2. Course description
• This course introduces students to the contemporary
world by examining the multifaceted phenomenon of
globalization. Using the various disciplines of the social
sciences, it examines the economic, social, political,
technological, and other transformations that have
created an increasing awareness of the
interconnectedness of the people and places around the
globe. To this end, the course provides an overview of
the various debates in global governance, development,
and sustainability. Beyond exposing the student to the
world outside the Philippines, it seeks to inculcate a
sense of global citizenship and global ethical
responsibility.
8. Chapter 1 – Introduction to
Globalization
“Let me begin with globalization. [...] Narrowly defined, it is meant to mean
. Its larger connotations, however, are less
innocent, encompassing as
pre-eminence of Western culture and
economy; Americanization of the developed and developing world
through the penetration of US culture into others as well as the marketing
of third-world cultures to the West as fashion, film setting, and cuisine…
9. Chapter 1 – Introduction to
Globalization
We imagine in
distinguishability, the elimination of minority languages, minority cultures
in its Wake. We speculate with horror on what could be the irrevocable,
enfeebling alteration of major languages, major cultures in its sweep. Even
if those dreaded consequences are not made completely manifest, they
nevertheless cancel
10. • “One day there will be no borders, no boundaries, no flags and no
countries and the only passport will be the heart.” ― Carlos
Santan
• The most important challenges facing the world in the 21st
century are associated with globalization, the growing
interconnectedness of people and places through converging
processes of economic, political, and cultural change. Once
distant regions are now increasingly linked together through
commerce, communication, and travel.
• This unit introduces the various definitions of globalization,
understand its key features, and familiarize you to a variety of
factors which have contributed to the process of globalization, its
benefits and disadvantages, and its history and theories
11. Lesson 1: Globalization
In This Lesson
Develop a nuanced definition of globalization in order to begin to understand the processes of
globalization.
View a video and develop their own definition of globalization.
Understand the key features of globalization.
Identify the pros and cons of globalization.
12. The Meaning of Globalization
• Globalization was first used in 1959. The noun appears in the Oxford
English dictionary in 1962. But three decades passed before globalization
was developed in social sciences as a paradigm or example.
• Globalization is a catchphrase familiar to anyone tuned in to social media.
Every day we hear the term globalization on the news, read it in the
papers, and overhear people talking about it. What does this term mean?
There is no definite definition of globalization or globalization and the term
is used to denote a variety of ways in which nation-states, regions and
people, due to advances in transportation an communication systems, are
becoming more and more closely connected and interdependent, not only
in the economic sense, but also in the cultural, political, social,
technological, environmental and spatial aspects.
13. The Meaning of Globalization
• Shalmali Guttal (2007) defined globalization as ―the process
of interaction and integration among people, companies, and
governments worldwide.
• As a complex and multifaceted phenomenon, globalization is
considered by some as a form of capitalist expansion which
entails the integration of local and national economies into a
global, unregulated market economy.
14. Other definitions:
• Globalization is ―the geographic dispersion of industrial and
service activities, for example research and development,
sourcing of inputs, production and distribution, and the cross-
border networking of companies, for example through joint
ventures and the sharing of assets.
Organization for Economic Cooperation and
Development
15. • [Globalization] is ―the word used to describe the growing
interdependence of the world‘s economies, cultures, and
populations, brought about by cross-border trade in goods
and services, technology, and flows of investment, people,
and information. Peterson Institute for International Economics
• [Globalization] is ―the ability to produce any good or service
anywhere in the world, using raw materials, components,
capital and technology from anywhere, sell the resulting
output anywhere and place the profits anywhere. Peter Jay
16. • [Globalization] is ―the increased interconnectedness and
interdependence of peoples and countries, is generally
understood to include two inter-related elements: the
opening of international borders to increasingly fast flows of
goods, services, finance, people and ideas; and the changes in
institutions and policies at national and international levels
that facilitate or promote such flows. Globalization has the
potential for both positive and negative effects on
development and health. World Health Organization
17. • [Globalization] is ―the inexorable integration of markets,
nation-states, and technologies to a degree never witnessed
before – in a way that is enabling individuals, corporations
and nation-states to reach around the world farther, faster,
deeper, and cheaper than ever before and in a way that is
enabling the world to reach into individuals, corporations,
and nation-states farther, faster, deeper, and cheaper than
ever before. Thomas Friedman
18. • [Globalization] is ―the process of greater
interdependence among countries and their citizens. It
consists of increased integration of product and
resource markets across nations via trade,
immigration, and foreign investment – that is, via
international flows of goods and services, of people,
and of investment such as culture and the
environment. Simply put, globalization is political,
technological, and cultural, as well as economic.
Robert J. Carbaugh
19. • [Globalization] is ―… a process in which geographic
distance becomes less a factor in the establishment
and sustenance of border-crossing, long distance
economic, political, and socioeconomic relations.
People become aware of this fact. Networks of
relations and dependencies therefore become
potentially border-crossing and worldwide. This
potential internationalization of relations and
dependencies causes fear, resistance, actions, and
reactions. Rudd Lubber
20. • [Globalization] can thus be defined “as the
intensification of worldwide social relations which link
distant localities in such a way that local happenings
are shaped by events occurring many miles away and
vice-versa.” This is a dialectical process because such
local happenings may move in an obverse direction
from the very distanciated relations that shape them.
Local transformation is as much part of globalization
as the lateral extension of social connections across
time and space. Anthony Giddens
21. • Globalization is the expansion and intensification of social
relations and consciousness across world-time and across
world-space. Manfred Steger
“Expansion refers to ― both the creation of new social
networks and the multiplication of existing connections that cut
across traditional political, economic, cultural, and geographic
boundaries.”
