https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Diamond_Age
What is interesting in this future is the essentially tribal nature of the worlds societies, based not so much on economic as on moral/religious//political/filial principles. This system is quite unstable, but a (maybe laissez faire WTO/IMF like) Common Economic Policy based on property rights provides a kind of glue to hold the economy together.
This seems to be a not unlikely future given the steady weakening of the nation states. It is also more in line with the fundamental human propensity to cluster along ethnic/religious lines, not along economic lines. In other words, for most of human history economics was second to morality and religion. In this more fragmented world this will probably be true again.
Given that it is a nanotechnology/replicator society free stuff/food is provided for everyone on a very basic level. Work seems to be a matter of choice, out of moral principle or to gain status or be better off. Inequality is widespead, as can be expected. What seems to be missing is education. And this might provide a kind of missing link. We have a strong tendency to project the current educated western wordl into the future. But why, in a world where there is no need anymore for people to work on the scale we are used to now, would we want to educate people who don't need to work? Some basic skills would be more than enough to entertain yourself and survive. Added bonus, no education, no understanding of society. Given plenty of free/almost free entertainment this would probably be a quite stable world. Education would probably be available for those who want it (MOOC's?) but not mandatory.
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