Human Geography – The Globalisation of Economic Activity Uneven Development in the Global Economy


Globalisation and State Intervention: Government – Business Relations



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Globalisation and State Intervention: Government – Business Relations

Globalisation introduced external factors, including international organizations and MNCs, into the equation between government and business, complicating their interactions.  The tendency shows that foreign private actors may serve as better allies of local private actors than of local governments since they have a similar goal on lifting constrains from governments.  Also, the increasing importance of IGOs (intergovernmental organizations) unquestionably undermines governments' authority, but its relationship with governments need not be antagonistic.  Often, the rules set out by IGOs need a strong government to implement in the domestic arena, where IGOs are still unable to directly intervene. 

An example was the IMF's intervention in Korean restructuring during the Asian financial crisis.  During the 1990s, Korean business gained independence from government-controlled resources and their bargaining power increased, but the financial crisis weakened the strength of Korean private sector and gave advantages to the government.  Since the financial resource, including the IMF bailout, held by the government was the only available resource for the private sector during the crisis, the government obtained sufficient power to direct the action of private firms.  Under the pressure of the IMF, the government stopped rescuing sick chaebols and allowed their bankruptcy.  Without guaranteed rescue, businesses have to exchange their compliance for the rescue when they face financial difficulty.  Reducing the size of chaebols also undermined chaebols’ influence in political and economic decision-making.  The crisis and the IMF intervention moved the relationship between government and business in Korea toward the direction in favour of the government.

In addition, foreign investors are also entering the Korean economy.  The crisis made the Korean government relive its restraints on the entry of foreign investment. Foreign investors can purchase Korean companies through M&A, or invest in Korean stock market more easily.  Foreign ownership in Korean listed companies jumped from 13% in 1996 to over 30% at end-2000. By 2000, foreign investors owned 55% of the shares of Samsung Electronics and 44% of Hyundai Electronics.  The rapid growth of foreign investment in Korean companies increases foreign intervention in the economic development.   



Efficacy of State Control

In addition to maintaining macroeconomic stability, states were involved in the guidance of economic development towards rapid growth.  Thus, they were characterized by a more intensive government intervention. They allocated capital resources to selected growth sectors by means of credit control, subsidies, and tax-reduction, and maintained or created the advantages obtained from external exchanges through manipulation of exchange rates and maintenance of a low wage level.

Globalisation weakens the state’s control over capital allocation.  Due to high mobility and availability of capital in the global arena, capital resources can be easily secured from the global market, making the ones controlled by the states relatively insignificant to private enterprises.  To countries that heavily depend on capital allocation to conduct intervention such as Korea, globalization of finance disarms the states' instrument to control the private sector. Conglomerates in Korea can easily obtain alternative financial resources from global markets without depending on the supply from the government, shown by the increase of long-term external debt not guaranteed by the government.  The ratio of the private non-guaranteed long-term debt to the total long-term debt increased from 9.6% in 1970 to 48.7% in 1997.  A reason of chaebols’ resorting to foreign financial resources is governmental limitation of their access to domestic credits.  In order to curb chaebols’ expansion and pursue efficiency, President Kim Young Sam set quotas for their domestic loans.  This policy did not really stop the increase of chaebols’ debt; instead, it forced chaebols to turn to international markets to search for their financial input.

This study gives the second tier NIEs a signal that, under globalization, they are probably unable to adopt the same state-intervention strategies.  Hence these developmental patterns and strategies may be no longer suitable in the newly globalized world, and a new strategy that can properly cope with globalization is needed for other industrializing economies.



Globalisation and Economic Development: The Financial System

Globalization brings challenges, especially to the countries with a malfunctioning financial system or in the unfavorable places of the global division of labor.

