Pros and Cons of Globalization Debate
Pros and Cons of Globalization Debate
Pros and Cons of Globalization Debate
A story in the Washington Post said “20 years ago globalization was pitched as
a strategy that would raise all boats in poor and rich countries alike. In the
U.S. and Europe consumers would have their pick of inexpensive items made
by people thousands of miles away whose pay was much lower than theirs.
And in time trade barriers would drop to support even more multinationals
expansion and economic gains while geo political cooperation would flourish.”
There is no question that globalization has been a good thing for many
developing countries who now have access to our markets and can export
cheap goods. Globalization has also been good for Multi-national corporations
and Wall Street. But globalization has not been good for working people (blue
or white collar) and has led to the continuing deindustrialization of America.
Pros
Supporters of globalization argue that it has the potential to make this world a
better place to live in and solve some of the deep-seated problems like
unemployment and poverty.
1. Free trade is supposed to reduce barriers such as tariffs, value added taxes,
subsidies, and other barriers between nations. This is not true. There are still
many barriers to free trade. The Washington Post story says “the problem is
that the big G20 countries added more than 1,200 restrictive export and
import measures since 2008
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3. Competition between countries is supposed to drive prices down. In many
cases this is not working because countries manipulate their currency to get a
price advantage.
6. There is now a worldwide market for companies and consumers who have
access to products of different countries. True
11. Socially we have become more open and tolerant towards each other and
people who live in the other part of the world are not considered aliens. True
in many cases.
12. Most people see speedy travel, mass communications and quick
dissemination of information through the Internet as benefits of globalization.
True
13. Labor can move from country to country to market their skills. True, but
this can cause problems with the existing labor and downward pressure on
wages.
14. Sharing technology with developing nations will help them progress. True
for small countries but stealing our technologies and IP have become a big
problem with our larger competitors like China.
16. Globalization has given countries the ability to agree to free trade
agreements like NAFTA, South Korea Korus, and The TPP. True but these
agreements have cost the U.S. many jobs and always increase our trade deficit
Cons
• The general complaint about globalization is that it has made the rich richer
while making the non-rich poorer. “It is wonderful for managers, owners and
investors, but hell on workers and nature.”
• The biggest problem for developed countries is that jobs are lost and
transferred to lower cost countries.” According to conservative estimates by
Robert Scott of the Economic Policy Institute, granting China most favored
nation status drained away 3.2 million jobs, including 2.4 million
manufacturing jobs. He pegs the net losses due to our trade deficit with Japan
($78.3 billion in 2013) at 896,000 jobs, as well as an additional 682,900 jobs
from the Mexico –U.S. trade-deficit run-up from 1994 through 2010.”
• The anti-globalists also claim that globalization is not working for the
majority of the world. “During the most recent period of rapid growth in
global trade and investment, 1960 to 1998, inequality worsened both
internationally and within countries. The UN Development Program reports
that the richest 20 percent of the world's population consume 86 percent of
the world's resources while the poorest 80 percent consume just 14 percent. “
• Social welfare schemes or “safety nets” are under great pressure in developed
countries because of deficits, job losses, and other economic ramifications of
globalization.
What is missing?
Trade Agreements – Both the NAFTA and the South Korean Korus trade
agreements might have been good for Wall Street and the multi-national
corporations but they eliminated jobs in America and expanded our trade
deficit. The upcoming Trans Pacific Trade Agreement will do the same thing
and Congress should not fast track this bad agreement for a dozen reasons.
Enforcing the rules – China ignores trade rules and WTO laws with reckless
abandon. Besides currency manipulation they subsidize their state owned
companies to target our markets, and provide funding to their state owned
companies that dump their products in America. They also steal our
technologies, sell counterfeit versions of our products, and impose tariffs and
other barriers anytime they want - as we do nothing to stop them. China does
not deserve to be on our most favored nation list and we need to tax their
exports to us until they stop these illegal activities.
What is good for third world countries, like Kenya, or countries with
tremendous growth, like China, has not been good for American workers.
Globalization is deindustrializing America as we continue to outsource both
manufacturing blue collar and white collar jobs. Supporters of globalization
have made the case that it is good because it has brought low priced imported
goods, but they have not matched the decline of wages in the middle class and
will not offset the loss of many family wage jobs