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ANTI GLOBALIZATION
ROLL NO: 32
COURSE: EPGDIM
NAME: SURYA PRAKASH SRIVASTAVA
Globalization, the integration of the world technologically, economically and politically, is the most
important development of our time. Global production and global markets offer business organizations
extraordinary opportunities for growth and profits. Globalization is credited with stimulating innovation
and technological progress. However, it is also blamed for increasing the gap between rich and poor,
accelerating the destruction of the environment, and threatening human rights. The intensity of feelings
in the globalization debate is astonishing. In the last three years, the anti-globalization movement has
staged protests at meetings of the World Trade Organization, the European Union, the World Bank, the
International Monetary Fund, the World Economic Forum, and the G-8.
Globalization – the ongoing process of greater interdependence among countries and their citizens – is
complex and multifaceted. Many of the problems that the critics of globalization point to are real. Some
of them relate to economics. Others relate to non-economic, but no less important, aspects of life. And
while some of the problems do stem from the process of global integration, others do not.
Globalization is a powerful real aspect of the new world system, and it represents one of the most
influential forces in determining the future course of the planet. It has many dimensions: economic,
political, social, cultural, environmental, security, and others. The focus here will be on the concept of
"globalization" as applied to the world economy. This concept is one that has different interpretations to
different people. Partly as a result of these different interpretations, there are very different reactions
to "globalization," with some seeing it as a serious danger to the world economic system while others
see it as advancing the world economy.
I will be covering two aspects of globalization in this essay. First, it will clarify the notion of
"globalization" as applied to the world economy. Second, it will evaluate both the potential benefits and
the potential costs stemming from globalization.
The view taken here, representing the thesis of this paper, is that there are both positive and negative
aspects to globalization, that some of its positive features stem from the effects of competition that it
entails, and that some of the negative aspects that could potentially lead to conflicts could be offset by
international or global cooperation through agreements on policy or through the development of new
international institutions. Thus, while globalization can cause international conflicts, it can also
contribute to their containment through the beneficial effects of competition and the potential of global
cooperation to treat economic and other threats facing the planet.
Globalization has involved greater openness in the international economy, an integration of markets on
a worldwide basis, and a movement toward a borderless world, all of which have led to increases in
global flows. There are several sources of globalization over the last several decades. One such source
has been technological advances that have significantly lowered the costs of transportation and
communication and dramatically lowered the costs of data processing and information storage and
retrieval. The latter stems from developments over the last few decades in electronics, especially the
microchip revolution. Electronic mail, the Internet, and the World Wide Web are some of the
manifestations of this new technology.
A second source of globalization has been trade liberalization and other forms of economic liberalization
that have led to reduced trade protection and to a more liberal world trading system. This process
started in the last century, but the two World Wars and the Great Depression interrupted it. It resumed
after World War II through the most-favored-nation approach to trade liberalization, as embodied in the
1946 General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) and now in the World Trade Organization (WTO).
As a result, there have been significant reductions in tariffs and other barriers to trade in goods and
services. Other aspects of liberalization have led to increases in the movement of capital and other
factors of production. Some have suggested that globalization is little more than a return to the world
economy of the late nineteenth century and early twentieth century, when borders were relatively
open, when there were substantial international capital flows and migrations of people, and when the
major nations of Europe depended critically on international trade. This is particularly the view of some
British scholars, looking back to the period of British imperial dominance of the world economy. While
there are some similarities in terms of trade and capital movements, the period of a century ago did not
have some of the major technological innovations that have led to a globalized world economy today
that is qualitatively different from the international economy of the last century.
A third source of globalization has been changes in institutions, where organizations have a wider reach,
due, in part, to technological changes and to the more wide-ranging horizons of their managers, who
have been empowered by advances in communications. Thus, corporations that had been mainly
focused on a local market have extended their range in terms of markets and production facilities to a
national, multinational, international, or even global reach. These changes in industrial structure have
led to increases in the power, profits, and productivity of those firms that can choose among many
nations for their sources of materials, production facilities, and markets, quickly adjusting to changing
market conditions. Virtually every major national or international enterprise has such a structure or
relies on subsidiaries or strategic alliances to obtain a comparable degree of influence and flexibility. As
one measure of their scale, almost a third of total international trade now occurs solely within these
multinational enterprises. With the advent of such global firms, international conflict has, to some
extent, moved from nations to these firms, with the battle no longer among nations over territory but
rather among firms over their share of world markets. These global firms are seen by some as a threat to
the scope and autonomy of the state, but, while these firms are powerful, the nation state still retains
its traditional and dominant role in the world economic and political system.
