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Global Stratification

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6 Australians and New Zealanders. Difficulty in Communicating. 165 people speak Mandarin ... The rest speak Bengali, Portuguese, Indonesian, Japanese, German, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Global Stratification


1
Global Stratification
2
If the world were a village of 1000
  • 584 Asians
  • 124 Africans
  • 95 East and West Europeans
  • 84 Latin Americans
  • 55 Soviets
  • 52 North Americans
  • 6 Australians and New Zealanders

3
Difficulty in Communicating
  • 165 people speak Mandarin
  • 86 speak English
  • 83 speak Hindi/Urdu
  • 64 speak Spanish
  • 58 speak Russian
  • 37 speak Arabic
  • The rest speak Bengali, Portuguese, Indonesian,
    Japanese, German, French, and 200 other languages

4
Religions
  • 329 Christians
  • 178 Moslems
  • 167 non-religious
  • 132 Hindus
  • 60 Buddhists
  • 45 Atheists
  • 3 Jews
  • 86 all other religions

5
Characteristics of the Global Village
  • 1/3 are children and 60 gt 65 yrs
  • ½ of children are immunized
  • 28 babies born 10 die
  • 1 is infected with HIV
  • 200 people receive 75 of the income 200 receive
    2
  • 70 own an automobile
  • 1/3 have access to clean, safe-drinking water
  • 1/5 of the adults are literate

6
Characteristics of the Global Village
  • 6,000 acres of land
  • 700 acres cropland
  • 1,400 acres pasture
  • 1,900 acres woodland
  • 2,000 acres desert, tundra, pavement and other
    wasteland
  • 83 of fertilizer to 40 of cropland
  • Remaining 60 feeds 73 of the people

7
Who are they?
  • 5 soldiers
  • 7 teachers
  • 1 doctor
  • 3 refugees driven from home by war or drought

8
Resources
  • 3 million total budget - 3,000 per person
  • 181,000 goes to weapons and warfare
  • 159,000 for education
  • 132,000 for health care
  • Just 100 people control all nuclear weapons

9
Distribution of World Income(United Nations
figures in 2001)
10
Gini Coefficient
11
Gini Coefficient Worldwide
12
Systems of Stratification
  • Slavery Semi-closed system with limited social
    mobility
  • Resurgence over last 50 years
  • Caste Closed System with no social mobility
  • Based on ascribed status
  • Class Open system with social mobility up or
    down
  • Shares similar access to resources and life style

13
Changing Terminology
  • Old terminology
  • First world industrialized rich countries
  • Second world less industrial socialist countries
  • Third world non-industrialized poor countries
  • New terminology
  • High-income richest forty nations with the
    highest standard of living
  • Middle-income somewhat poorer nations with
    economic development typical for the world as a
    whole
  • Low-income remaining sixty with lowest
    productivity and extensive poverty

14
The Severity of Poverty
  • Relative poverty
  • People lack resources that others take for
    granted
  • This sort of poverty exists in every society,
    rich or poor
  • Absolute poverty
  • A lack of resources that is life threatening
  • While some may exist in U.S. One-third or more of
    the people in low-income countries experience
    poverty at this level

15
EXTENT OF POVERTY
  • Every year 6 million children die from
    malnutrition before their 5th birthday
  • More than 800 million people go to bed hungry
    every day 300 million are children
  • Every 3.6 seconds someone dies from starvation
  • Over 40 do not have basic sanitation

16
Children Poverty
  • Poverty and children
  • 100 million children in poor countries are forced
    to work the streets (e.g., beg, steal, selling
    sex)
  • 100 million children have deserted their families
    and live off the streets
  • About half of all street children are in Latin
    America
  • 10,000 in Mexico City alone

17
Women Poverty
  • In all societies, a womans work is unrecognized,
    undervalued, and underpaid
  • Workers in sweatshops are mostly women
  • 80 of farmers in Africa are women
  • Seventy percent of the worlds 1 billion people
    living near absolute poverty are women
  • Every minute, a woman dies in pregnancy or
    childbirth
  • Economic improvement tied to improving lives of
    women
  • 40 of women do not have access to basic education

18
Modernization TheoryThis Model of Economic
Development Explains Global Inequality in Terms
of Technological Cultural Differences Between
Societies
  • Historical perspective
  • As recently as several centuries ago the entire
    world was poor
  • Exploration, trade, and the industrial revolution
    transformed Western Europe then North America
  • Cultural perspective
  • Weber explains that the Protestant Reformation
    reshaped traditional Catholicism
  • The accumulation of wealth replaced kinship and
    community and fostered the rise of capitalism
  • Tradition and cultural inertia discourages
    people from adopting new technologies and rising
    living standards

19
W.W. Rostows Stages of Modernization
  • Traditional stage
  • Changing traditional views
  • Take-off stage
  • Use of talents and imaginations
  • Drive to technological maturity
  • Diversified economy takes over
  • High mass consumption
  • Mass production stimulates consumption

20
The Role of Rich Nations
  • Assisting in population control
  • Exporting birth control and educating people on
    its importance
  • Increasing food production
  • The use of new hybrid seeds, modern irrigation
    methods, the use of chemicals and pesticides
  • Introducing industrial technology
  • Machinery and information must be shared if
    shifts in economies are to take place
  • Instituting programs of foreign aid
  • Money can be used for equipment necessary for
    change to take place

21
Critical Evaluation
  • Modernization simply hasnt happened in many
    nations
  • Fails to recognize how rich nations benefit from
    the status quo of poor nations
  • Fails to see the international relations affect
    all nations
  • Ethnocentric in that it holds up the richest
    nations as the standard to judge other societies
  • Blames global poverty on the poor societies
    themselves

22
Dependency TheoryThis Model of Economic
Development Explains Global Inequality in Terms
of the Historical Exploitation of Poor Societies
by Rich Ones
  • Historical perspective
  • People living in poor countries were better off
    in the past than they are now. Economic position
    of rich poor are linked
  • Importance of colonialism
  • Europeans colonized much of world west, south
    east of them
  • Neocolonialism is the essence of the modern
    capitalistic world economy

23
Wallersteins Capitalist World Economy
  • Todays world economy is rooted in the
    colonization that began 500 years ago
  • Rich countries form the core of the world economy
    being enriched by raw materials from around the
    world
  • Low income countries are the periphery, providing
    inexpensive labor and a market for industrial
    products
  • Middle income countries form the semiperiphery,
    having a closer tie to the core

24
Wallersteins Ideas
  • Basic thesis -- the world economy benefits rich
    societies by generating profits and harms the
    rest of the world by perpetuating poverty thus
    the world economy makes poor nations dependent on
    rich ones
  • Narrow, export-oriented economies Poor countries
    produce only a few crops for export to rich
    countries
  • Lack of industrial capacity Poor countries must
    sell raw materials to rich countries and then buy
    finished products back from them at high prices
  • Foreign debt The poor countries of the world owe
    the rich countries 1 trillion dollars, including
    hundreds of billions to the United States

25
Critical Evaluation
  • Wrongly treats wealth as a zero-sum game
  • Wrong to blame rich nations for global poverty
  • Too simplistic citing capitalism as the single
    factor
  • Downplays the economic dependence fostered by the
    former Soviet Union
  • More protest than policy
  • Thinly disguised call for world socialism

26
New InternationalDivision of Labor Theory
  • Commodity production is split into fragments,
    each of which can be moved to whichever part of
    the world can provide the best combination of
    capital and labor.
  • Global Commodity Chain
  • Producer-driven commodity chain
  • Buyer-driven commodity chain

27
Maquiladora Plants
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