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THE CONTEMPORARY WORLD SUBJECT
INTRODUCTION:
GLOBALIZATION
 Globalization is the process by which the
world, previously isolated through physical
and technological distance, becomes
increasingly interconnected.
 It is manifested by the increase in interaction
between people around the world that
involves the sharing of ideas, cultures, goods,
services, economic, political, cultural,
ideological, investment environmental and
processes aided by information technology.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
GLOBALIZATION: A CONTESTED CONCEPT
 Globalization first appeared in the 1940s, but
did not gain widespread traction until the
1990s.
 It is sometimes mistaken for an unstoppable
juggernaut ‘Americanizing’ the world.
 However, a more nuanced understanding of
the interactions between the local, national,
regional, and global. Indiscriminate use of
the word ‘globalization’ is confusing.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
GLOBALIZATION: A CONTESTED CONCEPT
 Globalization is a set of social processes
that lead to the social condition of
globality, through the growing
consciousness of global connectivity.
 There is no consensus on exactly what
processes constitute globalization, but
common themes include the creation of
networks, expansion of social relations,
and the acceleration of social
exchange.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
Globalization and history: is globalization a new
phenomenon?
 Globalization is commonly thought of as a
new phenomenon, but contact between
diverse individuals is not new.
 It began when prehistoric tribes settled and
were able to outmuscle wandering tribes.
 The premodern period saw technological
advances that allowed trade and
communication to flourish.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
Globalization and history: is globalization a new
phenomenon?
 The early modern period saw the birth of
capitalism and regional markets.
 The modern period saw the Industrial
Revolution provide massive advances in
technology at the expense of the
environment.
 The contemporary era is an era of
convergence, with people coming together
through deregulated economic and ICT
systems.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
3 components of economic globalization
 Academic literature commonly
subdivides globalization into three
major areas:
1. Economic globalization
2. Cultural/social globalization
3. Political globalization
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
I. Economic globalization
 It refers to the widespread international
movement of goods, capital, services,
technology and information.
 Economic globalization primarily comprises
the globalization of:
1. production
2. finance
3. markets
4. technology
5. Organizational
6. regimes
7. institutions
8. corporations
9. labour
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
Economic globalization
 The economic globalization is one
most often mentioned in the media.
 It is associated with massive
amounts of financial traded daily on
the different stock markets around
the label “NEW ECONOMY”.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
Economic globalization
 In order to monitor the economy,
3 economic institutions were created:
1. THE INTERNATIONAL MONITARY
FUND (IMF) --would oversee the
international monetary system;
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
Economic globalization
2. The International Banks for
Reconstruction and Development (IBRD
later named the WORLD BANK (WB) --
would provide loans for European
reconstruction but later expanded its
activities to the developing world;
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
Economic globalization
 The General Agreement on Tariffs and
Trade (GATT, renamed of the WORLD
TRADE ORGANIZATION in 1992) --would
oversee multilateral trade agreements.
 For about 30 years, this system
remained in place and provided
economic stability and prosperity to
Western nations.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
The economic dimension of globalization
 In the 1980s neoliberalism liberalized financial
transactions.
 However, this unstable growth led to the Great Financial
Crash, where banks traded toxic assets without
regulation.
 Transnational corporations rival nation-states in
economic power, and have had a profound effect on the
structure and function of the global economy.
 The Washington Consensus was drafted to reform
indebted developing countries, but it has thus far rarely
helped countries develop.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
The economic dimension of globalization
 The economic dimension of
globalization’ explores how the way
people have undertaken economic
production has changed.
 The global economic order emerged
after World War II, when the Bretton
Woods Conference laid the foundations
for the IMF, World Bank, and WTO.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
II. CULTURAL GLOBALIZATION
 Cultural Globalization refers to the
rapid transmission of ideas,
meanings, and values and cultural
products across around the world in
such a way as to extend and
intensify social relations.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
CULTURAL GLOBALIZATION
 This process is marked by the common
consumption of mono-cultures that have been
diffused by the Internet, popular culture media,
and international travel, entertainment
transnational marketing of particular brands and
international tourism – that transcends local
cultural traditions and lifestyles, and that shapes
the perceptions, aspirations, tastes and everyday
activities of people wherever they may live in the
world’.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
CULTURAL GLOBALIZATION
1. MIGRATION is an important aspect of cultural
globalization.
 This process has been going on for several
centuries, with languages, religious beliefs, and
values being spread by military conquest,
missionary work, and trade.
 However, in the last 30 years, the process of
cultural globalization has dramatically
intensified due technological advances in both
transportation and communications technology.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
CULTURAL GLOBALIZATION
 THE GLOBALIZATION OF FOOD is one of the most
obvious examples of cultural globalization – food
consumption is an important aspect of culture and
most societies around the world have diets that
are unique to them, however the cultural
globalization of food has been promoted by fast food
giants such as McDonald’s, Coca-Cola and Starbucks.
 The spread of these global food corporations has
arguably led to the decline of local diets and
eating traditions.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
CULTURAL GLOBALIZATION
2. THE GLOBALIZATION OF SPORT is
another fairly obvious example of cultural
globalization – think of all the international
sporting events that take place – most
notably the World Cup and The Olympics,
and Formula 1, which bind millions
together in a shared, truly global, ‘leisure
experience’.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
CULTURAL GLOBALIZATION
3. CONVERGING GLOBAL CONSUMPTION PATTERNS – today
you can go to pretty much any major city in the world and
share in a similar ‘consumption experience’.
 Also, more and more people in Asia and South-America
are coming to enjoy high-consumption lifestyles like in
the West – car ownership and tourism are both on the
increase globally for example.
 Central to this is the growth of similar styles of
shopping malls, and leisure parks which provide a
homogeneous cultural experience in different regions
across the world.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
CULTURAL GLOBALIZATION
 HOMOGENEITY comes to a society in a numbers of
ways- ethnically(Japanese), religiously(many Arab
nationals), culturally(Indians), politically(communism)
etc.
 Study has shown that the most prominent type of
homogeneity is ethnicity, where everybody share similar
physiological characteristics and cultural behavior .
 Ethnic homogeneity still strong among many aboriginal
groups in USA, Latin countries, China, Japan, South Asia
and Africa.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
CULTURAL GLOBALIZATION
 FINANCIAL HOMOGENEITY also exists in many
countries. It was prevalent in many communist
countries-this type of homogenous society is in
decline now-a day.
 North Korea is a great example of financial
homogeneity, at extreme level, another good
example is Scandinavian countries, where the
government make sure that every citizen of their
country enjoy high level of living standards.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
CULTURAL GLOBALIZATION
 THE GLOBAL VILLAGE/ GLOBAL
CONSCIOUSNESS-- Individuals and
families are now more directly
plugged into news from the
outside world – some of the most
gripping events of the past decade
have unfolded in real time in front
of a global audience.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
CULTURAL GLOBALIZATION
 According to Giddens this means that more and
more people have a more ‘global outlook’ and
increasingly identify with a global audience – for
example, television reporting of natural disasters in
developing countries result in people in wealthier
countries donating money to charities such as
Oxfam to assist with relief efforts. Giddens
developed the concept of ‘Cosmopolitanism’ to
describe this process of an emerging global
identity.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
CULTURAL GLOBALIZATION
 DETRADITIONALISATION--In his
classic 1999 text, Runaway World,
Anthony Giddens argues that one
consequence of globalization is
detraditionalisation – where people
question their traditional beliefs
about religion, marriage, and
gender roles and so on.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
CULTURAL GLOBALIZATION
 GLOBAL RISKS/ GLOBAL RISK CONSCIOUSNESS--Ulrich
Beck (1992) argues that a fundamental feature of
globalization is the development of a global risk
consciousness, which emerges due to shared global
problems which threaten people in multiple countries
 EXAMPLES: • the threat of terrorism,
• international nuclear war
• the threat of global pandemics
• the rise of organized crime funded primarily through
international drug trafficking
• the threat of planetary melt-down due to global
warming.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
THE CULTURAL DIMENSION OF
GLOBALIZATION
 The cultural dimension of globalization’
explores the intensification and expansion of
cultural flows across the globe.
 Critics of cultural globalization claim that
the world is being homogenized or
‘Americanized’.
 However, advocates say that globalization
reinvigorates niche cultures instead of
eliminating them.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
THE CULTURAL DIMENSION OF
GLOBALIZATION
 The existence of the global
imaginary is linked to the rise of
global media networks.