Non-government organizations, the NGO's, have also taken a much broader perspective that, as in the case of
the global firms, is often multinational or global. Even international organizations, such as the United Nations,
the International Monetary Fund and World Bank, and the new World Trade Organization have new global
A fourth reason for globalization has been the global agreement on ideology, with a convergence of
beliefs in the value of a market economy and a free trade system. This process started with the political and
economic changes that started in the 1978 reforms in China and then involved a “falling dominoes” series of
revolutions in Eastern and Central Europe starting in 1989 that ended with the dissolution of the Soviet Union
in December 1991. This process led to a convergence of ideology, with the former division between market
economies in the West and socialist economies in the East having been replaced by a near-universal reliance
on the market system. This convergence of beliefs in the value of a market economy has led to a world that is
no longer divided into market-oriented and socialist economies. A major aspect of this convergence of beliefs
is the attempt of the former socialist states to make a transition to a market economy. These attempted
transitions, especially those in the former Soviet Union and in Eastern and Central Europe have, however,
been only partially successful. The nations involved and their supporters in international organizations and
advanced western market economies have tended to focus on a three-part agenda for transition, involving: 1)
stabilization of the macroeconomy, 2) liberalization of prices, and 3) privatization of state-owned enterprise.
Unfortunately, this “SLP” agenda fails to appreciate the importance of building market institutions, of
establishing competition, and of providing for an appropriate role for the government in a modern mixed
economy.
A fifth reason for globalization has been cultural developments, with a move to a globalized and
homogenized media, the arts, and popular culture and with the widespread use of the English language for
global communication. Partly as a result of these cultural developments, some, especially the French and
other continental Europeans, see globalization as an attempt at U.S. cultural as well as economic and political
hegemony. In effect, they see globalization as a new form of imperialism or as a new stage of capitalism in the
age of electronics. Some have even interpreted globalization as a new form of colonialism, with the U.S. as the
new metropole power and with most of the rest of the world as its colonies, supplying it not only with raw
materials, as in earlier forms of European colonialization, but also with technology; production facilities; labor,
capital, and other inputs to the production process; and markets on a global basis.
Whether one sees globalization as a negative or as a positive development, it must be understood that it has
clearly changed the world system and that it poses both opportunities and challenges. It is also clear that the
above technological, policy, institutional, ideological, and cultural developments that have led to globalization
are still very active. Thus, barring a radical move in a different direction, these trends toward greater
globalization will likely continue or even accelerate in the future. One important aspect of these trends will be
the growth in international trade in services that has already increased substantially but promises even
greater growth in the future, especially in such areas as telecommunications and financial services. The result
will be continued moves toward a more open and a more integrated world as it moves closer and closer to a
planet without borders and to a more integrated, open, and interdependent world economy. The result will
Impact of Globalization
Globalization has had significant impacts on all economies of the world, with manifold effects. It affects their
production of goods and services. It also affects the employment of labor and other inputs into the production
process. In addition, it affects investment, both in physical capital and in human capital. It affects technology
and results in the diffusion of technology from initiating nations to other nations. It also has major effects on
efficiency, productivity, and competitiveness.
Several impacts of globalization on national economies deserve particular mention. One is the growth of
foreign direct investment (FDI) at a prodigious rate, one that is much greater than the growth in world trade.
Such investment plays a key role in technology transfer, in industrial restructuring, and in the formation of
global enterprises, all of which have major impacts at the national level. A second is the impact of
globalization on technological innovation. New technologies, as already noted, have been a factor in
globalization, but globalization and the spur of competition have also stimulated further advances in
technology and speeded up its diffusion within nations through foreign direct investment. A third is the
growth of trade in services, including financial, legal, managerial, and information services and intangibles of
all types that have become mainstays of international commerce. In 1970, less than a third of foreign direct
investment related to the export of services, but today that has risen to half and it is expected to rise even
further, making intellectual capital the most important commodity on world markets. As a result of the growth
of services both nationally and internationally, some have called this "the age of competence," underscoring
the importance of lifelong education and training and the investment in human capital in every national
economy.
Globalization, an important characteristic within the contemporary economic environment, has resulted
in significant changes to individual nations in terms of economic development strategies undertaken by
national governments. The term globalization refers to the integration of local and international
economies into a globally unified political economic and cultural order, and is not a singular
phenomenon, but a term to describe the forces that transform an economy into one characterized by
the embracement of the free movement of trade, investment, labor and capital. The drive for
globalization has resulted in greater economic growth globally, through the opening up of barriers to
international trade, yet this increase in world output is often associated with detrimental effects in
relation to the stability of a national economy, being susceptible to the ups and downs of the
international business cycle and also both positive and negative effects on the standards of living or
quality of life with in a nation.
