Global Systems and Global Governance
Globalistation
Dimensions of globalisation
Global marketing
This is the process of promoting and selling products or services
Global due to the ability to export and import
It involves treating the world as a single market with one strategy for advertisement
Economies of scale, which means its cheaper to have 1 global marketing campaign than 1 for every individual country
It also creates brand awareness
Despite this advertisement is still regionally adapted for different cultures
Patterns of production, distribution and consumption
Production
Historically, manufacturing was concentrated in western economies and America - products consumed in countries of origin
Decentralisation has occurred due to FDI by TNCs in developing countries. Lower land and labour costs encouraged TNCs to relocate the production side of their business - Global Shift
A consequence of Global shift has been deindustralisation of richer countries and a loss of jobs in the manufacturing sector
Example is the UK, where employment in this sector fell by 50% between 1983 and 2013.
More than 50% of all manufacturing jobs are located in developing countries
Factors affecting the location of companies;
Availability of a skilled and educated workforce
The building opportunity with new tech
Government incentives like tax breaks
Access to large markets without tariffs or trade barriers through trade agreements
Transfers of technology made by TNCs enable the developing countries to increase their productivity without raising wages
Distribution and consumption
consumption still mainly remains in HICs, so products manufactured in NICs are exported
Example is that Dyson is a UK-based manufacturer but it moved its bulk assembly and manufacturing factories to Malaysia but still sells the bulk of it's products in the UK and Europe
Patterns are changing, as NICs develop their more affluent populations demand for similar consumer products. There are predictions for the patterns;
Fastest growing trade route between India and China
Western Financial companies have opportunity ti benefit form the the expansion of trade in the Asia-Pacific region
Flows of
Capital
Capital is money that is invested
Time scale
Historically, capital was invested into its own countries
Overtime, capital has been invested in foreign countries
FDI = Foreign Direct Investment
Improvements in ICT encourage the international flow of currencies as money can be transferred instantly
Cryptocurrency
Bitcoin
Increased flows means more interconnection as countries economies rely on flows of investment between countries
labour
Movement of people in the workforce from one country to another
recently there has been more international migration due to;
Better work opportunities
Conflict
Some high-skilled workers mover to MEDCs for better work wages and working conditions
Some low-skilled workers move to MEDCs due to unemployment in LEDCs
The increasing flows of people interconnect countries and especially cultures
Products
Time scale
Historically, manufactures have developed in MEDCs and the products produced were sold where they were made
Overtime, Manufactures have relocated over seas to LEDCs and export their products due to cheap labour and less regulations
The flow of products has resulted in international trade
Services
These are the economic activities not involved in material goods - like banking
Improvements in ICT allow services to become global industries as they depend on good communication and information transfer
In the 1970s and 80s deregulation occurred (the removal of rules to increase competition) which opened national financial markets due to easier international business
Services are split
High level
eg. Financial
situated in MEDCs cities
Low level
eg. Customer Services
situated in LEDCs because of cheap labour
Information
the flow of financial data and new
been made accessible due to technological advances like email and internet
the more flow the more interconnected the world is as everyone can learn about everyone and thing without leaving their own countries
Factors of Globalisation
Trade: WTO means more free trade and trading groups like NAFTA and the EU
Since 1950, trade agreements are formed by countries joining together to form trade blocs
EFTA - European free trade association
AFTA - Asian free trade association
EU - European union
UEMOA - West African economic and monetary union
APEC - Asia-pacific economic co-operation
OPEC - Organisation of petroleum exporting countries
NAFTA - North American free trade agreement
Aims to eliminate all trade barriers
Trade between member countries tripled between 1993 and 2007
Promote economic competition
increase investment opportunities
Mexico receives foreign investment
Improve co-operation
Disadvantages
Canadian companies have closed due to competition
US firms move to Mexico resulting in job loss
Food surplus from the USA and Canada result in low prices affecting the agricultural economy in Mexico
There are various forms of trade groups:
free trade areas
Where the trade barriers between the states are eliminated but external members are still taxed
customs unions
Refers to trade blocs which allows free trade within themselves, but impose a common external tariff
common markets
A group formed by countries in geographical proximity where trade barriers are eliminated
economic or monetary unions like the EU
Example is the UK is part of the EU economically and politically but not monetarily as we aren't part of the eurozone
Not all trade agreements are regionally based like OPEC which focuses on the trade of oil globally, the most traded commodity
