Description
Globalization” refers to the growing interdependence of countries resulting from the increasing integration of trade, finance, people, and ideas in one global marketplace. International trade and cross-border investment flows are the main elements of this integration.
66
12
lobalization” refers to the growing
interdependence of countries resulting
from the increasing integration of trade,
finance, people, and ideas in one global
marketplace. International trade and
cross-border investment flows are the
main elements of this integration.
Globalization started after World War II
but has accelerated considerably since
the mid-1980s, driven by two main fac-
tors. One involves technological
advances that have lowered the costs of
transportation, communication, and
computation to the extent that it is often
economically feasible for a firm to locate
different phases of production in differ-
ent countries. The other factor has to do
with the increasing liberalization of
trade and capital markets: more and
more governments are refusing to pro-
tect their economies from foreign com-
petition or influence through import
tariffs and nontariff barriers such as
import quotas, export restraints, and
legal prohibitions. A number of interna-
tional institutions established in the
wake of World War II—including the
World Bank, International Monetary
Fund (IMF), and General Agreement
on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), suc-
ceeded in 1995 by the World Trade
Organization (WTO)—have played an
important role in promoting free trade
in place of protectionism.
Empirical evidence suggests that global-
ization has significantly boosted eco-
nomic growth in East Asian economies
such as Hong Kong (China), the
Republic of Korea, and Singapore. But
not all developing countries are equally
engaged in globalization or in a position
to benefit from it. In fact, except for
most countries in East Asia and some in
Latin America, developing countries
have been rather slow to integrate with
the world economy. The share of Sub-
Saharan Africa in world trade has
declined continuously since the late
1960s, and the share of major oil
exporters fell sharply with the drop in oil
prices in the early 1980s. Moreover, for
countries that are actively engaged in
globalization, the benefits come with
new risks and challenges. The balance of
globalization's costs and benefits for dif-
ferent groups of countries and the world
economy is one of the hottest topics in
development debates.
Costs and Benefits of Free Trade
For participating countries the main
benefits of unrestricted foreign trade
Globalization and International
Trade
“G
12 GLOBALIZATION AND INTERNATIONAL TRADE
Should all
countries be
equally open to
foreign trade?
67
stem from the increased access of their
producers to larger, international mar-
kets. For a national economy that access
means an opportunity to benefit from
the international division of labor, on
the one hand, and the need to face
stronger competition in world markets,
on the other. Domestic producers pro-
duce more efficiently due to their inter-
national specialization and the pressure
that comes from foreign competition,
and consumers enjoy a wider variety of
domestic and imported goods at lower
prices.
In addition, an actively trading country
benefits from the new technologies that
“spill over” to it from its trading part-
ners, such as through the knowledge
embedded in imported production
equipment. These technological
spillovers are particularly important for
developing countries because they give
them a chance to catch up more quickly
with the developed countries in terms
of productivity. Former centrally
planned economies, which missed out
on many of the benefits of global trade
because of their politically imposed iso-
lation from market economies, today
aspire to tap into these benefits by rein-
tegrating with the global trading system.
But active participation in international
trade also entails risks, particularly those
associated with the strong competition
in international markets. For example, a
country runs the risk that some of its
industries—those that are less competi-
tive and adaptable—will be forced out of
business. Meanwhile, reliance on foreign
suppliers may be considered unaccept-
able when it comes to industries with a
significant role in national security. For
example, many governments are deter-
mined to ensure the so-called food secu-
rity of their countries, in case food
imports are cut off during a war.
In addition, governments of developing
countries often argue that recently estab-
lished industries require temporary pro-
tection until they become more
competitive and less vulnerable to for-
eign competition. Thus governments
often prohibit or reduce selected imports
by introducing quotas, or make imports
more expensive and less competitive by
imposing tariffs. Such protectionist poli-
cies can be economically dangerous
because they allow domestic producers
to continue producing less efficiently
and eventually lead to economic stagna-
tion. Wherever possible, increasing the
economic efficiency and international
competitiveness of key industries should
be considered as an alternative to protec-
tionist policies.
