Globalization: Progress Or Profiteering?
Globalization
is the tendency of investment funds and businesses to move beyond
domestic and national markets to other markets around the globe,
allowing them to become interconnected with different markets.
Proponents of globalization say that it helps developing nations "catch
up" to industrialized nations much faster, through increased employment
and technological advances, and Asian economies are often highlighted as
examples of globalization's success.
Critics of globalization say that it weakens national sovereignty and
allows rich nations to ship domestic jobs overseas, where labor is much
cheaper. What is the real story on globalization? It largely depends on
your personal perspective.
The View from the Penthouse
For business leaders and members of the economic elite, globalization
is good. Cheaper labor overseas enables them to build production
facilities in locations where labor and healthcare costs are low, and
then sell the finished goods in locations where wages are high.
Profits soar due to the greatly reduced wages for workers, and Wall
Street rewards the big profit gains with higher stock prices. The CEOs
of global companies also get credit for the profits. Their rewards are
usually generous compensation packages, in which company stock and stock options figure prominently. Institutional investors and wealthy individuals also take home the big gains when stock prices increase.
The View from the Street
But globalization doesn't only affect CEOs and high-net-worth
individuals. Competition for jobs stretches far beyond the immediate
area in a global marketplace. From technology call centers in India to
automobile manufacturing plants in China, globalization means that
workers must compete with job applicants from around the world.
Some of these changes arose because of the North American Free Trade Agreement
(NAFTA). NAFTA sent the jobs of U.S. autoworkers to Mexico, a
developing country, where wages are significantly lower than those in
the U.S. A few years later, some of those same jobs were relocated to
third-world countries in East Asia, where wages are even lower.
In both cases, the auto manufacturers expected U.S. consumers to
continue buying those products at U.S. prices. While critics of
globalization decry the loss of jobs that globalization can entail for
developed countries, those who support globalization argue that the
employment and technology that is brought to developing countries help
those populations toward industrialization and the possibility of
increased standards of living.
The View from the Middle Ground
In the globalization battleground, outsourcing is a double-edged sword.
On the one hand, low wages in foreign countries enable retailers to
sell clothing, cars and other goods at reduced rates in western nations
where shopping has become an ingrained part of the culture. This allows
companies to increase their profit margins.
At the same time, shoppers save money when they buy these goods,
causing some supporters of globalization to argue that while sending
jobs overseas tends to lower wages, it may also lower prices at the same
time.
Lower-income workers also enjoy some of the benefits of stock price
appreciation. Many workers have mutual funds holdings, particularly in
their 401(k) plans. When companies outsource jobs and get rewarded with
rising share prices, mutual funds with those shares also increase in value.
The Effects of Globalization
The ever-increasing flow of cross-border traffic regarding money, information, people and technology isn't going to stop.
Some argue that it is a classic situation of the rich get richer
while the poor get poorer. While global standards of living have risen
overall as industrialization takes root in third-world countries, they
have fallen in developed countries. Today, the gap between rich and poor
countries is expanding, as is the gap between the rich and poor within
these countries.
Homogenization of the world is another result, with the same coffee
shop on every corner and the same big-box retailers in seemingly every
city in every country. So, while globalization does promote contact and
exchange between cultures, it also tends to make them more similar to
one another. At the market level, linked global financial markets propel local issues into international problems, such as meltdowns in Southeast Asia and the 1998 Russian debt default.
What Lies Ahead?
Deviation from the status quo on this issue is likely to be minimal.
The massive outsourcing of U.S. manufacturing jobs that began decades
ago continues today. White collar
jobs, such as call center workers, medical technicians, and accountants
have also joined the outsource parade, leaving many to argue that those
profiting from the arrangement have little incentive to change it,
while those most impacted by it are virtually powerless.
Politicians have latched onto the idea of the disappearing middle class as a political issue, but none of their income redistribution schemes are likely to have any immediate substantial impact.
The Bottom Line
Public scrutiny of CEO compensation has encouraged business leaders
to begin to see that a rising tide doesn't necessarily lift all boats.
In many cases, low-wage workers get hurt the most because they don't
have transferable skills. The concept of retraining workers is on the
radar, but it's easier said than done and decades too late for the
American manufacturing industry.
Until a better solution is found, education, flexibility, and
adaptability are the keys to survival. So far, the only answer that
politicians and business leaders agree on is the value of an educated,
flexible, adaptable workforce.
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