There are a number of advantages to trade blocs:
Globally:
Global peace
Increase in global trade
Develops economies and standards of living
Regionally:
compete on a global level with others
bigger representation on global affairs
freedom of movement of trade
allow people seeking work to move between countries easily
groups to negotiate trade advantages with other groups
Possibility of developing a common currency
supports particular sectors of a national economy
raises standards in education and healthcare
spreads democracy and human rights
can lead to more economic, social and political intergration
Possible Disadvantages:
loss of sovereignty
loss of financial control to a central authority like a bank
pressure to adopt central legislation
economic sectors can be damaged by having to share resources
Trade deals are assessed by looking at how successful they are in reducing barriers like tariffs
In 2011the rich OECD group studied 55 regional trade agreements to discover if barriers to agricultural produce were lowered
deals between the rich and emerging economies had lifted the traded duty-free goods from 68% to 87% over 10 years
in these deals NEEs the proportion had increased from 28% to 92% which demonstrates that regional trade agreements can lower barriers
Agreements
Bilateral agreements - An agreement on trade that is negotiated between 2 countries or 2 trade blocs
Multilateral agreement - An agreement negotiated between more than 2 countries or trade blocs at the same time
Communications: Mobiles and internet caused internet revolution
Transport: faster by air, road and rail
faster and in more quantities because:
increased size of aircraft
low cost airline and air freight
containerisation
high speed rail networks
Collapse of communism: more countries develop market economies
TNCs: Growth through mergers and expansion like Microsoft and Sony
Capital Investment due to capital mobility
Historically, trade was hindered by problems in exchanging finance for goods
Deregulation allowed arrangements for the removal or relaxing financial movement barriers
financial transactions between traders are quick and secure
Global Marketing: rise in significance of global brands - Coca Cola is recognised by 97% of the global population
Managements and information systems
improved transport and communication systems has lead to a production revolution changing how companies manufacture and distribute products
new processes of high volume production allow economies of scale (cost reductions). To benefit from these cost advantages, companies invested in:
large production and assembly plants with technology like robotics in the automotive industry
Global marketing and distribution networks allow sales to keep pace with increase production
global capable management
Investments organised with the global value chains, where the different stages of production process are located across different countries
Corporations in different industries and economic sectors organise this differently for a competitive edge
An example is that the fashion industry is reliant on fast transport from suppliers to have the short lead times necessary to be present in disparate markets
For greater efficiency some companies use the Just in time technique, costs are cut by reducing the quantity of goods in stock
It involves producing and delivering goods just in time to get sold
parts are also supplied just in time to produce goods
The new systems for remote management and increase cost efficiency have led to;
Spatial separation between high-order business activities - research,marketing - located at HQs in stategic positions.
Low-order activities - production - based in low production cost locations or in proximity to markets for the finished goods
Global Corporations focus on a few key strategies
Rapid growth of logistics and distribution solutions industry
Travel: increased business, personal and tourism travel
Containerisation: standerdised shipping in vast quantities at low costs worldwide
Migration: ideas and information spread via the movement of people
Government Support
National governments have trade departments to accommodate
Objective is to increase exports
Example is that the UK government have the UKTI (UK trade and Investment) to advise and support the trade of goods overseas
Example is that Pakistan has dry ports located inland where customs documents are completed locally before shipping goods to sea ports
Security
Issues such as;
- supply chain security
- crime
- anti-terrorism
- food and bio-security
World customs organisation (WCO) or EU security standards
Critique
Costs of Globalisation
Benefits of Globalisation
What is Globalisation?
It is the process of countries becoming more interconnected and interdependent
It is the process of economies, political systems and cultures becoming connected
It is caused by the movement of information, capital, products,services and labour in international trade
Export manufactured goods to LEDCs and import crude oil and minerals
Export machinery and clothes to MEDCs and import cars and chemicals
Becoming very important to global trade
NEEs
International trade and
access to markets
Single Product Economies
Umbrella City
70% of umbrellas are made in china
Located in Shaoxing
It maintains its position because
Specialization
Good access to domestic and international markets
Cheap production costs
Government support
Songxia Umbrella Industrial Park
1/2 billion umbrellas made a year in over 1200 factories
Single worker makes 300 a day
a country (usually LEDC) which relies on one, or a very small number, of products (usually raw materials) for its export earnings.