A country that attempts to produce
almost everything it needs domestically
deprives itself of the enormous economic
benefits of international specialization.
But narrow international specialization,
which makes a country dependent on
exports of one or a few goods, can also be
BEYOND ECONOMIC GROWTH
68
risky because of the possibility of sudden
unfavorable changes in demand from
world markets. Such changes can signifi-
cantly worsen a country’s terms of trade.
Thus some diversification of production
and exports can be prudent even if it
entails a temporary decrease in trade.
Every country has to find the right place
in the international division of labor
based on its comparative advantages.
The costs and benefits of international
trade also depend on factors such as the
size of a country’s domestic market, its
natural resource endowment, and its
location. For instance, countries with
large domestic markets generally trade
less. At the same time, countries that are
well endowed with a few natural
resources, such as oil, tend to trade
more. Think of examples of countries
whose geographic location is particularly
favorable or unfavorable for their partici-
pation in global trade.
Despite the risks, many countries have
been choosing to globalize their
economies to a greater extent. One way
to measure the extent of this process is
by the ratio of a country’s trade (exports
plus imports) to its GDP or GNP. By
this measure, globalization has roughly
doubled on average since 1950. Over the
past 30 years exports have grown about
twice as fast as GNP (Figure 12.1). As a
result, by 1996 the ratio of world trade
to world GDP (in purchasing power
parity terms) had reached almost 30
percent—on average about 40 percent in
developed countries and about 15 per-
Figure 12.1 Average annual growth rates of GNP and exports of goods and
services, 1965–96
0
2
4
6
8
10
3.1%
5.8%
3.0%
5.9%
7.4%
8.8%
3.3%
5.2%
4.6%
Exports GNP
World High-income
countries
East Asia
and the
Pacific
Latin America
and the
Caribbean
South Asia Sub-Saharan
Africa
6.2%
2.7%
2.1%
Percent
12 GLOBALIZATION AND INTERNATIONAL TRADE
69
cent in developing countries (Map 12.1
and Data Table 3).
Geography and Composition of
Global Trade
Over the past 10 years patterns of inter-
national trade have been changing in
favor of trade between developed and
developing countries. Developed coun-
tries still trade mostly among themselves,
but the share of their exports going to
developing countries grew from 20 per-
cent in 1985 to 22 percent in 1995. At
the same time, developing countries
have increased trade among themselves.
Still, developed countries remain their
main trading partners, the best markets
for their exports, and the main source of
their imports.
Most developing countries’ terms of
trade deteriorated in the 1980s and
1990s because prices of primary
goods—which used to make up the
largest share of developing country
exports—have fallen relative to prices of
manufactured goods. For example,
between 1980 and 1995 real prices of
45% or more 35.0–44.9% 20.0–34.9% 15.0–19.9% Less than 15% No data
Note: The ratio of trade to purchasing power parity–adjusted GDP is considered the best available tool for comparing integration with the world economy across countries. But
the use of this tool is complicated by the different shares of the service sector in the economies of different countries. For example, developed countries appear to be less
integrated because a larger share of their output consists of services, a large portion of which are by their nature nontradable.
Map 12.1 Trade as a percentage of real GDP, 1996
BEYOND ECONOMIC GROWTH
How is the role of
developing
countries in global
trade changing?
70
oil dropped almost fourfold, prices of
cocoa almost threefold, and prices of
coffee about twofold. There is still
debate about whether this relative
decline in commodity prices is perma-
nent or transitory, but developing coun-
tries that depend on these exports have
already suffered heavy economic losses
that have slowed their economic growth
and development.
In response to these changes in their
terms of trade, many developing coun-
tries are increasing the share of manu-
factured goods in their exports,
including exports to developed coun-
tries (Figure 12.2). The most dynamic
categories of their manufactured exports
are labor-intensive, low-knowledge
products (clothes, carpets, some manu-
ally assembled products) that allow
these countries to create more jobs and
make better use of their abundant labor
resources.
