Superpowers EQ3 Flashcards

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1
Q

What are spheres of influence?

A

The region over which a group or institution has power which is separate from whoever is traditionally in control.

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2
Q

How can the ownership of natural resources be disputed?

A
  • Invasion and conquest of another country’s territory, which is rare.
  • Claiming offshore, undersea resources by extending a country’s exclusive economic zone (EEZ), which is more common.
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3
Q

Give two examples to show how the ownership of natural resources can be disputed.

A

Russian annexation of Crimea in 2014 and Arctic oil and gas resources.

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4
Q

Why did Russia invade and take Crimea (part of the Ukraine) by force in 2014?

A

A key reason for doing this was to gain total control of the Russian naval base at Sevastopol in Crimea - home to Russia’s Black Sea Fleet
The base was leased to Russia in 1997, but not owned by Russia.

Russia fears that if Ukraine joins the EU and/or NATO this strategic base could be lost
Fearing the loss of land and port, both physical resources, Russia acted.

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5
Q

Why are there disputes over Arctic oil and gas resources?

A
  • Huge oil and gas reserves may exist under the Arctic Ocean.
  • This area is beyond the EEZ of Canada, the USA, Russia and Denmark.
  • All these countries have claimed EEZ extensions, which are disputed by others, and lodged these with the UN (which ultimately rules on them).
  • Since 2007, military patrols and activity have increased in the Arctic as each country shows interest in the area and is willing to defend its claims.
  • Melting of the ice caps has meant that there are now shipping routes that weren’t previously available and that cut down travel times.
  • Resources such as huge fish stocks, oil, gas and minerals beneath the melting ice caps. The US geological survey estimates the Arctic has 25% of the world’s undiscovered oil and gas.
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6
Q

Why are human resources a key element of power?

A
  • New military technology, used for defence or attack.
  • Inventions and new products that could bring riches.
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7
Q

What is intellectual property and its purpose?

Why is patenting importance for TNCs?

A
  • It stops TNC’s being reluctant to invest in R&D because it means inventions won’t be copied.
  • Increases trade as they can trust their ideas won’t be copied by other countries.
  • Having a unique selling point is crucial for profits. large amounts of money are paid in legal fees each year by TNCs trying to stop other companies from using their ideas.
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8
Q

What is an example of tensions due to other countries abusing IP laws?

A

The USA have accused Thailand of abusing the TRIPS agreement (agreement concerning copyright etc.). This is due to the counterfeit culture that exists in Thai tourist spots.

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9
Q

What would the consequences be if new inventions are not protected by an international system of intellectual property (IP)?

A
  • TNCs would be reluctant to invest in R&D because they would gain little profit from inventions that were immediately copied.
  • Countries would be reluctant to trade because their IP would fall into the hands of others who would steal it.
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10
Q

How much in US$ do royalty fees alone amount to?

What percentage of royalty fees alone go to the USA, Japan and western Europe?

What percentage of China’s GDP counterfeit goods sales been estimated to account for?

A

US$150-200

80%

5-8%

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11
Q

Why are counterfeit goods sales a problem for countries such as China?

A
  • TNCs may limit investment in China if they fear IP theft.
  • Total losses worldwide are probably US$400-600 billion annually.
  • Trade deals with countries such as China are made harder by its failure to tackle IP theft.
  • Counterfeit goods are often unsafe, putting consumers at risk.
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12
Q

What are EEZS?

A

Exclusive Economic Zone

Extends 20 nautical miles offshore from a country’s coast, and includes all resources in and under the sea. in some circumstances, its size can be extended.

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13
Q

Name five overlapping spheres of influence.

A
  1. Eastern Europe
  2. The Middle East & Central Asia
  3. East China Sea
  4. South China Sea
  5. Central America
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14
Q

Why is the South China Sea a very tense region?

A

China’s ‘Nine-Dashed Line’ and ‘First and Second Island Chain’ policies force it to try and control a large area of the ocean south and east of China. The USA has considered this it’s sphere since the end of the Second World War. Overlapping spheres of influence over the sparkly islands.

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15
Q

Why are there tensions in the south china sea over physical resources?

A
  • The Sparkly islands are artificial islands in the south china sea that were created for industrial and military purposes.
  • They lie near potential oil and gas reserves and offer rich fishing grounds.
  • It is contested between China, Vietnam, the Philippines, Taiwan, Malaysia, Brunei and Indonesia.
  • There hasn’t been any warfare, but there have been military displays from China and US.
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16
Q

How has the Eastern Europe sphere of influence changed?

A

Eastern European countries joining the EU, and moves by Georgia and Ukraine to do so, angered Russia, leading to the Russian invasions of parts of Georgia in 2008 and Ukraine in 2014, as well as a build up of NATO armed forces in the Baltic States.

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17
Q

How has the east china sea’s sphere of influence changed?

