4.2 Global networks and flows Flashcards

1
Q

what is a network?

A

A network is an illustration or model that shows how different places are interconnected through different kinds of flows, movement and transfer.

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2
Q

what is the difference between topographical maps and a network map

A

Topographical map represents real distance whereas network maps represents perceived distance between two places depending on the factors of connectivity.

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3
Q

what is a global hub?

A

Well-connected places are called global hubs in network theory. London, New York city, Singapore, Shanghai, Hong Kong are exampls.

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4
Q

what was the global gross domestic product value in 2015?

A

US$80 trillion

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5
Q

out of the US$80 trillion of global gross domestic product value, how much was generated by trade flows in agricultural and industrial commodities?

A

1/3

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6
Q

why has trade in raw material increase between 2000-2010?

A

the rapid development of emerging economies, especially china, India and Indonesia.

Rising industrial demand for materials and increasing global middle class consumer demand for food, gas and petrol are responsible for almost all growth in reaosce consumption.

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7
Q

why has manufactured good shipping increased?

A

firstly the growth in textiles and electronic goods are fulled by low production costs in China, secondly by supply chain growth in counties where rates of pay for workers are even lower including Bangladesh, Vietnam and Ethiopia.

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8
Q

what is core and periphery refering too in this unit?

A

core and periphery in the past, the development world ‘core’ regions of Eurupoe and North America exploited the human and natural reasorces of the much larger and less dveloped ‘perofephries’ regions of Asia , Africa and Latin America.

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9
Q

the trade patterns 60 years ago are very diffrent to the ones we have today, can you explain them?

A

The marjoirty of high value managefactured goods were producedd and sold in North America, Europe, Japan and Australasia.

Factories in these regions made use of raw, materials imported Asia, Africa, and South America.

Until recently, these uneven trade flows contributed to the persistence of a global core and periphery systm sometimes called the ‘north south deivde’.

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10
Q

what are the some examples of things that transformed South Korea and China into sites of innovation?

A

Koran electronic ginat Samsung and Chinas Huawei

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11
Q

facts about how the georgaphy of consumption chnaged for managfactued goods?

A

more than 1 billion moblie devces have been sold in Inida. Inida is also the worlds fastes growing car market. Large or fast-growing African econmocies including Nigeria , South Africa, Egypt and Kenya are increasinly viewed as improtant marktes by manufacturing ompaies.

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12
Q

what things have led to a rise in the global service market in emerging economies?

A

the rise of middle class spending power, reulatory and technological changes.

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13
Q

can you give a stat about the global service market?

A

the global service market is wort mor ethan one trillion US dollars in 2015.

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14
Q

what are some impornat servise sectors that have been emegering?

A

Tourism
finaical services and insurance
online media and retail

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15
Q

can you expand of tourism as a service secotr that was been emerging?

A

The value of the international tourist trade is widely believed to have doubled between 2005 and 2015 to a figure in excess of US$ 1 trillion ( it is hard to make a precise estimate due to the many indirect benefits it creates).

The number of international tourist arrivals has doubled in the same period and now exceeds 1 billion people.

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16
Q

what is an example of where Tourism has boomed as a service sector?

A

Much of the growth activity has been generated by touristic movement in Asia. China Now generates the highest volume of international tourism expenditure, while Europe receives more tourist arrivals than any other continent.

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17
Q

can you expand on ‘financial services and insurance’ as a service sector that was been emerging?

A

Free-market liberalization has played a major role in fostering international trade in financial services.

For instance, the deregulation of the City of London in 1986 removed a large amount of ‘red tape’ and paved the way for London to become the world’s leading global hub for financial services.

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18
Q

what is an example where free-market liberalization has expanded the service secor of ‘Finaical servises and insureance’?

A

In the European Union, cross-border trade in fianical services has expandied in the absence of barriers.

Large banks and insurance comapnies are able to sell services to customers in each of the EU’s member states.

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19
Q

can you expand on ‘Online media and retail’ as a service sector that was been emerging?

A

One important recent development in global trade has been the arrival of on-demand media services. Faster broadband and powerful handheld computers have allowed comapines such as Amazon and Netflix to stream films and music on-demand dircetly to consumers.

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20
Q

who eles has benifited from the online media and retail sercvice secotr growth?

A

Global divliary comapies such as DHL have reaped the benifts of e-commerce growth.

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21
Q

some counties and world cities serve as important gloabl hubs for particular flows, can you give two prominant examples?

A
  • Important stock markest are found in New York, Tokyo, Shanghi and São Paulo.
  • Nigeria and South Korea have successful television and film industries with many views in nabouring counties.
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22
Q

what is the GFC?