By contrast, developing countries’
imports from developed countries are
mostly capital- and knowledge-intensive
manufactured goods—primarily
machinery and transport equipment—in
which developed countries retain their
comparative advantage.
1
Figure 12.2 Developing countries’ trade with OECD countries, 1985 and 1996
1996 1985
Food Ores and fuel Agricultural raw materials Miscellaneous Manufactured goods
Exports to OECD countries
Imports from OECD countries
1996 1985
16%
57%
5%
22%
12%
26%
3%
2%
57%
11%
5%
3%
1%
80%
8%
83%
4%
2%
3%
12 GLOBALIZATION AND INTERNATIONAL TRADE
What problems do
transition
countries face as
they join in global
trade?
71
Trade Issues in Transition
Countries
Countries in transition from planned to
market economies have recognized the
potential benefits of global integration,
and most have significantly liberalized
their trade regimes. As a result many
Central and Eastern European countries
saw the share of trade in GDP increase
from 10 percent or less in 1990 to 20
percent or more in 1995. In Russia and
other countries of the former Soviet
Union the ratio of trade to GDP fell dur-
ing this period, but this was a result of the
collapse of trade within the former Soviet
Union—trade with the rest of the world
actually expanded. As market-determined
patterns of trade replace government-
determined patterns, a massive reorienta-
tion of trade is under way favoring closer
links with established market economies.
Trade among transition countries is also
recovering following a sharp, politically
motivated decline at the start of the
transition. A number of regional eco-
nomic integration initiatives are
unfolding—the Baltic Free Trade Area
(comprising Estonia, Latvia, and
Lithuania), Central Europe Free Trade
Area (the Czech Republic, Hungary,
Poland, the Slovak Republic, Slovenia,
and countries of the Baltic Free Trade
Area), and free trade initiatives within
the Commonwealth of Independent
States. One of these initiatives started in
1995 with negotiations about establish-
ing a customs union for four members
of the Commonwealth of Independent
States—Russia, Belarus, Kazakhstan,
and the Kyrgyz Republic. Russia and
Belarus have since signed a treaty on
forming an Interstate Commonwealth.
Regional trade blocs can contribute to
transition countries’ economic stabiliza-
tion but they also carry risks of diverting
trade from potentially more beneficial
trade partnerships with other countries.
Ten transition countries in Central and
Eastern Europe and the Baltics have
applied for membership in the European
Union, and nearly all transition countries
have applied to join the World Trade
Organization (WTO). Membership in
the WTO would provide these countries
with protection from substantial
barriers—particularly quotas—which still
impede their exporting of so-called sensi-
tive goods to developed countries.
Among these goods are agricultural prod-
ucts, iron and steel, textiles, footwear, and
others in which transition economies may
have comparative advantages. Joining the
WTO would not only confer rights on
transition economies, it would also
require them to meet certain obligations,
such as maintaining low or moderate tar-
iffs and abolishing nontariff barriers.
A major challenge for transition
economies is finding their place in the
worldwide division of labor. In many
cases that implies diversifying the struc-
ture of exports, particularly to developed
BEYOND ECONOMIC GROWTH
72
countries. Some former Soviet Union
countries are narrowly specialized in the
production and export of a small number
of commodities, such as cotton in
Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan and food
products in Moldova. For others, such as
Russia and Belarus, the biggest problems
are the quality and international compet-
itiveness of their manufactured goods.
Note
1. A popular debate in many developed coun-
tries asks whether the growing competitive pres-
sure of low-cost, labor-intensive imports from
developing countries pushes down the wages of
unskilled workers in developed countries (thus
increasing the wage gap between skilled and
unskilled workers, as in the United Kingdom
and United States) and pushes up unemploy-
ment, especially among low-skill workers (as in
Western Europe). But empirical studies suggest
that although trade with developing countries
affects the structure of industry and demand for
industrial labor in developed countries, the main
reasons for the wage and unemployment prob-
lems are internal and stem from labor-saving
technological progress and postindustrial eco-
nomic restructuring (see Chapters 7 and 9).
doc_703618400.pdf
Globalization” refers to the growing interdependence of countries resulting from the increasing integration of trade, finance, people, and ideas in one global marketplace. International trade and cross-border investment flows are the main elements of this integration.
