Globalisation
Introduction
A phone designed in California, manufactured in China, running software from India. Coffee from Brazil. A Korean drama on an American platform. This is GLOBALISATION — the increasing INTERCONNECTION of the world through flows of goods, capital, technology, ideas, and people. But globalisation is CONTESTED. For some, it is the greatest force for prosperity in human history. For others, it is a source of inequality, cultural homogenisation, and corporate dominance.
1. What Is Globalisation?
Globalisation is MULTIDIMENSIONAL — not just economic:
| Dimension | Example |
|---|
| Economic | Trade, investment, finance. A smartphone assembled in China from components made in 10+ countries. |
| Political | International institutions — UN, WTO, IMF. Governance BEYOND the nation-state. |
| Cultural | Flow of ideas, values, media. Hollywood, K-pop, yoga, global fast food. |
| Technological | Internet, social media, AI. Information flows across borders INSTANTLY. |
Is Globalisation New?
NOT entirely. The SILK ROAD connected Eurasia for centuries. European COLONIALISM forcibly integrated the world. What IS new: the SPEED, SCALE, and DEPTH — driven by the internet, container shipping, and trade liberalisation since the 1990s.
2. Causes of Globalisation
| Cause | How It Drives Globalisation |
|---|
| Technology | The internet, mobile phones, container ships, jet travel — 'The world has shrunk' |
| Trade Liberalisation | Tariffs reduced. WTO. Free trade agreements. Markets opened worldwide. |
| Financial Liberalisation | Capital moves across borders INSTANTLY. |
| Political Decisions | India (1991), China (1978). End of Cold War opened the communist bloc. |
3. The Debate — For and Against
The Case FOR Globalisation
| Argument | Evidence |
|---|
| Economic Growth | Countries that opened to trade — China, India, South Korea, Vietnam — experienced RAPID growth and poverty reduction |
| Technology Transfer | Farmers in Africa use mobile banking. Students access global education. |
| Cultural Exchange | People experience music, food, film, and ideas from everywhere. |
| Global Problem-Solving | Pandemics, climate change, terrorism — cannot be solved by any single country. |
| Consumer Choice | Vast range of goods at lower prices. |
The Case AGAINST Globalisation
| Argument | Evidence |
|---|
| Inequality | Benefits the RICH and SKILLED. Inequality has RISEN within countries. |
| Loss of Sovereignty | Governments constrained by markets. 'If bond markets disapprove, your currency crashes.' |
| Cultural Homogenisation | Global brands overwhelm local cultures. Languages and traditions ERASED. |
| Corporate Power | MNCs larger than many countries. Evade taxes. Exploit weak laws. |
| Job Loss | Manufacturing moved from the West to low-cost countries. Working class devastated. |
4. Globalisation and India
| Positive | Negative |
|---|
| IT/ITeS BOOM — India became 'back office of the world' | Small manufacturers CRUSHED by cheap Chinese imports |
| Hundreds of millions lifted from poverty | Farmer distress — global price volatility |
| Indian companies became GLOBAL players (Tata, Infosys) | 'Jobless growth' — GDP grew, employment didn't |
| Consumer choice expanded dramatically | Inequality WIDENED — urban-rural, skilled-unskilled |
5. Anti-Globalisation Resistance
| Movement | What It Represents |
|---|
| 1999 Seattle protests | WTO meeting disrupted. 'Teamsters and Turtles' — unions + environmentalists. |
| World Social Forum | 'Another World Is Possible.' Counter to Davos. |
| Nationalist/Populist movements | Brexit (2016). Trump's 'America First.' |
6. Exam Focus
| Question Type | Marks | Likely Topics |
|---|
| Long Answer | 6 | Is globalisation a force for good? Arguments for and against |
| Short Answer | 4 | What is globalisation? Explain its dimensions |
| Short Answer | 2 | How has globalisation affected India? |
Self-Test
Q1. What is GLOBALISATION? Explain its dimensions.
A1. The increasing INTERCONNECTION of the world through: (1) ECONOMIC — trade, investment, finance. (2) POLITICAL — international institutions (UN, WTO, IMF). Governance beyond the nation-state. (3) CULTURAL — flow of ideas, values, media, lifestyles. (4) TECHNOLOGICAL — internet, social media, AI. CAUSES: technology, trade liberalisation, political decisions (India 1991, China 1978), end of Cold War.
Q2. Evaluate arguments FOR and AGAINST globalisation.
A2. FOR: Rapid growth and poverty reduction in countries that opened to trade. Technology transfer. Cultural exchange. Enables collective action on global problems. Consumer choice and lower prices. AGAINST: Rising INEQUALITY within countries. Loss of national SOVEREIGNTY — markets constrain democratic choices. Cultural HOMOGENISATION. Corporate POWER — MNCs evade taxes. Job losses in developed countries. CONCLUSION: Globalisation's effects depend on HOW it is governed. Unregulated = benefits the powerful. Well-governed (with labour/environmental standards, fair trade, safety nets) = can benefit all.