Before the Reset
Part 3: What Comes After the Storm
This is the final piece in a three-part series. Part 1 was about why the current global turbulence is a reset, not a collapse. Part 2 was about which industries are feeling the ripple effects and how. This one is about what comes next, and why I am, genuinely and honestly, optimistic.
After my bypass surgery in 2012, there was a moment, a few weeks into recovery, that I remember very clearly. I was sitting outside in the early morning, having my chai, and I noticed that everything felt sharper; the air, the light, the sounds. Not because anything had changed around me, but because I had been given a second look at everything, and I was no longer taking it for granted.
The surgery had been frightening. The recovery had been hard. But what came after was, in many ways, a better version of how I had been living before.
I think about that morning a lot as I write this final piece, because if my first two articles were about the storm and the damage it is doing, this one is about what I believe comes next, and what I believe is this: what comes next is genuinely exciting.
First; Let Us Be Honest About What is Being Left Behind
Every reset leaves something behind. That is the whole point. The system that is unwinding was built on cheap money, cheap energy, frictionless globalisation, and the assumption that the same handful of countries would set the rules for everyone else indefinitely. It produced enormous wealth, and also enormous inequality, enormous fragility, and enormous resentment.
The reset is not comfortable, but comfort was, in many cases, built on foundations that were never as solid as they appeared.
What is being left behind is the illusion that the world could remain this unequal, this fragile, and this concentrated, and never have to reckon with the consequences.
What is being built in its place is messier. It is more multipolar, more distributed, more contested. But it is also, and I genuinely believe this, more honest, and eventually, more durable.
The storm did not break the system. It revealed which parts of it were already broken.
The New World Order is Not One Order…it is Many
One of the most significant shifts I am watching is the move from a unipolar world, centred on US dollar dominance and Western-led institutions, toward something more genuinely multipolar.
BRICS now encompasses 11 nations, including Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Iran, and in 2026 India holds the Chair of the BRICS Summit. (Source: TBS News / India in Greece, 2026) Indian refiners have already begun settling Russian crude purchases in Chinese yuan and UAE dirhams, bypassing the dollar entirely. The Reserve Bank of India has put forward a proposal to link Central Bank Digital Currencies of BRICS nations, not to create a single supranational currency, but to allow faster, cheaper cross-border trade settlement using each country's own digital currency. (Source: Modern Diplomacy, April 2026).
I want to be careful here, because this is often misread. India is not anti-West. India is not anti-dollar. India is pro-India, which means positioning itself as a trusted partner across multiple blocs, rather than a satellite of any single one.
In a fragmenting world, that is not fence-sitting. That is strategy…and it is working.
India's Moment; But Only if We Earn it
Let me tell you the number that sometimes keeps me up at night, in a good way.
India has 65% of its population under 35. Our median age is 28, compared to 38 in China and 48 in Japan. By 2030, India will have nearly 1 billion people in the workforce. (Source: IBEF / Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 2026) The WEF estimates that 24.3% of the incremental global workforce over the next decade will come from India.
Think about that for a moment. When the world's factories need workers, when the world's hospitals need nurses, when the world's technology companies need engineers, one in four of the new people joining the global workforce will be Indian.
That is not a demographic statistic. That is a geopolitical asset.
But, and this is the part I feel I must say, a demographic dividend is not automatic. It is a window, not a guarantee. The investments India makes in skills, education, healthcare, and infrastructure in the next five to seven years will determine whether this generation becomes the engine of the next global economy, or an enormous missed opportunity. The window is open. It will not stay open forever.
I wonder if our policymakers feel the urgency of that timeline the way those of us in business do.
The Digital India Story is Already Being Written
Here is something I find remarkable, and I do not think it gets enough attention globally.
India now accounts for nearly 49% of all real-time digital payments in the world. (Source: Policy Circle / DD News, 2026) In May 2026, UPI alone processed ₹29.90 trillion in transactions, a new record, across 23.2 billion transactions in a single month. (Source: Edunovations / The Researchers, May 2026) The IMF has formally recognised UPI as the world's largest real-time payments system. UPI is now live in the UAE, Singapore, France, Bhutan, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Mauritius, and Qatar.
India did not buy this position. We built it, from scratch, on public infrastructure, and we are now exporting it to the world.