 These networks are owned by a
small group of transnational
corporations, which can affect
journalistic integrity.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
THE CULTURAL DIMENSION OF
GLOBALIZATION
 Several different hypotheses exist
about the effects of language
globalization.
 Some say that it leads to protection
of native tongues.
 On the other hand, some foresee
the rise of a ‘Globish’ language.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
III. political globalization
 It refers to the growth of the worldwide
political system, both in size and complexity.
 It includes:
1. national governments,
2. their governmental and
3. intergovernmental organizations
4. government-independent elements of global
civil society such as:
a. international non-governmental organizations
b. social movement organizations.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
The political dimension of globalization
 ‘The political dimension of globalization’
looks at political arrangements beyond
the nation-state.
 Traditional politics harboured an ‘us’
and ‘them’ mentality.
 Contemporary globalization has led to a
permeation of those borders.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
The political dimension of globalization
 The modern nation-state came into being
after the Protestant Reformation,
characterized by centralized government
and self-determination.
 The rise of organizations such as the United
Nations has threatened the nation-state,
according to globalization sceptics.
 However, national governments still hold
significant powers.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
The political dimension of globalization
 There has been a rise in the number of
supra-territorial institutions, operating
from the local level all the way to the
global level.
 Some commentators ultimately see a
global civil society, although critics
question the feasibility of this.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
III. political globalization
 One of the key aspects of the political
globalization is the declining
importance of the nation-state and the
rise of other actors on the political
scene.
 The creation and existence of the
United Nations has been called one of
the classic examples of political
globalization.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
political globalization
UNITED NATIONS AND ITS ROLE IN GLOBALIZATION
 It is an international organization created on
24th October of 1945 when the UN charter
was signed.
 MAIN OBJECTIVES ARE:
1. to maintain international peace and security and
2. promoting human rights and global development.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
political globalization
Member states of the United Nations
 The United Nations member states are
the 193 sovereign states that are
members of the United Nations (UN) and
have equal representation in the UN
General Assembly and 51 founding
countries.
 The UN is the world's largest
intergovernmental organization which is
based in New York (Headquarter).
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
STRUCTURES: GLOBAL ECONOMYBY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
I. What is Global Economy?
 The world economy or global
economy is the economy of the
humans of the world,
considered as the international
exchange of goods and services
that is expressed in monetary
units of account.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
Global Economy
 Typical EXAMPLES of economic
globalization are the global supply
chains now standard for the
manufacture of many devices,
ranging from cars to smart phones;
the processes surrounding raw
materials, components, and assembly
may take place across multiple
countries.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
What is the importance of Global Economy?
 Because of its size and interconnectedness,
developments in the US economy are bound to
have important effects around the world.
 The US has the world’s single largest economy,
accounting for almost a quarter of global GDP
(at market exchange rates), one-fifth of global
FDI, and more than a third of stock market
capitalization.
 It is the most important export destination for
one-fifth of countries around the world.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
Changing Structure:
Global Economy
 Since the end of World War II, the
global economy has steadily increased
its trade and financial openness,
enabled in part by the International
Monetary Fund (IMF), the World Bank,
and the General Agreement on Tariffs
and Trade (GATT), now the World Trade
Organization (WTO).
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
Changing Structure of the Global Economy
 In parallel, colonialism,
with its inherent
constraints on economic
development and its
built-in asymmetries,
collapsed.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
Changing Structure of the Global Economy
 As formal barriers to trade
and capital flows declined, a
number of other trends
combined to accelerate the
growth and structural changes
in the developing economies.
Changing Structure of the Global Economy
THEY INCLUDED:
1. advances in transportation and
communications technology
2. management innovation in
multinational companies
3. a process of learning about doing
business in multiple and diverse
environments
4. and the integration of multinational
supply chains.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
Changing Structure of the Global Economy
 The shape of global supply
chains is constantly shifting.
 Countries enter and engage
with the global economy at
different times and expand
at different rates.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
Changing Structure of the Global Economy
 The early high-growth economies—
Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan—
initially exported labor-intensive
products, then graduated to more
capital-intensive products such as
automobiles and motorcycles, and then
to human capital intensive activities
such as design and technology
development.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
DO CHANGING STRUCTURE
OF THE GLOBAL ECONOMY
AFFECT THE PHILIPPINES?
Relating to us…
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
What kind of economy is the Philippines?
 The Philippines has a mixed economic
system which includes a variety of private
freedom, combined with centralized
economic planning and government
regulation.
 Philippines is a member of the Asia-
Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) and
the Association of Southeast Asian Nations
(ASEAN).
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
PHILIPPINES:
COMPETING IN GLOBAL ECONOMY
 The economy of the Philippines is the world's 34th
largest economy by nominal GDP according to the
2017 estimate of the International Monetary Fund's
statistics, it is the 13th largest economy in Asia, and
the 3rd largest economy in the ASEAN after Indonesia
and Thailand.
 The Philippines is one of the emerging markets and is
the sixth richest in Southeast Asia by GDP per capita
values, after the regional countries of Singapore,
Brunei, Malaysia, Thailand and Indonesia.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
PHILIPPINES:
NEW INDUSTIALIZED COUNTRY
 The Philippines is primarily considered a
newly industrialized country, which has an
economy in transition from one based on
agriculture to one based more on services and
manufacturing.
 As of 2017, GDP by purchasing power parity
was estimated to be at $1.980 trillion.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
PHILIPPINES:
a tiger cub in economic globalization
 Primary exports include semiconductors and
electronic products, transport equipment, garments,
copper products, petroleum products, coconut oil,
and fruits.
 Major trading partners include Japan, China, the
United States, Singapore, South Korea, the
Netherlands, Hong Kong, Germany, Taiwan and
Thailand.
 The Philippines has been named as one of the Tiger
Cub Economies together with Indonesia, and
Thailand.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
PHILIPPINES:
ECONOMIC TRANSITIONBY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
World Bank Forecasts, Selected Asian Economies
World Bank: Global Economy to Recover in 2017, Led by India,
Philippines, China and Vietnam
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
STRUCTURES: MARKET INTEGRATIONBY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
What is global market integration?
 Global market integration means that
price differences between countries
are eliminated as all markets become
one.
 One way to the progress of
globalization is to look at trends how
prices converge or become similar
across countries.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
The law of one price
 states that the prices of identical security,
commodities or asset traded anywhere that are
exchanged in two or more markets must be the
same regardless of location and currency.
 In an efficient market, there must be only one
price for commodities regardless of where they are
traded. Identical goods must have identical
prices.
 For EXAMPLE, an ounce of gold must have the same
price expressed in terms of dollars in London as it
does in Tokyo.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
The law of one price
 The law of one price is a variation of
Purchasing Power Parity that relates to a single
commodity as opposed to a basket of goods.
 This theory postulates that the difference in
prices for identical commodities in two
countries is due to the foreign exchange (FX)
rate between the two countries.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
MARKET INTEGRATION in 21st century
 Globalization—the integration of people
with world markets—is perhaps the most
significant and pervasive economic
development of the late 20th and early
21st Centuries.
 It is the subject of a small but growing
body of empirical economic research at
the national and multi-national levels.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
MARKET INTEGRATION
 In economics research, globalization
means trade integration.
 As market liberalization and trade
integration climb to the top of the
economic policy agenda in many
countries, development economists
increasingly focus their attention on
market imperfections that may inhibit
trade and create welfare losses.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
MARKET INTEGRATION
 As economic integration unfolds,
producers become inserted directly into
global markets on the output side,
through production of exports, and/or on
the input side, through imported
intermediate inputs, technologies, or
factors.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
MARKET INTEGRATION:
Migration
 Migration is the principal mechanism
by which households in less
developed countries (LDCs),
especially in rural areas, become
directly inserted into the global
economy.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
MARKET INTEGRATION:
Migration
 Globalization is not internationalization,
but the effective erasure of national
boundaries-opening the way not only to
free mobility of capital and goods but
also, in effect, to free movement (or
uncontrolled migration) of vast labor
tools from regions of rapid population
growth and the impacts on national
economies could be tragic.

BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
MARKET INTEGRATION:
MICROECONOMICS
 “MICROECONOMICS OF GLOBALIZATION”
refers also to the myriad ways in which
economic actors also may become
inserted into the global economy
indirectly, through their relations with
other economic agents within local,
regional, and national markets.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
MARKET INTEGRATION:
MICROECONOMICS
 It is the study of the economic
behavior of individuals, households
and firms.
