Global economy

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Last updated 2:22 PM on 4/2/24
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30 Terms

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ECONOMY

The process or system by which goods and services are produced, sold, and bought in a country or region.

The system of production, distribution , and consumption.

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GLOBAL ECONOMY

It refers to the increasing interdependence of world economies as result of the growing scale of cross border trade of commodities and services, flow of international capital, and wide and rapid spread of technologies.

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Two types of economy

PROTECTIONISM

TRADE LIBERALIZATION

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PROTECTIONISM

A policy of systematic government intervention in foreign trade with the objective of encouraging domestic production

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TRADE LIBERATION

It is the removal or reduction of restrictions or barriers on the free exchange of goods between nations.

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EIGHT MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS

  1. Having a global partnership for development.

  1. Improving maternal health

  1. Combating diseases like HIV/AIDS and malaria

  1. Ensuring environmental sustainability

  1. Achieving universal primary education

  2. Promoting gender equality and

  3. women empowerment

  4. Reducing child mortality

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FAIR TRADE

is the concern for social , economicand environmental well -being of marginalized small producers

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Fair trade is concerned with :

Protection of workers

Establishment of more just prices

Engagement in sustainable production

Creation of relationships between producers and consumers

Promotion of safe working environment

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ECONOMIC GROWTH

an increase in the amount of goods and services produced per head of the population over a period of time.

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GDP

Gross domestic product

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GDP FORMULA

GDP = private consumption + gross investment + government investment + government spending + (exports – imports).

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Gross Domestic Product (GDP)

is the best way to measure economic growth. It takes into account the country's entire economic output.

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STRATIFICATION

refers to a system by which a society ranks categories of people in a hierarchy.

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Multiplier effect

an increase in one economic activity can lead to an increase in other economic activities

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THEORIES OF STRATIFICATION

(1) MODERNIZATION THEORY

(2) WALT ROSTOW’S STAGES OF MODERNIZATION

(3) DEPENDENCY THEORY AND THE LATIN AMERICAN EXPERIENCE

(4) THE MODERN WORLD-SYSTEMS

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MODERNIZATION THEORY

This theory frames global stratification as a function of technological and cultural differences between nations.

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PINPOINTS OF MODERNAZATION THEORY

Columbian exhange

Industrial Revolution

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Columbian exchange

refers to the spread of goods, tech, education, and diseases between the Americas and Europe after Christopher Columbus’s so called discovery of the Americas.

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Industrial Revolution

This is when new technologies, like steam power and mechanization, allowed countries to replace human labor with machines and increase productivity.

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WALT ROSTOW’S STAGES OF MODERNIZATION

According to Walt Rostow, modernization in the West took place, as it always tends to, in 5 stages:

1. Traditional Stage

2. Preconditions for Take-Off Stage

3. Take-Off Stage

4.Technological Maturity Stage

5. High Mass Consumption Stage

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Traditional Stage

refers to societies that are structured around small, local communities with production being done in family settings, most of their time is spent on laboring, which creates strict social hierarchy.

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Take-Off Stage

People begin to use their individual talents to produce things beyond the necessities.

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Technological Maturity Stage

Technological growth of earlier periods begins to bear fruit in the form of population growth, reduction in poverty levels, and more diverse job opportunities.

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High Mass Consumption Stage

It is when a country is big enough that production becomes more about wants than needs.

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DEPENDENCY THEORY AND THE LATIN AMERICAN EXPERIENCE

This theory was the product of the Latin American experience. “Dependency” is the condition in which the development of the nation-states of the South contributed to a decline in their independence and to an increase in economic development of the countries of the North (Cardoso and Felato, 1979). This theory argues that liberal trade causes greater impoverishment, not economic improvement, to less developed countries.

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Core nations

more industrialized nations,received much of the world’s wealth.

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Semi-peripheral nations

middle income nations, closer ties to the global economic core

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Peripheral nations

less developed and receive unequal distributions

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THE MODERN WORLD-SYSTEMS

This history of colonialism inspired American sociologist Immanuel Wallerstein the model of what he called the capitalist world economy. In Wallerstein’s model ,the periphery remains economically dependent on the core in a number of ways; Poor nations tend to have few resources to export to rich countries.

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NAFTA

North American Free Trade Agreement