Summary of "Abhigya Predicts - Emerging New World Order: Wars, Leaders, Economies & India- in 2030."
Overview
- The interview revisits Indian astrologer Abhigya’s past forecasts (he claims early calls on COVID-19, the Russia–Ukraine war, Hamas–Israel, and India–Pakistan tension) and asks him to project global and Indian trajectories through 2030 and beyond.
- Abhigya frames recent change as a deep civilizational pivot that began in 2020, driven by major planetary conjunctions (notably Jupiter–Saturn alignments) that reshape mass consciousness, increasing fear, insecurity and a propensity toward conflict.
Abhigya views current decades as a pivot in mass consciousness driven by planetary cycles; these cycles, he argues, mediate when and how long‑stored social consequences manifest.
Conflict forecasts and timelines
- Escalation and waves:
- He expects continuing escalation of regional wars and a trend toward larger, multi‑front global conflict.
- Two main waves are forecast: a fragmented, widening phase around 2029–2032, and a more concerted (but not WWII‑scale) phase around 2039–2041.
- Short‑term (next few years from interview):
- Another significant conflict may arrive within about five years; 2026 is flagged as likely for new serious conflicts.
- Russia–Ukraine is unlikely to fully end soon—temporary armistices are possible around 2027–2028, with fighting continuing on other fronts.
- Geographic focus:
- Europe will remain a theater, but focus is expected to shift eastward — the South China Sea and eastern Asia likely to involve more external players.
- Conflicts are predicted to be fragmented across regions rather than a single unified global war.
- Nuclear war outlook:
- He is confident a full nuclear exchange is unlikely in this decade, citing a broader 60‑year astrological cycle (samvatsara) that suggests relative restraint through about 2033.
Geopolitical power shifts
- Western decline:
- The roughly 400‑year Western/European dominance cycle is said to have ended around 2020.
- Western power and prosperity are expected to reduce over coming decades. U.S. influence should remain strong for ~20 years but decline more rapidly after about 2033; currency instability is flagged to begin around that time.
- China:
- Expected to continue rising, consolidate influence, and likely occupy the top global slot within ~20 years.
- Leadership changes are anticipated around 2029 and political turbulence near 2040, but not total collapse.
- India:
- Projects India to ascend strongly over the long term and to reach a top economic slot (by PPP/GDP measures) around the 2050s–2060s.
- A China–India duopoly is expected to dominate much of the mid‑to‑late 21st century.
India‑specific analysis
- 2020 as inflection:
- 2020 marked an “uncoiling” of suppressed economic energy for India; capital inflows, improving civic standards and rising prosperity are expected to accelerate.
- Timeframe for improvement:
- Significant per‑person improvement will take decades. Some structural benefits may materialize faster via technology, but a full civilizational peak analogous to Europe’s historical rise could take many decades (he suggests major gains over 100+ years, with noticeable acceleration this century).
- Internal tensions:
- He foresees political friction and a period of internal unrest around 2040 as prosperity and capital spur disputes over distribution and governance.
- These tensions are described as painful but ultimately catalytic for reform; civic behavior (hygiene, trust, civic sense) is emphasized as crucial for sustaining growth.
- Regional relations:
- India–China relations are likely to become more economically cooperative over the next two decades, with symbiotic ties reducing full‑scale war risk.
- Relations with Pakistan and Bangladesh may worsen short‑term but could improve generationally; Bangladesh and parts of Nepal may see earlier gains.
Economy, markets and assets
- Asset outlook:
- Gold, silver and many assets are at historic highs; Abhigya expects continued rise for the next ~5 years from the interview date, with possible corrections.
- He flags potential meaningful currency instability beginning ~2033–2036 that will affect asset prices.
- Gold specifics:
- Viewed as a long‑term safe haven—likely to rise overall, though intermittent falls are possible (he references historical extreme corrections of 20–50%).
- He warns of a meaningful correction around 2033–2034 before gold resumes an upward trend as currencies destabilize.
- Broader economy:
- Military rearmament and security spending are expected to rise globally (e.g., Japan, Germany), influencing fiscal positions.
- India’s economy is anticipated to grow rapidly, but distributed gains will depend on governance and social factors.
Environment, technology and social trends
- Natural calamities:
- He anticipates significant natural events this century, including the possibility of a very large volcanic eruption (Krakatoa‑scale) possibly decades out (mentions ~2040 as a candidate window).
- Climate and ecological fallout related to human actions and warfare are also highlighted.
- Food security:
- Concerns are raised about food‑security stresses around 2040; he warns of potential famine‑scale disruptions if adverse scenarios unfold.
- Technology:
- Predicts AI will transform the global economy, potentially controlling or decisively shaping livelihoods — he suggests AI may impact roughly 70% of the global economy in coming decades.
- Karmic/astrological framing:
- Across his analysis he attributes large social cycles to the interaction of collective karma and planetary configurations—astrology is presented as the mechanism that times when stored social consequences surface.
Social commentary and recommendations
- Civic reform:
- Strong call for better hygiene, civic behavior, and social trust in India; these are framed as prerequisites for sustained growth and as examples for neighbors.
- Governance:
- Argues for firmer, reform‑oriented governance (avoiding vote‑bank paralysis); notes that wartime pressure often forces reforms but stresses that proactive reform is preferable.
- Generational change:
- Expects younger generations in Pakistan, Bangladesh and elsewhere to progressively abandon radical ideologies, improving regional dynamics over one–two generations.
Uncertainties and caveats
- Abhigya frames these projections as astrological analyses with historical parallels and probabilistic windows.
- He acknowledges uncertainties such as lack of exact birth data for leaders and the dependence of timelines on evolving geopolitical choices, technological shocks, and unforeseen events.
Presenters / Contributors
- Abhigya — Indian astrologer, principal analyst/interviewee
- Krishna — interviewer/host
Category
News and Commentary
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