Korea is notorious for the heavy debt burden of its companies. Between 1991 and 1996, the average debt/equity ratio of Korean firms in manufacturing sector was more than triple that of Taiwan and almost twice that of the U.S. The financial situation of the dominant chaebols in Korea suffered even heavier debt burden than did average firms.  The average debt/equity ratio of the top 30 chaebols was 403.8%, compared with 304.7% for the whole manufacturing sector.  By the end of 1997, the top 30 chaebols bore W 357 trillion debt, equivalent to 85 percent of GDP, and about two-thirds of the debt was carried by top 5 chaebols, indicating that Korean debt is also highly concentrated.

In the 1990s, the threshold of turning debt problems into crises was tremendously lowered due to the interconnection of financial markets. In the Asian financial crisis, the contagion of exchange rate plunge in the region weakened Korean capacity to repay the debt in dollars.  Even though the debt ratio in 1997 was not as high as the ones in the early 1980s, under the catalysis of exchange rate plunge, a mild debt problem may be quickly transformed into a crisis.   Korea did not maintain an amount of international reserves large enough to cover debt service and short-term debt.  In 1997, the amount of total external debt was 6.7 times and the amount of the short-term debt was 2.6 times larger than that of the international reserves. After the crisis, Korea has taken a series of measures to improve this situation, including lowering the debt ratio of chaebols, eliminating cross-debt guarantee, concentrating on core business, and purchase of non-performing loans, etc. The amount of bad loans as a percentage of total loans dropped from 12.9% in December 1999 to 5.01% in September 2001.  The debt ratio in manufacturing sectors decreased from 400% in 1997 to 200% in 2000.



The Production System

Taiwanese and Korean MNCs have actively sought multi-nationalization of their activities since the late 1980s but in different patterns and therefore own different abilities to take advantage of new global opportunities.

In terms of area, the majority of Taiwan’s investments went to China and Southeast Asia (52%), and the purpose of investing is to avoid increasing production costs for their labor-intensive goods. Although large in number, these MNCs have little significant meaning in enhancing Taiwan’s ability to cope with globalization, being limited to neighboring countries and still being engaged in production.  Foreign investments of Korean companies are spread all over the world and range from acquiring raw materials to market expansion.  Korea invested a large amount in the OECD countries.  From 1997 to 2001, Korean investment in Asia only accounted for 33% of all outward FDI, while investment in North America and Europe jumped to 45%. Marketing and research were the major functions carried by these investments. Due to chaebols’ selling networks worldwide and each major company having its own global marketing channels, they can easily distribute their products overseas. Korean MNCs are more prepared than Taiwanese ones to grasp the fruits of globalization.

A country’s inward FDI is also an indicator of the impact of globalization.  Greater FDI inflows means that a country owns stronger competitiveness that foreign investors would like to explore. Another important variable influencing inflow of FDI is government restriction, which reduces the opportunities of technology upgrade stimulated by foreign companies and the chance to attract more foreign capital. Korea’s Economic nationalism and fear of foreign dominance resulted in a strong tendency to refuse FDI entry. Taiwan held a much more open attitude toward FDI.  Many studies show that technological development in Taiwan benefitted a lot from the presence of foreign companies.  On average, inward FDI/GDCF (gross domestic capital formation) ratio in Taiwan was much higher than in Korea.  After the financial crisis, Korea changed its strategy to actively absorb FDI.  This made the ratio of Korea increase rapidly from 0.7% of 1991-1994 to 13.6% of 1999-2000, contributing to the successful recovery of the Korean economy.

A third way to explore the possible responses of a country's producers to globalization is examining the mode of their business.  Companies engaging in consumer markets have benefited more from globalization than have the ones in the OEM (original equipment manufacturing) markets, partly because accompanying the enlargement of the global markets, marketing costs (advertising and distribution) become increasingly high.  Superior brand-images of existing global marketing giants assist their products to be accepted by the customers of new markets, quickly occupying them. In Romania, for example, IBM was the leading computer seller in 1996, and in Poland, Hewlett Packard secured 73 percent of the ink-jet printer market in 1997.  In other words, globalization offers existing large firms more chance to bring their superior marketing capability into full play.