A

the Global Financial Cricis

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23
Q

when did the GFC take place

A

2007-09

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24
Q

what caused the GFR?

A

the GFC originated in the US and EU money markets, where sales of high-risk financial services and products triggered the faliour or near collapse of several leading banks and institutions.

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25
Q

what was the consequence of the GFC?

A

The resulting shockwaves undermined the entire world economy,

Some counties experienced severe economic difficulty in the immediate aftermath.

Examples include Portugal, Greece and Irland.

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26
Q

sevral key data indcators indicate what abut the effects of the GFC?

A

that the long-term downturn in world trade flows has continued to affect developed,e merging and developing economies alike since the GFC.

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27
Q

what are some statistics about the GFC and its after mass?

A

In 2016, for the fifth consecutive year, global trade did not grow.

oil and some natural gas resource prices have fallen due to the global industry slowdown. As a result, economic growth in Sub-sahara Africa has halved, leading to several countries to ask the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for help.

A significant slowdown of emerging econmoies has occured: Brazil, Russia, South Afria and Nigeria recorded minimla growth or enetered a regression in 2016.

Container shipping movments have also declined. The baltic Dry Index (BDI) - a messure of the price for shipping dry goods such as iron ore and coal- reached a record low in 2016.

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28
Q

what is the last importat influence on the world trade?

A

chinas economy maturing and slow down.

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29
Q

can you give a stat about chinas slow down?

A

Dispite being the world leading economy by some messers, its growth rate has halfved recently since 2007 from 14% to under 7%.

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30
Q

what is a way you can discribe chinas as after a slow down?

A

Chinas was globalization’s growth locomotive.

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31
Q

what is the nature of this change and why?

A

it is a parminant rather than cyclical change beacuse China has entered a new and slower fase of economic development.

This is beacuse instead of exlorting cheap mass-manifactured goods, chinas leaders have shifted the coutnires economy towards the procudtion of more sofphisticared and higher-value consumer items for its own domestic market.

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32
Q

what has been the effect of Chinas slow down?

A

it has reduced chinas demand (and therefore global demand) for natural reasorces, therby ending a decade-long global commodies boom or ‘super cycle’.

Prices fall when markets weaken and in 2016 the prices of iron ore, aliminium, copper, gold, platinum and oil reached their lowest levels since GFC.

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33
Q

what and who is the MINT group?

A

the four fastest growing economies of Mexico, Indonesia, Nigeria and Turkey.

34
Q

who are loads impornatnt for?

A

loans can be an inmpormnt fianical flows for states at all levels of economic development. (for exampe FTER The GFC, several European counties needed help form the IMF).

35
Q

can you gie an example where international lending has been sucessfull?

A

The Wolrd Bank lent Laos US$1 billion to build a new dam on the Nam Theun River. The dam generated hydroelecritc power. Laos can now earn US$ 2 billion by selling elecrisity to its nabour Thailand over the next 25 years.

This will be enough money to repay the loan and increase the GDP of Lagos too.

36
Q

what is the general theory behind loans?

A

borrowing bring procperity to developing eocnmoies if the mobey is wisly invested in ways that earn an income both for the borrowing and for the lender (who charges interest).

37
Q

what are SAPs?

A

structual adjeustment programmes- these are Money borowing rules designed to help avoid finaical mismanagemnt by enucraging fiscal prudence.

38
Q

when are SAPs needed and what are some examples of what they employ?

A

they are used sometimes when states experiance severe fianical difficulties. Borrowing couties must agree to make concessions in returns for new lendings.

This may involve privatizing poorly run goverment servsis, or withdrawing costly sate support for ineffienct industies.

39
Q

what are some critisisms of SAPs?

A

critics say they exacerbate povety instead of solving it and furthere undermine the economic soverignty of borrowing states.

In critical theory they are regareded as a neo-colonial stratagy ised by developed counties to mentain theor power an influce over how the global periphery develops.

40
Q

what is an example where the ciritisms of SAPs were manifested in real life?

A

in 2003, Tanzania’s poor city dwellers were left without free water supplise after the goverment was impelled to privetize water supplies as a condition of its US$143 million World Bank loan.

Interestingly, Tanzania has more recntly borrowed money from India for its lattest water supply project- this is symtomatic of the shifting pattern of power explored in 4.1; poor coutnies are increaly looking towards new supperpowers like china and india for assiatnce alongside, or in place of, the US-dominated Bretton Woods instirutions.

41
Q

how has globalisation affected migration flows?

