1 / 12

Welcome

Globalisation: The Great Debate John Branch, Ph.D. Lecturer in Strategy and Marketing, Stephen M. Ross School of Business Faculty Associate, Center for Russian and East European Studies University of Michigan. • Globalisation. • Debate. • The Controversy of Globalisation. Welcome.

bing
Télécharger la présentation

Welcome

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Globalisation:The Great DebateJohn Branch, Ph.D.Lecturer in Strategy and Marketing,Stephen M. Ross School of BusinessFaculty Associate,Center for Russian and East European StudiesUniversity of Michigan

  2. • Globalisation • Debate • The Controversy of Globalisation Welcome • The Dimensions of Globalisation 1 July 2006. . . Ross, CREES 1 December. . .William Davidson Institute Olin: International marketing, IBOC, GMS, OIBA Ph.D., University of Cambridge Oxford and Northwestern ESC Rennes Since 1993, visiting professor: ZSEM, Croatia Sasin, Thailand HSEBA, Finland ESAN, Peru SSE Riga, Latvia Canadian

  3. Globalisation • Globalisation • 2822 articles and 589 books in 2002 • Globalisation is. . . • . . . primarily an economic phenomenon, involving the increasing interaction, or integration, of national economic systems through the growth of international trade, investment, and capital flows (www.globalisationguide.org). • . . . the process of denationalization of markets, politics, and legal systems, i.e., the rise of the global economy (www.globalisationguideorg). • But. . . • there is also increasing cross-border social, cultural, and technological exchange. • Debate • The Controversy of Globalisation • The Dimensions of Globalisation

  4. • Globalisation • From a sociological point of view, globalisation is. . . • . . . the decoupling of space and time, emphasising that in terms of human communication, there are no temporal or geographic contraints (Anthony Giddens). • . . . a process (or set of processes) which embodies a transformation in the spatial organization of social relations and transactions, expressed in transcontinental or interregional flows and networks of activity, interaction, and power (Andrew McGrew). • . . . a process in which geographic distance becomes a factor of diminishing importance in the establishment and maintenance of cross-border economic, political and socio-cultural relations (Ruud Lubbers). • Debate • The Controversy of Globalisation • The Dimensions of Globalisation

  5. • Globalisation • Critics would present globalisation as. . . • . . . a worldwide drive toward a globalised economic system dominated by supranational corporate trade and banking institutions that are not accountable to democratic processes or national governments (www.globalisationguide.com). • . . . the hegemony of American values (Simon Reich). • Debate • The Controversy of Globalisation • The Dimensions of Globalisation

  6. • Globalisation • Debate • The Controversy of Globalisation Debate • The Dimensions of Globalisation

  7. The Controversy of Globalisation • Globalisation • So, who won the debate? • Debate • The Controversy of Globalisation • The Dimensions of Globalisation

  8. The Dimensions of Globalisation • Globalisation • Confluence of economic phenomena (capitalism) • Liberalisation and deregulation of markets • Privatisation of assets • Retreat of state functions • Diffusion of technology • Cross-national distribution and production (foreign direct investment) • Integration of capital markets • Debate • The Controversy of Globalisation • The Dimensions of Globalisation

  9. • Globalisation • Evolutionary process: • 16th century European capitalism, following circumnavigation of earth in 1529 to 1521 • Expansion of world trade and investment in late 19th century • Halted by first world war and protectionism of 1920s which led to the great depression • Sense of one world during 1875 to 1925: • Gregorian calendar, international date line and zones • Telegraphy and signalling standards • Post second world war: • Emancipation of colonies; international cooperation • Multinational companies • Fall of Berlin wall and collapse of U.S.S.R. • Technological advances • Debate • The Controversy of Globalisation • The Dimensions of Globalisation

  10. • Globalisation • Involves everyone: • International organisations: • WTO, IMF, World Bank, United Nations • Companies • Consumers • Governments • Environmentalists • Non-Governmental Organisations • Unions • Debate • The Controversy of Globalisation • The Dimensions of Globalisation

  11. • Globalisation • Controversial: • The invisible hand. . . Does it really work? • Putting profits over people • Making the poor poorer • ‘Washington consensus’ conspiracy to enrich bankers • Destroying cultural differences • Yielding democracy to faceless multinationals • Americanisation • Hegemony of WTO, IMF, World Bank • Endangers the environment • Debate • The Controversy of Globalisation • The Dimensions of Globalisation

  12. So What?

More Related