It is often difficult to categories an economy as being globalized, yet there are several key indicator that
suggest economic management decisions undertaken by the govt have come as a result of globalization.
The main evidence to suggest the globalization of nations has been the growth in global markets,
changes in global consumption patterns, the establishment of intergovernmental agreements as well as
the rise of transnational corporations. Globalization has been essentially driven by the breaking down of
economic barriers between nations over recent decades that have resulted in greater worldwide
economic growth. This economic liberalization has been spurred on by the global trend towards the
It is estimated that global economy grew, on average, by 2.5% per annum during the late 1990s. This
was fuelled by a growth in trade of over 7% per annum, and growth in foreign investment levels of over
23%. It is clear that globalization has brought about greater rates of economic growth in most nations,
as proven by the highly successful NIC’s in Asia, known as the “Asian Tiger” economies, however, while
the global economy has grown in total the benefits have varied significantly between economies. Where
high income and newly industrialized countries have achieved growth rates of around 3% and 7%
respectively, low income countries achieved growth of only 2%. Economic activity in transitional
economies fell during the 1990s by an average of 2.7% per annum, showing that globalization has not
resulted in more equal standards of living.
However, the standard of living, or quality of life Is not simply a measure of the level of economic
growth or change in real GDP, but it is a measure that takes into account the literary levels, education,
health care, technological change and mortality rates. An example of a quality of life indicator is the
Human Development Index (HDI) which measures changes in those factors as a result of globalization.
Over the last few decades, the HDI of the world’s richest countries have increased as a result of
globalization, where growth and development has been attributed to these economies through
willingness to embrace market liberalization. However, the HDI of the poorer nations have grown at a
slower rate to the richer nation’s which, as some economists put it, shows that globalization is another
word for the continual plundering of the poorer and weaker nations by the rich and powerful
economies. It has been strongly argued that the benefits of competition go only to those who can
compete, and poor countries have to negotiate on unequal terms. In addition, the forces of globalization
take no account for social injustices, with Asian sweat shops being a prime example.
Trade growth has contributed significantly to changes in living standards and economic growth of global
economies, but its impacts have differed between different economies. While the increases in global
imports and exports have come as a result of falling protectionist policies, it has advantaged mainly
producers of manufactured goods, while producers of primary goods still face international barriers to
trade. The consequence of this is the increase in trade between nations that produce different types of
manufactured goods, and as a result much of the benefits of this increase trade go towards high income
and NIC nations. Developing nations, while experiencing growth, have not reached the same levels as
high income nations, there for widening the income divide globally. Similarly, 70% of the financial glow
increases are to industrialized nations, increasing their access to capital and living standards, leaving
lower income nations on slower growth rates.
The quest for economic growth and improved quality of life has resulted in greater focus on nation’s
external stability. The ability of a country to manage its exchange rate, balance of payments and foreign
Additionally, the global movement toward free trade has resulted in many high income manufacturing
nations increasing in there terms of trade through comparative advantage, and increasing there rates of
economic growth. However, developing nations’ terms of trade tend to fall over time as prices for
primary exports fall. This result in long term trade deficits and a worsening CAD that results in a
deteriorating external balance, which generally maintains the income divide between the rich and poor
nations with in the global economy.
While globalization has resulted in aggregate increases in trade, output and investment growth over the
past few decades, it is clear that the benefits from this growth have been distributed unequally between
different economies. While developing nations are now focusing on manufacturing productions, high
income economies are establishing new production patterns and many poor nations are not adapting
significantly. Consequently, this has resulted in lagging economic growth rates with in less developed
countries, while nations such as the fast growing “Tiger” economies have experienced phenomenal
growth rates of close to 9%. The income divide globally, as a result would tend to widen, as richer
nations become richer at a faster rate than poor nations. However, a limiting factor towards continuing
accelerated growth with in high income nations continues to be the maintenance of an economy’s
external stability, in particular preventing the blow outs of net foreign debt and equity over the business
cycle, which might affect the international confidence in the management of the particular economy.
There for globalization on the whole has come as a benefit throughout the world, yet these benefits are
still heavily weighed towards the already rich nations, while the developing economies struggle to
maintain growth on par with the higher income nations, resulting in the evident contrast in quality of life
between there “classes” of nations in the global economy.
Positive Impacts
Globalization has various aspects which affect the world in several different ways such as:
Negative Effects
Globalization has been one of the most hotly debated topics in international economics over the past
few years. Globalization has also generated significant international opposition over concerns that it has
increased inequality and environmental degradation. In the Midwestern United States, globalization has
eaten away at its competitive edge in industry and agriculture, lowering the quality of life in locations
that lack the opportunity to adapt to the change.