A

globalization has lead to a rise in migration flows both within countries (internal migration) and between the (external migration).

42
Q

what are two stats you can pull up about migration?

A

A recrd number of people migrated internationally in 2015 and there are now a total of more than 250 million living in a country they were not born in. This respects 3-4% of the words population.

43
Q

what are some of the important pattersn that have taken place in the pattersn of international migration in recent years?

A
  • as recenty as the 1990s, international migration was dirceted mainly towards developed world destinations such as New York and Paris. SInce the, world cities in developing coutnies, such as Mumbai (india), Lagos (Nigeria) nd Dubai (UAE) have also begun to function as major global hubs for immigration.
  • much international migration is relativly regionalised. In geneal, the largest labour flows connect neighbour countires such as the USA nd mexico, or Poland and Germany.
44
Q

what is a stat you can give about the value of remittances?

A

around US$500 billion of rimmitances are currently being sent home by migrant annually.

This is three times the valou of overseas development aids.

45
Q

what can remmitances be sent?

A

remmitances can be transfered via banks or sent in the mail as cash.Remitly is an American online remittance service based in Seattle, United States that offers international money transfers to over 150 countries.

46
Q

what is the diffecenciating factor between internation aid and remitances?

A

unlike international aid and lending, remittances are a peer-topeer fiancial flow: money travles more or less dircetly from one family memeber to another.

47
Q

what is the vital role of remittances?

A

this corss boarder money flow plays a vital role in the socital development of communites who have prosily bbeen exculeded from access to education and healthcare.

48
Q

why should globalisation not only be considered a cause of mirgation and remmitance?

A

beacuse the vast rise in trade between some coutnies like the UK and India has actually coincided with a deciline in the mirgation between them.

49
Q

what is international aid?

A

international aid is a gift of moeny, goods or servises to a developing country.

50
Q

what is the diffrerecne between international aid and a loan?

A

international aid does not need paying back.

51
Q

who may provided internation aid?

A

the doner may be a country, or a group of coutnies such as the European Union. Individual HICs give aid to poorer coutnies by making donations to chraties such as Oxfam.

52
Q

what is the aim of most international aid?

A

most international aid is foucused at spesifict long-term development goals for communities.

Hnad pumps or lined well can bring a real imprvemtn in quality of ife for lacal people. On a alrnger scale, it can be channeled into ky infatsructure improvemnets- For instance German fiancée aided construction of Malysia’s Bakun dam.

53
Q

what are two geograpical patterns we can see in the way development aid is trustubted internationally?

A
  • flows of aid from the UK are drceted towards Commonwealth coutnires. This is partly explained by the history the UK hoolds with its former colonies.

-Inida and china now provide aid to developing African coutnies. Inidia has spent US$6 billion on education projects there. The tazara railway that has links to Tanzania and Zambia was funded by interantioal aid from China.

54
Q

what are some opintions aginst international aid?

A

it can deter innovation by fostering dependancy. It neuters other potentionally more impronat fianical flows such as investment in business.

55
Q

what is an example where the conserns of international aid were manifested in real life?

A

Zambia:

-Free provision of second hand cloths- known locally as salaula- is essential for many zambians living around US$1.50 a day.

-however, many of Zambia’s own felgings textile indursties went of of business due to this generosity.

  • moreover, unde the World Banks SAP ruels attached to lenidng, Zambias goverment was prevented from substadizing these stuggling idncuties.
56
Q

what are some examples of illigal flows that link socities and places together?

A

people, narcotics, counterfeit property, stolen goods and endangered wildlife.

57
Q

what are the limitations to figuring out the size of illigal trades and how is it done?

A

the real size of illigal floes can only be estimated curdly using police reports and anecdotal evidence.

58
Q

what have global flows created over time?

A

networks of interconnected and interdependant places. Every counrty depends to some extent on the economic health of others for its own contirnuned well being.

59
Q

what are some challanges of networked and interdependant places?

A
  • if a disatser or economic ressetion adversly affects a host couty for migrant, then source coutnies may experiance a drop in GDP on account of falling remittances

-a hightened degree of risk is introduced to well-connected places.The greater the reward the grater the risk.

60
Q

what are some opportiies of networked and interdependant places?

A
  • social and political ties between two coutnies can be strenthed though mirgation.
  • writting in the 1990s, Thomas Friedman argued that economic and poliyical interdepedany are linked. In his’ golden arches theory of conflic prevention’ he asserted that two couties with McDonals resturants would never wage war because there economies are linked. While the recent war between Russia dn Ukraine has weakened this argument, it remains and idea worth exploring.
61
Q

what is a fraze that can be used to discribe TNCs role in globalisation?

