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Globalization

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Globalization CMN 2168 Recap - Globalizing technologies Digitalization is probably the most important technological advance in the area of communications. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Globalization


1
Globalization
  • CMN 2168

2
Recap - Globalizing technologies
  • Digitalization is probably the most important
    technological advance in the area of
    communications. The term refers to the process
    whereby information is produced as a universal
    binary code, and is thus able to circulate more
    freely and at greater speed across communication
    technologies, and not just within them (59).

3
Recap
  • Digitalization brings together different media
    (telephone, television, computers) and texts
    (pictures, sounds, words).
  • Greater flexibility.
  • Greater speed.

4
  • The relationship between the place of technology
    in our lives and its supposedly progressive
    dimension needs to be discussed in terms of the
    actual effects of these technologies and global
    convergence.
  • Global convergence the tendency facilitated by
    communication technologies, to bring together
    different communities, institutions, media (217).

5
  • Castells argues that corporations both
    participate into and are dependent on information
    networks.
  • As virtually all corporations are connected to
    and reliant on information networks, they cannot
    place themselves or think outside these networks
    (partly because of the general interdependence on
    such communication systems).

6
  • The exclusion of some kind of information in
    analysis is part of a much wider tendency which
    Bourdieu refers to as the editing out of the
    human.
  • Mathematization of human behaviours
    (scientific authority associated with
    statistically and mathematically based
    information. 66-7).

7
  • According to Virilio, information networks
    contribute to the development of endocolonialism
    (as opposed to exocolonialism).
  • Endocolonialism Paul Virilios term for the new
    form of colonialism where social and economic
    inequalities are not exported to the colonies
    but are accentuated within colonialist states
    such as the United States and the United Kingdom
    (216).

8
  • There is now a network of flows across the globe.
    The old imperial centre / periphery has
    disappeared into a confusing system of power
    relations and connections. What appear to be free
    and interactive trade relations are in fact an
    utterly constricting set of obligations,
    tendencies and imperatives (70).

9
  • Chomsky and globalization
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vAHJPSLgHemM

10
Chomsky and globalization
  • The accelerating pace of globalisation is having
    a profound effect on life in rich and poor
    countries alike, transforming regions such as
    Detroit or Bangalore from boom to bust - or vice
    versa - in a generation.
  • Many economists believe globalisation may be the
    explanation for key trends in the world economy
    such as
  • - Lower wages for workers, and higher profits, in
    Western economies
  • - The flood of migrants to cities in poor
    countries
  • - Low inflation and low interest rates despite
    strong growth.

11
  • In economic terms, globalisation refers to the
    growing economic integration of the world, as
    trade, investment and money increasingly cross
    international borders (which may or may not have
    political or cultural implications).

12
  • The rapid spread of information technology (IT)
    and the internet is changing the way companies
    organise production, and increasingly allowing
    services as well as manufacturing to be
    globalised.

13
The role of trade
  • Trade has been the engine of globalisation, with
    world trade in manufactured goods increasing more
    than 100 times (from 95bn to 12 trillion) in
    the last 50 years since 1955, much faster than
    the overall growth of the world economy.
  • Since 1960, increased trade has been made easier
    by international agreements to lower tariff and
    non-tariff barriers on the export of manufactured
    goods, especially to rich countries.

14
  • Neo-liberalism is based on the Washington
    consensus, also called the neo-liberal doctrine
    (or neo-liberalism). It puts great emphasis on
    liberalisation of trade and finance,
    privatisations and the supremacy of markets. This
    system praises the rationalisation of all
    activities and services, but it generally leads
    to the concentration of money within the hands of
    a small minority.

15
  • Neo-liberalism relies on the ideas of Adam Smith
    (who was one of the intellectuals who developed
    the idea of free trade and capitalism).
  • Privatisations
  • Liberalisation of trade and finance
  • Supremacy of markets

16
Global capitalism
  • Globalization can be understood as the
    relationship between the development of new
    communication technologies, on the one hand, and
    the contexts and politics of the use of that
    technology, on the other (73).

17
  • We can also understand globalization as an
    aspect of its effects on and in relation to the
    institutions, practices and strategies of
    capitalism (73).
  • Capitalism is currently the dominant system for
    the organization of economies characterized by
    the private ownership of the means of production,
    and reliance on the market to direct economic
    activity and distribute economic goods and
    rewards. Its founding principle is the pursuit of
    self-interest through competition (215).

18
Logic of capitalism
  • Capitalism operates through the creation of
    surplus value, but that surplus value must always
    find a market.
  • Surplus value is created when the value of
    production exceeds labour and other associated
    costs.

19
  • Surplus value is only realized, however, through
    the process of consumption.
  • Surplus value is then (at least parlty) returned
    to the capitalist process as investment, which in
    turn creates more surplus value and more goods
    for consumption.

20
  • When home markets are exhausted and unable to
    cope with what eventually becomes capitalist
    overproduction, or when overproduction leads to
    devaluation, capitalism is faced with a barrier
    to its mode of operation.

21
  • This can be accommodated by the development of
    new markets, such as foreign countries (or
    colonies in the past).
  • The long term goal of capitalism is the
    capitalization of the entire world (74).
  • Global capital.

22
  • Capitalisms basic principle is the pursuit of
    self-interest, which is achieved economically
    through competition between producers and
    producers, consumers and consumers. This
    competition, under capitalist logic, creates a
    state in which the right amount of goods and
    services at the right price are made available to
    meet consumer demands (79).

23
  • The principle, in the simplest terms, is that
    increasing demand will put pressure on supply
    prices will go up in response to the pressure,
    and demand will drop back, in the face of the
    raised prices, to reach an equilibrium with
    supply (79).
  • See the marble example on page 79.

24
In other words
  • Under capitalism, the means of production are
    privately owned. The levels of exchange and the
    production of goods and services are reliant on
    the market and the relation between supply and
    demand rather than through intervention (79-80).

25
The two main competitors of capitalism
  • Fascism
  • The means of production are privately owned
  • The state plans and intervenes in production.

26
  • Communism
  • - The state both owns the means of production and
    controls the outputs.
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