Some also view the effect of globalization on culture as a rising concern. Along with globalization of
economies and trade, culture is being imported and exported as well. The concern is that the stronger,
bigger countries such as the United States may overrun the other, smaller countries' cultures, leading to
those customs and values being faded away. This process is also sometimes referred to as
Americanization or McDonaldization.
Export Poverty
It can be said that globalization is the door that opens up an otherwise resource-poor country to the
international market. Where a country has little material or physical product harvested or mined from
its own soil, large corporations see an opportunity to take advantage of the "export poverty" of such a
nation. Where the majority of the earliest occurrences of economic globalization are recorded as being
the expansion of businesses and corporate growth, in many poorer nations globalization is actually the
result of the foreign businesses investing in the country to take advantage of the lower wage rate: even
though investing, by increasing the Capital Stock of the country, increases their wage rate.
There are several agencies that have been set up worldwide specifically designed to focus on anti-
sweatshop campaigns and education of such. In the USA, the National Labor Committee has proposed a
number of bills as part of The Decent Working Conditions and Fair Competition Act, which have thus far
failed in Congress. The legislation would legally require companies to respect human and worker rights
by prohibiting the import, sale, or export of sweatshop goods.
The world today is so interconnected that the collapse of the subprime mortgage market in the U.S. has
led to a global financial crisis and recession on a scale not seen since the Great Depression. Government
deregulation and failed regulation of Wall Street's investment banks were important contributors to the
subprime mortgage crisis.
A flood of consumer goods such as televisions, radios, bicycles, and textiles into the United States,
Europe, and Japan has helped fuel the economic expansion of Asian tiger economies in recent decades.
However, Chinese textile and clothing exports have recently encountered criticism from Europe, the
United States and some African countries. In South Africa, some 300,000 textile workers have lost their
jobs due to the influx of Chinese goods. The increasing U.S. trade deficit with China has cost 2.4 million
American jobs between 2001 and 2008, according to a study by the Economic Policy Institute (EPI). A
total of 3.2 million – one in six U.S. factory jobs – have disappeared between 2000 and 2007.
Brain drain
An opportunity in richer countries drives talent away from poorer countries, leading to brain drains.
Brain drain has cost the African continent over $4.1 billion in the employment of 150,000 expatriate
professionals annually. Indian students going abroad for their higher studies costs India a foreign
exchange outflow of $10 billion annually.
Environmental degradation
Burning forest in Brazil. The removal of forest to make way for cattle ranching was the leading cause of
deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon from the mid 1960s. Recently, soybeans have become one of the
most important contributors to deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon.
The Worldwatch Institute said the booming economies of China and India are planetary powers that are
shaping the global biosphere. In 2007, China overtook the United States as the world's biggest producer
of CO2. At present rates, tropical rainforests in Indonesia would be logged out in 10 years, Papua New
Guinea in 13 to 16 years. A major source of deforestation is the logging industry, driven spectacularly by
China and Japan. Thriving economies such as China and India are quickly becoming large oil consumers.
China has seen oil consumption grow by 8% yearly since 2002, doubling from 1996–2006. Crude oil
prices in the last several years have steadily risen from about $25 a barrel in August 2003 to over $140 a
barrel in July 2008. State of the World 2006 report said the two countries' high economic growth hid a
reality of severe pollution. The report states:The world's ecological capacity is simply insufficient to
satisfy the ambitions of China, India, Japan, Europe and the United States as well as the aspirations of
the rest of the world in a sustainable way
Without more recycling, zinc could be used up by 2037, both indium and hafnium could run out by 2017,
and terbium could be gone before 2012. It is said that if China and India were to consume as much
resources per capita as United States or Japan in 2030 together they would require a full planet Earth to
Food security
The head of the International Food Policy Research Institute, stated in 2008 that the gradual change in
diet among newly prosperous populations is the most important factor underpinning the rise in global
food prices. From 1950 to 1984, as the Green Revolution transformed agriculture around the world,
grain production increased by over 250%.The world population has grown by about 4 billion since the
beginning of the Green Revolution and most believe that, without the Revolution, there would be
greater famine and malnutrition than the UN presently documents (approximately 850 million people
suffering from chronic malnutrition in 2005).
