Chapter 2
Chapter 2
Chapter 2
The Globalization
of World Economics
Learning Outcomes
At the end Of this lesson. you should able to]
I. define economic glob arration;
2 identify the Actors that facilitate economic #balization;
3. narrate a of global market integration in the twentieth
and
& articulate Fur on economic integration.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) regards "economic
globalization" as a historical process representing the result of
human innovation and technological progress. It is characterized
by the increasing integration of economies around the world
through the movement of goods, services, and capital across
borders. These changes are the products of people, organizations,
institutions, and technologies.' As with all other processes Of
globalization, there is a qualitative and subjective element to this
definition. How does one define "increasing integration"? When
is it considered that trade has increased? Is there a particular
Even while the IMF and ordinary people grapple with the
difficulty of arriving at precise definitions of globalization,
they usually agree that a drastic economic change is occurring
throughout the world. According to the IMF, the value of trade
(goods and services) as a percentage of world GDP increased
from 42.1 percent in 1980 to 62.1 percent in 2007.8 Increased
trade also means that investments are moving all over the world
at faster speeds. According to the United Nations Conference on
The Globalization of World Economics I 13
Trade and Development (UNCTAD), the amount of foreign direct
investments flowing across the world was US$ 57 billion in 1982.
By 2015, that number was $1.76 trillion. These figures represent a
dramatic increase in global trade in the span of just a few decades.
It has happened not even after one human lifespan!
Apart from the sheer magnitude of commerce, we should
also note the increased speed and frequency of trading. These
days, supercomputers can execute millions of stock purchases
and sales between different cities in a matter of seconds through
a process called high-frequency trading. Even the items being sold
and traded are changing drastically. Ten years ago, buying books
or music indicates acquiring physical items. Today, however, a
"book" can be digitally downloaded to be read with an e-reader,
and a music "album" refers to the 15 songs on mp3 format you can
purchase and download from iTunes.
This lesson aims to trace how economic globalization came
about. It will also assess this globalization system, and examine
who benefits from it and who is left out.
International Trading Systems
International trading systems are not new. The oldest known
international trade route was the Silk Road-a network of
pathways in the ancient world that spanned from China to what is
now the Middle East and to Europe. It was called as such because
one of the most profitable products traded through this network
was silk, which was highly prized especially in the area that is now
the Middle East as well as in the West (today's Europe). Traders
used the Silk Road regularly from 130 BCE when the Chinese
Han dynasty opened trade to the West until 1453 BCE when the
Ottoman Empire closed it.
However, while the Silk Road was international, it was not
truly "global" because it had no ocean routes that could reach the
American continent. So when did full economic globalization
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14 | The Structures of Globalization
begin? According to historians Dennis O. Flynn and Arturo
Giraldez, the age of globalization began when "all important
populated continents began to exchange products continuously-
both with each other directly and indirectly via other continents-
and in values sufficient to generate crucial impacts on all trading
partners." Flynn and Giraldez trace this back to 1571 with the
establishment of the galleon trade that connected Manila in the
Philippines and Acapulco in Mexico." This was the first time that
the Americas were directly connected to Asian trading routes. For
Filipinos, it is crucial to note that economic globalization began on
the country's shores.
The galleon trade was part of the age of mercantilism. From
the 16th century to the 18th century, countries, primarily in
Europe, competed with one another to sell more goods as a means
to boost their country's income (called monetary reserves later on).
To defend their products from competitors who sold goods more
cheaply, these regimes (mainly monarchies) imposed high tariffs,
forbade colonies to trade with other nations, restricted trade
routes, and subsidized its exports. Mercantilism was thus also a
system of global trade with multiple restrictions.
A more open trade system emerged in 1867 when, following
the lead of the United Kingdom, the United States and other
European nations adopted the gold standard at an international
monetary conference in Paris. Broadly, its goal was to create a
common system that would allow for more efficient trade and
prevent the isolationism of the mercantilist era. The countries
thus established a common basis for currency prices and a fixed
exchange rate system-all based on the value of gold.
