It's
this last form of globalization - economic globalization - that is the most
controversial. Unemployment is high in North America , while manufacturing jobs are continually
outsourced to the developing world.
Technical jobs and support services are increasingly moving to India and Southeast Asia . And endless boatloads of cheap goods, often
produced in sweatshops in a modern equivalent of serfdom or even slave labour,
flood into our stores at low prices. But
even beyond the ethical arguments against sweatshop labour, I would argue that
economic globalization is neither sustainable nor resilient.
Economic
globalization as we know it depends on free-market economics, a
competition-driven system in which only the strong (and highly specialized)
survive. A company with only one product
can produce it more efficiently than a company that tries to produce many; this
leads to a high degree of specialization, which requires interdependence (after
all, if I only grow beans, I'll need to get my bacon from you). Soon, entire regions specialize (corn in America , electronics in Asia ,
etc.), and we all depend on shipping to move these products around rather than
grow or build them ourselves at home.
But while it may be more efficient to grow a pineapple in Hawaii than in Manitoba ,
shipping perishables across the world is not
efficient, and it is certainly not sustainable!
If we were behaving as though we had a limited quantity of oil, we would
not be spending it on shipping things from China that we could build at home.
This
interconnected web of global economics is not resilient. We recently had a shortage of diesel fuel
here in Canada ;
if we had actually run out and the delivery trucks stopped, it would only take
3 days for all of our grocery stores to run out of food. Could we survive on hogs and grain? If we are not able to sustain ourselves by
providing our own food and products, a simple fuel shortage could result in
starvation.
This
principle is easily seen in agriculture.
Monoculture (a single crop) is more vulnerable to pests, which also
specialize; it's how a simple potato blight wiped out Ireland . Our global economic system amounts to a
network of monocultures, all vulnerable on their own, and connected by the
burning thread of fossil fuels. As we
see today, instability in the American housing market has rocked the global
economy.
Join
us at the Eastman Education Centre as Dennis Hiebert, Professor of Sociology at
Providence College speaks about globalization.
Thursday Jan 28, 7pm.
Jeff Wheeldon
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