The Economics Book

(Barry) #1

228


G


lobalization is a term that
means different things
to politicians, business
people, and social scientists. To an
economist it means the integration
of markets. Economists have long
thought this a good thing.
In the 18th century Adam Smith
(p.61) attacked the old mercantilist
ideas of protectionism, which
aimed to restrict the inflow of
foreign goods. He argued that
international trade would expand
the size of markets and allow
countries to become more efficient
by specializing in certain products.
Often, market integration is seen as
inevitable because it rides on the
back of a wave of new technology—
such as smarter phones, faster
planes, and an expanding internet.
But globalization is also affected
by choices made by nations—
sometimes conscious, sometimes
accidental. Although technological
change tends to bring nations
together, policy choices can push
them apart.
Modern globalization is not
unprecedented. Globalization has
waxed and waned over time as
nations have made different policy

choices. Sometimes these
choices have added to the effect
of technological progress on the
integration of markets; sometimes,
they have hindered it.
Market integration is the fusing
of many markets into one. In one
market a commodity has a single
price: the price of carrots would
be the same in east Paris and west
Paris if these areas were part of the
same market. If the price of carrots

GLOBALIZATION


Globalization is
not inevitable.

Full globalization
requires the harmonization
of trade regulations and
laws across countries.

Such harmonization
would require either
a global government or
the erosion of countries’
democracies.

In the past
governments have made
different choices about
the level of barriers and
therefore about the path
of globalization.

Globalization spreads
with technology but is
also impeded by barriers
such as trade tariffs.

IN CONTEXT


FOCUS
Global economy

KEY THINKER
Dani Rodrik (1957– )

BEFORE
1664 English economist
Thomas Mun says that growth
requires reductions in imports.

1817 British economist David
Ricardo says that international
trade makes countries richer.

1950 Raúl Prebisch and Hans
Singer argue that developing
countries lose out from
globalization because of
unequal terms of trade.

AFTER
2002 Joseph Stiglitz criticizes
globalization as promoted by
the World Bank and the IMF.

2005 World Bank economist
David Dollar argues that
globalization has reduced
poverty in poor countries.

Neither of these is
feasible, and they are not
desired by electorates.

Christopher Columbus stumbled
across the Americas on an expedition
intended to find a new trade route to
China. Such efforts to globalize trade
have taken place for centuries.
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