66
12
lobalization” refers to the growing
interdependence of countries resulting
from the increasing integration of trade,
finance, people, and ideas in one global
marketplace. International trade and
cross-border investment flows are the
main elements of this integration.
Globalization started after World War II
but has accelerated considerably since
the mid-1980s, driven by two main fac-
tors. One involves technological
advances that have lowered the costs of
transportation, communication, and
computation to the extent that it is often
economically feasible for a firm to locate
different phases of production in differ-
ent countries. The other factor has to do
with the increasing liberalization of
trade and capital markets: more and
more governments are refusing to pro-
tect their economies from foreign com-
petition or influence through import
tariffs and nontariff barriers such as
import quotas, export restraints, and
legal prohibitions. A number of interna-
tional institutions established in the
wake of World War II—including the
World Bank, International Monetary
Fund (IMF), and General Agreement
on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), suc-
ceeded in 1995 by the World Trade
Organization (WTO)—have played an
important role in promoting free trade
in place of protectionism.
Empirical evidence suggests that global-
ization has significantly boosted eco-
nomic growth in East Asian economies
such as Hong Kong (China), the
Republic of Korea, and Singapore. But
not all developing countries are equally
engaged in globalization or in a position
to benefit from it. In fact, except for
most countries in East Asia and some in
Latin America, developing countries
have been rather slow to integrate with
the world economy. The share of Sub-
Saharan Africa in world trade has
declined continuously since the late
1960s, and the share of major oil
exporters fell sharply with the drop in oil
prices in the early 1980s. Moreover, for
countries that are actively engaged in
globalization, the benefits come with
new risks and challenges. The balance of
globalization's costs and benefits for dif-
ferent groups of countries and the world
economy is one of the hottest topics in
development debates.
Costs and Benefits of Free Trade
For participating countries the main
benefits of unrestricted foreign trade
Globalization and International
Trade
“G
12 GLOBALIZATION AND INTERNATIONAL TRADE
Should all
countries be
equally open to
foreign trade?
67
stem from the increased access of their
producers to larger, international mar-
kets. For a national economy that access
means an opportunity to benefit from
the international division of labor, on
the one hand, and the need to face
stronger competition in world markets,
on the other. Domestic producers pro-
duce more efficiently due to their inter-
national specialization and the pressure
that comes from foreign competition,
and consumers enjoy a wider variety of
domestic and imported goods at lower
prices.
In addition, an actively trading country
benefits from the new technologies that
“spill over” to it from its trading part-
ners, such as through the knowledge
embedded in imported production
equipment. These technological
spillovers are particularly important for
developing countries because they give
them a chance to catch up more quickly
with the developed countries in terms
of productivity. Former centrally
planned economies, which missed out
on many of the benefits of global trade
because of their politically imposed iso-
lation from market economies, today
aspire to tap into these benefits by rein-
tegrating with the global trading system.
But active participation in international
trade also entails risks, particularly those
associated with the strong competition
in international markets. For example, a
country runs the risk that some of its
industries—those that are less competi-
tive and adaptable—will be forced out of
business. Meanwhile, reliance on foreign
suppliers may be considered unaccept-
able when it comes to industries with a
significant role in national security. For
example, many governments are deter-
mined to ensure the so-called food secu-
rity of their countries, in case food
imports are cut off during a war.
In addition, governments of developing
countries often argue that recently estab-
lished industries require temporary pro-
tection until they become more
competitive and less vulnerable to for-
eign competition. Thus governments
often prohibit or reduce selected imports
by introducing quotas, or make imports
more expensive and less competitive by
imposing tariffs. Such protectionist poli-
cies can be economically dangerous
because they allow domestic producers
to continue producing less efficiently
and eventually lead to economic stagna-
tion. Wherever possible, increasing the
economic efficiency and international
competitiveness of key industries should
be considered as an alternative to protec-
tionist policies.