On the other hand, companies with only good production ability (e.g. OEM producers) need to be subject to frequent challenges of globalization. Under the trends of global technology diffusion and ever-changing production conditions, it is relatively easy for a new OEM firm to enter the market and for competitors to take away the advantage on production of existing firms, especially second tier NIEs with a much lower labor cost. In Taiwan, the personal computer industry had been recognized as one of the most successful industries in selling products with their own brand names (OBM, Original Brand-name Manufacturing), instead of OEM (37%) in 1988. However, this situation tremendously changed during the 1990s.  By 1997, at least 61% of Taiwanese export computers were sold on an OEM base.  It indicates that Taiwan have encountered serious difficulty when they tried to market their own products and develop their own global strategies.

In contrast, Korean major electronics firms have experienced a rapid increase in OBM production during the 1990s. In 1997, Samsung made 80 percent of its products under its own brand name, a sharp increase from 1993’s 55 percent. LG Electronics, one of the major electronics firms with a high OEM ratio in Korea, reduced their OEM business from 52 percent to 40 percent between 1995 and 1997. Global strategies not only create new sources of competitive advantage, but provide a better foundation for proactive innovation instead of passive response to foreign OEM customer requests. In the new global economy, a firm with less innovation ability will suffer huge disadvantage in international competitiveness.

The Development of the New Economy

With globalization, the capacity of innovation becomes a crucial source of competitiveness, and strengthening the capacity is a necessary approach to cope with globalization.  The other important element of the new economy is the application of information and communications technology (ICT).

For a long period of time, the R&D expenditure in Korea was higher than in Taiwan.  The expenditure in Korea by percentage of GDP is 25% higher than Taiwan.  However, if we look into the composition of R&D, we can find that in the manufacturing sector, Taiwan invested more portions in high-tech industry than Korea.  In fact, in 1999, Taiwan spent 58% of its total R&D expenditure in high-tech manufacturing, and there was 48% in Korea. In terms of numbers of patents granted by the USPTO, Taiwan is better than Korea.  In 2001, the number of patents granted to Taiwan was 6,545, ranking the fourth, comparing to Korea’s 3,763 and the eighth place.  However, the number of patents increased faster in Korea than in Taiwan.  From 1990 to 2001, the average increase rate in Taiwan was 20.25%, while in Korea, it was 26.24%.  According to an analysis by USPTO, in 1999, the major technological fields in which Taiwanese enterprises obtained the patents were semiconductor device manufacturing, electrical materials, static information storage and retrieval, and chairs and seats.  For Korea, they were liquid crystal, cell, elements and systems; static information storage and retrieval; semiconductor device manufacturing; dynamic magnetic information storage or retrieval.

With regard to the application of ICT, Korea is well known by its widespread of the use of the Internet.  It has the largest portion of national population who are Internet users in the world. Taiwan is also in the list of the first tier countries, but it still lags behind Korea. The percentage of the broadband users among population is 51.7% in Korea and 18.2% in Taiwan.  This is partly attributed to the promotion of the Korean government since the financial crisis. Compared to Taiwan, Korea spent more money on R&D, but most concentrated on the businesses that chaebols focus on.  Judged by the wide range and variety of Taiwan’s patents, Taiwan’s R&D may cover different fields of industries. The high number of patents indicates a country’s innovative capacity.  In addition, Korea’s advance in ICT application provides it with a solid foundation to cope with globalization. No matter in terms of production, marketing, or communication, the Internet is a necessary tool to extend business operation to the globe.



The Human Development Index (HDI)

The Human Development Index (HDI) is a composite statistic used to rank countries by level of "human development". The HDI is a comparative measure of life expectancy, literacy, education and standards of living for countries worldwide. It is a standard means of measuring well-being, especially child welfare. It is used to distinguish whether the country is a developed, a developing or an under-developed country, and also to measure the impact of economic policies on quality of life.