Example: Social media – Establish new global connections
between people.
22. • International groups of non-governmental organizations (NGOs)
are networks that connect a more specific group (social workers
and activists) from different corners of the globe.
• Intensification refers to the expansion, stretching, and
acceleration of these networks.
Example: London and New York have strong financial market
connection and with the advent of electronic trading, the volume of
that trade increases rapidly since traders can now trade more at
higher speeds. Thus, the connection is accelerating.
23. BUT
It is not only in financial matters that you can find these
connections. In 2012, when the monsoon rains flooded much of
Bangkok, the Honda plant making some of the critical car parts
temporarily ceased production. This had a strong negative
effect on Honda-USA which relied heavily on the parts being
imported from Thailand. Not only was it unable to reach the
sales targets but the ability of the service centers nationwide to
assist Honda owners also suffered. As a result, the Japanese car
company‘s global profits also fell.
24. • Relates to how people perceive time and space. People begin
to feel that the world has become a smaller place and
distance has collapsed from thousands of miles to just a
mouse-click away.
Example: E-mail, cable-TV, internet
25. • If GLOBALIZATION represents the many processes that
allow for the expansion and intensification of global
connections, GLOBALISM is a widespread belief among
powerful people that the global integration of
economic markets is beneficial for everyone, since it
spreads freedom and democracy across the world.
26. Converging Currents of Globalization
• Most scholars agree that the most significant component of globalization is the economic reorganization of
the world. The characteristics of this new world arrangement are:
1. Global communication systems that link all regions of the planet instantaneously and global
transportation systems capable of moving goods quickly by air, sea, and land;
2. Transnational conglomerate corporate strategies that have created global corporations more
economically powerful than many nation-states;
3. International financial institutions that make possible 24-hour trading with new and more flexible
forms of monetary flow;
4. Global agreements that promote free trade;
5. Market economies that have replaced state-controlled economies, and privatized firms and services,
like water delivery, formerly operated by governments;
6. An abundance of planetary goods and services that have arisen to fulfill consumer demand (real or
imaginary); and, of course,
7. An army of international workers, managers, executives, who give this powerful economic force a
human dimension.
(Rowntree, Lewis, Price & Wyckoff, 2008)
27. Factors That Have Contributed to Globalization
• There are a variety of factors which have contributed to the process of globalization.
Some of the most important globalization drivers are numbered below.
1. The price of transporting goods has fallen significantly, enabling good to be imported
and exported more cheaply due to containerization and bulk shipping;
2. The development of the internet to organize trade on a global scale;
3. TNCs have taken advantage of the reduction or lowering of trade barriers;
4. The desire of TNCs to profit from lower unit labor costs and other favorable
production factors abroad has encouraged countries to regulate their tax systems to
draw in foreign direct investment (FDI);
5. Transnational and multinational companies have invested significantly in expanding
internationally;
6. The collapse of communism in the Soviet Union; and
7. The opening of China to world trade.
28. • Globalization is one of the most controversial issues of our times.
Supporters generally believe that it brings in greater economic
efficiency that will eventually result in bring prosperity for the
entire world. Critics think that it will largely benefit those who
are already rich, leaving most of the world poorer than before.
Economic globalization is generally applauded by corporate
leaders and economists. But opposition to economic
globalization is widespread in the labor and environmental
movements for it has promoted exploitation of workers, children,
farmers, and the environment.
29. Globalization
Advantages
• Productivity increases faster
when countries produce goods
and services in which they have
a comparative advantage. Living
standards can increase more
rapidly.
• Global competition and cheap
imports keep a constraint on
prices, so inflation is less likely
to disrupt economic growth.
Disadvantages
• Millions of workers have lost
their jobs because of imports or
shifts in production abroad.
Most find new jobs that pay less.
• Millions of workers fear getting
laid off, especially at those firms
in import-competing industries
30. Globalization (cont…)
Advantages
• An open economy promotes
technological development and
innovation, with fresh ideas
from abroad.
• Jobs in export industries tend to
pay about 15 percent more than
jobs in import - competing
industries.
Disadvantages
• Workers face demands of wage
concessions from their
employers, which often threaten
to export jobs abroad if wage
concessions are not accepted.
• Besides blue-collar jobs, service
and white - collar jobs are
increasingly vulnerable to
operations being sent overseas.
31. Globalization (cont..)
Advantages
• Unfettered capital movements
provide workers access to
foreign investment and maintain
low interest rates
Disadvantages
• Workers can lose their
competitiveness when
companies build state-of-the-art
factories in low wage countries,
making them as productive as
those in the developed
countries.
(Business Week ―Backlash Behind the Anxiety over Globalization, 2000)
32. • A number of experts argue that both the anti-globalization and
the pro-globalization stances are exaggerated. Those in the
middle ground tend to argue that economic globalization is
indeed unavoidable. They point out that even the anti-
globalization movement is made possible by the Internet and is,
therefore, itself an expression of globalization. They further
contend that globalization can be managed, at both the national
and international levels, to reduce economic inequalities and
protect the natural environment. Such scholars stress the need for
strong yet efficient governments and international institutions
(such as the UN, World Bank, and IMF), along with networks of
watchdog environmental, labor, and human rights groups.
(Rowntree, Lewis, Price & Wyckoff, 2008
33. Enrichment videos
• Crash Course World History #41: Globalization I - The Upside
hosted by John Green
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5SnR-e0S6Ic
• Crash Course World History #42: Globalization II – Good or
Bad? hosted by John Green
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s_iwrt7D5OA