MARKET INTEGRATION Contemporary
MARKET INTEGRATION Contemporary
MARKET INTEGRATION Contemporary
INTEGRATION
A. INTERNATIONAL
FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
1) The General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
(GATT) and the World Trade Organization (WTO)
Positive Consequences
• it lowered prices by removing tariffs;
• opened up new opportunities for small and medium
sized business to establish a name for itself;
• quadrupled trade between the three countries; and
• created 5 million US jobs.
Negative Consequences
• excessive pollution;
• loss of more than 682,000 manufacturing jobs;
• exploitation of workers in Mexico; and
• moving Mexican farmers out of business.
B. HISTORY OF GLOBAL
MARKET INTEGRATION
1) 15TH Century
• For the most part, government policies during this era fostered
openness to trade, capital mobility, and migration.
Britain unilaterally repealed its tariffs on grains in 1846, and a series of
bilateral treaties subsequently dismantled many barriers to trade in
Europe.
A growing appreciation for the principle of comparative advantage, as
forcefully articulated by Adam Smith and David Ricardo, may have
made governments more receptive to the view that international
trade is not a zero-sum game but can be beneficial to all participants.
• Domestic opposition to free trade eventually
intensified, as cheap grain from the periphery
put downward pressure on the incomes of
landowners in the core.
• Beginning in the late 1870s, many European
countries raised tariffs, with Britain being a
prominent exception.
• In the United States, tariffs on manufactures
were raised in the 1860s to relatively high
levels, where they remained until well into
the twentieth century.
• Unfortunately, the international economic integration
achieved during the nineteenth century was largely
unraveled in the twentieth by two world wars and the
Great Depression.
• After World War II, the major powers undertook the
difficult tasks of rebuilding both the physical
infrastructure and the international trade and
monetary systems.
• The industrial core--now including an emergent Japan
as well as the United States and Western Europe--
ultimately succeeded in restoring a substantial degree
of economic integration, though decades passed
before trade as a share of global output reached pre-
World War I levels.
Post War Period
2) Multinational Companies
3) Global Companies
4) Transnational Companies
THE GLOBAL CORPORATIONS
• Global corporations intentionally surpass
national borders and take advantage of
opportunities in different countries to
manufacture, distribute, market, and sell their
products.
• The contemporary global corporation is
simultaneously and commonly referred to
either as a multinational corporation (MNC),
a transnational corporation (TNC), an
international company, or a global
company.
1. International Companies