 Where macroeconomics looks at the
big picture of the economy,
microeconomics looks at the
individual behaviors that drive
economic processes.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
Examples of microeconomics
1. Demand
2. Supply
3. Prices
4. Elasticity
5. Opportunity Cost
6. Labor Economics
7. Competition
8. Competitive Advantage
9. Consumer Choice
10. Consumer Confidence
11. Business Confidence
12. Information Economics
13. Welfare Economics
14. Productivity
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
microeconomics
Demand
 How demand for goods
is influenced by income,
preferences, prices and
other factors such as
expectations.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
microeconomics
Supply
 How producers decide
to enter markets, scale
production and exit
markets.
Law of Supply and Demand
Demand
falls,
Supply
Rises
Demand
rises,
Supply
falls
supply
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
microeconomics
Prices
 How individuals, households and firms
react to prices and influence prices
with their supply and demand.
 For EXAMPLE, the observation that
some customary prices appear to be
sticky in that consumers resist buying
above a particular historically
established price.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
microeconomics
Elasticity
 Elasticity is how supply and
demand reacts to change.
 For EXAMPLE, a household that
demands less of a good when
the price increases due to the
availability of substitutes.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
microeconomics
Opportunity Cost
 The tradeoffs that individuals and firms make
to manage constrained resources such as time,
money, capital and land.
 EXAMPLE, you spend time and money going to
a movie, you cannot spend that time at home
reading a book, and you can't spend the
money on something else. Time is precious
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
microeconomics
Labor Economics
 Modeling the supply and demand for
labor.
 focus on human capital (referring to
the skills that workers possess, not
necessarily their actual work).
 For EXAMPLE, looking at how
expectations for economic growth
impact the labour participation
rate.
humans use to produce goods and services
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
microeconomics
Competition
 Modeling competition in markets.
 Three types of competition
1) Direct competitors
2) Indirect competitor
3) Phantom competitors
 For EXAMPLE, the use of game
theory to model a price war
between competitors.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
microeconomics
Competitive Advantage
 Competitive advantage is the ability of certain
firms to outcompete all competition in a
particular area.
 3 Tips to Determine Your Competitive
Advantage
1. Price
2. Product
3. Customer experience
 For EXAMPLE, a sporting goods company with
superior brand recognition and a positive brand
image that can charge premium prices and still
enjoy high demand for its products.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
microeconomics
Consumer Choice
 How needs, perceptions and information shape
consumer choices.
 2 influences on a person’s consumption choice:
1. their income
2. prices of the goods
 For EXAMPLE, the idea that consumers
maximize their expected utility of purchases
meaning that they buy the things they expect
to be most useful to them.
IT’S YOUR
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
microeconomics
Consumer Confidence
 How consumer expectations for the future
influence spending, saving, investment and
labor participation.
 Is an economic indicator that measures the
degree of optimism that consumers feel
about the overall state of the economy and
their personal financial situation.
 EXAMPLE, When consumer confidence is
high, consumers make more purchases.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
microeconomics
Business Confidence
 How producer expectations for the future
influence hiring, capital investment and
supply.
 Business confidence index (BCI) -provides
information on future developments,
based upon opinion surveys on
developments in production, orders and
stocks of finished goods in the industry
sector.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
3 basic kinds of market integration Horizontal
integration
 This occurs when a firm or agency gains
control of other firms or agencies
performing similar marketing functions
at the same level in the marketing
sequence.
 This type of integration sometimes
combine agencies to form a union with
a view to reduce their effective number
and the extent of actual competition in
the market.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
EXAMPLE OF HORIZONTAL INTEGRATION
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
Two or more companies produce the same goods or services
It is also known as horizontal merger
EFFECTS OF HORIZONTAL INTEGRATION
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
 Buying out competitor in a time
bound way to reduce competition.
 Gaining larger share of the market
and higher profits
 Attaining economies of scale
 Specializing in trade
ADVANTAGE OF HORIZONTAL INTEFRATION
1. Lower cost
2. Higher efficiency
3. Increased differentiation
4. Increased market power
5. Reduced competition
6. Economics of scale
7. Economic of scopes
8. International trade
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
DISADVANTAGE OF HORIZONTAL
INTEFRATIONBY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
1. Destroyed value
2. Legal repercussions
3. Reduced flexibility
3 basic kinds of market integration VIRTICAL
INTEGRATIONBY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
 Occurs when a firm performs more than one
activity in the sequence of the market process.
 Linking together of 2 or more functions in the
marketing process within a single firm or under
a single ownership.
 Makes possible to exercise control over both
quality and quantity of the product from the
beginning of the production process until the
products is ready for the consumer.
 Reduces the number of middle men in the
marketing channel.
EXAMPLE OF VERTICAL INTEGRATION
diagramBY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
End product--customer
Raw material
EXAMPLE OF VERTICAL INTEGRATION
 Apple Inc. is one of the best-known
companies for perfecting the art of
vertical integration.
 The company manufactures its custom A-
series chips for its iPhones and iPads. It
also manufactures its custom touch ID
fingerprint sensor.
 The company has also integrated
forward as much as backward.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
VIRTICAL INTEGRATION
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
I. FORWARD INTEGRATION
 a firm assumes another
function of marketing which is
closer to the consumption
function.
 EXAMPLE: Wholesaler
assuming the function of
retailing.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
EXAMPLE OF VERTICAL INTEGRATION
diagram
VIRTICAL INTEGRATION
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
II. BACKWARD INTEGRATION
 This involves ownership or a
combination of sources of supply.
 EXAMPLE: when a processing firm
assumes the function of
assembling/purchasing the product
from the villages.
VIRTICAL INTEGRATION
III. BALANCED VERTICAL
INTEGRATION
 The third type of vertical
integration is a combination of
the backward and the forward
vertical integration
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
3 basic kinds of market integration
CONGLOMERATIONBY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
 A combination of agencies or activities not directly
related to each other may, when it operates under
a unified management.
 A process whereby a business acquires a substantial
number of other unrelated businesses in order to
form a large and highly diversified corporation.
 EXAMPLE: the merger between the Walt Disney
Company and the American Broadcasting Company.
Because a conglomerate merger is one between
two strategically unrelated firms, it is unlikely that
the economic benefits will be generated for the
target or the bidder.
EXAMPLE OF conglomerate INTEGRATION
diagram
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
REASONS FOR THEMARKET INTEGRATION
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
 To remove transaction cost
 Foster competition
 Provide better signals for optimal
generation and consumption
decisions
 Improve security of supply
GLOBAL INTERSTATE SYSTEM
 The modern world-system is now a
global economy with a global
political system (the modern
interstate system).
 Refers to the relationship between
different state union.
 It also includes all the cultural
aspects and interaction networks of
the human population.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
IMPORTANCE OF GLOBAL INTERSTATE
SYSTEM
 A hegemon is a core state
that has a significantly
greater amount of
economic power than any
other state, and that takes
on the political role of
system leader.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
GLOBAL INTERSTATE SYSTEM:
The Development of World-Systems
 The world-systems perspective emerged
during the world revolution of 1968 and the
anti-war movement that produced a
generation of scholars who saw the peoples
of Global South (then called the “Third
World”) as more than an underdeveloped
backwater.
 It became widely understood that a global
power structure existed and that the people
of the non-core had been active participants
in their own liberation.

BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
GLOBAL INTERSTATE SYSTEM:
The Development of World-Systems
 The history of colonialism and decolonization
were seen to have importantly shaped the
structures and institutions of the whole global
system.
 A more profound awareness of Eurocentrism was
accompanied by the realization that most
national histories had been written as if each
country were on the moon.
 The nation state as an inviolate, pristine unit of
analysis was now seen to be an inadequate
model for the sociology of development.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
The World-Systems Theory
 World-systems theory is a macro-scale
approach to analyzing the world
history of the mankind and social
changes in different countries.
 The definition of the theory refers to
the division of labor, be it inter-
regionally or transnationally.
 Currently, the theory divides the world
into the core, semi-periphery and
periphery countries
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
GLOBAL INTERSTATE SYSTEM:
The Development of World-Systems
 World-systems are whole systems
of interacting polities and
settlements.