A

Strained relations between North Korea (a Chinese ally) and South Korea (a US ally) as North Korea has become a nuclear power. China sees South Korea and Japan (US allies) as economic competitors. All countries have ongoing disputes over islands in the sea.

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18
Q

How has the Eastern Europe sphere of influence changed?

A

Eastern European countries joining the EU, and moves by Georgia and Ukraine to do so, angered Russia, leading to the Russian invasions of parts of Georgia in 2008 and Ukraine in 2014, as well as a build up of NATO armed forces in the Baltic States

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19
Q

Why is land ownership a sphere of the contest?

A
  • There are borders and islands that remain unclear over who owns them.
  • This may be because there is untapped energy sources, an opportunity for expansion, military strategic importance.
20
Q

What is neo-colonialism?

A

Superpowers pulling the economic and political strings even though they don’t directly rule and control developing nations.

21
Q

What tensions are there within Asia?

A
  • There are tensions between the communist govt. of China and the republic of china govt. which has retreated to the Chinese island province of Taiwan. Both claim to be the official govt. of China.
  • Tibet has for a long time sought separation from China however this hasn’t happened and China refuse to acknowledge the Tibetans leader the Dalai Lama.
22
Q

What are some of the reasons for the large Chinese investment in Africa?

A
  • Political and economic ties and geostrategy.
  • Young people they can educate.
  • Rapidly growing populations so cheap labour.
  • Resources such as minerals, oil and gas.
  • Landscape for factories and agriculture.
  • Raw materials.
23
Q

What are the benefits of Chinese investment in Sub Saharan Africa?

A
  • They are Africa’s largest trading partner.
  • Increased education.
  • They have benefited from China building schools and infrastructure.
24
Q

What are the problems with the Chinese investment in Africa from an African perspective?

A
  • Only 5% of the FDI actually goes to Africa whilst half is in Asia.
  • There is an over dependence of Africa on Asia and if the Chinese economy slows down so would the African one.
  • China is effectively doing what the western world did to them as they are exploiting the growing population with cheap labour.
25
Q

How is China exploiting Africa?

A

Low-income countries could have new relationships with emerging powers. An example is China’s interest in Sub-Saharan Africa, the world’s least developed region. China’s interest is based on exploiting Africa’s abundant and undeveloped physical resources:

  • Copper ore in Zambia.
  • Crude oil in Angola, Sudan and Chad.
  • Coltan (the ore of niobium and tantalum used in mobile phones) from the DRC.

Between 2000 and 2014, China invested $86 billion in 3000 projects in African nations.

  • To secure raw materials for Chinese industries: Africa is resource-rich (for example 90% of global platinum and cobalt supplies and 70% of Coltan, which is used in mobile phones). I thought of Chinese investments in mining.
26
Q

What are the opportunities for China in exploiting Africa?

A
  • China-Africa relations are based on trade, not ex-colonial ties.
  • Chinese mines and factories bring jobs and raise incomes and GDP.
  • In order to develop mining and factory investment, China has invested huge sums in HEP, railways, ports and roads - which can be used more widely.
  • China-Africa trade was worth $200 billion in 2016, a huge sum for a developing region.
27
Q

What are the challenges for China in exploiting Africa?

A
  • Countries without natural resources China wants are left out.
  • Many jobs area actually done by Chinese migrant labour which numbers over 1 million workers.
  • Mining and oil exploitation risks causing deforestation, oil spills and water pollution.
  • Cheap Chinese imported goods have undercut some local African producers, especially of textiles.
  • Africa’s economic model is still cheap raw material exports, and expensively manufactured exports
28
Q

What was the China Belt and road initiative?

A
  • Initiated by the People’s Republic of China that seeks to connect Asia with Africa and Europe via land and maritime networks with the aim of improving regional integration, increasing trade and stimulating economic growth.
  • The BRI comprises a Silk Road Economic Belt – a trans-continental passage that links China with south-east Asia, south Asia, Central Asia, Russia and Europe by land – and a 21st-century Maritime Silk Road, a sea route connecting China’s coastal regions with south-east and south Asia, the South Pacific, the Middle East and Eastern Africa, all the way to Europe.
  • The initiative defines five major priorities:

policy coordination;
infrastructure connectivity;
unimpeded trade;
financial integration;
and connecting people.

29
Q

What is the information on China and India?

A

India and China represent 36% of the world’s population, 18% of the global GDP and 32% of global carbon dioxide emissions. Their rising economic importance to the world cannot be denied. Both are members of the G20, which is an increasingly important global grouping. The older G8 set up in 1975 consists of indebted developed countries, whereas the G20 includes cash-rich investor countries.

30
Q

What are the relations between China and India?