Oil in Nigeria
Nigeria should have done well from globalization
The global demand has fuelled Nigeria's economy
But the focus on oil has resulted in a decline of traditional industries or manufacture and farming
It has cause a mass rural - urban migration resulting in rural poverty and over crowding in cities like lagos
As Nigeria doesn't have the technology or skills to exploit the oil the major oil companies are encouraged to develop the reserves
The TNCs have had no regard for the indigenous people or the environment
Oil spills are common in the Niger DElta
The high income has resulted in Nigeria's currency being over valued - imported consumer goods cheap
results in domestically manufactured goods being too expensive to export
This is known as Dutch Disease and is common in EMEs
Industrialization is a consequence of this, driving more people into oil, making Nigeria less internationally competitive in manufactured goods and increases its reliance on foreign imports
Oil reserves of around 36 billion barrels
Gas reserves of over 2800 billion cubic meters
oil and gas account for more than 80% of the national income
Member of OPEC
International Trade
Global trade rules are set by the WTO
Countries can't give another countries special access to their market without doing the same for all other countries
However, they can give special access to countries within their trade bloc
Must promote free trade
Must act predictably in their trading
There must be fair competition
One company or country shouldn't get an unfair advantage over rivals
International trade and investment have changed dramatically
Trade
International trade is the import and export of goods and services between countries
The volume of global trade has increased from the 1980s - its value increased by nearly 8x
Developed countries still remain the biggest global trades but some NEEs are catching up
China is now the largest exporter of goods
Less developed countries are growing slowly but are starting to trade
However the poorest 49 countries which make up 10% of the global population only account for 0.4% of world trade
More countries have lowered their trade barriers partly to do with the new trade blocs
Rise in fairtrade - supporting people in LEDCs who make products and export them to MEDCs
Since the 1970s, nearly 1000 producer groups have been set up with their produce being sold in supermarkets in developed countries
Investment
FDI - a person, company or group spending money in a foreign country to generate profit
investors may be attracted to the size or stability of the market. The possibility of extracting resources for themselves or the ability to access financial services like luxembourg who have big financial sectors
The volume of FDI has risen from $400 billion to $1500 Billion
Patterns of investment have changed
Historically, developed countries invested in other developed countries
Since 1980s, developed countries have been invesing in NEEs and developing countries
In the past 10 years china has been one of the biggest receivers of FDI
NEEs now invest heavily in less developed countries
China invests heavily in countries in Africa
Ethical investment - when a person, company or group only invest in areas that are considered socially responsible
Companies that have caused environmental or humanitarian harm are generally avoided by ethical investors
Grown since 1990s
Trading Blocs
What are they?
Agreements between governments about trade
Associations between different governments that promote and manage trade
Remove trade barriers between members and keep barriers non-members
Refer to globalization for a list of examples of trading blocs
many trade blocs are regional - they make trading easier between neighboring countries
Example - in 2016, German exports to other EU countries were 708 billion euros, compared to 501 billion to countries outside the EU
Some trading blocs are based around specific industries
Example is OPEC for the export of petrol at standardized prices
Special Economic Zones increase the volume of trade with emerging economies and less developed countries
SEZs - areas that have different trade and investment rules to the rest of a country - increasing trade while keeping barriers in the rest of the country
Trading relationships change depending on the countries involved
Developed countries
most trade takes place between developed countries
Export cars and chemicals to NEEs and import Machinery and clothes
Export machinery and medicine to LEDCs and import Food, tobacco and oil
Less developed countries
Most trade with MEDCs and NEEs
Export food, tobacco and crude oil to MEDCs and import machinery and medicine
Export crude oil and minerals to NEEs and import manufactured goods
Developed countries have greater access to markets than other countries
Access to markets - how easy it is for the countries or companies to trade with one another usually determined by the import or export barriers
Access is effected by wealth. MEDCs usually have higher tariffs on imported goods from LEDCs which makes it harder for LEDCs to access the market
MEDCs have more money to invest so they can avoid high tariffs imposed by LEDCs
LEDCs rely on loans that require them to remove their trade barriers increasing access to their markets
Access is increased by being a member of a trade bloc
SDT agreements give less developed countries greater market access
The WTO forms special and differential treatment agreements (SDTs)
let LEDCs bypass some MEDCs tariffs
