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The Advantages of Globalization

Much has been said over the past couple of decades about Globalization being a good thing that is inevitable.  Why is it a "good thing"?  Is it inevitable?  (British: globalisation, US: globalization, both spellings will be used below).

Globalisation is not solely about international trade, we can trade with only a mild level of globalisation.  Globalisation describes how the world is adopting a single culture and economy.  The Globalizing Tendency hold that this is a good thing because once the world has a single culture then everyone will understand everyone else and we will all become richer and less subject to war and conflict.  Perhaps, before accepting these claims we should ask who it is who benefits directly from Globalization and then turn to whether or not the predicted utopia will occur.

Globalization begins with trade and large scale trading sets fashion and hence culture.  In the early twentieth century the Anglo-American market place stretched across the whole British Empire and provided an easy conduit for Globalized culture.  Cables had been laid under the world's oceans from the 1860s onwards so there were rapid communications to all parts of the world. The Americans, who wanted to use the resources of the British Empire (a quarter of the world's population), were particularly upset about trade tariffs that disadvantaged them in this market as were British companies who had problems selling to the Americans so the corporations of both countries agitated for free trade.  After World War I the Anglo-American axis was globally dominant and could sell to the whole world. In the 1920s the easing of regulations led to a massive boom in the movement of goods, money and labour.  The gold standard allowed easy financial transactions (like a single currency), the global banking system became interconnected and large corporations bestrode the world.  This was the first Globalized economy.  The stock in corporations became ever more valuable and the volume of trade rocketed.  Large corporations ruled the world.

The system was so interconnected that once one part of this system got into trouble all the rest collapsed.  See Globalization and Great Depressions for a detailed description of how this happened.

The collapse of the First World Order, the globalized economy of the 1920s was followed by the introduction of tariffs, the limitation of labour movements and tight bank regulations.  Globalization was wound back.  The new Communist Empires in Russia and China and the end of the European trading empires also reduced the scope for global culture and trading.

Western corporations and economists had not forgotten the heady days of the early twentieth century.  The economics of the Second World War meant that American corporations now became dominant in Europe and they pressed for a New World Order, a second chance at Globalizing the world's economy.  It was not until the communist empires had fallen that a truly global repeat of the early twentieth century was possible because Soviet influence and money kept producing relatively protectionist governments and political views all around the world.  After the fall of communism in 1989 the world's corporations seized the opportunity. Giant globalized media corporations led the way, sending a continuous barrage of propaganda across the globe to reassure everyone that Globalization was not only a "good thing" but inevitable. This was the second Globalized economy.  The stock in corporations became ever more valuable and the volume of trade rocketed.  Large corporations ruled the world.


The system was so interconnected that once one part of this system got into trouble all the rest collapsed.  See Globalization and Great Depressions for a detailed description of how this happened.

Anyone who has read an economics textbook or even "The Economist" magazine can see immediately the nature of the problem that leads to collapse.  Economists and corporate bosses think solely in terms of economics and short term gain.  Corporations are not concerned about using up the world's resources or creating climate change or destroying cultures or, by the free movement of labour undermining social provision.  Trading volumes and share prices are the beginning and the end of their concern.  Worse still, they act in the short term.  No-one can predict more than a couple of years into the future so corporate bosses go for the immediate pay out, the giant bonus now, the short term lift in share prices etc.  They work together to create a giant, global system to provide these short term rewards without any thought about the stability of such a device.


It is obvious that a fully interconnected global economy is a disaster waiting to happen and strong national economies with a sensible amount of international interconnectedness are the proper way to run a world economy, not Globalization.  This is probably obvious to senior corporate employees but company law destroys their concern for wider issues.  As for economists, the people only hear from those who interpret the world according to the desires of media bosses so they are largely organs of propaganda.  And what of politicians?  They should represent the people against the corporations but, sadly, they seem to be corrupted by promises of jobs as directors and even direct payments.

Globalization benefits senior corporate staff such as directors of large companies and the workers in these companies during the boom period.  When the boom is over there is poverty, unrest and a serious risk of international conflict.

The "utopia" of a uniform world full of coffee-coloured people living lives in peace is a nightmare, another dystopia like Marxism.  It is racist because black people and white people can also be beautiful, it is shockingly ignorant because the beauty of culture is diversity not corporate uniformity and it is a lie because corporate booms and busts cause war.

See also:

Globalisation and Great Depressions

The future of globalization

Nations are the unit of diversity

Globalization and global warming

The aims of localism

Comments

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