The HDI combines three dimensions:

  • A long and healthy life: Life expectancy at birth

  • Access to knowledge: Mean years of schooling and Expected years of schooling

  • A decent standard of living: GNI per capita (PPP US$)

Advantages

Disadvantages

Easy measure and indicator of political competitiveness

Does not take into account poverty or other measures of deprivation

Reliable factors and indicators

PPP values change quickly and are likely to be misleading

Easy to collect data

Does not account for equity – GINI coefficient

Signifies future welfare – education and health are both supply side policies

Quality of life not closely linked – does not account for factors like war or oppression

Able to measure success of government policies

Human development is overall difficult to measure, even with selected indices

It is one value – allows for modelling and statistical analysis, thus practical

Assumes ceteris paribus – an isolated snapshot in time

Goodhart’s Law: Any observed statistical regularity will tend to collapse once pressure is placed upon it for control purposes (1975).This has made the HDI potentially an unreliable indicator of development once countries begin to target only these indices.

TYS Questions

2007 H2 Q5 Either: Give the meaning of the term development gap. Describe the development gap experienced within one world region. [9m]

2008 H1 Q7 Either: How useful is the HDI as a measure of economic development? [9m]

2008 H2 Q5 Either: In 2002 the World Bank reported that in the 1990s, although the number of extreme poor (those living on less than US$1 per day) had decreased by 120 million, about 2 billion people “had been left out of the process of globalisation.” Explain why the impact of globalisation is uneven amongst LDCs and NIEs. [16m]

2009 H2 Q5 Either: In the UN list of HDI values for 177 countries in 2004, Norway, a DC in Europe, was ranked first with 0.965 and Niger, and LDC in Africa, was ranked last with 0.311. Assess the usefulness of HDI and of one more other indicators which may be use to measure development. [16m]

2010 H1 Q7 Or: Using examples to illustrate your answer, describe and explain what is meant by the term newly industrialising economy (NIE). [9m]

New International Division of Labour



  • Discuss the causes for and impact of the emergence of the new international division of labour on the global economic activities.

NIDL

It is the global spread of labour-use across international borders in the face of increasing globalisation and industrial competition. It is the spatial division of labour which occurs when the process of production is no longer confined to national economies. This has led to a trend of transference, or what is also known as the "global industrial shift", in which production processes are relocated from developed countries to developing countries. This is because companies search for the cheapest locations to manufacture and assemble components, so low-cost labour-intensive parts of the manufacturing process are shifted to the developing world where costs are substantially lower. Companies do so by taking advantage of transportation and communications technology, as well as fragmentation and locational flexibility of production. From 1953 to the late 1990s, the industrialized economies' share of world manufacturing output declined from 95% to 77%, and the developing economies’ share more than quadrupled from 5% to 23%.



Characteristics of NIDL

It is TNC driven, as they have the capital required for global investments.



Hierarchical and tri-partite in relationship: core (DCs, HQ and R&D), semi periphery (NIEs, regional HQ) and periphery (LDCs, manufacturing plants)

Capital accumulation of profits is greatest at the top of the hierarchy, where R&D is located

Dynamic relationship – Producers at DC level can quickly and efficiently organise actors at LDC level to maximise efficiency in the search for cheaper factors of production

Causes of NIDL

PULL Factors

Search for cheap and efficient labour

  • Labour cost in China is estimated to be 33 times lower than the US for textiles

  • Vietnam’s factory wages of around $50-$60 a month, which is half that of Chinese workers in manufacturing centres along China’s coast, hence is attractive to even Chinese firms

Search for new markets

  • Larger the size, more potential demand to be tapped. Also, demand for goods is likely to be labour intensive manufactured goods, and less of skilled manufactured goods and services

  • China, due to its size. Larger consumer market, growing purchasing power of population.

