Until it doesn’t.
That’s the uncomfortable truth about the modern world we’ve built—efficient, streamlined, optimised… and dangerously fragile.
We tell ourselves we are more advanced, more capable, more resilient than ever before.
But scratch the surface, and a very different picture emerges.
Built for Efficiency, Not Survival
Over the past few decades, we made a choice.
Not explicitly. Not consciously. But consistently.
We chose efficiency over resilience.
Just-in-time supply chains instead of stockpiles
Global sourcing instead of local capability
Minimal reserves instead of strategic buffers
Cost-cutting instead of redundancy
On paper, it all made perfect sense.
Lower costs. Higher profits. Faster delivery.
What could possibly go wrong?
The System Works… Until It’s Stressed
The problem with highly optimised systems is simple:
They work brilliantly—right up to the moment they don’t.
Remove a single link in the chain, and everything starts to wobble.
Remove a few, and the system fails.
We saw glimpses of this during COVID:
Empty shelves
Delayed shipments
Shortages of critical goods
And yet, instead of learning the lesson, we largely returned to business as usual.
Because efficiency is addictive.
Energy: The Clearest Example
Take energy.
Countries like Australia are rich in resources—oil, gas, coal.
And yet:
We shut down refineries
We rely on imported refined fuel
We hold minimal onshore reserves
It is the perfect example of a system that works beautifully… as long as global supply chains remain intact.
But what happens when they don’t?
That’s not a theoretical question anymore.
Food, Fuel, and the Thin Line Between Order and Disruption
Modern societies run on a delicate balance.
Fuel powers transport.
Transport delivers food.
Food keeps everything functioning.
Disrupt one element, and the effects ripple outward quickly.
No diesel → trucks stop
Trucks stop → supermarkets empty
Supermarkets empty → panic begins
We are far closer to that edge than most people realise.
Not because we lack resources.
But because we lack buffers.
Globalisation Without a Backup Plan
Globalisation delivered enormous benefits.
Cheaper goods.
Expanded markets.
Rapid growth.
But it also created a dangerous assumption:
That the system will always work.
That shipping lanes will always be open.
That trading partners will always deliver.
That geopolitical tensions won’t disrupt supply.
History suggests otherwise.
And recent events are reminding us just how quickly those assumptions can collapse.
Resilience Looks Inefficient — Until You Need It
Here’s the paradox.
True resilience looks wasteful.
Spare capacity
Stockpiles
Redundant systems
Local production
All of it costs money.
All of it appears unnecessary—until the moment it isn’t.
We spent decades stripping these “inefficiencies” out of the system.
Now we are rediscovering why they existed in the first place.
The Political Problem: Short-Term Thinking
Why did this happen?
Because resilience doesn’t win elections.
Efficiency does.
Lower costs. Lower prices. Immediate gains.
The benefits of resilience, on the other hand, are invisible—right up until the day they become essential.
And by then, it’s too late to build them.
We Didn’t Become Weak Overnight
This fragility wasn’t created by a single decision.
It was the result of thousands of small ones.
One refinery closed here
One reserve reduced there
One dependency shifted offshore
Each decision made sense in isolation.
Together, they created a system with very little margin for error.
The Illusion Is Breaking
For a long time, we believed we were resilient because nothing had seriously tested us.
Now we are being tested.
Supply chains under pressure
Energy markets volatile
Geopolitical tensions rising
And suddenly, the illusion is harder to maintain.
What Needs to Change
If there is a lesson here, it is not subtle.
We need to rebalance.
Not abandon efficiency—but stop worshipping it.
That means:
Rebuilding strategic reserves
Supporting domestic capability
Diversifying supply chains
Accepting the cost of redundancy
In short:
Designing systems that can survive disruption, not just perform in perfect conditions.
Final Thought
We like to think we are more advanced than previous generations.
In many ways, we are.
But they understood something we seem to have forgotten:
That resilience matters.
That security matters.
That systems must be built not just for good times—but for bad ones.
We built a world that works beautifully when everything goes right.
Now we are discovering what happens when it doesn’t.