A country that attempts to produce
almost everything it needs domestically
deprives itself of the enormous economic
benefits of international specialization.
But narrow international specialization,
which makes a country dependent on
exports of one or a few goods, can also be
BEYOND ECONOMIC GROWTH
68
risky because of the possibility of sudden
unfavorable changes in demand from
world markets. Such changes can signifi-
cantly worsen a country’s terms of trade.
Thus some diversification of production
and exports can be prudent even if it
entails a temporary decrease in trade.
Every country has to find the right place
in the international division of labor
based on its comparative advantages.
The costs and benefits of international
trade also depend on factors such as the
size of a country’s domestic market, its
natural resource endowment, and its
location. For instance, countries with
large domestic markets generally trade
less. At the same time, countries that are
well endowed with a few natural
resources, such as oil, tend to trade
more. Think of examples of countries
whose geographic location is particularly
favorable or unfavorable for their partici-
pation in global trade.
Despite the risks, many countries have
been choosing to globalize their
economies to a greater extent. One way
to measure the extent of this process is
by the ratio of a country’s trade (exports
plus imports) to its GDP or GNP. By
this measure, globalization has roughly
doubled on average since 1950. Over the
past 30 years exports have grown about
twice as fast as GNP (Figure 12.1). As a
result, by 1996 the ratio of world trade
to world GDP (in purchasing power
parity terms) had reached almost 30
percent—on average about 40 percent in
developed countries and about 15 per-
Figure 12.1 Average annual growth rates of GNP and exports of goods and
services, 1965–96
0
2
4
6
8
10
3.1%
5.8%
3.0%
5.9%
7.4%
8.8%
3.3%
5.2%
4.6%
Exports GNP
World High-income
countries
East Asia
and the
Pacific
Latin America
and the
Caribbean
South Asia Sub-Saharan
Africa
6.2%
2.7%
2.1%
Percent
12 GLOBALIZATION AND INTERNATIONAL TRADE
69
cent in developing countries (Map 12.1
and Data Table 3).
Geography and Composition of
Global Trade
Over the past 10 years patterns of inter-
national trade have been changing in
favor of trade between developed and
developing countries. Developed coun-
tries still trade mostly among themselves,
but the share of their exports going to
developing countries grew from 20 per-
cent in 1985 to 22 percent in 1995. At
the same time, developing countries
have increased trade among themselves.
Still, developed countries remain their
main trading partners, the best markets
for their exports, and the main source of
their imports.
Most developing countries’ terms of
trade deteriorated in the 1980s and
1990s because prices of primary
goods—which used to make up the
largest share of developing country
exports—have fallen relative to prices of
manufactured goods. For example,
between 1980 and 1995 real prices of
45% or more 35.0–44.9% 20.0–34.9% 15.0–19.9% Less than 15% No data
Note: The ratio of trade to purchasing power parity–adjusted GDP is considered the best available tool for comparing integration with the world economy across countries. But
the use of this tool is complicated by the different shares of the service sector in the economies of different countries. For example, developed countries appear to be less
integrated because a larger share of their output consists of services, a large portion of which are by their nature nontradable.
Map 12.1 Trade as a percentage of real GDP, 1996
BEYOND ECONOMIC GROWTH
How is the role of
developing
countries in global
trade changing?
70
oil dropped almost fourfold, prices of
cocoa almost threefold, and prices of
coffee about twofold. There is still
debate about whether this relative
decline in commodity prices is perma-
nent or transitory, but developing coun-
tries that depend on these exports have
already suffered heavy economic losses
that have slowed their economic growth
and development.
In response to these changes in their
terms of trade, many developing coun-
tries are increasing the share of manu-
factured goods in their exports,
including exports to developed coun-
tries (Figure 12.2). The most dynamic
categories of their manufactured exports
are labor-intensive, low-knowledge
products (clothes, carpets, some manu-
ally assembled products) that allow
these countries to create more jobs and
make better use of their abundant labor
resources.