India's fintech market is projected to surpass $400 billion by FY29. (Source: The Fintech Times, 2026).
When people ask me what makes India different in this reset, why I believe India is not just surviving this macro storm but genuinely positioned to emerge stronger, UPI is part of my answer. It is proof that India can build world-class, scalable, sovereign digital infrastructure. The digital payments revolution that took decades in the West happened here in under ten years.
That tells you something important about what India is capable of when it moves with intent.
The Energy Transition is Not a Cost… it is the Biggest Investment Opportunity of Our Lifetimes
I said in Part 2 that high oil prices are painful but also the strongest argument for energy diversification that has ever existed.
Here is what that argument is producing. Global investment in clean energy infrastructure is expected to surpass $2 trillion in 2026. (Source: Calvert / Deloitte Renewable Energy Outlook, 2026) 4.5 terawatts of new wind and solar installations are projected over the next five years, a 67% increase on the preceding five-year period. Annual global battery storage installations are expected to exceed 100 gigawatts in 2026 for the first time ever. EV sales are forecast to reach 40% of global car sales by 2030. (Source: BloombergNEF, 2026)
For India, which is one of the world's largest energy importers and one of the countries most exposed to climate risk, the transition to renewable energy is not an ideological choice. It is an economic and strategic imperative. Every solar panel installed on Indian soil is a rupee not sent abroad for oil. Every gigawatt of domestic renewable capacity is a step toward energy sovereignty.
The irony of this moment is real. The same geopolitical storm that is pushing oil to $117 a barrel is simultaneously making the economic case for renewables stronger than it has ever been.
The crisis is accelerating the cure.
And Where Does VDA Fit in the New World?
I have saved this for last, because I think it is the piece of the puzzle that is most misunderstood, and the one with the most potential to surprise people.
In a world that is moving toward multipolarity, where nation-states are questioning dollar dependence, where CBDCs are being built for cross-border settlement, and where institutional capital is openly hedging against the fragility of the existing financial architecture, digital assets are not a fringe story anymore.
They are infrastructure for the new world.
Stablecoins are becoming the plumbing for cross-border trade settlement, particularly across the Global South, where traditional banking infrastructure is expensive and slow. Tokenisation of real-world assets; property, commodities, debt instruments, is moving from concept to practice. The convergence of traditional finance and decentralised finance, which seemed improbable just five years ago, is happening in real time.
For India specifically, the opportunity is clear. We have the engineering talent to build in this space. We have the digital infrastructure to support it, UPI's success proves that. We have the demographic profile that makes us natural users of digital-native financial products, and we have the geopolitical positioning to be a bridge between the Western regulatory frameworks for digital assets and the emerging market appetite for them.
What we still need, and what I hope arrives sooner rather than later, is a regulatory framework that gives this sector the clarity it needs to grow with confidence, rather than in spite of uncertainty.
I entered this sector only recently. I came in as a businessperson, not as a crypto enthusiast. What I have found is an industry that is simultaneously more serious and more misunderstood than I expected. The serious people in this space are building infrastructure for the next twenty or thirty years. They deserve a policy environment that takes them as seriously as they take their work.
So, What Does the Reset Actually Look Like?
Let me bring this all together.
The reset looks like a world where supply chains are more distributed, energy is more diversified, and financial architecture is more multipolar. It looks like manufacturing moving to countries that were previously overlooked. It looks like digital infrastructure built by emerging economies that rivals, and in some cases outperforms, what was built by the West. It looks like a generation of young Indians, Africans, and Southeast Asians stepping into a global economy with more doors open to them than any previous generation.
It does not look clean. It does not look neat. It involves friction, volatility, and transition costs that are genuinely painful for millions of people.
But underneath the noise, if you are paying attention, it looks like the foundations of something better.
I started this series with a morning chai and a question: is the world on fire, or does it just feel that way? After three pieces of research, reflection, and honest observation, my answer is this.
Parts of the old world are on fire. But the fire is clearing ground. And on that ground, something new is already beginning to grow.
I, for one, am not frightened of what comes next... I am paying attention to it.
Thank you for reading this series. If it made you think differently about what is happening in the world right now, even slightly, then it was worth writing.