a compelling glimpse into the risks and rewards ahead for Canada and its largest city. One of the more ambitious efforts is a Conference Board of Canada study titled “ Canada 2030: The Defining Forces Disrupting Business,” which surveyed business leaders on the 10 most meaningful trends dominating boardroom discussions today and then sent its research team deep into each file. But there are some very educated guesses as guideposts for what’s to come. We can’t know precisely which game-changing technology will take hold first. Here’s why: looking beyond 2030, Greater Toronto is forecast to grow all the way to the 10-million mark by 2045, when we will take our place among the world’s most diverse megacities, according to Ontario government projections. It promises to be a transformative decade, perhaps the most consequential 10 years the city has ever known.įrom transit to climate to housing to affordability, the times call for civic ambition with shovels-in-the-ground follow-through unseen in two generations. This time around, Toronto’s growth spurt is projected to unfold into an era of electric vehicles, artificial intelligence, advanced robotics and driverless everything.
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If you thought the last 10 years packed a disruptive wallop, brace yourself: it’s going to happen all over again. Not after the changing of the generational guard, as the last of the Baby Boom retires, passing leadership to younger, more diverse, more digitally dexterous hands. The way we live won’t be the same.īy 2030, even we won’t be the same, not after the arrival of a million new faces, lifting Greater Toronto’s population to eight million.