Globalisation Flashcards
Globalisation
The spread of goods, products, ideas, news, people and information
* It’s the increase in interdependence and interconnectivity of countries through trade, people, money, culture and information
* The world is beng unified into a single socitey and functioning together
How has globalisation changed overtime?
World Bank, July 1944
- First in timeline
- Helped **shaped the global economy by establishing economic rules that countries are expected to follow if they want to borrow money **
- Based in Washington, USA
2nd
EU, 1973
- Britain joins Europe
- EU was known as EEC when the UK joined
- A multinational groups that countries all around the world have chosen to join
- Growth= political globalisation
3rd
First Mobile Phone Call, 1973
- Motorola researcher and executive, Martin Cooper made the first mobile phone call from handheld subscriber equipment
- Weighed 1.1kg, measured 23cm long, 13cm deep and 4.45cm wide
4th
First smart phone, 1992
- IBM Simon was the first ever monile phone to feature software apps, using a stylus and touch screen
- Cost $899
- Only worked in USA
5th
Broadband, 1996
- Broadband internet available for US and Europe
- Developments allowed large amounts of text documents as well as photographs, videos and music to be easily shared
6th
Millennium Development Goals launched, 2000
- Global initiative launched by the United Nations
- Aimed to raise living standards in the word’s poorest countries, where people haven’t benefited from globalsation
7th
World Trade Centre attack, 2001
- A terrorist attack on the World Trade Centre in New York
- World was more connected than it used to be
- Age of globalisation is also afflicted by conflict and disagreement between different groups of people and nations
8th
Facebook, 2004
- Growth of Facebook is associated strongly with the growth of of globalisation and the ‘shrinking world’ effect
Flows of globalisation
- Capital (FDI)
- Labour
- Products
- Information
- Services
Flows of Capital
Money that is invested. Spent on something to produce and income or increased profit from it
* It’s the movement of money for the purpose of investment, trade to produce goods/provide services
* E.g FDI
FDI
- Foreign direct investment = amount of capital in foreign countries (increased from $400 bil in 1996 - $1500 bill in 2016)
- Inward FDI- measures investments made in a country from another country
- Outward FDI- measures investments made by domestic companies in a foreign economy
- E.g **FDI in London **- No.1 spot for FDI globally
**Regeneration of Battersea power station **- into shopping centres, flats and houses
Flows of labour
The movement of people who work in another country
* Remittances- transfer of money back home from a persons host/work country, across national boundaries
* 40% of Somalians rely on remittiances to supply basic needs
* Workers are now globalised e.g. Mexico to USA, Poland to UK and India to Europe
* International migration increased by over 40% between
* Skilled workers move to HICs for higher wages and better working conditions
* Unskilled workers may move to HICs to escape low wages
Flows of products
**Physical goods moving from one country to another **
* Manufacturing has decreased in HICs (5 mill in 1985 - 2.6 mill in 2014)
* Low labour costs overseas so companies have moved their products overseas e.g Dyson moved their products to Malaysia to produce hoovers
* USA, Germany and Netherlands imported the most UK supplements in 2018
* Container ships helped to speed up the process of unloading cargo ships