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April 25, 2013
Reasons for optimism in today's world
Editor's note: Fareed Zakaria recently delivered the commencement address at Harvard. While the audience was
graduates, the message could apply to a great many of us, so we've reprinted a modified version below.
By Fatted Zakaria
The best commencement speech I ever read was by the humorist Art
i
Buchwald. He was brief, saying simply, "Remember, we are leaving
you a perfect world. Don't screw it up."
You are not going to hear that message much these days. Instead, you're
likely to hear that we are living through grim economic times, that the
graduates are entering the slowest recovery since the Great Depression.
The worries are not just economic. Ever since 9/11, we have lived in an
age of terror, and our lives remain altered by the fears of future attacks
and a future of new threats and dangers. Then there are larger concerns that you hear about: The
Earth is warming; we're running out of water and other vital resources; we have a billion people
on the globe trapped in terrible poverty.
So, I want to sketch out for you, perhaps with a little bit of historical context, the world as I see
it.
The world we live in is, first of all, at peace — profoundly at peace. The richest countries of the
world are not in geopolitical competition with one another, fighting wars, proxy wars, or even
engaging in arms races or "cold wars."
This is a historical rarity. You would have to go back hundreds of years to find a similar period
of great power peace. I know that you watch a bomb going off in Afghanistan or hear of a terror
plot in this country and think we live in dangerous times. But here is the data. The number of
people who have died as a result of war, civil war, and, yes, terrorism, is down 50 percent this
decade from the 1990s. It is down 75 percent from the preceding five decades, the decades of the
Cold War, and it is, of course, down 99 percent from the decade before that, which is World War
II. Harvard professor Steven Pinker says that we are living in the most peaceful times in human
history.
The political stability we have experienced has allowed the creation of a single global economic
system, in which countries around the world are participating and flourishing. In 1980, the
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number of countries that were growing at 4 percent a year — robust growth — was around 60.
By 2007, it had doubled. Even now, after the financial crisis, that number is more than 80. Even
in the current period of slow growth, keep in mind that the global economy as a whole will grow
10 to 20 percent faster this decade than it did a decade ago, 60 percent faster than it did two
decades ago, and five times as fast as it did three decades ago.
The result: The United Nations estimates that poverty has been reduced more in the past 50 years
than in the previous 500 years. And much of that reduction has taken place in the last 20 years.
The average Chinese person is 10 times richer than he or she was 50 years ago — and lives for
25 years longer. Life expectancy across the world has risen dramatically. We gain five hours of
life expectancy every day — without even exercising! A third of all the babies born in the
developed world this year will live to be 100.
All this is because of rising standards of living, hygiene, and, of course, medicine. Atul
Gawande, a Harvard professor who is also a practicing surgeon, and who also writes about
medicine for The New Yorker, writes about a 19th century operation in which the surgeon was
trying to amputate his patient's leg. He succeeded — at that — but accidentally amputated his
assistant's finger as well. Both died of sepsis, and an onlooker died of shock. It is the only
known medical procedure to have a 300 percent fatality rate. We've come a long way.
To understand the astonishing age of progress we are living in, just look at the cellphones in your
pockets. Your cellphones have more computing power than the Apollo space capsule. That
capsule couldn't even Tweet! So just imagine the opportunities that lie ahead. Moore's Law —
that computing power doubles every 18 months while costs halve — may be slowing down in the
world of computers, but it is accelerating in other fields. The human genome is being sequenced
at a pace faster than Moore's Law. A "Third Industrial Revolution," involving material science
and the customization of manufacturing, is yet in its infancy. And all these fields are beginning
to intersect and produce new opportunities that we cannot really foresee.
The good news goes on. Look at the number of college graduates globally. It has risen fourfold
in the last four decades for men, but it has risen sevenfold for women. I believe that the
empowerment of women, whether in a village in Africa or a boardroom in America, is good for
the world. If you are wondering whether women are in fact smarter than men, the evidence now
is overwhelming: yes. My favorite example of this is a study done over the last 25 years in which
it found that female representatives in the House of Congress were able to bring back $49 million
more in federal grants than their male counterparts. So it turns out women are better than men
even at pork-barrel spending. We can look forward to a world enriched and ennobled by
women's voices.