It is becoming increasingly difficult to maintain food security in a world beset by a confluence of "peak"
phenomena, namely peak oil, peak water, peak phosphorus, peak grain and peak fish. Growing
populations, falling energy sources and food shortages will create the "perfect storm" by 2030,
according to the UK government chief scientist. He said food reserves are at a 50-year low but the world
requires 50% more energy, food and water by 2030. The world will have to produce 70% more food by
2050 to feed a projected extra 2.3 billion people and as incomes rise, the United Nations' Food and
Agriculture Organisation (FAO) warned. Social scientists have warned of the possibility that global
civilization is due for a period of contraction and economic re-localization, due to the decline in fossil
fuels and resulting crisis in transportation and food production.One paper even suggested that the
future might even bring about a restoration of sustainable local economic activities based on hunting
and gathering, shifting horticulture, and pastoralism.
The journal Science published a four-year study in November 2006, which predicted that, at prevailing
trends, the world would run out of wild-caught seafood in 2048.
Disease
Globalization, the flow of information, goods, capital and people across political and geographic
boundaries, has also helped to spread some of the deadliest infectious diseases known to humans.
Starting in Asia, the Black Death killed at least one-third of Europe's population in the 14th century. Even
worse devastation was inflicted on the American supercontinent by Europe. For instance 90% of the
populations of the civilizations of the "New World" such as the Aztec, Maya, and Inca were killed by
small pox brought by European colonization. Modern modes of transportation allow more people and
products to travel around the world at a faster pace, they also open the airways to the transcontinental
movement of infectious disease vectors. One example of this occurring is AIDS/HIV. Approximately 1.1
million persons are living with HIV/AIDS in the United States, and AIDS remains the leading cause of
death among African American women between ages 25 and 34. Due to immigration, approximately
500,000 people in the United States are believed to be infected with Chagas disease. In 2006, the
tuberculosis (TB) rate among foreign-born persons in the United States was 9.5 times that of U.S.-born
persons.
The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) issued a report that the global drug trade
generates more than $320 billion a year in revenues. Worldwide, the UN estimates there are more than
50 million regular users of heroin, cocaine and synthetic drugs. The international trade of endangered
species is second only to drug trafficking. Traditional Chinese medicine often incorporates ingredients
from all parts of plants, the leaf, stem, flower, root, and also ingredients from animals and minerals. The
use of parts of endangered species (such as seahorses, rhinoceros horns, saiga antelope horns, and tiger
bones and claws) has created controversy and resulted in a black market of poachers who hunt
restricted animals. In 2003, 29% of open sea fisheries were in a state of collapse.
International Inequality
Inequality must be defined and be able to be measured so that comparisons can be made between rich
and poor countries. Once the causes are determined, the effects of globalization can be evaluated and
be measured. The World Bank defines inequality as the disparity of income and standard of living among
nations and their citizens (Birdsall, 2002). To compare inequality among nations, incomes and living
standards of their citizens should be reviewed. The World Bank has determined that people living on $1
per day in developing countries and people living on $2 per day in medium economies are considered
poor (Infoplease, 2005). In contrast to the $1-$2 per day standard, in the United States, Japan, Europe or
other developed nations, a person trying to live on less than $1,000 per year is unimaginable because
the cost of living is many times this amount. The US Census Bureau defines poverty for a single, elderly
person (over age 65) earning less than $25 a day as poor (US Census, 2005). Younger workers and/or
people living in multiple person families have a higher threshold than $25 a day before they are
considered poor.
The income gap that exists between rich and poor counties has become substantial. Although great
strides have been made in improving income for poor nations, many regions of the world have 25% or
more of their population living off less than $1 per day (World Bank, 2005). Some people think that with
the poor people having limited earning capacity, they also have limited access to the world’s wealth. In
2003, the richest fifth of the world's population received 85% of the total world income, while the
poorest fifth received just 1.4% of the global income (Infoplease, 2005). When the GDP is compared
between the richest and poorest nations over the past century, a wider income gap can be seen
growing. Between 1900 and 2000, the richest quarter of the world’s population saw its per capita GDP
increase nearly six-fold during the century, while the poorest quarter experienced less than a three-fold
increase (IMF, 2005). Income inequality has increased and has continued widening.
