Resolved: On balance, economic globalization benefits worldwide poverty reduction 3


A2: Globalization Reduces Poverty



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A2: Globalization Reduces Poverty




Pro states are false – globalization has not reduced poverty, it has increased it

John Hillary, 2013, Journalist, The Poverty of Capitalism, page number at end of card


To many people, particularly those living outside the core economies of the capitalist world system, this was not news. The experience of colonialism had taught the peoples of the global South that the accumulation of capital in the metropolitan centres of empire required the violent suppression and immiseration of the colonised, to the extent that it negated the possibility of their historical development. 2 Nor was this experience confined to some dim and distant past, as the ‘new imperialism’ exercised through international financial institutions such as the World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF) had continued to condemn the same peoples to exploitation throughout the decades following their liberation from colonial rule. 3 The result of this systematic dispossession has been mass poverty on a global scale. In August 2008, one month before the collapse of investment bank Lehman Brothers sent financial markets into freefall, the World Bank acknowledged that it had previously overstated the numbers lifted out of poverty in the previous three decades of neoliberal globalisation, and that a staggering 1.4 billion people were still living below the extreme poverty line (the equivalent of what it means to be poor in the world's very poorest countries, such as Mali, Ethiopia or Chad). A total of 2.6 billion people – over half the entire population of the global South – were calculated to be living below the $ 2 a day poverty line, following the extensive structural adjustment programmes undertaken at the behest of the World Bank and IMF in order to ‘integrate’ their national economies into the capitalist world system. 4 Before the global economic meltdown, in other words, the majority world was already in crisis. Hilary, John (2013-10-09). The Poverty of Capitalism: Economic Meltdown and the Struggle for What Comes Next (Kindle Locations 203-211). Pluto Press. Kindle Edition.

Financial integration makes the poor vulnerable

Anish Bharadwaj, 2014, International Max Planck Research School for Competition and Innovation, Munich Centre for Innovation and Entrepreneurship Research, Advances in Economics and Business

2(1): 42, p. 42-57

While trade integration does not appear to increase vulnerability, and foreign direct investment flows have been remarkably stable, integration with financial markets can increase the propensity to develop crises. The increased susceptibility to and costs of crises are due to inadequacies in the domestic policy and institutional framework and larger and more volatile private capital flows. Although the increased prevalence of financial crises has not raised GDP volatility (with the exception of East Asia), it can have a large detrimental impact on the poor both through output declines and the socialization of large resolution costs (World Bank, 2000). Beyond these aggregate effects, globalization can increase insecurity of particular groups, especially workers, in a more footloose and fast changing world.


Poor do not have the skills to take advantage of free trade


Anish Bharadwaj, 2014, International Max Planck Research School for Competition and Innovation, Munich Centre for Innovation and Entrepreneurship Research, Advances in Economics and Business

2(1): 42, p. 42-57

The poor in countries with an abundance of unskilled labor do not always gain from trade reform (Harrison, 2006). Many economists have used the Heckscher-Ohlin (HO) framework in international trade to argue that trade liberalization should raise the incomes of the unskilled in labor-abundant countries.

Most researchers who use this framework to argue that globalization is good for the world’s poor make a number of heroic assumptions. These assumptions -- such as the necessity that all countries produce all goods are often challenged. In addition, the country studies show that labor is not nearly as mobile as the HO trade model assumes; for comparative advantage to increase the incomes of the unskilled, they need to be able to move out of contracting sectors and into expanding ones. Another reason why the poor may not gain from trade reforms is that developing countries have historically protected sectors that use unskilled labor, such as textiles and apparel. This pattern of protection, while at odds with simple interpretations of HO models, makes sense if standard assumptions (such as factor price equalization) are relaxed. Trade reforms may result in less protection for unskilled workers, who are most likely to be poor. Finally, penetrating global markets even in sectors that traditionally use unskilled labor requires more skills than the poor in developing countries typically possess.


Globalization doesn’t benefit Africa because outside firms build everything

Derrick Owusu-Kodu, April 7, 2014, Poverty and the Impacts of Globalization on the African Economy,

http://www.africandynamo.com/2014/04/poverty-and-impacts-of-globalization-on.html#mM4cowGoocBOQhUe.99 DOA: 1-2-15
Another negative impact of globalization has been the total reliance on foreign enterprises. African countries habitually resort to employing foreign companies to carry out almost all of their infrastructure projects. Almost every project requiring technical know-how in Africa is being constructed by foreign companies. It is  not surprising one bit to see Chinese companies building roads, bridges and other infrastructure in every corner of Africa. How many African companies are helping build Chinese infrastructure? A hallmark of all great civilizations has been exceptional development of enterprise, but attempts by African state's governments to encourage African firms and organizations to play front-line roles in economic, social and infrastructure development have always proven futile.This has led to an increasing dependency on outside aid and a net loss to the African economy.

Globalization makes poor countries vulnerable to financial crises

Anish Bharadwaj, 2014, International Max Planck Research School for Competition and Innovation, Munich Centre for Innovation and Entrepreneurship Research, Advances in Economics and Business

2(1): 42, p. 42-57
It is now increasingly recognized that the process of globalization entails significant risks and potentially large economic and social costs. Openness to global capital markets has brought greater volatility in domestic financial markets, particularly in countries whose financial systems were weak to begin with and economic policies lacked credibility. Large reversals in short-term capital flows (often induced by contagion effects or abrupt changes in market sentiment on world capital markets) have led to severe financial crises and sharp increases in unemployment and poverty, which have in some cases persisted beyond the short-term (Agenor, 2004). Similarly, trade liberalization has led in some countries to reduced demand for unskilled labor and lower real wages in the short run; combined with a low degree of inter-sectoral labor mobility, job losses and income declines have often translated into higher poverty rates.

Trade openness does not benefit developing countries

Anish Bharadwaj, 2014, International Max Planck Research School for Competition and Innovation, Munich Centre for Innovation and Entrepreneurship Research, Advances in Economics and Business

2(1): 42, p. 42-57
Although there are some good arguments suggesting that trade liberalization may improve resource allocation in the short term or raise growth rates permanently (and thus be beneficial to the poor), there are a number of other arguments suggesting the opposite. Opening a country’s markets to foreign firms, for instance, tends to reduce the market power of domestic firms and increase competitive pressures on them, eventually forcing (some of) them out of business. In the longer run, the country may well become more efficient in using its productive resources, thereby enjoying higher growth rates and lower poverty. But in the short term, the inability to compete, and the presence of labor market rigidities (segmentation due to minimum wage legislation or wage-setting behavior by firms or trade unions, as well as imperfect mobility across sectors), may hamper the reallocation of all categories of labor from the non-tradable sector to the tradable sector that a reduction in tariffs normally entails (Agenor & Azeman, 2006). As a result, both unemployment and poverty may increase and persist over tim

Even if total income increases, there is a net increase in poverty

Anish Bharadwaj, 2014, International Max Planck Research School for Competition and Innovation, Munich Centre for Innovation and Entrepreneurship Research, Advances in Economics and Business

2(1): 42, p. 42-57
Trade liberalisation is generally an ally in the fight against poverty: it tends to increase mean incomes, providing more resources with which to tackle poverty, and, while it will generally affect income distribution, it does not do so in a systematically adverse way. However, most trade reforms will hurt someone, and that some reforms may increase overall poverty even while they boost incomes in total.




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