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Globalization in History

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Title: Globalization in History


1
Globalization in History
  • Lecture 11(Chapter 12)

2
Topics disccused in this lecture
  • What is Globalization?
  • When did Globalization begin?
  • Which are the major forces behind Globalization?
  • The economic consequences of Globalization
  • on economic growth
  • on wage bargaining and income distribution
  • on labour standards

3
What is Globalization?
  • G. is market integration on a world scale.
  • And what does market integration mean?
  • It means that markets operate according tothe
    law of one price, LOOP.
  • LOOP means that an identical good gets the same
    price in any market.
  • Well, actually it is more complicated than that.

4
LOOP and transaction costs
  • There are transport and other transaction costs
    involved in bringing a good for one market, say
    London, to another, say New York, therefore LOOP
    must be rephrased.
  • LOOP means that the (absolute) price difference
    between an identical good sold in two markets
    must not exceed the transaction costs involved in
    bringing the good between the markets.

5
Implications
  • If transport and transaction costs fall then
    there is price convergence.
  • There are additional factors contributing to
    price convergence
  • increased market efficiency reduces excess
    trading profits

6
Domestic freight rates fell more than
transatlantic
7
Globalization is price convergence
Source United Kingdom and France (Paris) until
1903 British Parliamentary Papers, Second series
of memoranda, statistical tables and charts
prepared in the Board of Trade with reference to
various matters bearing on British and foreign
trade and industrial conditions. London 1904.
Gazette average for UK, quality not specified for
France. 1904-1934 National Bureau of Economic
Research Historical Database (1904-1934),
http//www.nber.org/databases/macrohistory/content
s/chapter04.html. 1960-1985 Economic Research
Service, US Department of Agriculture. United
States (New York) 1800-49 Arthur Harrison Cole
(1938), 1850-1900 Karl Gunnar Persson (2004).
Main sources were New York Times and J.E.
Beerbohms Evening Corn Trade News. (Chicago)
1840-1995 National Bureau of Economic Research
Data base. http//www.nber.org/databases/macrohist
ory/contents/chapter04.html , C. Knick Harley
(1980)
8
and increasing X/GDP ratio
Trade/GDP ratio Percent
9
Globalization is increased capital mobility
  • Source NBER (2003), Globalization in Historical
    Perspective.

10
and falling interest rate differentials
  • Source NBER (2003), Globalization in Historical
    Perspektive.

11
Does Globalization promote wage convergence?
  • We would expect wage convergence if migration is
    not restricted.Why?
  • Because bargaining position of workers remaining
    in emigration-countries (Old world) will
    increase, while bargaining strength of workers in
    immigration nations(New world) will fall.
  • In the 1870-1914 period migration was
    unrestricted in the Atlantic economy and there
    was wage convergence.
  • Sharp fall in migration and little or no wage
    convergence in the Interwar period (1914-1945).
  • World migration has been restricted after 1945
    and migration does not contribute strongly to
    wage convergence.

12
19th century mass migration
13
19th century wage convergence
14
When did Globalization begin?
  • The Mediterranean world was integrated already
    in the Roman era.
  • Then followed a period of disintegration.
  • There was regionalization rather than
    Globalization until transport costs fell and the
    speed of information transmission increased in
    the 19th century.

15
Two major phases of Globalization
  • First phase from 1850 to 1914 when all markets
    were free from restrictions.
  • Second phase starting after 1945, but
    international mass migration was regulated as
    well as capital mobility (Bretton Woods) until
    the 1980s and trade was gradually liberalized.
  • Still work in progress.

16
The forces generating Globalization
  • There are two major forces in Globalization
    political and technological.
  • Liberal migration policy and trade policy in the
    mid 1850s were decisive in opening closed
    economies.
  • Gold standard stimulated capital mobility and
    capital was chasing migrant labour.
  • At about the same time railways lowered transport
    costs for land-locked regions and Ocean freight
    rates fell.
  • The telegraph increased the speed of information
    transmission from weeks to hours by early 1870s
    the whole world was wired.

17
Information revolution speeds up price adjustment
  • Source Based on ongoing work by M.Ejrnæs and
    K.G.Persson

18
Extent of trade determines speed of adjustment
19
The economic consequences of Globalization
  • Since Globalization implies openness we can
    expect it to stimulate the transmission of new
    goods and new technologies.
  • Trade will also increase the efficiency in the
    use of existing resources.
  • But how will RD spending be affected in an
    increasingly competitive environment?

20
When theory is inconclusive, history might have
the answer
  • Source NBER (2003), Globalization in Historical
    Perspective.

21
Wage bargaining in rich countries will be affected
  • Globalization reduces the bargaining power of
    trade unions in rich countries.
  • The demand curve for labour will be more elastic
    when there is unlimited supply of low wage
    workers in China and India.
  • Domestic inflation in rich countries will be
    muted.

22
The demand curve is shifting counter-clockwise



23
Consequences of an upward shift in labour costs
  • In a protected economy an increase in labour
    costs, the upward shift in the S curve will be
    passed over to consumers as higher inflation and
    only marginally as higher unemployment, from
    employment OL to OL.
  • In the global world that shift will generate more
    unemployment and less inflation, from employment
    OL to OL.

24
Will there be a race to the bottom in labour
standards?
  • Will the implication be that labour standards,
    that is working conditions, will be determined by
    economies with lowest standards?
  • Historical experience from the first
    Globalization period suggests that there was a
    race towards the top, that is economies with
    decent standards inspired others to imitate.
  • Such a demonstration effect is possible only if
    workers have access to information and the right
    to organize. Not true of China today.
  • But beware labour standards are often used as an
    excuse by protectionists.

25
Openness and labour standards in 1913
Source Huberman, M. and W. Lewchuk (2003),
European economic integration and the labour
compact, 18501913, European Review of Economic
History, 7(1),p.29
26
Will there be a new Globalization backlash?
  • In the US democratic candidates usually adopt an
    anti-global ticket.
  • Democrats are more protectionist and now control
    US Congress.
  • Small nations, which are more dependent on
    trade, are normally more globally minded
    Scandinavia.
  • Is that because they have better social safety
    nets when nations face global shocks?

27
A lesson from history
  • There is nothing inevitable about Globalization.
  • In 1913 no-one could imagine the
    anti-globalization forces ruling the world in the
    Interwar period with disastrous political and
    economic results.
  • Globalization needs peace and absence of major
    shocks like the Great Depression.
  • Globalization has winners and losers but the net
    gains are positive.
  • To stop a backlash you may need to compensate the
    losers.

28
Farmers in New and Old world complained about low
prices
  • European late 19th century protectionism was a
    reaction to New World grain invasion.
  • But why was there a farm protest movement in the
    US Midwest?
  • Relative deprivation!

29
The paradox of rural discontent graphically
speaking
30
Conclusion
  • Two periods of globalization,
  • Beware of globalization backlash there are
    winners and losers within nations.
  • Stiff competition reduces price setting power
    also for big firms and reduce bargaining power of
    trade unions.
  • Fear of a race towards the bottom not suppported
    by 150 years of globalization.
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