Globalization
in sentence
2352 examples of Globalization in a sentence
Every aspect of
globalization
– free trade, free movement of capital, and international migration – is under attack.
In Russia and Asia, anti-Western groups are at the forefront of the campaign against
globalization.
All they see are massive, unbending institutions and intolerable inequalities in wealth and income, and they blame
globalization.
To answer that question, we must consider what about
globalization
is generating returns for the wealthy.
A central aspect of
globalization
is the careful documentation of the knowledge and legal tools needed to combine the property rights of seemingly useless single assets (electronic parts, legal rights to production, and so on) into complex wholes (an iPhone), and appropriate the surplus value they generate.
The lawyers and corporate elites who draft and enact the legislation and regulations that govern
globalization
are disconnected from those who are supposed to implement the policies at the local level.
Last year, ILD began, with pro bono support from Silicon Valley firms, to determine whether information technology, and specifically blockchain (the transparent, secure, and decentralized online ledger that underpins Bitcoin), could enable more of the world’s population to get in on
globalization.
By democratizing the law, perhaps it can save
globalization
– and the international order.
No one should be surprised if the real final chapter in the
globalization
story of the 1990s is a crash on Wall Street, well timed to the 70th anniversary of the drama of 1929.
The Chinese bureaucracy must adapt radically to cope with the risks – and take advantage of the benefits – of technology and globalization, with the biggest challenge being the shift to a knowledge-based, environmentally conscious, inclusive, and stable industrial base.
Meanwhile the pre-existing countervailing institutions (like labor unions) for the workers get eroded by new technology and
globalization.
This requires not just reinforcing resilience in the face of crisis, but also equipping euro-area economies for the longer-term challenges of globalization, aging, resource scarcity, and climate change.
Economic
globalization
has, of course, produced some large benefits for the world, including the rapid spread of advanced technologies such as the Internet and mobile telephony.
Yet
globalization
has also created major problems that need to be addressed.
Moreover,
globalization
has created losers as well as winners.
What
globalization
requires, therefore, are smart government policies.
The need for highly effective government in the era of
globalization
is the key message of my new book, The Price of Civilization.
I wrote The Price of Civilization out of the conviction that the US government has failed to understand and respond to the challenges of
globalization
ever since it began to impact America’s economy in the 1970’s.
Rather than respond to
globalization
with more government spending on education, infrastructure, and technology, Ronald Reagan won the presidency in 1980 by pledging to slash government spending and cut taxes.
Globalization’s AssassinThe world’s first wave of economic globalization, led by the British Empire in the nineteenth century, came to an end literally with a bang on a Sunday afternoon in 1914, when Gavrilo Princip killed (with two uncannily well-aimed bullets) Austria’s Archduke Franz Ferdinand and his wife.
Globalization
means free movement of capital, goods, technology, ideas, and, yes, people.
Any
globalization
that is limited to the first three or four freedoms but omits the last one is partial and not sustainable.
Efforts to restrict people’s movement between countries expose the soft underbelly of globalization: the deepening gap between countries’ mean incomes.
If today’s
globalization
continues to widen income gaps, the waves of migration will grow.
If globalization, which has so enriched the world’s wealthiest countries, is to continue, governments must find ways to increase incomes more evenly.
Free Trade, Free Labor, Free GrowthADELAIDE – Protectionist sentiment and fear of
globalization
are on the rise.
But disenchantment with
globalization
– and, in some regions, fear of immigration– has since set in.
A recent Financial Times/Harris poll in the US, Germany, France, the United Kingdom, Italy, and Spain found people nearly three times more likely to say that
globalization
is negative than positive.
They blame
globalization
for damaging their livelihoods and economic prospects, and they seek an enemy – some “other” – whom they can vilify for the uncertainty and downward mobility they have experienced.
In fact, new technologies are probably the most important reason why
globalization
is advancing at a rapid pace.
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