Title: GLOBALIZATION
1GLOBALIZATION
- MADE IN AMERICA?
- THREATENED BY AMERICA?
2CREATING A NEW WORLD ORDER
- CAPITALISM
- MULTINATIONAL CORPORATIONS (MNCs)
- MARKETING AND ADVERTISING
- DEMOCRACY (American style?)
- CONSUMERISM
3U.S.-style CAPITALISM
- Capitalism generally refers to an economic system
in which the means of production are mostly
privately owned and operated for profit, and in
which the distribution, production and pricing of
goods and services are determined in a largely
free market. - Capitalism is a social system based on the
principle of individual rights.
4CIRCULATION OF CAPITAL
5CIRCULATION OF CAPITAL
- Who controlled capital?
- Who could lend money for interest?
6CIRCULATION OF CAPITAL
- Who controlled capital?
- Who could lend money for interest?
- What political limitations existed on capital
circulation and accumulation?
7CIRCULATION OF CAPITAL
- Who controlled capital?
- Who could lend money for interest?
- What political limitations existed on capital
circulation and accumulation? - Why did the Protestants develop capitalism more
successfully than the Catholics in Europe? - (anti-market sentiments of medieval culture)
8CORPORATIONS
- Early corporations of the commercial sort were
formed under frameworks set up by governments of
states to undertake tasks which appeared too
risky or too expensive for individuals or
governments to embark upon (Dutch East India
Company, e.g.)
9CORPORATIONS
- Eventually, American state governments began to
realize the greater corporate registration
revenues available by providing more permissive
corporate laws. - Delaware pioneered corporate law (early 20th C.).
10MARKETING AND ADVERTISING
- Rise of media
- Promotion of product or identity
- Sociology of consumerism
11U.S.-style DEMOCRACY
- Direct Democracy
- - sovereignty is lodged in the assembly of
all citizens who choose to participate
Countries highlighted in blue are designated
"Electoral Democracies" in Freedom House's 2006
survey Freedom in the World.
12DEMOCRACY AND GLOBALIZATION
- Free people free markets
- Individualism creates capitalistic opportunities
- States choosing democracy are more liable to
embrace US-style capitalism - increasing transactions across the border of
nation-states are eroding the efficiency of
national governing structures, especially
democratic ones.
13- the nation-state system, democratic politics,
and full economic integration are mutually
incompatible. Of the three, at most two can be
had together.
14POLITICAL STRUCTURE OF THE NEW WORLD ORDER
- Bretton Woods (July 1944)
- World Bank
- IMF
- ? United Nations (April 1945, based on
- Atlantic Charter)
- ? Cold War (1946 1989/1991)
-
15U.S. and GLOBALIZATION
- 1945 - The U.S. held a majority of investment
capital, manufacturing production and exports. It
produced half the world's coal, two-thirds of the
oil, and more than half of the electricity. The
U.S. was able to produce great quantities of
machinery, including ships, airplanes, vehicles,
armaments, machine tools, and chemicals.
Reinforcing the initial advantageand assuring
the U.S. unmistakable leadership in the
capitalist worldthe U.S. held 80 of gold
reserves and had not only a powerful army but
also the atomic bomb.
16WILSONS 14 POINTS (1918)
- (III) The removal, so far as possible, of all
economic barriers and the establishment of an
equality of trade conditions among all the
nations consenting to the peace and associating
themselves for its maintenance.
17WILSONS 14 POINTS (1918)
- (XII) . other nationalities which are now under
Turkish rule i.e., Kurds, Arab peoples,
Armenians, and some Greeks should be assured an
undoubted security of life and an absolutely
unmolested opportunity of autonomous development.
- "the free self - determination of nations upon
which all the modern world insists."
18SELF-DETERMINATION
- The principle of self - determination , according
to Lippmann (1944), is "simply un-American." The
American ideal, he explained, was "a state within
which diverse peoples find justice and liberty,
under equal laws and become a commonwealth."
19THE ATLANTIC CHARTER (1941)
- First, the US and the UK seek no aggrandizement,
territorial or other
http//usinfo.state.gov/usa/infousa/facts/democrac
/53.htm
20THE ATLANTIC CHARTER (1941)
- ? Second, they desire to see no territorial
changes that do not accord with the freely
expressed wishes of the peoples concerned
21THE ATLANTIC CHARTER (1941)
- Third, they respect the right of all peoples to
choose the form of government under which they
will live and they wish to see sovereign rights
and self government restored to those who have
been forcibly deprived of them
22THE ATLANTIC CHARTER (1941)
- Fourth, they will endeavor, with due respect for
their existing obligations, to further the
enjoyment by all States, great or small, victor
or vanquished, of access, on equal terms, to the
trade and to the raw materials of the world which
are needed for their economic prosperity
23THE ATLANTIC CHARTER (1941)
- Fifth, they desire to bring about the fullest
collaboration between all nations in the economic
field with the object of securing, for all,
improved labor standards, economic advancement
and social security
24THE ATLANTIC CHARTER (1941)
- Sixth, . they hope to see established a peace
which will afford to all nations the means of
dwelling in safety within their own boundaries,
and which will afford assurance that all the
people in all the lands may live out their
lives in freedom from fear and want
25THE ATLANTIC CHARTER (1941)
- Seventh, such a peace should enable all people
to traverse the high seas and oceans without
hindrance
26THE ATLANTIC CHARTER (1941)
- Eighth, they believe that all of the nations of
the world, for realistic as well as spiritual
reasons must come to the abandonment of the use
of force. - Since no future peace can be maintained if
land, sea or air armaments continue to be
employed by nations which threaten, or may
threaten, aggression outside of their frontiers,
they believe, pending the establishment of a
wider and permanent system of general security,
that the disarmament of such nations is
essential. - They will likewise aid and encourage all
other practicable measures which will lighten for
peace-loving peoples the crushing burden of
armaments.
27The U.S. and Globalization21st Century Challenges
- After 1989/91 no framework for the New World
Order - Had the U.S. lost control of the globalization
process? - What does the worlds only military superpower do
with that power?