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Explore the impact of globalization in 1972 and how it has evolved over time, focusing on economic growth, political engagements, personal contact, and more in countries such as the Asian Tigers. Witness the dramatic transformations and convergence in income levels.
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Globalization is more than trade • Technology (internet users, hosts, secure servers) • Political Engagement (embassies, participation in International Organizations) • Personal Contact (travel, telephone traffic, cross-border transfers) • Economic Integration (trade, capital flows, international transactions) • A.T. Kearney/Foreign Policy Magazine issues a Globalization Index for 62 countries each year
Jeopardy 1972 Commenting on the Vietnam War, this US policymaker and eventual Nobel Prize winner prematurely declares, “Peace is at hand.”
Then: 1972 • Henry Kissinger’s negotiations with the North Vietnamese bog down, and remaining US troops are not withdrawn until the following year.
Jeopardy 1972 Arab terrorists kill 11 Israeli athletes at the summer Olympics in this city.
Then: 1972 • Henry Kissinger’s negotiations with the North Vietnamese bog down. • Arab terrorists kill 11 Israeli athletes at the summer Olympics in Munich, Germany.
Jeopardy 1972 This chess master defeats a Russian contender to become America’s first world chess champion.
Then: 1972 • Henry Kissinger’s negotiations with the North Vietnamese bog down. • Arab terrorists kill 11 Israeli athletes at the summer Olympics in Munich, Germany. • Bobby Fischer beats Boris Spassky in chess to become the first US world chess champion.
Jeopardy 1972 This movie won the 1972 Academy Award for Best Picture, and its sequel won the Best Picture award two years later.
Then: 1972 • Henry Kissinger’s negotiations with the North Vietnamese bog down. • Arab terrorists kill 11 Israeli athletes at the summer Olympics in Munich, Germany. • Bobby Fischer beats Boris Spassky in chess to become the first US world chess champion. • The Godfather wins the Academy Award for Best Picture.
Then: 1972 – lesser known facts • “Globalization” did not appear in economics textbooks • A natural experiment was in progress:--Import Substitution Industrialization (ISI) versus--Export Led Industrialization (ELI) • The "Asian Miracle" was underway
Jeopardy 311 These four countries collectively comprise the “Asian Tigers.”
The Asian Tigers pursued ELI: • South Korea • Taiwan • Singapore • Hong Kong
Tiger 1: South Korea: Background • 1953: End of Korean War; 2/3 of industrial capacity destroyed • 1960: Poorer than Bangladesh, Haiti, Ivory Coast • Exported 3% of output; tariff rate exceeded 50% • Began reforms in 1964 • Mid 1960s: British economist Joan Robinson "referred to the economic miracle of North Korea and declared that it would economically overwhelm the poverty-stricken South."
South Korea: 1972 • Chaebols: Hyundai, Samsung, Lucky Star, Daewoo • Industrial targeting: steel, petrochemicals, nonferrous metals, shipbuilding, electronics, and machinery • Exported nearly 20% of output, up from 3% in 1960 • 1/4 of exports accounted for by clothing • Per capita output twice its 1960 level
South Korea today • Exports over 40% of its output • Leading exports are computer and transportation goods • Fastest growing country in the world since 1960 • More than 10 times richer than Bangladesh, Haiti and Ivory Coast, its peers in 1960
Tiger 2: Taiwan: Background • 1949: Chiang Kai-Shek’s Nationalists arrive • Sociologist Max Weber: Confucianism is incompatible with capitalism. • Relatively high 50% literacy rate after 50 years of colonial rule under Japan • 1960: Richer than Korea by close to 40%; nearly as rich as El Salvador • Population less than 1/2 of Korea's, exported close to 20% of its output in 1965
Taiwan: 1972 • No US aid since 1965 • Like Korea, doubled its 1960 output per capita • Already exported as much of its output as Korea does today (42%).
Taiwan today • Still has an edge over Korea in output per capita--but now just a 20% margin versus 40% in 1960 • The world’s third-fastest growing country since 1960
Tiger 3: Singapore • 1965: Seceded from 8-year old Malaysia to become its own country • 1965: 75% richer than Korea, almost as rich as Brazil • Under 2 million pepole, always open, with exports exceeding output and no tariffs • Noteworthy for purposely courting MNCs • #2 growth rate since 1960 and now 4 times as rich as Brazil
Tiger 4: Hong Kong • Like Singapore: no tariffs and exports exceed output • 1972: 25% richer than Singapore • Slightly slower growth, so Singapore has just about caught up today
The Asian Tigers show significant convergence toward US income levels
Jeopardy 1972 This country, known at the time as “the poor man of Europe,” becomes a member of the European Community (now called the European Union).