Income alone is not the only indicator to measure the wealth of a country’s citizens. Besides income,
there are quality of life characteristics that should also be considered. Sri Lanka has a low income, but
has impressive social indicators such as life expectancy is the same as in developed nations, high literacy
rates, low mortality rates and a declining population growth rate; results of a social welfare system put
in place during the 1940s (IMF, 2005; Sri Lanka, 2005). Cuba is another such example where living
conditions have improved, yet the incomes of the people have stagnated. Cuba has had limited trading
opportunities with a US boycott in place and the cessation of Soviet support to the island-nation; yet its
healthcare and education draw praise from the World Bank (Newsbatch, 2005). There are social benefits
that a government can provide that will improve the quality of life and can be measured. Poverty is
measured by several different organizations, but many are similar to the UN measure for poverty. The
UN's Human Poverty Index is a measurement of poverty that factors in illiteracy, malnutrition among
children, early death, poor health care, poor access to safe water, vulnerability to famine or flooding,
The nations where people live longer and healthier contribute more labor hours to the production of
goods on a per person basis. As a nation is able to increase its productivity, it is able to trade with other
nations. A nation’s wealth is not limited by what it is able to produce domestically when that nation
engages in trade beyond its own borders. Nations that pursue international trade are able to increase
their growth rate. During the 20th century nearly all nations encountered unparalleled economic growth
as global per capita GDP increased almost five-fold with the strongest expansion in the second half of
the century, a period of rapid growth accompanied by increase in trade (IMF, 2005). International trade
has enabled economies to recover more quickly after war, natural disaster, and economic crisis. The
developing countries of China, India and Mexico, which represent about 3 billion people, have adopted
policies enabling their citizens to take advantage of globalization and their economies are catching up
with rich ones (Manzella, 2002). Many economists predict that China’s economy will surpass the
United States’ in terms of GDP in a few decades (Johnson, 2005). International trade has had a beneficial
impact on these countries due to their policy changes and willingness to open their society.
In an interview with an African economist, James Shikwati discussing the best approach by Western
nations to help the developing nations of Africa, as cited by Thielke (2005): Huge bureaucracies are
financed (with the aid money), corruption and complacency are promoted, Africans are taught to be
beggars and not to be independent. In addition, development aid weakens the local markets
everywhere and dampens the spirit of entrepreneurship that we so desperately need. As absurd as it
may sound: Development aid is one of the reasons for Africa's problems. If the West were to cancel
these payments, normal Africans wouldn't even notice. Only the functionaries would be hard hit. Which
is why they maintain that the world would stop turning without this development aid. Foreign aid to
poor countries should be able to help the government develop the infrastructure and institutions to
eventually become self-sufficient. Rich nations have been giving considerable amounts of aid, including
low-interest rate loans to developing nations for the last half of the 20th century, yet many of these
nations are still poor. This is done through direct foreign aid from a donor country and through
international organizations like the World Bank. In many of these poor countries, the economic system
is comparable to pre-capitalist conditions where the goods and services they produce are very limited in
scope.
Even if a country chooses to accept aid to improve the conditions of its people, the people may not be
able to benefit due to corrupt leadership and institutions. Many developing nations have corrupt leaders
that do not invest in the social services or infrastructure needed for its people. They are more concerned
with staying in power and tend to reward people that will help them stay in power. The developing
nations suffer from poverty not because of high debt burdens, but because inefficient governments
redistribute the existing economic pie to privileged political elites rather than trying to make the pie
grow larger through sound economic policies (Easterly, 2001). In their attempt to gain economic
stability, they are in a constant search for more resources to generate wealth. African tribes war against
one another to scramble for land. President Yoweri Museveni of Uganda, has continued to spend money
on questionable military adventures in the Democratic Republic of the Congo; and other governments
like Angola, Ethiopia, and Rwanda have also preferred a military route rather than engaging in economic
trade with their neighbors (Easterly, 2001). These corrupt governments spend large amounts of their
budgets on their military and pet projects that do not serve the people well. Another example is the
government of North Korea that has spent its resources developing nuclear weapons while its people
are starving. When government money is spent on the military and war, it is not spent on providing
education, clean water, medicine, or the basic amenities that allow a country’s people to move out of
Without trade, foreign aid is the alternative of choice to help the people move out of poverty. Yet many
of the people continue to live in poverty year after year due to inefficient governments and distribution
of resources. Transparency International, a nongovernmental organization dedicated to stop corruption
in governments, reported that nine out of ten developing nations are corrupt and inefficient. Even when
aid is given, these nations are so corrupt that very little of the aid makes it to the people that it is
suppose to help. Without aid, people will depose inefficient governments and collect the political
willpower to engage their problems and search for long-term solutions. Aid allows inept and corrupt
governments to stay in power. A unilateral transfer payment in the form of aid is not a long-term
solution. For a solution to become permanent, governments must be stable and be perceived as non-
corrupt and willing to spend on the proper infrastructure and encourage trade.
Culture Clash
Not everyone believes international trade can benefit the poor, developing countries. People who are
not in favor of expanding international trade and desire preservation of local culture and customs are
referred to as anti-globalists. They are an assortment of several different groups with different issues; all
motivated toward a common cause: to stop global trade (Wikipedia, 2005). They believe many trade
agreements and multinational corporations can undermine the environment, labor rights, national
sovereignty, and the third world.