 Systemness means that these
polities and settlements are
interacting with one another in
important ways – interactions are
two-way, necessary, structured,
regularized and reproductive.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
Core nations
 Core nations appear to be powerful, wealthy
and highly independent of outside control.
 They are able to deal with bureaucracies
effectively; they have powerful militaries
and can boast with strong economies.
 Due to resources that are available to them
(mainly intellectual), they are able to be at
the forefront of technological progress and
have a significant influence on less developed
non-core nations.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
SEMI-PERIPHERAL NATIONS
 These regions have a less developed
economy and are not dominant in the
international trade.
 In terms of their influence on the world
economies, they end up midway between
the core and periphery countries.
 However, they strive to get into a
dominant position of the core nation, and
it was proved historically that it is possible
to gain major influence in the world and
become a core country.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
Peripheral nations
 These are the nations that are the least
economically developed.
 One of the main reasons for their peripheral
status is the high percentage of
uneducated people who can mainly provide
cheap unskilled labor to the core nations.
 There is a very high level of social
inequality, together with a relatively weak
government which is unable to control
country’s economic activity and the
extensive influence of the core nations.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
CONCEPT OF GLOBAL GOVERNANCE
 Global governance or world
governance is a movement
towards political cooperation
among transnational actors,
aimed at negotiating responses to
problems that affect more than
one state or region.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
ROLE OF GLOBAL GOVERNANCE
 Trade, climate change and the role of
values in global governance.
 The emerging field of global
governance has produced a number of
breakthroughs, as well as failures,
aimed at managing global problems
through the voluntary and ad hoc
cooperation of a diverse range of
international actors.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
IS THERE A NEED FOR GLOBAL
GOVERNANCE?
 Global governance is necessary because
humanity increasingly faces both
problems and opportunities that are
global in scale.
 Today, transnational problems such as
violence and pandemics routinely reach
across borders, affecting us all.
 The most important challenge for
humanity to overcome is that of
existential risks.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
IS GLOBAL GOVERNANCE MULTI FACETED?
 Global Governance aims to
prepare professionals to face
global challenges that require
specific legal and economic
competencies, as well as a wide
range of technical knowledge
and skills to manage cultural
mediations.
 This is why global governance is
multi-faceted.
What are the forms of global governance?
 Rosenau discusses these six types of
global governance.
 They are
1. top-down governance,
2. bottom-up governance,
3. market governance,
4. network governance,
5. side-by-side governance
6. complex web governance.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
TOP-DOWN GOVERNANCE
 A top-down approach to governance
presents a clear divide between top-level
policy formulation and the subsequent
implementation of these preset goals by
administrators and service providers.
 The process of enacting policy is viewed
as an implementation chain where links
must be forged between various
agencies.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
bottom-up governance
 The bottom-up implementation approach
initiates with the target groups and
service deliverers, because they find that
the target groups are the actual
implementors of policy.
 The top-down implementation approach
is a clear-cut system of command and
control—from the government to the
project, which concerns the people.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
bottom-up governance
DIAGRAMBY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
MARKET GOVERNANCE
 Market governance mechanisms (MGMs)
are formal, or informal rules, that
have been consciously designed to
change the behaviour of various
economic actors.
 This includes actors such as
individuals, businesses, organisations
and governments - who in turn
encourage sustainable development.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
MARKET GOVERNANCE DIAGRAM
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
network governance
 Network governance is "interfirm
coordination” that is characterized
by organic or informal social
system, in contrast to bureaucratic
structures within firms and formal
contractual relationships between
them.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
network governance DIAGRAM
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
COMPLEX Web governance
 Web governance is the process of
maintaining and managing an
online presence in an organized
way.
 The idea is to set certain
standards for your website and
hold yourself to them.
COMPLEX Web governance
 That can include both your own
organization’s standards and external
regulations or compliance standards,
such as WCAG 2.1 web accessibility
standards.
 The ultimate goal is to provide the
best user experience possible for your
website visitors by ensuring quality,
consistency, accessibility,
searchability, and more.
THANK YOU FOR READING!
CHELDHAYE

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Globalization

  • 2. INTRODUCTION: GLOBALIZATION  Globalization is the process by which the world, previously isolated through physical and technological distance, becomes increasingly interconnected.  It is manifested by the increase in interaction between people around the world that involves the sharing of ideas, cultures, goods, services, economic, political, cultural, ideological, investment environmental and processes aided by information technology. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 3. GLOBALIZATION: A CONTESTED CONCEPT  Globalization first appeared in the 1940s, but did not gain widespread traction until the 1990s.  It is sometimes mistaken for an unstoppable juggernaut ‘Americanizing’ the world.  However, a more nuanced understanding of the interactions between the local, national, regional, and global. Indiscriminate use of the word ‘globalization’ is confusing. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 4. GLOBALIZATION: A CONTESTED CONCEPT  Globalization is a set of social processes that lead to the social condition of globality, through the growing consciousness of global connectivity.  There is no consensus on exactly what processes constitute globalization, but common themes include the creation of networks, expansion of social relations, and the acceleration of social exchange. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 5. Globalization and history: is globalization a new phenomenon?  Globalization is commonly thought of as a new phenomenon, but contact between diverse individuals is not new.  It began when prehistoric tribes settled and were able to outmuscle wandering tribes.  The premodern period saw technological advances that allowed trade and communication to flourish. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 6. Globalization and history: is globalization a new phenomenon?  The early modern period saw the birth of capitalism and regional markets.  The modern period saw the Industrial Revolution provide massive advances in technology at the expense of the environment.  The contemporary era is an era of convergence, with people coming together through deregulated economic and ICT systems. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 7. 3 components of economic globalization  Academic literature commonly subdivides globalization into three major areas: 1. Economic globalization 2. Cultural/social globalization 3. Political globalization BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 8. I. Economic globalization  It refers to the widespread international movement of goods, capital, services, technology and information.  Economic globalization primarily comprises the globalization of: 1. production 2. finance 3. markets 4. technology 5. Organizational 6. regimes 7. institutions 8. corporations 9. labour BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 9. Economic globalization  The economic globalization is one most often mentioned in the media.  It is associated with massive amounts of financial traded daily on the different stock markets around the label “NEW ECONOMY”. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 10. Economic globalization  In order to monitor the economy, 3 economic institutions were created: 1. THE INTERNATIONAL MONITARY FUND (IMF) --would oversee the international monetary system; BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 11. Economic globalization 2. The International Banks for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD later named the WORLD BANK (WB) -- would provide loans for European reconstruction but later expanded its activities to the developing world; BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 12. Economic globalization  The General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT, renamed of the WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION in 1992) --would oversee multilateral trade agreements.  For about 30 years, this system remained in place and provided economic stability and prosperity to Western nations. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 13. The economic dimension of globalization  In the 1980s neoliberalism liberalized financial transactions.  However, this unstable growth led to the Great Financial Crash, where banks traded toxic assets without regulation.  Transnational corporations rival nation-states in economic power, and have had a profound effect on the structure and function of the global economy.  The Washington Consensus was drafted to reform indebted developing countries, but it has thus far rarely helped countries develop. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 14. The economic dimension of globalization  The economic dimension of globalization’ explores how the way people have undertaken economic production has changed.  The global economic order emerged after World War II, when the Bretton Woods Conference laid the foundations for the IMF, World Bank, and WTO. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 15. II. CULTURAL GLOBALIZATION  Cultural Globalization refers to the rapid transmission of ideas, meanings, and values and cultural products across around the world in such a way as to extend and intensify social relations. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 16. CULTURAL GLOBALIZATION  This process is marked by the common consumption of mono-cultures that have been diffused by the Internet, popular culture media, and international travel, entertainment transnational marketing of particular brands and international tourism – that transcends local cultural traditions and lifestyles, and that shapes the perceptions, aspirations, tastes and everyday activities of people wherever they may live in the world’. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 17. CULTURAL GLOBALIZATION 1. MIGRATION is an important aspect of cultural globalization.  This process has been going on for several centuries, with languages, religious beliefs, and values being spread by military conquest, missionary work, and trade.  However, in the last 30 years, the process of cultural globalization has dramatically intensified due technological advances in both transportation and communications technology. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 18. CULTURAL GLOBALIZATION  THE GLOBALIZATION OF FOOD is one of the most obvious examples of cultural globalization – food consumption is an important aspect of culture and most societies around the world have diets that are unique to them, however the cultural globalization of food has been promoted by fast food giants such as McDonald’s, Coca-Cola and Starbucks.  The spread of these global food corporations has arguably led to the decline of local diets and eating traditions. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 19. CULTURAL GLOBALIZATION 2. THE GLOBALIZATION OF SPORT is another fairly obvious example of cultural globalization – think of all the international sporting events that take place – most notably the World Cup and The Olympics, and Formula 1, which bind millions together in a shared, truly global, ‘leisure experience’. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 20. CULTURAL GLOBALIZATION 3. CONVERGING GLOBAL CONSUMPTION PATTERNS – today you can go to pretty much any major city in the world and share in a similar ‘consumption experience’.  Also, more and more people in Asia and South-America are coming to enjoy high-consumption lifestyles like in the West – car ownership and tourism are both on the increase globally for example.  Central to this is the growth of similar styles of shopping malls, and leisure parks which provide a homogeneous cultural experience in different regions across the world. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 21. CULTURAL GLOBALIZATION  HOMOGENEITY comes to a society in a numbers of ways- ethnically(Japanese), religiously(many Arab nationals), culturally(Indians), politically(communism) etc.  Study has shown that the most prominent type of homogeneity is ethnicity, where everybody share similar physiological characteristics and cultural behavior .  Ethnic homogeneity still strong among many aboriginal groups in USA, Latin countries, China, Japan, South Asia and Africa. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 22. CULTURAL GLOBALIZATION  FINANCIAL HOMOGENEITY also exists in many countries. It was prevalent in many communist countries-this type of homogenous society is in decline now-a day.  North Korea is a great example of financial homogeneity, at extreme level, another good example is Scandinavian countries, where the government make sure that every citizen of their country enjoy high level of living standards. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 23. CULTURAL GLOBALIZATION  THE GLOBAL VILLAGE/ GLOBAL CONSCIOUSNESS-- Individuals and families are now more directly plugged into news from the outside world – some of the most gripping events of the past decade have unfolded in real time in front of a global audience. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 24. CULTURAL GLOBALIZATION  According to Giddens this means that more and more people have a more ‘global outlook’ and increasingly identify with a global audience – for example, television reporting of natural disasters in developing countries result in people in wealthier countries donating money to charities such as Oxfam to assist with relief efforts. Giddens developed the concept of ‘Cosmopolitanism’ to describe this process of an emerging global identity. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 25. CULTURAL GLOBALIZATION  DETRADITIONALISATION--In his classic 1999 text, Runaway World, Anthony Giddens argues that one consequence of globalization is detraditionalisation – where people question their traditional beliefs about religion, marriage, and gender roles and so on. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 26. CULTURAL GLOBALIZATION  GLOBAL RISKS/ GLOBAL RISK CONSCIOUSNESS--Ulrich Beck (1992) argues that a fundamental feature of globalization is the development of a global risk consciousness, which emerges due to shared global problems which threaten people in multiple countries  EXAMPLES: • the threat of terrorism, • international nuclear war • the threat of global pandemics • the rise of organized crime funded primarily through international drug trafficking • the threat of planetary melt-down due to global warming. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 27. THE CULTURAL DIMENSION OF GLOBALIZATION  The cultural dimension of globalization’ explores the intensification and expansion of cultural flows across the globe.  Critics of cultural globalization claim that the world is being homogenized or ‘Americanized’.  However, advocates say that globalization reinvigorates niche cultures instead of eliminating them. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 28. THE CULTURAL DIMENSION OF GLOBALIZATION  The existence of the global imaginary is linked to the rise of global media networks.  These networks are owned by a small group of transnational corporations, which can affect journalistic integrity. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 29. THE CULTURAL DIMENSION OF GLOBALIZATION  Several different hypotheses exist about the effects of language globalization.  Some say that it leads to protection of native tongues.  On the other hand, some foresee the rise of a ‘Globish’ language. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 30. III. political globalization  It refers to the growth of the worldwide political system, both in size and complexity.  It includes: 1. national governments, 2. their governmental and 3. intergovernmental organizations 4. government-independent elements of global civil society such as: a. international non-governmental organizations b. social movement organizations. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 31. The political dimension of globalization  ‘The political dimension of globalization’ looks at political arrangements beyond the nation-state.  Traditional politics harboured an ‘us’ and ‘them’ mentality.  Contemporary globalization has led to a permeation of those borders. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 32. The political dimension of globalization  The modern nation-state came into being after the Protestant Reformation, characterized by centralized government and self-determination.  The rise of organizations such as the United Nations has threatened the nation-state, according to globalization sceptics.  However, national governments still hold significant powers. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 33. The political dimension of globalization  There has been a rise in the number of supra-territorial institutions, operating from the local level all the way to the global level.  Some commentators ultimately see a global civil society, although critics question the feasibility of this. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 34. III. political globalization  One of the key aspects of the political globalization is the declining importance of the nation-state and the rise of other actors on the political scene.  The creation and existence of the United Nations has been called one of the classic examples of political globalization. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 35. political globalization UNITED NATIONS AND ITS ROLE IN GLOBALIZATION  It is an international organization created on 24th October of 1945 when the UN charter was signed.  MAIN OBJECTIVES ARE: 1. to maintain international peace and security and 2. promoting human rights and global development. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 36. political globalization Member states of the United Nations  The United Nations member states are the 193 sovereign states that are members of the United Nations (UN) and have equal representation in the UN General Assembly and 51 founding countries.  The UN is the world's largest intergovernmental organization which is based in New York (Headquarter). BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 37. STRUCTURES: GLOBAL ECONOMYBY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 38. I. What is Global Economy?  The world economy or global economy is the economy of the humans of the world, considered as the international exchange of goods and services that is expressed in monetary units of account. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 39. Global Economy  Typical EXAMPLES of economic globalization are the global supply chains now standard for the manufacture of many devices, ranging from cars to smart phones; the processes surrounding raw materials, components, and assembly may take place across multiple countries. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 40. What is the importance of Global Economy?  Because of its size and interconnectedness, developments in the US economy are bound to have important effects around the world.  The US has the world’s single largest economy, accounting for almost a quarter of global GDP (at market exchange rates), one-fifth of global FDI, and more than a third of stock market capitalization.  It is the most important export destination for one-fifth of countries around the world. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 41. FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 42. Changing Structure: Global Economy  Since the end of World War II, the global economy has steadily increased its trade and financial openness, enabled in part by the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the World Bank, and the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), now the World Trade Organization (WTO). BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 43. Changing Structure of the Global Economy  In parallel, colonialism, with its inherent constraints on economic development and its built-in asymmetries, collapsed. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 44. Changing Structure of the Global Economy  As formal barriers to trade and capital flows declined, a number of other trends combined to accelerate the growth and structural changes in the developing economies.