What it means for the U.S.
Now you might say, "This is all wonderful for the world at large, but what does this mean for
America?' Well, for America and for most places, peace and broader prosperity — "the rise of
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the rest" — means more opportunities. I remind you that this is a country that still has the largest
and most dynamic economy in the world, that dominates the age of technology, that hosts
hundreds of the world's greatest companies, that houses its largest, deepest capital markets, and
that has almost all of the world's greatest universities. There is no equivalent of Harvard in
China or India, nor will there be one for decades, perhaps longer.
The United States is also a vital society. It is the only country in the industrialized world that is
demographically vibrant. We add 3,000,000 people to the country every year. That itself is a
powerful life force, and it is made stronger by the fact that so many of these people are
immigrants. They — I should say we — come to this country with aspirations, with hunger, with
drive, with determination, and with a fierce love for America. By 2050, America will have a
better demographic profile than China. This country has its problems, but I would rather have
America's problems than most any other place in the world.
When I tell you that we live in an age of progress, I am not urging complacency — far from it.
We have had daunting challenges over the last 100 years: a depression, two world wars, a Cold
War, 9/11 and global economic crisis. But we have overcome them by our response. Human
action and human achievement have managed to tackle terrible problems.
We forget our successes. In 2009, the H1N1 virus broke out in Mexico. Now, if you looked back
at the trajectory of these kinds of viruses, it is quite conceivable this one would have spread like
the Asian flu in 1957 or 1968, in which 4,000,000 people died. But this time, the Mexican health
authorities identified the problem early, shared the information with the World Health
Organization, learned best practices fast, tracked down where the outbreak began, quarantined
people and vaccinated others. The country went on a full-scale alert, banning any large
gatherings. In a Catholic country, you couldn't go to church for three Sundays. Perhaps more
importantly, you couldn't go to soccer matches either. The result was that the virus was
contained, to the point where, three months later, people wondered what the big fuss was and
asked if we had all overreacted. We didn't overreact; we reacted, we responded, and we solved
the problem.
There are other examples. In the 12 months following the economic peak in 2008, industrial
production fell by as much as it did in the first year of the depression. Equity prices and global
trade fell more. Yet this time, no Great Depression followed. Why? Because of the coordinated
actions of governments around the world. 9/11 did not usher in an age of terrorism, with al-
Qaeda going from strength to strength. Why? Because countries cooperated in fighting them and
other terror groups, with considerable success. When we can come together, when we cooperate,
when we put aside petty differences, the results are astounding.
So, when we look at the problems we face — economic crises, terrorism, climate change,
resource scarcity — keep in mind that these problems are real, but also that the human reaction
and response to them will also be real. We can more easily map out the big problem than the
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thousands of individual actions governments, firms, organizations, and people will take that will
constitute the solution.
In a sense, I'm betting on the graduates. I believe that your actions will have consequences. Your
efforts will make a difference.
I know I am expected to provide some advice at a commencement. Should you go into
nanotechnology or bioengineering? What are the industries of the future? Honestly, I have no
idea. But one thing I do know is that human beings will reward and honor those talents of heart
and mind they have always honored for thousands of years: intelligence, hard work, discipline,
courage, loyalty and, perhaps above all, love and a generosity of spirit. Those are the qualities
that, at the end of the day, make you live a great life, one that is rewarded by the outside world,
and a good life, one that is rewarded only by those who know you best. These are the virtues that
people honor, that they built statues for 5,000 years ago. Well, nobody builds statues anymore.
They build weird, modernist sculptures with strange pieces of metal falling off of them, but you
get my idea. Trust yourself; you know what you should do. You know the kind of life you should
live. You don't need an ethics course to know what you shouldn't do. Just trust in your instincts,
be true to them, and you will make for yourself a great and a good life. And, in doing so, you
will change the world.
At my age I don't feel competent to give you much advice, but I will give you one last piece of
wisdom that comes with age. For all of you who are graduating students or, really, anyone who is
still young, trust me. You cannot possibly understand the love that your parents have for you
until you have children of your own. Once you have your own kids, their strange behavior will
suddenly make sense. But don't wait that long. On this day of all days, give them a hug, and tell
them that you love them.
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