In Europe,…IrelandIn 1972, poorer than Spain and 14 other European countries
In 1987, still poorer than Spain and 14 other European countries
Ireland: Economic reform • 1987: Undertook substantial macroeconomic reform and invited in foreign corporations (as Singapore did)
Ireland today: the Celtic Tiger • Foreign direct investment (FDI) up from less than 1% of GDP in 1987 to over 20% in 1999 • #1 Globalization Index ranking for past 2 years • The fastest growing economy in the EU over the past 15 years • OECD forecasts highest rate of employment growth in the industrialized world over the coming years
Ireland moved up from #16 in 1987 to #7 in 2001, passing the UK in 1997
Jeopardy 311 This Latin American country depended on copper for 80% of its export earnings in 1972.
In Latin America,…Chile Background • Latin America was the laboratory for ISI • Earlier export orientation had failed • Dependency theory • Anti-Americanism • Not clear in early 1970s that ISI wouldn't work as well or better than ELI • Clearer now: Argentina: 6th richest country in 1900, 42nd in 2001
Chile: Background • 1970: Salvador Allende, a Socialist, elected president • Won 36.2% of the popular vote • Nixon urged the CIA to prevent his inauguration
Chile: 1971-3 • 1971: Chile nationalized copper mines owned by US firms Kennecott and Anaconda • US imposed an economic blockade • 1972: Middle and upper class shop owners went on strike • US provided military training to officers hostile to Allende • 1973: Allende died in a military coup • Augusto Pinochet assumed power
Chile’s economic reform • Political repression: 2,400 died or disappeared • Reform administered by the Chicago Boys of Santiago’s Catholic University • 105 percent average tariff rate sharply reduced by the late 1970s • Turnaround began slowly, with 2 global and domestic recessions: by 1983, Chile's standard of living was only 2% higher than a generation before
Chile today • Applies a uniform tariff on imports--9% in 2001 • Since 1983, Latin America's fastest-growing economy with per capita output growth of 4.3% per year, twice as fast as the US • Standard of living has doubled • Exports more than twice as much copper now as in 1972, but copper accounts for less than 40% of export earnings compared to 80% in 1972
Since 1983, Chile has risen from the 8th to the 2nd richest country in Latin America
Jeopardy 311 This country is the world’s number one diamond exporter.
In Africa,…BotswanaBackground: 1972 • Many African countries newly independent • Several started off well • 1972: Nigeria was among the top 25% of the world's countries in its rate of growth • The curse of wealth: Nigeria is poorer now than in 1972
Botswana • Ranked as Africa's least corrupt country by Transparency International in 1999 and 2000 • Assigned "A" grade credit ratings by Moody's Investors Service and Standard & Poor's • Since independence in 1966, has had the world's 6th-fastest growth rate of per capita income • Moved from one of the poorest countries in the world to a middle-income country with a per capita income of $8,800 in 2001. • Has the world's highest incidence of HIV/AIDS
Several countries in Africa grew rapidly before 1972, but only a few since then. Annual percentage growth rate of real income per capita
Jeopardy 1972 A policymaker from this country defended his pragmatic economic reform proposals by remarking that “It doesn't matter whether a cat is black or white so long as it catches mice.”
China: 1972 • Mao Zedong still in power • The Cultural Revolution was recent history • Nixon visited
China: Economic reform • Pragmatic reformer Deng Xiaoping was “rehabilitated” in 1973 • His lasting reforms kicked in in 1978 • He established China’s first Special Economic Zones (SEZs) in Guangdong province in 1980
India: Background • Paul Ehrlich. The Population Bomb • According to one of its own economists: "India's misfortune was to have brilliant economists, an affliction that the Far Eastern super-performers were spared." • A democracy with Soviet-style economic planning and South American-style ISI strategy • 1972: exported 4% of its output • Operated under “Permit Raj”
Recap: • The “Asian Tigers”: South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore, Hong Kong • ELI leaders elsewhere: Ireland, Chile, Botswana • Late boomers: China and India • Some other countries on the move: Africa: Mauritius Asia: Vietnam Latin America: Mexico