Example is the EU's 2001 Everything but Arms agreement allowing the least developed countries to bypass tariffs on goods that aren't weapons
Profits made from SDTs all LEDCs to diversify the range of industries they have
Negative impact? - allowing cheap imports into the country and argue that regional trade bloc would be more effective allowing the collective negotiation of prices
Differential access to markets has economic and social consequences
Economic impacts
Hard for countries with poor market access to establish new industries
So they resort to selling low value primary goods that fluctuate in price leading to a low GNI so they have less money to invest in industry resulting in slow economic growth
Countries with high market access can grow their economies quickly making their citizens wealthy and giving them the money to invest and grow their economies further
Social impacts
people in countries with good access usually have better paid jobs and therefore more disposable income increasing their standards of living
countries with less market access result in less money for education or healthcare so quality of life is lower and the population can mainly access low paid, low-skilled jobs
more dangerous working in less developed countries as sweatshops and dangerous factories who also employ children have moved from MEDCs
Trade market access affect people's lives around the world
Trade benefits MEDCs more than LEDCs
Example is that many LEDCs export primary products which are developed by MEDCs and exported at a higher price meaning they profit, so wages in that country are higher
Trade and high levels of access to markets means a wider range of goods are available to MEDCs - increasing the standard of living
Trade creates more inter dependency between countries
If one thing goes wrong in one country many other countries are affected
eg. the financial crisis in 2008 increased rates of unemployment in many countries
The global coffee trade
Coffee is grown in warm countries around the equator
Coffee production is dominated by countries in south America and Africa
For example the biggest coffee producer is Brazil
Brazil exported 20% of the world's coffee in 2015
It has around 300,000 coffee farms
produces 2.5 million tonnes a year
There are 2 types of coffee bean the arabica and robusta
Whilst both are grown the arabica makes 70% of the worlds coffee production
Coffee plants grow in nurseries, then move to farms after 6-12 months for harvesting - coffee is mainly grown in small holdings
Issues with coffee production
Susceptible to a range of diseases
Pests and insects like the Black Twig Borer
Certain weather makes the outbreak of disease or pests more likely
Wet weather = more bacteria
Dry weather = more pest infestations
Farmers use fertilisers and pesticides, these are imported so usually very expensive
Coffee is traded globally
Coffee is produced in mainly LEDCs and consumed in MEDCs
Brazil is the largest coffee producer see above for info
USA is the largest importer of coffee
Imported 20% of the world's coffee in 2015
The price of coffee fluctuates depending on supply and demand
Supply = how much is produced
demand = How much consumers are buying
If the demand increases and the supply doesn't the price will increase
If the price increases people will produce more because they want more money causing the price to fall
If the supply increases and the demand doesn't the price will drop
If the price drops more coffee is bought and the price rises again
Low prices are good for consumers and high prices are good for producers
Price fluctuations will effect farmers
Example - the amount of coffee exported from Veitnam has increased steadily since 1987. By 1999, Veitnam exported over 450 million kg of coffee a year. Causing coffee prices to fall from $1.19 per kg to $0.68 per kg in a year. This caused south american American Coffee producers to go out of business
The coffee trade is dominated by TNCs
Only 7-10% of the price goes to coffee farmers as they only sell the coffee bean which is low value
TNCs buy the bean and roast them which increases their value and they receive the profits when selling them
Coffee farmers are in LEDCs and TNCs are from MEDCs so the profits also go to the developed countries rather than invested in the LEDC
Most coffee producers are small-scale and rely on selling their products, so have no power over prices
TNCs have alot of control over the coffee market as 4 companies control 40% of coffee exports
TNCs pick and choose where they buy their coffee
Usually countries selling at the lowest price
So countries lower wages, regulations and environmental protection to attract TNCs - race to the bottom
Eg. much of the coffee in Brazil is farmed intensively, leading to a loss of wildlife habitats and Biodiversity
Fair trade
In 1992, the Fair trade foundation was set up
Works with producer organisations
Aims to set a minimum fairtrade price which covers all the farmer's costs - prevents poverty
Works with farmers to maintain environmental standards and to prohibit forced labour and child labour
Coffee campaign has grown enormously
no. of organisations grew from 175 in 2002 to 329 in 2011
Global sales increased from 15 000 tonnes to 80 000 tonnes a year
Fair trade pays additional money to the communal fund to help local communities develop helping the LEDCs invest in industry
More ethical than traditional trade
TNCs
Transnational co-operations are companies producing, selling or operating in 2 or more different countries. Eg. Sony manufacture in China and sell in Europe
