Excerpts From:
The Chrysalis Age: A Handbook for Spiritual and Global Transformation in the New Millennium
Transformation of the World: What Is Globalization?
As
we explore the different aspects of the world, and in particular the global
economy, it will helpful to take a moment and define globalization and examine
in brief some of the issues that surround it.
Globalization is “… the inexorable integration of markets,
nation-states and technologies to a degree never witnessed before—in a way that
is enabling individuals, corporations and nation-states to reach around the
world farther, faster, deeper and cheaper than ever before, and in a way that
is enabling the world to reach into individuals, corporations, and
nation-states farther, faster, cheaper than ever before.”
Thomas L. Friedman, The Lexus and the Olive Tree, p. 9
Globalization is a catchall word describing the
transformative effects of various aspects of the world becoming more
interconnected. It is often used to
refer to the way liquidity of capital and the erasure of trade barriers has
changed the nature of the world economy.
It also refers to how these economic changes are driven by advances in
technologies such as computers, the Internet, and manufacturing. It can be used to describe the cultural
effects of worldwide mass media dominated by a handful of corporations, or used
in talking about the shifts and changes in governments and social structures
caused by changes in the world economy and technology. “Accordingly,” as David
Held and Anthony McGrew write, “globalization can be thought of as; a process
(or set of processes -- which embodies a transformation in the spatial
organization of social relations and transactions—assessed in terms of their
extensity, intensity, velocity and impact—generating transcontinental or
interregional flows and networks of activity, interaction, and the exercises of
power.”[i]
Although there are a large number of individual aspects to globalization, it
implies many levels of connection. We
are living in Marshall McLuhan’s Global Village, and like any village, we are
getting to know each other better, while at the same time we are affecting each
other’s lives more deeply.
This isn’t the first time we’ve gone through
a phase of globalization. Historians
point to the Belle Époque of 1870 to 1914 in which similar events took place
and cautionary critics point out that this earlier phase of globalization
eventually led us into the First World War.
The similarities between today and the turn of the 19th
Century are significant, but they can also be misleading. Much like today, there were striking advances
in technology, such as the telephone, the automobile, and motion pictures, not
to mention developments in automation and the creation of the modern assembly
line. Also like today there was a vast
increase in trade between nations and a proliferation of large corporations
with extraordinary amounts of capital and power. However, these similarities are only surface
deep. The pace of technological change
at the turn of the 19th century was rapid, but it was crawling at a
snails pace by comparison to the rate of technological change we are currently
experiencing. Moreover, the technologies
we are creating today dwarf the power of anything we have previously envisioned
and implemented. In 1914 international companies still retained a degree of
loyalty to their home nation. By
contrast, today’s corporations are not simply powerful leviathans they are,
with ever fewer exceptions, truly transnational and far more concerned with
their market value than with the interests of any particular nation. The globalization of the Belle Époque can no
more be credited with provoking the First World War than the isolationism of
the 20’s and 30’s can be blamed in entirety for resulting in the Second World
War. Both were contributing, but not
decisive factors in helping to formulate an atmosphere conducive to
conflict. The situation today is
extremely different. While war is ever
more likely as globalization takes a firmer hold on the world, it is ever more
unlikely to involve multiple Western nations, except when acting in concert against
a common foe. The economic and political
ties that bind mature democratic nations together make it far less advantageous
for them to attempt to resolve their conflicts through force. On the other hand, the leaders of less
developed nations, with little or no democracy, weak infrastructure,
omnipresent corruption, and rampant poverty, find violent conflict if not a means
to resolving differences, at least a way to distract impoverished populations
from their tyranny.
The neo-liberal agenda that promotes the
process of globalization we are currently following suggests that stronger
economic ties reduce the likelihood of war.
New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman refers to this as his McDonald’s
Theory, by which no two nations that possess a McDonald’s have gone to
war. This theory hasn’t held up
entirely, as there is a McDonald’s in Belgrade, Serbia, which was bombed by
NATO during the Kosovo conflict, but by and large it is an accurate
platitude. Economic prosperity can lead
to less conflict with neighboring nations.
However, that economic prosperity needs to reach a rather significant
level to establish real safety. The Neo-Liberal
agenda of globalization seeks to increase economic stability and prosperity
through international free trade. This
tends to have both positive and negative effects. Naturally, those who are pushing this agenda,
and profiting most heavily from it, tend to focus on the benefits. Not surprisingly, those who are critical of
it tend to focus only on the negative aspects of globalization. Though it has existed since the beginning of
the 1990s as a loose coalition of environmental groups, corporate watchdog
organizations, and media critics, in popular consciousness the
anti-globalization movement is most frequently linked with the protests against
the World Trade Organization in Seattle in the fall of 1999. This event created a great deal of popular
attention for the subject of globalization, granting both its proponents and
detractors a wider audience, but few citizens seem to have grasped the
implications of the arguments.
