It is hard to predict the future, but some trends are clear:
- Amateur radio is, in the main, a hobby of white older men.
- People less often use amateur radio for chatting, preferring the internet.
- The hobby is attracting and keeping fewer young people.
- There is far less building and experimenting.
- The national society (RSGB) depends heavily on old men volunteering.
- Far fewer transceivers will be sold in the future as we age.
- Japanese manufacturers will increasingly question if there are still profits in amateur radio.
- The licencing authority (OFCOM) gains no revenue from amateur radio, just costs.
- We increasingly rely on fewer UK dealers.
- Some dealers will retire and close.
- Some magazines depend heavily on advertising revenue and would really suffer if this revenue stream stopped.
Take together, things will inevitably change. The same situation is likely in many countries e.g. the USA and Germany.
It is my view, quite possibly totally wrong, that deregulation is the most likely outcome. One possibility is:
- Amateur radio will cease in its current form.
- All amateur radio bands will be deregulated so no licence will be required.
- Callsigns will become optional, but allocated by the RSGB if still needed.
- No interference must be caused.
- Amateur radio will merge with other licence free services like CB and ISM.
It is far from clear what the future holds, but change will come. One possibility is than any frequency may be used with the exception of certain restrictions such as frequencies allocated to the military or commercial services and broadcasting as long as no harmful interference is caused.
Am I concerned? No. My interest has always been experimentation and any such changes are unlikely to make things worse. Also, most amateur radio operators are appliance operators these days, buying their transceivers from a dealer with little or no idea about how it works! I know of one local who does not know how to even use the transceiver he bought!