Important to the global economy
80% of global trade was linked to TNCs in 2013
Operate in many industries
Primary - extraction of natural resources
Eg. Shell
Secondary - Making material goods
Eg. Toyota
Tertiary - Providing services
Eg. Aviva
The creation of jobs, provision of technology and investment mean they have political influence
TNCs bring FDI into LEDCs, spread technology and promote cultures
One of the main driving forces of globalisation
Connect countries due to their spatial organisation - global supply chain - different parts of the TNC operate in different countries
TNCs headquarters in MEDC's big cities due to good communication and transport
Research and development (R&D) is located in cities or towns where there;s a supply of highly skilled people - same country as headquarters
Location of regional R&D closer to markets they are selling to so they can make specific adaptations to products
Factories in LEDCs due to cheap natural resources and labour - low production costs or they have factories near their markets to cut import and export costs
TNCs form Links between Countries through investment
They do this by expanding their operations
Mergers - 2 companies agree to become one big company
Example - BP and Amoco merged in 1998
Acquisitions - one company buys another company
Example - Ford bought Volvo in 1999
Using Subcontractors - TNCs use foreign companies to manufacture products without owning them
FDI - involves merger and acquisitions and using subcontractors
Example - if HSBC bought a bank in Indonesia it's FDI
TNCs expand operations to gain more control over their markets
Vertical integration
A company takes over other parts of the supply chain
Example - shell now owns its supply chain from extraction to selling at petrol stations
Horizontal intergration
When companies merge with over companies at the same stage of production
Example - In 2006, Disney took PIXAR, both making family orientated animations
TNCs Organise Production to take advantage of a global supply chain
TNCs create the global supply chain giving them economies of scale - most value
TNCs Primary industries invest in countries with natural resources they can extract
Example - in 2016 Shell acquired BP to access oil in Brazil and Australia
TNCs Secondary industries invest in countries with low labour costs and cheap land and tax breaks. Or in places where there is a large market for their product
TNCs Tertiary industry invests in well educated populations
TNCs invest in countries with weak labour and environmental regulations allowing them to cut costs
TNCs have a big impact on global trade
Intra-firm trading - 1 division of a TNC trades with another part of the TNC
Counted in trade figures
Makes up 30-50% of international trade
When a TNC invests it creates a multiplier effect
By opening a factory it creates jobs for the local area so people have more money to spend helping local businesses and governments
TNCs make it easier for local companies to trade as part of the global supply chain
TNCs take advantage of Global Marketing
TNCs benefit from having lots of money to spend on advertising and large marketing departments
TNCs gain knowledge of local markets and adjust their strategies even incorporating local cultures
The aim of TNCs is to create a brand that is globally recognised
94% of the global population recognise coca-colas logo
Walmart
Is a chain of discount department stores and is one of the largest TNCs in the world - the largest retail TNC
Walmart began in 1962 in the USA
More stores opened across the USA and then recently across the globe by the acquisition of other companies some of these companies still trade under their own names
The UK store is called ASDA
Walmart divides its labour across different countries
Headquarters - Arkansas
Manufacturing is carried out in in China and India where production costs are cheap
Its is starting to expand into NEEs like India
Walmart has impacts in the USA
Economic
Employment - each new store creates jobs
One of the cheapest US supermarkets
Decline in the manufacturing industry
Buys products from outside the US causing a loss in manufacturing jobs inside the US
Loss of local business
Social
Walmart provides a large choice of goods - super centre
Open 24 hours a day
Many jobs at Walmart are poorly paid with few benefits
Poor working conditions - long and irregular hours
Environmental
Produce a huge amount of polluting gases - but it has opened green stores which run on renewable energy
Stores are often large and out of town
Walmart has impacts on its Host countries
Economic
Creates jobs in construction, manufacturing and retail services
Local companies and farmers supply goods
Local suppliers to Walmart may be able to expand their businesses by exporting goods
Forces its suppliers to accept low prices
Local companies suffer in competing with Walmart
Most profits are sent back to the USA rather than invested in the host country
Social
Skilled jobs in LEDCs
Eg. Stores in China are run by locals
Working for Walmart can offer a more reliable wage
Poor working conditions
Walmart donates 100s of millions to improve healthcare and the environment in its operating countries
In 2015 it donated over $2 million to west Africa after the Natural Disasters
Environmental
Invests in environmentally friendly technologies and sustainable development
Uses large areas of land for factories and stores
The Global Commons
Antarctica
What is a global common?