Despite facilitating simpler trade, the gold standard was
still a very restrictive system, as it compelled countries to back
their currencies with fixed gold reserves. During World War I,
when countries depleted their gold
reserves to fund their armies,
many were forced to abandon the gold standard. Since European
countries had low gold reserves, they adopted floating currencies
that were no longer redeemable in gold.
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ot Econornic•. 1 23
led to unprecedented reductions in tariffs and other trade barriers,
but these processes have often been unfair.
First. developed countries are often protectionists. as they
repeatedly refuse to lift policies that safeguard their primary
products that could otherwise be overwhelmed by imports from
the developing world. The best example of this double standard is
Japan's determined refusal to allow rice imports into the country
to protect its farming sector. Japan's justification is that rice is
"sacred." Ultimately, it is its economic muscle as the third largest
economy that allows it to resist pressures to open its agricultural
sector.
The United States likewise fiercely protects its sugar industry.
forcing consumers and sugar-dependent businesses to pay higher
prices instead of getting cheaper sugar from plantations of Central
Faced with these blatantly protectionist measures from
powerful countries and blocs, poorer countries can do very little
to make economic globalization more just. Trade imbalances,
therefore, characterize economic relations between developed and
developing countries.
The beneficiaries of global commerce have been mainly
transnational corporations (TNCs) and not governments.
And like any other business, these TNCs are concerned more
with profits than with assisting the social programs of the
governments hosting them. Host countries, in turn, loosen tax
laws. which prevents wages from rising. while sacrificing social
and environmental programs that protect the underprivileged
members of their societies. The term "race to the bottom" refers,
to countries' lowering their labor standards. including the
protection of workers' interests. to lure in foreign investors seeking
high profit margins at the lowest cost possible, Governments
weaken environmental laws to attract investors, creating fatal
consequences on their ecological balance and depleting them of
their finite resources (like oil, coal, and minerals).
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24 The of Globalization
Localizing the Material
Many Phi"ppine industries wee devastated by unfair trade
deals under the GATT and eventually the One sector that
was affected was Philippine agriculture. According
Walden and a team cf researchers at Focus on the Global
South. the US used its pov.•er under the GATT system to prevent
Philippine importers from purchasing Philippine poultry and
potk—even as sold meat to the Phlippines.
Although the Philippires expected to make up losses in
secto's like meat with gahs in areas such as coconut products
no significant char,9e was realized. In 1993, coconut
amounted to "9 billon. and after a slight increase to 52.3 billfon
in 1997. itreturned to fig billon in 2000
strikingly Bello and company noted that the Philippines
became a food importer •order the GATT. In 1993. the country
had an *gricultural trade surplus of 5292 million. It had a deficit
1997 and 994 million in
. Waldn Hert*R Marissa de Guzrr.an. and Mary
Zed
Conclusion
International economic integration is a central tenet Of
globalization. In fact. it is so crucial to the process that many
writers and confuse this integration for the entirety
reminder. economics is one window into
the phenomenon ofglobalization
; it is not the entire thing.
Nevertheless. much of globalization is anchored on changes
in the economy_ Global culture, for example. facilitated by
trade. Filipinos Would not be
not for the trade that allows locals to watch American movies•
listen to American music. and consume American pÆts. Th'
relations. These days, many events o
ise largely contingent on trade
to cement trading relations between f foreign affairs are conducted
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the o' 1 25
Given the stakes involved in economic globalization, it is
perennially important to ask how this system can be made more
'ust. Although some elements of global free trade can bc scaled
back, policies cannot do away with it as a whole. International
policymakers. therefore. should strive to think of ways to make
trading deals fairer. Governments must also continue to devise
ways of cushioning the most damaging effects of economic
globalization, while ensuring that its benefits accrue for everyone.
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