  • 45. Changing Structure of the Global Economy THEY INCLUDED: 1. advances in transportation and communications technology 2. management innovation in multinational companies 3. a process of learning about doing business in multiple and diverse environments 4. and the integration of multinational supply chains. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 46. Changing Structure of the Global Economy  The shape of global supply chains is constantly shifting.  Countries enter and engage with the global economy at different times and expand at different rates. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 47. Changing Structure of the Global Economy  The early high-growth economies— Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan— initially exported labor-intensive products, then graduated to more capital-intensive products such as automobiles and motorcycles, and then to human capital intensive activities such as design and technology development. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 48. DO CHANGING STRUCTURE OF THE GLOBAL ECONOMY AFFECT THE PHILIPPINES? Relating to us… BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 49. What kind of economy is the Philippines?  The Philippines has a mixed economic system which includes a variety of private freedom, combined with centralized economic planning and government regulation.  Philippines is a member of the Asia- Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN). BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 50. PHILIPPINES: COMPETING IN GLOBAL ECONOMY  The economy of the Philippines is the world's 34th largest economy by nominal GDP according to the 2017 estimate of the International Monetary Fund's statistics, it is the 13th largest economy in Asia, and the 3rd largest economy in the ASEAN after Indonesia and Thailand.  The Philippines is one of the emerging markets and is the sixth richest in Southeast Asia by GDP per capita values, after the regional countries of Singapore, Brunei, Malaysia, Thailand and Indonesia. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 51. PHILIPPINES: NEW INDUSTIALIZED COUNTRY  The Philippines is primarily considered a newly industrialized country, which has an economy in transition from one based on agriculture to one based more on services and manufacturing.  As of 2017, GDP by purchasing power parity was estimated to be at $1.980 trillion. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 52. PHILIPPINES: a tiger cub in economic globalization  Primary exports include semiconductors and electronic products, transport equipment, garments, copper products, petroleum products, coconut oil, and fruits.  Major trading partners include Japan, China, the United States, Singapore, South Korea, the Netherlands, Hong Kong, Germany, Taiwan and Thailand.  The Philippines has been named as one of the Tiger Cub Economies together with Indonesia, and Thailand. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 53. PHILIPPINES: ECONOMIC TRANSITIONBY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 54. World Bank Forecasts, Selected Asian Economies World Bank: Global Economy to Recover in 2017, Led by India, Philippines, China and Vietnam BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 55. STRUCTURES: MARKET INTEGRATIONBY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 56. What is global market integration?  Global market integration means that price differences between countries are eliminated as all markets become one.  One way to the progress of globalization is to look at trends how prices converge or become similar across countries. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 57. The law of one price  states that the prices of identical security, commodities or asset traded anywhere that are exchanged in two or more markets must be the same regardless of location and currency.  In an efficient market, there must be only one price for commodities regardless of where they are traded. Identical goods must have identical prices.  For EXAMPLE, an ounce of gold must have the same price expressed in terms of dollars in London as it does in Tokyo. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 58. The law of one price  The law of one price is a variation of Purchasing Power Parity that relates to a single commodity as opposed to a basket of goods.  This theory postulates that the difference in prices for identical commodities in two countries is due to the foreign exchange (FX) rate between the two countries. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 59. MARKET INTEGRATION in 21st century  Globalization—the integration of people with world markets—is perhaps the most significant and pervasive economic development of the late 20th and early 21st Centuries.  It is the subject of a small but growing body of empirical economic research at the national and multi-national levels. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 60. MARKET INTEGRATION  In economics research, globalization means trade integration.  As market liberalization and trade integration climb to the top of the economic policy agenda in many countries, development economists increasingly focus their attention on market imperfections that may inhibit trade and create welfare losses. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 61. MARKET INTEGRATION  As economic integration unfolds, producers become inserted directly into global markets on the output side, through production of exports, and/or on the input side, through imported intermediate inputs, technologies, or factors. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 62. MARKET INTEGRATION: Migration  Migration is the principal mechanism by which households in less developed countries (LDCs), especially in rural areas, become directly inserted into the global economy. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 63. MARKET INTEGRATION: Migration  Globalization is not internationalization, but the effective erasure of national boundaries-opening the way not only to free mobility of capital and goods but also, in effect, to free movement (or uncontrolled migration) of vast labor tools from regions of rapid population growth and the impacts on national economies could be tragic.  BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 64. MARKET INTEGRATION: MICROECONOMICS  “MICROECONOMICS OF GLOBALIZATION” refers also to the myriad ways in which economic actors also may become inserted into the global economy indirectly, through their relations with other economic agents within local, regional, and national markets. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 65. MARKET INTEGRATION: MICROECONOMICS  It is the study of the economic behavior of individuals, households and firms.  Where macroeconomics looks at the big picture of the economy, microeconomics looks at the individual behaviors that drive economic processes. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 66. Examples of microeconomics 1. Demand 2. Supply 3. Prices 4. Elasticity 5. Opportunity Cost 6. Labor Economics 7. Competition 8. Competitive Advantage 9. Consumer Choice 10. Consumer Confidence 11. Business Confidence 12. Information Economics 13. Welfare Economics 14. Productivity BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 67. microeconomics Demand  How demand for goods is influenced by income, preferences, prices and other factors such as expectations. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 68. microeconomics Supply  How producers decide to enter markets, scale production and exit markets. Law of Supply and Demand Demand falls, Supply Rises Demand rises, Supply falls supply BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 69. microeconomics Prices  How individuals, households and firms react to prices and influence prices with their supply and demand.  For EXAMPLE, the observation that some customary prices appear to be sticky in that consumers resist buying above a particular historically established price. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 70. microeconomics Elasticity  Elasticity is how supply and demand reacts to change.  For EXAMPLE, a household that demands less of a good when the price increases due to the availability of substitutes. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 71. microeconomics Opportunity Cost  The tradeoffs that individuals and firms make to manage constrained resources such as time, money, capital and land.  EXAMPLE, you spend time and money going to a movie, you cannot spend that time at home reading a book, and you can't spend the money on something else. Time is precious BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 72. microeconomics Labor Economics  Modeling the supply and demand for labor.  focus on human capital (referring to the skills that workers possess, not necessarily their actual work).  For EXAMPLE, looking at how expectations for economic growth impact the labour participation rate. humans use to produce goods and services BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 73. microeconomics Competition  Modeling competition in markets.  Three types of competition 1) Direct competitors 2) Indirect competitor 3) Phantom competitors  For EXAMPLE, the use of game theory to model a price war between competitors. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 74. microeconomics Competitive Advantage  Competitive advantage is the ability of certain firms to outcompete all competition in a particular area.  3 Tips to Determine Your Competitive Advantage 1. Price 2. Product 3. Customer experience  For EXAMPLE, a sporting goods company with superior brand recognition and a positive brand image that can charge premium prices and still enjoy high demand for its products. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 75. microeconomics Consumer Choice  How needs, perceptions and information shape consumer choices.  2 influences on a person’s consumption choice: 1. their income 2. prices of the goods  For EXAMPLE, the idea that consumers maximize their expected utility of purchases meaning that they buy the things they expect to be most useful to them. IT’S YOUR BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 76. microeconomics Consumer Confidence  How consumer expectations for the future influence spending, saving, investment and labor participation.  Is an economic indicator that measures the degree of optimism that consumers feel about the overall state of the economy and their personal financial situation.  EXAMPLE, When consumer confidence is high, consumers make more purchases. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 77. microeconomics Business Confidence  How producer expectations for the future influence hiring, capital investment and supply.  Business confidence index (BCI) -provides information on future developments, based upon opinion surveys on developments in production, orders and stocks of finished goods in the industry sector. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 78. 3 basic kinds of market integration Horizontal integration  This occurs when a firm or agency gains control of other firms or agencies performing similar marketing functions at the same level in the marketing sequence.  This type of integration sometimes combine agencies to form a union with a view to reduce their effective number and the extent of actual competition in the market. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 79. EXAMPLE OF HORIZONTAL INTEGRATION BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT Two or more companies produce the same goods or services It is also known as horizontal merger
  • 80. EFFECTS OF HORIZONTAL INTEGRATION BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT  Buying out competitor in a time bound way to reduce competition.  Gaining larger share of the market and higher profits  Attaining economies of scale  Specializing in trade
  • 81. ADVANTAGE OF HORIZONTAL INTEFRATION 1. Lower cost 2. Higher efficiency 3. Increased differentiation 4. Increased market power 5. Reduced competition 6. Economics of scale 7. Economic of scopes 8. International trade BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 82. DISADVANTAGE OF HORIZONTAL INTEFRATIONBY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT 1. Destroyed value 2. Legal repercussions 3. Reduced flexibility
  • 83. 3 basic kinds of market integration VIRTICAL INTEGRATIONBY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT  Occurs when a firm performs more than one activity in the sequence of the market process.  Linking together of 2 or more functions in the marketing process within a single firm or under a single ownership.  Makes possible to exercise control over both quality and quantity of the product from the beginning of the production process until the products is ready for the consumer.  Reduces the number of middle men in the marketing channel.
  • 84. EXAMPLE OF VERTICAL INTEGRATION diagramBY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT End product--customer Raw material
  • 85. EXAMPLE OF VERTICAL INTEGRATION  Apple Inc. is one of the best-known companies for perfecting the art of vertical integration.  The company manufactures its custom A- series chips for its iPhones and iPads. It also manufactures its custom touch ID fingerprint sensor.  The company has also integrated forward as much as backward. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 86. VIRTICAL INTEGRATION BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT I. FORWARD INTEGRATION  a firm assumes another function of marketing which is closer to the consumption function.  EXAMPLE: Wholesaler assuming the function of retailing.
  • 87. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT EXAMPLE OF VERTICAL INTEGRATION diagram
  • 88. VIRTICAL INTEGRATION BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT II. BACKWARD INTEGRATION  This involves ownership or a combination of sources of supply.  EXAMPLE: when a processing firm assumes the function of assembling/purchasing the product from the villages.