Global commons don't belong to anyone country
They are governed by different pieces of international law
There are 4 global commons
Antarctica
The high seas
Seas further than 200 miles away from land
Atmosphere
Space
Environmental NGOs protect the commons from exploitation as they offer habitats and are valuable for scientific research
Global commons face many pressures
Many feel they can exploit the global commons without dealing with consequences as the costs of exploitation are shared
Tragedy of the commons
Industrialization and development are increasing the demand for resources
Many resources are and can be extracted from the comons
large amount of polluting gases are being pumped into our atmosphere
New technologies make it easier to get to the global commons as they were fairly inaccessible before but makes them more vulnerable
Plants problems due to pressure
Overfishing in the seas
Atmospheric pollution is causing climate change
Increased CO2 causes acidification of the oceans which effects the marine organisms
The sea absorbs more CO2 when it is colder
Global common protection
Institutions are acknowledging that countries rights to develop must be balanced by the need to protect the commons
NGOs like the WWF call for the areas to be protected with any development being sustainable
Sustainable development requires global cooperation
Global systems
Interdependence
Economic
What it means?
Countries rely on one another for resources eg.Oil produced and consumed in different countries
The flows include remittance, foreign aid and FDI
Benefits
FDI allows other countries to take advantage of cheap materials and labour, host country benefits from foreign capital. Foreign aid improves infrastructure and living standards
Flows are unequal
Money from MEDCs to LEDCs in investments but LEDCs rarely have the money to do the same
Problems
Inequalities - foreign aid creates dependency, FDIs usually force out local businesses
Conflict - foreign aid can go to armed groups. FDI creates conflict between foreign companies and local people
Injustice - Companies may pressure governments to make it cheaper to invest
Global trade systems
International trade and access to markets is overseen by the WTO (World trade organisation)
Began in 1995
aim and role
Supervise and liberalise trade by reducing barriers
Sorts out trade problems between member governments
Negotiate legal ground rules for international commerce
Successor of the GATT
over 160 members, over 3/4 are NEEs or LEDCs
International financial systems
Global financial systems
World bank
Aims to reduce poverty and supports less developed countries
Historically, they funded top down projects
descision to undertake project is made by central authority
Now, they fund more bottom up projects
locals are consulted and supported in making decisions to develop in order to address one or more of their specific needs
Loans money for investment and development
all members must pay in but only those who need it can take money out
must pay back
International monetary funds
regulates the financial flows
Imposes cuts on education and welfare government spending
Advises governments
loans money to countries with economic problems
Support the world's economic order by regulating the flow of international capital
Established after WW2
Political
What it means?
Countries depend on one another to solve global issues like global warming
Social
What it means?
Connections between people in different countries - migrants
Environmental
What it means?
Every country is interdependent on each other to look after the environment and example is the Chernobyl explosion in Ukraine releasing radiation
Concerns about global warming have led to the formation of the IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change)
Unequal Power relations
the systems and supporting organisations help improve the world, they are often led by the most powerful nations that influence the pattern of change for their own advantage, only allowing less powerful nations to respond in limited ways
Developed countries have control over global economy and political events
Example
Big contributors to climate change are usually rich and developed countries, they are usually resistant to making changes to limit climate change because it may harm their economy
Those most affected are the LEDCs like Bangladesh who are suffering from rising sea levels and aren't able to influence bigger countries to reduce emissions
Global institutions can reinforce the unequal power relations
Global financial systems for example
IMF - based in the USA, led by developed countries, LEDCs have less influence
Loans are conditional - LEDCs must make changes like cutting regulations to receive the loan
WTO - reduce trade barriers, developed have kept trade barriers reducing imports from LEDCs. Boosting MEDCs economies at the expense of the LEDCs economies
Unequal flows of people create benefits and inequalities
1. people move from less developed countries for jobs
2. People move to escape warfare, famine or persecution
3. people move for economic reasons usually aren't poor due for the need of visas and the cost of transport
4. Easier for people from developed countries to migrate - unequal flow
5. Benefits; usually migrants create economic growth as they do jobs that people can't or won't do
6. Remittance - send money home to less developed places
7. unequal flows create problems;
Inequalities - Brain drain - scientists to Silicon Valley - those skilled leave the LEDCs for better work lives in MEDCs increasing the development gap