The truth of globalization, as always, lies somewhere
between the extremes of the claims and criticisms of the ideologues on both
sides of the issue. Globalization does have enormous benefits, but often these
are slanted in the direction of those who are already reaping enormous
advantage from the system. Free trade
can be helpful to developing an economy, but only if it is fair and balanced,
giving all sides and all participants equal rewards. The flight of manufacturing companies to less
developed nations in search of cheap labor has effects that are both positive
and negative. Developed nations get cheaper goods, but fewer good manufacturing
jobs. Developing nations get jobs, but
not the freedoms and liberties that these jobs once provided to their
counterparts in developed nations. There
is a wide gap of meaning between freedom and free trade. As Anthony Giddens, writes, “The citizen is not the same
as the consumer, and freedom is not to be equated with the freedom to buy and
sell in the marketplace.”[ii]
Globalization also has serious impacts on the environment, social structures,
and cultures, but so does isolationism.
The
Third Way, which Giddens is a strong advocate for, attempts to bridge
this gap and push globalization in a slightly different direction by using
various forms of regulation to cushion the effects of free market capitalism.
While this is a rational compromise, it fails to address the root causes of the
problems arising from globalization.
Those who are suggesting a Third Way for the global economy are still
gripped by a Modern worldview.
Giddens is right about citizenship though, and this will be nowhere more
obvious than in China. The Chinese
government is attempting to convince its population that they really want to be
consumers not citizens. They have every
reason to believe that this will work because they can see how willing America
citizens have been to forego participation in government and leave behind all
notions of a civil society as long as they could have McDonald’s, shopping
malls, and 500 channels of satellite TV.
As the statistics on crime, depression and suicide in America indicate,
this life of consumption and separation isn’t all it’s cracked up to be. One has to wonder how long this façade will
last and whether countries like China will experience the same dissatisfaction
with the consumer way of living as many Americans are beginning to.
To
be specific, I am not against globalization in general, I am against the way we
are proceeding to go about it, though by and large, this comes down to pretty
much the same thing, as I am vehemently against our current path of
progress. However, I don’t advocate a
Third Way that cuts a poor compromise between two extremes, nor do I believe
that some return to isolationism will solve any more problems than it
creates. I believe that we need to
reconsider the way we envision the economy at the local, national, and global
levels, taking into account the implications of technology, social structures,
culture, and the environment in every way.
Specifically we need to begin viewing the global economy through the
lenses of complexity and network theory.
These schools of science look toward complex systems in nature, such as
ecologies, and networked systems like the Internet, to discern the fundamental
rules governing highly interconnected structures, such as our local, national,
and global economies. It is only by
learning how our various intermeshed economic systems work that we can have any
hope of consciously organizing them to benefit the whole of humanity. And to do this we will not only need to
understand how economies function on a financial level, but also how politics,
government, culture, the environment, and technology influence them. Failing to do this will likely lead to our
failure in every other aspect of civilization.
The
following chapters will attempt to do just this, at least in a limited fashion,
and the Third Turn, A Vision for World Transformation, will set out explicit
suggestions for how we can steer the world in a new direction that takes
advantage of the gloablizing force we are wielding, without turning these
powers inadvertently against their creators.
Some Advantages of
Globalization
- Increased
free trade between nations
- Increased
liquidity of capital allowing investors in developed nations to invest in
developing nations
- Corporations have greater flexibility to operate
across borders
- Global
mass media ties the world together
- Increased
flow of communications allows vital information to be shared between
individuals and corporations around the world
- Greater
ease and speed of transportation for goods and people
- Reduction
of cultural barriers increases the global village effect
- Spread
of democratic ideals to developed nations
- Greater
interdependence of nation-states
- Reduction
of likelihood of war between developed nations
- Increases
in environmental protection in developed nations
Some Disadvantages of
Globalization
- Increased
flow of skilled and non-skilled jobs from developed to developing nations
as corporations seek out the cheapest labor
- Increased
likelihood of economic disruptions in one nation effecting all nations
- Corporate
influence of nation-states far exceeds that of civil society organizations
and average individuals
- Threat
that control of world media by a handful of corporations will limit
cultural expression
- Greater
chance of reactions for globalization being violent in an attempt to
preserve cultural heritage
- Greater
risk of diseases being transported unintentionally between nations
- Spread
of a materialistic lifestyle and attitude that sees consumption as the
path to prosperity
- International
bodies like the World Trade Organization infringe on national and individual
sovereignty
- Increase
in the chances of civil war within developing countries and open war
between developing countries as they vie for resources
- Decreases
in environmental integrity as polluting corporations take advantage of
weak regulatory rules in developing countries
[i] David Held and Anthony McGrew,
The Global Transformations Reader, p.55
[ii] Anthony Giddens, The
Third Way and Its Critics, p.164