  • Cosmetics market 13bn in first half of 2010, leading firms like L’oreal and Olay to enter Chinese market in terms of shifting production and other processes

  • Between 2002-2007, the Chinese car market grew by 21% on average, and is expected to grow tenfold by 2030 from 2009, even as it became the largest market for automobiles in the world

  • Reduces supply chain and inventory supply risks

  • Reduces transport costs

  • Localising products to local markets – Lexus in the US luxury car market

Economies of scale

  • E.g. Walmart – cheaper prices overall

  • Wal-Mart's growth between 1985 and 2004 resulted in food-at-home prices that were 9.1% lower and overall prices (as measured by the Consumer Price Index) that were 3.1% lower than they would otherwise have been

  • It distributed its merchandise from a vast network of distribution centers served by a private truck fleet, allowing them to restrict inventory while simultaneously open more stores. The inventory control system gave it another competitive advantage on the competition. Distribution channels were very efficient and allowed for lower pricing, thus creating another barrier to entry for firms who wished to enter the market.

Less environmental and legal concerns

  • Hazardous industries such as textile, petrochemical and chemical production, as well as smelting and electronics, have migrated to Latin America, Africa, Asia and Eastern Europe. E.g. Union Carbide’s methyl isocyanate incident in Bhopal, India, killing 15000 and affecting 800000 more.

  • In Indonesia, no rules or codes of conduct are observed, and workers work ridiculous overtime shifts, up to 24 hours at a go.

Little or weak labour unions

  • Mexico has poor government regulations on workers’ rights. In some cases, TNCs can get away with not compensating workers for any accidents caused by the companies. Employers prefer to have women labour force as they are either not unionized or organized by weak state-controlled unions.

  • In 1968, Singapore enacted a law that curtailed worker benefits and gave more power to companies to hire and fire, making the Singapore workforce more attractive to TNCs.

Role of state

  • In 1995, the Namibian government passed a law called the export processing zone Act as part of its strategy to become an internationally competitive investment location. The government hoped that EPZs would attract foreign investments to Namibia, and boost the country’s manufacturing capacity.

  • EDB Singapore in 1961 developed Jurong Industrial Park – tax incentives, ready-made factory building attracted Texas Instruments in 1969, as well as National and Fairchild shortly after.

Actions of economic agents (TNCs)

  • Places which already have a suitable trained workforce for a high-technology industry

  • Toyota chose the Burnaston site in Derby for its first factory in the EU for its long tradition of engineering and vehicle manufacturing and favourable working practices, as well as the excellent skilled and flexible workforce there – more than 20000 suitable job applications from workers living in the area

  • Cheap Land in declining industrial areas

  • Toyota build their plant in Burnaston on a disused airfield

  • Well-developed transport facilities to market areas

  • Toyota chose the UK as it had reliable industrial transport links to customers

  • U.S. Block Windows ships acrylic blocks within four days, as compared to 12-16 weeks with outsourcing to China

  • High unemployment, providing a good labour supply

  • Second Toyota plant in the EU, Valenciennes in France had an unemployment rate of 20%, hence high government grants of 60 million and other training aid

  • Past economic problems so the government is willing to offer financial help

  • Nissan received 125 million from UK to encourage them to set up a plant

  • Establish operations within trade barriers, thus avoiding quotas and import duties

  • Suzlon and Vestas, Indian and Danish wind-turbine makers make investments in U.S. manufacturing not only because it’s expensive to ship turbines, but also for the turbines to be perceived as “American” to officials involved in green purchasing

  • Focus on the tastes of local people, known as host market production, and be more visible to the area’s consumers, increasing sales

  • To gain a higher share in the US domestic luxury car market, Toyota introduced a separate brand called Lexus in 1989. This has now become the most popular luxury car brand in the US, and Toyota introduced it back to Japan in 2005

  • Collaborate with other companies located there

  • HP and Canon and their product design

  • HP and Chinese government firms


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