The 20th century has seen international trade and the income gap between rich and poor nations
increase. Some anti-globalists perceive that international trade and the widening of the income gap
between rich and poor countries to be correlated. The World Economic Outlook studied 42 countries for
which data was available for the entire 20th century and reached the conclusion that output per capita
has risen but that the distribution of income among countries has become more unequal than at the
beginning of the century (IMF, 2005). This conclusion has erroneously accused rich countries of
getting richer by exploiting poorer countries.
Population growth in poor nations is high and the people have little education, as it does not take much
education to work on a farm. Cited by Birdsall, 2002, Dr. Wade, a professor of political economics at the
London School of Economics, blames this rising inequality on differing rates of population growth
between rich and poor countries and the pressures of technological change. Many of these poor
countries still have an agrarian economy. Since the people cannot afford technology, like tractors to
work the land or irrigation systems to increase productivity, human capital is employed. It is more
advantageous for a family to have more children, so they can help work the farm. Many of the children
will get sick and some die, due to lack of proper healthcare. In some countries like India, there is a
growing industrialized sector. As these countries’ economies become industrialized, the population, who
is uneducated in everything but farming, begin to move to the cities as unskilled laborers if they are
lucky enough to find work. Unfortunately, most people who move to the city will become part of the
growing unemployed. These developing countries are abundant with unskilled labor due to high
population growth and lack of education, especially among women, that make the country a source for
inexpensive, unskilled labor in exchange for jobs. Its large population is a resource that makes another
nation want to trade with it.
Many of these developing countries do not have continuing growth as part of their culture, which leads
to the continuation of the stagnate economic conditions. Economic growth needs to be examined to
verify or disprove the widening inequity gap because poor nations are being exploited by rich nations.
Economic growth is defined as the increase in the value of goods and services produced by an economy
and can be measured as the percent rate of increase in real gross domestic product (Wikipedia, 2005).
There are two types of economic growth a nation can undergo to move itself out of poverty: intensive
and extensive. Intensive growth is due to an increase in the quality of a nation’s factors of production,
usually due to a change in technology or international trade; where as, extensive growth is growth due
to an increase in the quantity of a nation’s factors of production, usually increased by acquiring land via
war and colonialism. Technology means change to a society, and many pre-capitalist societies
were based on tradition and certainty, and change was uncertain, therefore discouraged (Berri, 2004). In
order for pre-capitalist economies to grow they had to increase their factors of production. Land was
limited and technology did not exist to yield more crops. Lack of technology also limited capital
accumulation. Population increases labor, but still limited by the same technologies and quality, per-
capita growth does not increase. Therefore in the absence of trade, economic growth in pre-capitalist
societies is zero (Berri, 2004). Capitalist nations have been able to increase technology and embrace
change to become the wealthier nations on the globe. Many of these non-capitalists countries are still
considered developing nations.
Antiglobalists regard the extension of international markets and financial interests as the cause of
increasing global inequality (and poverty) and declining levels of human welfare (Birdsall, 2002). The
population of these poor countries is plentiful and willing to work at cheap wages, as they are labor
abundant. Their own government is eager to oblige the multinational corporation and in many cases,
Governments in developing countries have convinced their people that the aid and limits to
international trade is necessary for their continued development. These governments have limited their
own growth by imposing tariffs and quotas on imports and claiming that international trade has kept
their own countries from developing stable economies.
Many of the poor nations are forced to agree to economic reform before they are allowed to receive
aid, and additionally, many of these nations are reluctant to accept foreign aid because they believe it
will have a negative impact on their cultural identity. These economic reforms are seen as to favor the
rich nations by allowing them more access to the poor nation’s resources. The World Bank and
International Monetary Fund (IMF) have lending policies that compel poor countries to adopt economic
policy reforms, which are perceived to benefit only their wealthy trading partners and leave the
emerging economy with an overwhelming debt burden (Newsbatch, 2005). Poor countries think
international trade will destroy their culture and lifestyle. Many of these poor nations believe that if
they participate in globalization, their culture will change and they will lose part of their identity
(Tomlinson, 2003). Modern technology has actually led to the opposite being true. Globalization does
not destroy local civilization and customs, but proliferates individual culture by using modern
communication like the Internet and television satellite, so that a culture is not limited by location
(Tomlinson, 2003). A person in their home country will go about their routine without giving any
thought to their identity; however, when they travel to another country for employment or vacation,
like the Mexican laborer in the US, they become more aware of their national identity. Globalization as a
destroyer of cultural identity is a misconception that encourages poor countries to remain in the same
cycle of poverty. Poor nations remain in the same cycle of poverty because of their culture is not growth
oriented, has high population growth, low-level of education and a distrust of wealthier nations placing
conditions on their economic aid. By accepting economic policy reforms, many nations feel they no
longer have control over their nation’s economic affairs. Developing nations have a distrust of rich
nations, which prevents them from taking advantage of market forces that will allow them to move
toward peaceful economic growth.
