Globalization
in sentence
2352 examples of Globalization in a sentence
Clearly, Europe's answer to
globalization
is that certain spheres of social life-say, healthcare, education, the environment, or culture-cannot be left to the whip of the market.
More broadly, China’s economy depends on economic globalization, which requires global rules and enforcement mechanisms.
During much of the 1980s and 1990s, the Bank oversaw structural adjustment programs in developing countries that focused on deregulation, privatization, and economic liberalization, especially trade opening, all of which helped to enable
globalization.
The military question – believed to have been resolved after the region’s transition to democracy which came with the Cold War’s end, the effort to achieve regional integration, and the push toward
globalization
– has reappeared.
If it is to succeed in making the world a better place,
globalization
can not be predicated upon market forces alone, but needs to reinforce the stability and integration of diverse societies.
Given that many voters in Europe and the US feel battered by globalization, a populist party that aggressively puts the nation first has a head start against its rivals.
Indeed, perhaps no other aspect of economic
globalization
will pose greater challenges to world leaders over the coming decades.
This is one way of making
globalization
work to benefit those in need.
“Totalitarianism” finally disintegrated in 1989, and
globalization
prevailed.
Because IBM, according to the article, produced in 14 countries and sold in 109, it “contains in itself the
globalization
(mondializzazione) of capitalist imperialism.”
This obscure left-wing publication is the first known reference to
globalization
in its contemporary sense.
But in the 2000’s, the meaning of
globalization
shifted and began to take on a semi-positive note, in large part because it increasingly looked as if the major winners of
globalization
included many rapidly growing emerging markets.
Historians have started to project
globalization
backwards.
It is no longer seen only as a story of the capital-market-driven integration of the last two decades of the twentieth century, or even of an “early wave of globalization” in the nineteenth century, when the gold standard and the Atlantic telegram seemed to unite the world.
Instead, the wider and deeper historical vision is of a
globalization
that encompasses the Roman empire and the Song dynasty, and goes back to the
globalization
of the human species from a common African origin.
By 2011, anti-globalization rhetoric had largely faded, and
globalization
is thought of as not something to be neither fought nor cheered, but as a fundamental characteristic of the human story, in which disparate geographies and diverse themes are inextricably intertwined.
In short,
globalization
has lost its polemical bite, and with that loss, its attractions as a concept have faded.
They talk of family, morality, nation, but their policies lead to NATO, the European Union, massive foreign investment, international capital, and
globalization
– all things that appear to undermine the communitarian values of the right.
All the while, the seemingly unstoppable march of the market, globalization, and individualism that had propelled the right since Thatcher and Reagan came to an abrupt halt.
And yet the reactionary/revolutionary movement of the type that we are witnessing – a backlash against the inevitable consequences of
globalization
– remains unmistakably French.
French President Emmanuel Macron noted that
globalization
is in the midst of a major crisis, and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has stated that the unrest we see around the world is palpable and “isn’t going away.”
National security versus
globalization
is not an either-or issue though they sometimes come into conflict with each other, so balancing them is the key to successful policy.
Compensating for the expected diminution of guest workers on the global stage is a likely increase in outsourcing, which provides an alternative and potentially more attractive way to import labor services when
globalization
is tainted by terrorism.
Outsourcing keeps terrorists – and other foreigners who would get expensive welfare subsidies – at bay without sacrificing the benefits of
globalization.
Finally, growing economic insecurity is creating a backlash against trade and globalization, which may significantly alter attitudes towards China.
The dominant ideology of government non-intervention naturally intensifies resistance to change among the losers from
globalization
and technology, and creates overwhelming problems in sequencing economic reforms.
Meanwhile, each government, with its own style and political discourse, seeks to associate the state with the benefits of a
globalization
that, for the past few years, has been showing its generosity.
Somehow, too, Asia’s leaders must manage the pace of
globalization.
Just as Southeast Asia’s peasant rebellions of the 1930’s were a reaction to the breakdown of an earlier episode of globalization, so Islamism in Asia is a response to our new secularist/consumerist societies.
If we are to avoid an even stronger backlash against globalization, the West must respond quickly and strongly.
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