A
  • They are ideological rivals: India is the world’s largest democracy, whereas China is a communist dictatorship.
  • They share a border, but parts are disputed (Arunachal Pradesh, Tawang, Aksai Chin) which led to conflict in 1962, 1967 and 1987.
  • China has created a strong economic alliance with Pakistan focused on the $54 billion Chinese investment in CPEC (China-Pakistan Economic Corridor), but Pakistan and India have tense, often antagonistic relations.
  • China has the upper hand in terms of economics, as India has a large trade deficit (imports more than exports) with China.
31
Q

What are the different tensions in the middle east?

A
  • Contains 60% of oil reserves.
  • Most Muslim countries are hostile to Israel whilst USA are their ally.
  • The religious difference between Sunni and Shia branches of Islam.
  • The rise of ISIS in Iraq and Syria has created war. terrorism and a refugee crisis.
  • The Kurdish people demand their own state.
  • Afghanistan has been unstable since the Soviet invasion in 1979 and has been viewed suspiciously by the USA for hiding Islamist militant groups responsible for attacks e.g. 9/11.
32
Q

What are the economic conflicts in the middle east?

A
  • Middle east major supplier of oil to Western countries.
  • There’s a fight between countries to see who should control the oil.
33
Q

What are the environmental conflicts in the middle east?

A
  • Damage to the environment due to oil drilling
  • Wildlife disturbed
  • Habitats destroyed
  • Oil spills
34
Q

What was the global financial crisis?

A
  • The Global Financial Crisis of 2007-8 was a stock-market crash and a series of bank failures that in turn led to a global recession, business closures and rising unemployment. Since then, the USA and EU have slowly rebuilt their damaged economies. The crisis caused government debt levels to increase sharply as money was borrowed to:
  • Re-finance banks and other businesses facing collapse.
  • Pay social service costs, such as unemployment benefits.
  • Pay for new infrastructure (roads, bridges) in an effort to stimulate economic growth.
35
Q

What was the debt like for countries facing the global financial crisis

A

By 2016 debt levels had reached 90% of annual GDP in the UK, 75% in the USA and 214% in Japan. High debt levels, in the long term, may slow down future economic growth. Debt levels are pushed up by high social costs:

36
Q

What is economic restructuring in terms of the global financial crisis?

A
  • The global shift to Asia has created deindustrialisation in the EU and USA.
  • There are high costs linked to regenerating former industrial areas.
  • In addition, the workforce needs retraining and re-skilling in tertiary sector jobs.
37
Q

What is structural unemployment in terms of the global financial crisis?

A
  • Loss of manufacturing jobs to emerging economies through globalisation.
  • This has led to a pool of middle-aged, low-skilled, male workers without jobs.
  • Many rely on social security payments from the government.
38
Q

What is ageing and care in terms of the global financial crisis?

A
  • Rising life expectancy and low fertility rates mean an ageing population.
  • Care home, nursing care and pension costs are all rising.
  • This has to be paid for by a shrinking working-age population in many EU countries.
39
Q

What was the USA’s government budget for 2016?

A

Social security - $910 billion

Transport, education, and housing - $600 (all in billions)

Medicare (health spending, retired) - $588

Defense - $584 (15%)

Unemployment benefits, veterans and other programmes - $563

Medicine (health spending for those on low income) - $368

Debt interest - $241

40
Q

What are the costs of military spending for the UK?

A

Defence spending in 2021/2022 was £71.4 billion which reduces government spending on other aspects such as healthcare and education.

41
Q

What are the benefits of military spending for the UK?

A

The domestic defence industry supports and creates highly skilled jobs and strengthens the economy

42
Q

Why could the US’s large spending on military power and space exploration be questioned?

A
  • The UK, France and the USA also spend large sums of money on nuclear missile technology and civilian nuclear power research. Both of these can be questioned.
  • In order to be a truly global superpower, the USA must spend these sums of money. However, the money could be spent in other ways:

About 13% of Americans live in poverty (living on less than $12,000 per year)
about 60,000 roads and rail bridges in the USA need to be repaired. The over-65s in the USA made up 15% of the population in 2016, this will rise to 20% by 2030.

US spending on space exploration has been around $900 billion since 1958.

43
Q

Which type of government spending amounts to 0.7% of UK GDP?

A

Development assistance (foreign aid)

44
Q

What are the three possible scenarios for the future balance of superpower?

A
  1. The USA remains a hyperpower.
  2. There is a bipolar world with China and USA.
  3. A multi-polar world where the USA and EU decline in comparison to increasingly powerful BRIC economies.
45
Q

By 2030, what is predicted to happen to the balance of superpowers?

A
  • A similar world to today, but the Chinese economy is likely to be similar in size to that of the USA.
  • Per capita incomes in China will be lower than in the USA, and China will still be in the process of becoming a fully developed country.
  • China is unlikely to have become a global political leader by 2030.
46
Q

By 2050, what is predicted to happen to the balance of superpowers?

A
  • Potentially a very different world, with China and India both powerful economically and militarily (and potential rivals).
  • The USA could have similar levels of power and influence to India and China.