Trade allows people to make individual decisions concerning their own wellbeing. This requires a
different approach to the traditional beliefs that the governments are best qualified to distribute goods
to its people. In the 1980s, the laissez-faire capitalist policies of Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher
broke down trade barriers and business regulations as privatization and trade liberalization was seen as
a more favorable method to distribute benefits and resources to the public, resulting in a more
weakened public sector (Wikipedia, 2005). Many ant globalists would like to see governments take a
more active role in this distribution process. As multinational corporations control more resources and
the means to distribute them, they have more power when negotiating trading terms with poor
countries.
The poorest of the least-developed countries’ problem is not that they are being impoverished by
globalization, but that they are in danger of being largely excluded from it. Of the impoverished
countries, 0.4 % of these countries had declining trade with international partners in 1997, down by half
from 1980. Their access to foreign private investment remains negligible (PREM, 2000). These nations
have limited the outside world’s access to their nation, and in doing so, have limited their own growth.
There are four aspects of globalization that should help poorer countries become more self-sufficient.
These include trade, capital movements, movements of people, spread of knowledge and technology
(IMF, 2000). Trade allows individuals to exchange labor, goods, land and technology and is more
efficient at putting these items into more peoples control rather than trying to control these from a
single point like the government or aid organizations. In developing countries, as a whole, trade has
increased from 19% in 1971 to 29% in 1999, but not all countries have benefited equally. Countries in
Southeast Asia, China and India are on track to becoming economic powerhouses as they export
primarily manufactured goods and have opened their society to allow international trade. Then there
are others, mainly in Africa, who primarily exports raw materials and food, and trade has not fared as
well (IMF, 2000). The agricultural subsidies of the rich countries inundate their markets with artificially
low cost agricultural products, as a result ruining domestic agricultural industries (Newsbatch, 2005).
Further observation has also shown that African countries are more dictatorial and aid packages have
remainedprevalent.
Capital movements are the movement of financial assets across international borders. Since the 1980s,
trade has opened up, allowing business investment to replace foreign aid as the single most important
category to help transition developing economies to market economies. The World Bank (Appendix 4)
shows the net private flows to developing nations are at higher levels than net official flow consistently
from 1992 through 2002, the period of the observed data. Not only did net private flows to developing
nations outpace official net flows, they did so by a significant amount. By the end of the 1990s, private
investment exceeded net official assistance by seven times (World Bank, 2004). Private investment is
investment that is made by private companies to developing countries that does not require direct
repayments from the country itself. The government does not control private investment; but the
government does benefit indirectly. Multinational corporations build factories and hire workers, and
usually pay them above local wages, yet below the wages of their home country. Local governments
can then collect more revenue from the increased tax base from the workers and the industry.
Workers will move to where the jobs are located. This means that unskilled workers will move to where
more unskilled labor is required; or skilled workers moving to where more skilled labor is required.
Wages communicate the demand for the labor that is required by each country. Most migration is
Conclusion
This paper has demonstrated that inequality exists and that it is widening. When the rich nations get
richer other factors are at work such as more efficient use of resources, which need stable, open
governments and the infrastructure for improved social conditions. Many poor nations fail because the
state fails, or with a large population growth rate, have difficulties managing the allocation of their
resources. Rich nations have implemented policies and a capitalist approach to distribution of goods and
services that propagates long-term growth. Not all nations are endowed with an equal proportion of
factor inputs; inequality will exist. By opening up trade, nations can share their factors more equitably
and the total global pool of wealth will increase. For most of the 20th century, rich nations gave aid to
poor nations only to see it squandered. The people of the country must have the political will and
capability to select leaders that choose a path of economic growth instead of cultural stagnation. Many
of these countries are poor and have an unequal distribution within the country itself due to corrupt
government leaders that view international aid as a source of personal income. Several of the poorer
nations do not want to open up to international trade due to fear of losing their own identity, when in
fact they are losing an opportunity for its people to move out of poverty. Many of the poorer nations
have an agrarian economy that is labor intensive, without technology. They are changing over to an
industrial economy that is not as labor intensive. During this transition, they will provide cheap labor
markets for multinational corporations, and wages for these people will increase. Globalization, when
there is free movement of goods and services, capital, people and technology, helps poorer nations.
International trade allows each nation to maximize the benefits of its input factors where it has a
comparative advantage. Control of these resources must be dispersed to individuals so that they are
empowered to make decisions that will improve their economic condition.