Globalization

Who is affected?

Countries

Examples

Canada

United Kingdom

United States

India

China

Brazil

Economic Growth

Increased Trade

Access to Global Markets

Cultural Exchange

Cultural Integration

Exchange of Cultures

Environmental Impact

More Pollution

Increased Resource Depletion

Wildlife Destruction

Workers

Examples

Nike

Nestle

Ford

IBM

Job Opportunities

Increased Employment

Productive Workforce

Working Conditions

Exploitation

Efficient Workers

Wage Suppression

Companies

Examples

PepsiCo

Apple

Shell

Coca-Cola

Cost Savings

Cheap Labour

Cheap Raw Materials

Copper

Lithium

Oil

Gold

Corn

Increased Competition

Drives Innovation

Saturated Markets

Canada

United States

United Kingdom

Examples

Samsung

Hyundai

Expended Market Access

Developed Regions

North America

Oceania

Europe

Developing Regions

Asia

South Africa

Africa

Interdependence

Sectors

Economic

Information Technology

Manufacturing

Agriculture

Logistics

Factors Affecting a Country's Global Business Participation

Economic Stability

The more stable a country,
the higher potential it has to attract
foreign investments

Stable Countries

China

United Kingdom

Jordan

Germany

United States

Unstable Countries

Russia

Central African Republic

Syria

Venezuela

Myanmar

Trade Policies

Government policies such as tariffs,
trade agreements, and regulations,
will influence the country's ability to
participate in international business.

Countries With Restrictive Trade Policies (With the US)

North Korea

Cuba

Syria

Iran

Venezuela

Countries With Open Trade Policies (With the US)

Canada

Saudi Arabia

Brazil

United Kingdom

Israel

Infrastructure

Adequate infrastructure, such as transportation,
logistics, and communication are crucial for efficient
global trade and a country's ability to participate in
international business.

Countries With Developed Infrastructure

Canada

United States

South Korea

Japan

United Kingdom

Countries With Developing/Undeveloped Infrastructure

India

Russia

D.R. Congo

Mozambique

Laos

Market Size

The size of a market (a country and its potential
buyers) will affect and attract foreign business
towards itself.

Large Markets

United States

China

Indonesia

India

Small Markets

Kazakhstan

Iceland

Libya

Currency Exchange

Exchange rate stability (the stability
of a country's currency) will affect it's
ability to do international business.

Countries With The Strongest Currencies

United States (USD)

United Kingdom (GBP)

European Union (EUR)

Switzerland (CHF)

Countries With The Weakest Currencies

Russia (RUB)

Iran (IRR)

Vietnamese Dong (VND)

Guinea (GNF)

Every sector relies on each other, regardless
of the business, target market, or place of
operation. This is how the economy generates
revenue, and if a vital sector were to suddenly
disappear, the resulting damage would be
catastrophic. This is interdependence.

Who Relies on Who?

Each Other

Everyone, from workers, countries,
companies, and consumers all contribute
and depend on each other in order to create
a functioning and productive economy. These
are the backbone of the world and are a main
way in how globalization affects us.