By contrast, developing countries’
imports from developed countries are
mostly capital- and knowledge-intensive
manufactured goods—primarily
machinery and transport equipment—in
which developed countries retain their
comparative advantage.
1
Figure 12.2 Developing countries’ trade with OECD countries, 1985 and 1996
1996 1985
Food Ores and fuel Agricultural raw materials Miscellaneous Manufactured goods
Exports to OECD countries
Imports from OECD countries
1996 1985
16%
57%
5%
22%
12%
26%
3%
2%
57%
11%
5%
3%
1%
80%
8%
83%
4%
2%
3%
12 GLOBALIZATION AND INTERNATIONAL TRADE
What problems do
transition
countries face as
they join in global
trade?
71
Trade Issues in Transition
Countries
Countries in transition from planned to
market economies have recognized the
potential benefits of global integration,
and most have significantly liberalized
their trade regimes. As a result many
Central and Eastern European countries
saw the share of trade in GDP increase
from 10 percent or less in 1990 to 20
percent or more in 1995. In Russia and
other countries of the former Soviet
Union the ratio of trade to GDP fell dur-
ing this period, but this was a result of the
collapse of trade within the former Soviet
Union—trade with the rest of the world
actually expanded. As market-determined
patterns of trade replace government-
determined patterns, a massive reorienta-
tion of trade is under way favoring closer
links with established market economies.
Trade among transition countries is also
recovering following a sharp, politically
motivated decline at the start of the
transition. A number of regional eco-
nomic integration initiatives are
unfolding—the Baltic Free Trade Area
(comprising Estonia, Latvia, and
Lithuania), Central Europe Free Trade
Area (the Czech Republic, Hungary,
Poland, the Slovak Republic, Slovenia,
and countries of the Baltic Free Trade
Area), and free trade initiatives within
the Commonwealth of Independent
States. One of these initiatives started in
1995 with negotiations about establish-
ing a customs union for four members
of the Commonwealth of Independent
States—Russia, Belarus, Kazakhstan,
and the Kyrgyz Republic. Russia and
Belarus have since signed a treaty on
forming an Interstate Commonwealth.
Regional trade blocs can contribute to
transition countries’ economic stabiliza-
tion but they also carry risks of diverting
trade from potentially more beneficial
trade partnerships with other countries.
Ten transition countries in Central and
Eastern Europe and the Baltics have
applied for membership in the European
Union, and nearly all transition countries
have applied to join the World Trade
Organization (WTO). Membership in
the WTO would provide these countries
with protection from substantial
barriers—particularly quotas—which still
impede their exporting of so-called sensi-
tive goods to developed countries.
Among these goods are agricultural prod-
ucts, iron and steel, textiles, footwear, and
others in which transition economies may
have comparative advantages. Joining the
WTO would not only confer rights on
transition economies, it would also
require them to meet certain obligations,
such as maintaining low or moderate tar-
iffs and abolishing nontariff barriers.
A major challenge for transition
economies is finding their place in the
worldwide division of labor. In many
cases that implies diversifying the struc-
ture of exports, particularly to developed
BEYOND ECONOMIC GROWTH
72
countries. Some former Soviet Union
countries are narrowly specialized in the
production and export of a small number
of commodities, such as cotton in
Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan and food
products in Moldova. For others, such as
Russia and Belarus, the biggest problems
are the quality and international compet-
itiveness of their manufactured goods.
Note
1. A popular debate in many developed coun-
tries asks whether the growing competitive pres-
sure of low-cost, labor-intensive imports from
developing countries pushes down the wages of
unskilled workers in developed countries (thus
increasing the wage gap between skilled and
unskilled workers, as in the United Kingdom
and United States) and pushes up unemploy-
ment, especially among low-skill workers (as in
Western Europe). But empirical studies suggest
that although trade with developing countries
affects the structure of industry and demand for
industrial labor in developed countries, the main
reasons for the wage and unemployment prob-
lems are internal and stem from labor-saving
technological progress and postindustrial eco-
nomic restructuring (see Chapters 7 and 9).
doc_703618400.pdf