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- The reaction to globalization
Is globalization a myth?
The debate over whether globalization actually exists still continues. Rugman and Collinson (2006) claim that many multinational companies are not making their profits from trade with LDCs, but rather from countries that are already affluent. Much of the argument depends on the definition of a global business. Rugman maintains that this is ‘generally accepted as a firm with major operations (at least 20 per cent of its total sales) in each of the three regions of the broad “triad” of [the] EU, North America and Asia’ (Rugman and Collinson, 2006: 80). Much therefore depends on the definition itself. There is strong evidence that there has been a significant growth in trade within the three regions mentioned above. This fits the definition of regional business, where a firm has the majority of its sales inside one of the three triad regions, usually the home region. In practice, the debate between globalization and regionaliza- tion is really one of degree. LDCs in a number of cases have been marginalized, receiving a declining share of trade and investment, and suffering from a high rate of debt and debt servicing. The net result is that there is still unequal distribution of income and an increasing gap between the rich and the poor. The failure of the Doha Conference to gain full consensus for a free trade agreement and the pressure on Western Europe, the USA and China to consider at least a limited return to protectionist policies during the global recession have been a cause for concern. In his State of the Union address in January 2012, President Obama warned of the need for further measures to encourage US companies to reverse the shift of manufacturing off- shore because of the loss of jobs and the stagnation of wages in the USA. The reaction to globalization The downside of globalization is the outsourcing of manufacturing from the West, where factories have been forced to close as multinationals have found cheaper sources of production, in particular with significantly reduced labour costs, and raw materials in LDCs. There is concern that global inequality is growing, with the result that in many countries there is increasing political instability and the widening Globalization and its Effect on Culture 215 of the gap in incomes between the minority privileged elite and the rest of the population. This trend is compounded by lower wages, poor health and safety in the workplace and corrupt business practices. These all con- tribute to a feeling of resentment and envy. The demonstrators against globalization, such as the Occupy movement, are part of a protest that sees globalization concerned more with making profits at the expense of social concerns and doing little to remove inequality. They maintain that they are forced to act outside legitimate politics because mainstream politicians do not appear to recognize the root causes of their dissatisfaction. There are two very different ways of analysing the effects of globalization. One approach is to see the working of the market economy bringing about a world in which the gap between rich and poor increases. The second (and more optimistic) view is that a market economy will enable countries to converge towards a more equal state of prosperity as global trade liberalizes the world economy. If poverty persists, it will be because we have failed to allow the market to operate freely. Workers, factory owners and those involved in the setting- up and financ- ing of international operations gain in terms of wages. The transportation of the products is a further source of economic advantage to the countries concerned. Their finances in general benefit from the increased spending power of those employed as well as the psychological advantages to workers of having a job. Even where working conditions are relatively poor and the wages are low, many would say this is preferable to being unemployed without any source of income. In Globalization and its Discontents (2002), Joseph Stiglitz, former Chief Economist of the World Bank and a noted academic economist, was a strong critic of globalization because its benefits are spread unevenly throughout the world. This is particularly the case in LDCs, where many people remain in poverty, notably in Africa, mainly because of a lack of resources in educa- tion to take advantage of the new technologies that have begun to make a difference to living standards in India and China. Stiglitz (2007) also con- tends that market reforms have been pushed forward too quickly, whereas individual countries should be free to experiment with alternatives and develop ways that are best suited to their cultures and their needs. He does, however, contend that globalization has some benefits: ‘Opening up inter- national trade has helped many countries grow far more quickly than they would otherwise have done … Because of globalization, many people in the world live longer than before and their standard of living is far better.’ Writing in The Times on 19 February 2007, Stiglitz maintained that India and China have taken full advantage of the globalization of knowledge and markets to move hundreds of millions out of poverty, but in other parts of the world, the gap between rich and poor nations has increased, mainly due to the large subsidies in the North, which have depressed the incomes of those in the South and have increased their levels of poverty. He sounds 216 Cross-Cultural Communication a warning that unless globalization has ‘more winners and fewer losers, there can be a backlash against globalization’. Tony Blair, the former British Prime Minister, stated that: ‘If globalisation only works for the benefit of the few, it will fail. The West must follow the principles that power, wealth and opportunity must be in the hands of the many, not the few. The global economy must be a force for good and an international movement’ (The Times, 2 October 2001). In the foreword to a report on globalization for the Institute of Public Policy Research in January 2012, Peter Mandelson reiterates this view: ‘There is growing evidence that global economic integration brings rising inequality within economies if the balance between those who benefit from globalization and those who bear the burden of the adaptation is not actively addressed.’ This was a view that Professor Samuel Huntington had already expressed in his The Clash of Civilizations in 1993, when he emphasized that: ‘The new global civilization is in fact a very narrow one, consisting only of the assumptions and values held by most people in the West, but worldwide this culture is shared by very few outside the West.’ He went on to argue that because the world is moder- nizing its way of doing business and its communication systems, it does not necessarily mean that it is becoming more Westernized: ‘The impact of urbanization and the mass communication, coupled with poverty and ethnic divisions, will not lead to people everywhere thinking as we do.’ However, despite Huntington’s prediction, the so- called ‘triad of the rich’, namely North America, Western Europe and Japan, is now being increasingly challenged by the growing spending power of an affluent class emerging in the BRICs. 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