  • 89. VIRTICAL INTEGRATION III. BALANCED VERTICAL INTEGRATION  The third type of vertical integration is a combination of the backward and the forward vertical integration BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 90. 3 basic kinds of market integration CONGLOMERATIONBY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT  A combination of agencies or activities not directly related to each other may, when it operates under a unified management.  A process whereby a business acquires a substantial number of other unrelated businesses in order to form a large and highly diversified corporation.  EXAMPLE: the merger between the Walt Disney Company and the American Broadcasting Company. Because a conglomerate merger is one between two strategically unrelated firms, it is unlikely that the economic benefits will be generated for the target or the bidder.
  • 91. EXAMPLE OF conglomerate INTEGRATION diagram BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 92. REASONS FOR THEMARKET INTEGRATION BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT  To remove transaction cost  Foster competition  Provide better signals for optimal generation and consumption decisions  Improve security of supply
  • 93. GLOBAL INTERSTATE SYSTEM  The modern world-system is now a global economy with a global political system (the modern interstate system).  Refers to the relationship between different state union.  It also includes all the cultural aspects and interaction networks of the human population. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 94. IMPORTANCE OF GLOBAL INTERSTATE SYSTEM  A hegemon is a core state that has a significantly greater amount of economic power than any other state, and that takes on the political role of system leader. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 95. GLOBAL INTERSTATE SYSTEM: The Development of World-Systems  The world-systems perspective emerged during the world revolution of 1968 and the anti-war movement that produced a generation of scholars who saw the peoples of Global South (then called the “Third World”) as more than an underdeveloped backwater.  It became widely understood that a global power structure existed and that the people of the non-core had been active participants in their own liberation.  BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 96. GLOBAL INTERSTATE SYSTEM: The Development of World-Systems  The history of colonialism and decolonization were seen to have importantly shaped the structures and institutions of the whole global system.  A more profound awareness of Eurocentrism was accompanied by the realization that most national histories had been written as if each country were on the moon.  The nation state as an inviolate, pristine unit of analysis was now seen to be an inadequate model for the sociology of development. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 97. The World-Systems Theory  World-systems theory is a macro-scale approach to analyzing the world history of the mankind and social changes in different countries.  The definition of the theory refers to the division of labor, be it inter- regionally or transnationally.  Currently, the theory divides the world into the core, semi-periphery and periphery countries BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 98. GLOBAL INTERSTATE SYSTEM: The Development of World-Systems  World-systems are whole systems of interacting polities and settlements.  Systemness means that these polities and settlements are interacting with one another in important ways – interactions are two-way, necessary, structured, regularized and reproductive. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 99. Core nations  Core nations appear to be powerful, wealthy and highly independent of outside control.  They are able to deal with bureaucracies effectively; they have powerful militaries and can boast with strong economies.  Due to resources that are available to them (mainly intellectual), they are able to be at the forefront of technological progress and have a significant influence on less developed non-core nations. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 100. SEMI-PERIPHERAL NATIONS  These regions have a less developed economy and are not dominant in the international trade.  In terms of their influence on the world economies, they end up midway between the core and periphery countries.  However, they strive to get into a dominant position of the core nation, and it was proved historically that it is possible to gain major influence in the world and become a core country. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 101. Peripheral nations  These are the nations that are the least economically developed.  One of the main reasons for their peripheral status is the high percentage of uneducated people who can mainly provide cheap unskilled labor to the core nations.  There is a very high level of social inequality, together with a relatively weak government which is unable to control country’s economic activity and the extensive influence of the core nations. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 102. CONCEPT OF GLOBAL GOVERNANCE  Global governance or world governance is a movement towards political cooperation among transnational actors, aimed at negotiating responses to problems that affect more than one state or region. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 103. ROLE OF GLOBAL GOVERNANCE  Trade, climate change and the role of values in global governance.  The emerging field of global governance has produced a number of breakthroughs, as well as failures, aimed at managing global problems through the voluntary and ad hoc cooperation of a diverse range of international actors. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 104. IS THERE A NEED FOR GLOBAL GOVERNANCE?  Global governance is necessary because humanity increasingly faces both problems and opportunities that are global in scale.  Today, transnational problems such as violence and pandemics routinely reach across borders, affecting us all.  The most important challenge for humanity to overcome is that of existential risks. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 105. IS GLOBAL GOVERNANCE MULTI FACETED?  Global Governance aims to prepare professionals to face global challenges that require specific legal and economic competencies, as well as a wide range of technical knowledge and skills to manage cultural mediations.  This is why global governance is multi-faceted.
  • 106. What are the forms of global governance?  Rosenau discusses these six types of global governance.  They are 1. top-down governance, 2. bottom-up governance, 3. market governance, 4. network governance, 5. side-by-side governance 6. complex web governance. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 107. TOP-DOWN GOVERNANCE  A top-down approach to governance presents a clear divide between top-level policy formulation and the subsequent implementation of these preset goals by administrators and service providers.  The process of enacting policy is viewed as an implementation chain where links must be forged between various agencies. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 108. bottom-up governance  The bottom-up implementation approach initiates with the target groups and service deliverers, because they find that the target groups are the actual implementors of policy.  The top-down implementation approach is a clear-cut system of command and control—from the government to the project, which concerns the people. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 109. bottom-up governance DIAGRAMBY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 110. MARKET GOVERNANCE  Market governance mechanisms (MGMs) are formal, or informal rules, that have been consciously designed to change the behaviour of various economic actors.  This includes actors such as individuals, businesses, organisations and governments - who in turn encourage sustainable development. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 111. MARKET GOVERNANCE DIAGRAM BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 112. network governance  Network governance is "interfirm coordination” that is characterized by organic or informal social system, in contrast to bureaucratic structures within firms and formal contractual relationships between them. BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 113. network governance DIAGRAM BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO,MPA,JD,LPT
  • 114. COMPLEX Web governance  Web governance is the process of maintaining and managing an online presence in an organized way.  The idea is to set certain standards for your website and hold yourself to them.
  • 115. COMPLEX Web governance  That can include both your own organization’s standards and external regulations or compliance standards, such as WCAG 2.1 web accessibility standards.  The ultimate goal is to provide the best user experience possible for your website visitors by ensuring quality, consistency, accessibility, searchability, and more.
  • 116. THANK YOU FOR READING! CHELDHAYE

Hinweis der Redaktion

  1. 1936-38—1ST computer invented : John W. Mauchly and J. Presper Eckert at the University of Pennsylvania. ENIAC (Electrical Numerical Integrator and Calculator) used a word of 10 decimal digits instead of binary ones like previous automated calculators/computers. ENIAC was also the first machine to use more than 2,000 vacuum tubes, using nearly 18,000 vacuum tubes; westernized country: USA. Canada. Spain. Portugal. France. UK. Ireland. Luxembourg.
  2. United Nations--founded in 1945 after the Second World War by 51 countries; Maintaining worldwide peace and security. Developing relations among nations. Fostering cooperation between nations in order to solve economic, social, cultural, or humanitarian international problems.
  3. Prehistoric tribes--Kevin H. O'Rourke, Jeffrey G. Williamson. Some world historians attach globalization big bang' significance to 1492 (Christopher Colombus stumbles on the Americas in search of spices) and 1498 (Vasco da Gama makes an end run around Africa and snatches monopoly rents away from the Arab and Venetian spice traders)
  4. Rise of the Merchant Class. The relatively static feudal way of life, which had endured for centuries, began to break down at the beginning of the 16th Century. A primary cause of the shift away from feudalism was increased foreign trade, which led to the emergence of a new class of merchant capitalist. capitalism, revolves around production --Capitalism started to emerge during the 17th Century. ... Its introduction was the final stage in the “buyer uppers” transition from merchant, (making money from trade), to capitalist (deriving wealth from the ownership and control of the means of production)..
  5. organization of 189 countries, working to foster global monetary cooperation, secure financial stability, facilitate international trade, promote high employment and sustainable economic growth, and reduce poverty around the world. #74 Philippines--9,494—based on Gross domestic product (GDP) based on purchasing-power-parity (PPP) per capita.