A

TNCs are the key agents- or ‘architects’- of globalization in the twenty first centurary.

62
Q

why and how do TNCs play such a big role in twenty first centuary globalisation?

A

they link together with enourmous capital flows in the form of Forginge dircet investemnt (FDI)

63
Q

what are some facts you can bring up to illustate the key role TNCs play in globalisation?

A

the great global increase in interconnectivity and interdependency witnessed over the last 30 years owns more to FDI than any other type of monetary flow.

there are around 60,000 TNCs. The top 100 of these own 20% of world financial assets, employ 6 million people and enjoy 30% of global customer sales.

64
Q

what are examples of how the global distribution of TNCs changed in recent years?

A

enormous outbound forginge investments are being made each year by Inidas CFS and Infosys, as well as China Haier and Huawei. the 2006 guy-out of Corus, prevously brittish steal, by Indian firm Tata was a landmark move that some comenators branded ‘reverse colonialism’.

65
Q

what actually is FDI?

A

foringe direct investment is a financial injection made by a TNC into a nation’s economy.

66
Q

what are the main four diffrent TNC inbestment stratagies ?

A

offshoring, acquisition, joint venture, glocalization

67
Q

what is offshoring?

A

this involves TNCs moving parts of their own production processes (factories or offices) to other countries to reduce labour or other costs.

By offshoring, TNCs can also locate manufacturing and office services closer to the markets they will be serving. E.G Japanese car companies such as Nissan have built factories in the Eu in order to serve European markets directly and avoid MGO taxes.

68
Q

what are some evaluative points about offshoring?

A

there are many benefits of creating a spatial division of labour, both for the TNCs (whose profits rise) and the states it invests in (where jobs are created).

companies may expose themselves to a range of new political and physical risks by investing in certain sates.

69
Q

what is spatial division of labour?

A

the common practice among TNCs of moving low-skilled workers abroad to places where labour costs are low.

Important skilled management jobs are retained at the TNCs headquarters in its country of origin.

70
Q

what is an acquisition?

A

when an international corporate merger takes place, two firms in different countries join forces to create a single entity.

When a TNC launches a takeover of a company in another country it is called a foreign acquisition.

E.g in 2010 UK chocolate maker Cadbury was taken over by US food giant Kraft.

71
Q

what are some evaluative points about acquitions?

A

expanded market and opportunities to reduce costs through rationalization.

changes in the TNC ownership affect the geography of global financial flows. Large profit flows are redirected towards the state where the buyer is headquartered. This has major implications in turn for states and societies because of the financial losses or gains in corporation tax paid to the government.

72
Q

what is a joint venture?

A

this involves two companies forming a partnership to handle business in a particular territory (but with out merging to become one entity).

TNCs must sometimes set up joint ventures because local investment law demands it, for instance in India.

73
Q

what are some evaluative point about joint venturs?

A

The combined expertise of a global TNC working with a local company can make the venture more successful than either stakeholder would achieve alone.

Setting up a joint venture reduces the risk a TNC is exposed to; it must also share te profits though.

74
Q

what is glocalisation?

A

TNCs sometimes invest in new product designs as part of their overseas investment strategy. Glocalisation involves adapting a ‘global’ product to take account of geographical variations in people’s states religions and interests.

75
Q

what is an evaluative point on glocalisation?

A

it makes business sense for some TNCs to pay attention to their customer’s culture.

However, not all companies need to glocalise products. For some big-name TNCs like Lego, the ‘authentic’ uniformity of their global brand is what generates sales.

76
Q

what is outsourcing?

A

as an alternative to investing in its own overseas operations, a TNC can choose instread to offer a working contact to another foreign company.

77
Q

what is an evaluation of outsourcing?

A

it frees the TNC from the hassle of building or leasing new property and employing people directly.

However, it also introduces new elements of risk into the supply chain. A TNC may find it harder to monitor the way in which its goods and services are being Mae. This could jeopardise both the quality of the product and the working conditions for employees- both of which can ruin a company’s reputation.

78
Q

what is an example of outsourcing gone wrong?

A

the 2013 collapse of the unsafe Rana Plaza building in Dhaka, Bangladesh, led to the deaths of 1100 textile workers. It was also deeply troubling for War-mart, Matalan and many other major TNCs who regularly outscored clothing orders to Rana Plaza.

79
Q

what are the evaluation, synthesis and skills you will need to be thinking about when emplying anything from this sub unit?

A

How diffrent flows vary in their relative importance

how global flows and interactions and represented graphically using flow lines.

80
Q
A