Conflict - low skilled migrants are happier to work for less than low skilled locals, by employing the migrants they depress wages which creates conflict between locals and migrants
Injustice - migrant workers are made to work in dangerous conditions
Unequal flows of technology
most technology is owned by MEDCs
More tech = more innovation of ideas
Inequalities - developed countries can afford the best tech, making it easier for them to produce products cheaper
Conflict and Injustice - repressive governments of LEDCs use weapons tech sold by developed countries to stop protests
Global Governance
Ideas about Global Governance are dominated by developed countries
Before 1980
National Govs took responsibility for the welfare of their citizens, controlling imports through trade barriers to protect their industries
In 1980
Developed countries thought economies work better without state intervention like trade barriers and tariffs - neo-libralism
Increased free trade meant more development and less conflict
Problems
Inequalities - concentrates wealth in the hands of a few
Conflict - If private companies and free trade in LEDCs are threatened by their government, MEDCs interventions are justified
Injustice - Governments and TNCs argue that free trade leads to development, justifying poor working conditions and environmental degradation
The world is Governed by Norms, Laws and Institutions
Many of the issues the world faces today are global and go beyond the national laws
Eg. National governments can't tackle climate change alone
A number of global norms, laws and institutions have been formed to deal with global issues
International laws like human rights, labour standards and trade regulations
Norms are accepted standards of behaviour
Eg. the right to freedom of speech may be restricted by some countries and as a result face internation condemnation
Institutions are political or legal organisations that pass and enforce laws these include the UN, WTO and international criminal court
Regulates the global economic and political systems by setting up rules countries and companies should follow
By setting rules, global governance makes everyone in a global system act a certain way
Global governance aims to promote growth and stability
Advantages
The laws and norms that international institutions enforce mean that countries abide by common rules
Trade rules mean that countries can't take advantage of each other, so all countries can develop
The WTO increases global trade through it's common rules as it makes trade predictable, increasing stability
The World health Organisation (WHO) combats epidemics which increases social stability and the UNESCO ensures the benefits of scientific advances are shared
The world bank gives loans to LEDCs to increase their economic growth
Problems
Countries sign up to international laws ans institutions voluntarily so not all countries are bound to such rules
It can be difficult to make countries and TNCs comply with the rules
Some countries have not brought economic sanctions to China as it is so important to the global economy
Some think the global institutions act for political reasons
Global institutions can create inequalities and injustices
There are conditions to receiving a loan from the IMF or World Bank
EG. to receive loans LEDCs have to implement free trade policies and cut government spending
Economic groups like the G7 strengthen the power of developed countries rather than encouraging equality
Members of security institutions like the United Nations Security Council can veto resolutions
Eg. Between 2011 and 2016, Russia and China vetoed several resolutions to intervene in the Syrian Civil War
The UN
Set up in 1945 to establish peace
193 members
When countries join they sign a UN charter which sets out basic principles of global governance and the functions of the UN
Aims
Maintain global peace and security
Develop friendly relations between nations
Use cooperation to solve international issues
To bring countries together to settle disputes
The UN is made up of several organisations
Eg. the UN security council responsible for global peace
Eg. the General Assembly act as a parliament of nations
The UN works to promote growth and stability but some say it has made some issues worse
Growth and Stability
Growth - The UN Millennium Development Goals have reduced the number of people living in poverty and increased the number of children in school
In 2015, the UN set targets for 2030 to promote continued sustainable development
Stability - UN peace keeping missions help end wars with peaceful elections after civil wars for example
Inequalities and Injustices
Inequalities - developed countries hold most of the power over decisions taken at the UN, most of the global issues tackled by the UN affect African countries but no African country has a permanent seat at the UN security council
Injustices - at times the UN has been ineffective
In 1995, the UN peace keepers failed to protect 8000 people in Srebrenica when they were massacred by the Bosnian Serbs
Institutions work together to make global governance a success
Institutions operate at a range of scales
Global = UN
International = EU
National = British Government
Regional = Welsh Assembly
Local = local councils and county courts
Decisions made at global institutions affect the institutions further down
Eg. the 2015 Paris Climate Change Agreement required changes at local levels
Decisions made at local levels affect global institutions
Eg. In 2016 a regional government blocked a trade deal between the EU and Canada
Non-governmental organisations (NGOs) operate on a range of scales to monitor and support institutions
CODE
Case Studies
Examples
Statistics