  6. originally created as the (IBRD) in 1944 along with its twin, the IMF. Together they came to be known as the ‘Bretton Woods’ twin sisters’. When it was set up it was decided that this international bank would assist in the economic reconstruction of the World War II-damaged European economies. In early 1946 this international bank launched its carrier as the multilateral development bank and since then the IBRD came to be known as the World Bank. Its headquarters is located in Washington, opposite the IMF building, and it lies as the next door neighbour of the White House.--supports a broad range of programmes aimed at reducing poverty and improving living standards in the developing world including the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) by helping countries develop an environment for investment, jobs Its objective __Investing in people, particularly through basic health and education; (ii) Focusing on social development, gover­nance and institution-building as the major elements of poverty alleviation; (iii) Strengthening the ability of the govern­ments to deliver quality services with greater efficiency and transparency; (iv) Protecting the environment; (v) Supporting and encouraging private business development and long-term planning.
  7. (WTO) is the only international organization dealing with the global rules of trade. Its main function is to ensure that trade flows as smoothly, predictably and freely as possible.  WTO is the successor to the (GATT), which was created in 1947 in the expectation that it would soon be replaced by a specialized agency of the (UN) to be called the International Trade Organization (ITO). Although the ITO never materialized, the GATT proved remarkably successful in liberalizing world trade over the next five decades. 
  8. benefits of neoliberalism--increased real wages, job creation and economic growth. Washington Consensus-constitute the "standard“reform package promoted for crisis-wracked developing countries by Washington, D.C.-based institutions such as the International Monetary Fund (IMF), World Bank and United States Department of the Treasury.
  9. New International Economic Order (NIEO)-through the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development to promote their interests by improving their terms of trade, increasing development assistance, developed-country tariff reductions. A tariff is a tax on imports. The CBP typically requires importers to pay the duties within 10 days of their shipments clearing customs. So the tariffs are paid to the U.S. government by importing companies.- Governments impose tariffs to raise revenue, protect domestic industries, or exert political leverage over another country. Tariffs often result in unwanted side effects, such as higher consumer prices.
  10. Indian physicist and activist Vandana Shiva calls it "monoculture of the mind." Dominated by US and Western values and lifestyles, driven by a consumer-based, free-market ideology and carried through the massive US entertainment-industrial complex, the global monoculture has infiltrated every corner of the Earth.
  11. The World Economic Forum defines globalization as “the process by which people and goods move easily across borders.” As such, you can’t have globalization without human migration. , The nature of migration varies greatly between countries. In some, such as the United States and France, most of those immigrating legally are doing so for family reasons – they are either going to join close relatives who are already living in these countries or to begin married life. In others, such as Switzerland, most immigrants travel because they have a right to work and live in the country. There are other differences: In the traditional “settlement countries,” such as Australia, Canada and the United States, most immigrants are planning to settle permanently.
  12. 3. The FIA Formula One World Championship has been one of the premier forms of racing around the world since its inaugural season in 1950. The word "formula" in the name refers to the set of rules to which all participants' cars must conform.--it's a street race rather than a circuit race. The time it takes to finish the race is usually around 90 minutes and can be no longer than two hours, for driver safety reasons.
  13. A homogeneous culture is a society comprised of people of the same race. ... In general, they speak the same language and abide by the same societal norms and traditions. Homogeneous cultures are often considered very prosperous and stable because of their uniformity, with the Japanese being a prime example
  14. According to Giddens (1990, p. 64), globalization is “the intensification of worldwide social relations which link distant localities in such way that local happenings are shaped by events occurring many miles away and vice versa”, thereby changing all aspects of our everyday life. Cosmopolitanism is the ideology that all human beings belong to a single community, based on a shared morality. A person who adheres to the idea of cosmopolitanism in any of its forms is called a Cosmopolitan or Cosmopolite.
  15. He uses the concept of ‘detraditionalisation’ rather than ‘decline of tradition’ to reflect the fact that in many cases people continue with their traditional ways of life, rather than actually changing them, but the very fact that they are now actively questioning aspects of their lives means cultures are much less stable and less predictable than before globalization, because more people are aware of the fact that there are alternative ways of doing things and that they can change traditions if they want to.
  16. the constant media focus on such global problems has led to a widespread culture of fear and increasing anxiety across the globe, which has arguably contributed to things such as Paranoid Parenting and Brexit, but on the plus side, new global international movements and agencies have emerged through which people come together across borders to tackle such problems.
  17. Globish, a blend of the words global and English, was coined by French businessman Jean-Paul Nerrière in the mid-1990s
  18. nation-state is a defined territory with a sovereign government, made up of people sharing a common culture, history, and language. 1st modern nation-states were Spain, England and France, and they emerged as nation-states during the fifteenth century.
  19. The massive turmoil that the Reformation caused had a lasting impact on European politics. Soon after the Catholic Church deemed Martin Luther a “protestant,”
  20. a state is argued to have supraterritoriality when it can prosecute its own citizens or corporations even if they are no longer residing within the immediate territory of the state.
  21. The Charter of the United Nations (also known as the UN Charter) of 1945 is the foundational treaty of the United Nations, an intergovernmental organization. Furthermore, Article 103 of the Charter states that obligations to the United Nations prevail over all other treaty obligations
  22. 1. The Gross Domestic Product measures the value of economic activity within a country. Strictly defined, GDP is the sum of the market values, or prices, of all final goods and services produced in an economy during a period of time. 2. A foreign direct investment (FDI) is an investment in the form of a controlling ownership in a business in one country by an entity based in another country.
  23. Foreign direct investment is critical for developing and emerging market countries. Their companies need the multinationals' funding and expertise to expand their international sales. advantage of FDI is that it offsets the volatility created by "hot money." That's when short-term lenders and currency traders create an asset bubble. They invest lots of money all at once, then sell their investments just as fast.
  24. Asymmetries-irregularities
  25. Capital intensive production requires more equipment and machinery to produce goods; therefore, require a larger financial investment. • Labor intensive refers to production that requires a higher labor input to carry out production activities in comparison to the amount of capital required
  26. Philippine Deforestation: Final Paper Deforestation is one of the most crucial problem of the Philippines today, because of poor economic performance, weak polices, legal institutions and government laws, increasing population, poverty, corruption , agricultural expansion and lastly, extensive commercial logging
  27. GDP is the sum of the market values, or prices, of all final goods and services produced in an economy during a period of time. The market value of an asset is determined by fluctuations in supply and demand. It should be noted that market value represents what someone is willing to pay for an asset -- not the value it is offered for or intrinsically worth. For example, say a person is selling their house for $300,000.
  28. In the Philippines, the volatility of inflation has been caused by factors such as disturbances in agricultural food supply or movements in international oil prices. As a result, the headline inflation rate may reach double-digit levels, even though the prices of other CPI components show only mild increases.
  29. A foreign exchange rate is the price of the domestic currency stated in terms of another currency. ... Since standardized currencies around the world float in value with demand, supply, and consumer confidence, their values change relative to each over time. Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) is measured by finding the values (in USD) of a basket of consumer goods that are present in each country
  30. MICROECONOMICS-the part of economics concerned with single factors and the effects of individual decisions.
  31. When economists refer to the “opportunity cost” of a resource, they mean the value of the next-highest-valued alternative use of that resource. If, for example, you spend time and money going to a movie, you cannot spend that time at home reading a book, and you can't spend the money on something else.
  32. Some common examples of capital include hammers, forklifts, conveyer belts, computers and delivery vans. Capital differs based on the worker and the type of work being done. Think of capital as the machinery, tools and buildings humans use to produce goods and services.
  33. when other businesses within the same sector, offering the same products compete with each other. when any small business is taking the customer away from you, by offering a product which does not exist in your portfolio. EXAMPLE: a movie theatre will consider cable television and DVD’s as its indirect competitors. when instead of buying your service or your product, customer chooses to purchase something else altogether. This type of competition involves business entities which do not exist in the typical frame of mind of customers. Tackling such competitors is very difficult because it is completely in the hand of the customers.
  34. Legal Repercussions--An author has the right to sue a plagiarist. Some plagiarism may also be deemed a criminal offense, possibly leading to a prison sentence. ... Writers are well-aware of copyright laws and ways to avoid plagiarism.
  35. A hegemon is a leading or major power. The United States has long been a hegemon in world politics.
  36. Eurocentrism (also Eurocentricity or Western-centrism) is a worldview centered on or biased towards Western civilization. The exact scope of centrism varies from the entire Western world to only Europe or even just Western Europe (especially during the Cold War).
  37. Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.1 defines how to make Web content more accessible to people with disabilities. Accessibility involves a wide range of disabilities, including visual, auditory, physical, speech, cognitive, language, learning, and neurological disabilities.