What Does Dicken (1986) Mean When He Argues That Internationalisation Is Best Viewed As A “mosaic Of Essay, Research Paper
” The world economy is changing in fundamental ways. The changes add up to a basic transition, a structural shift in international markets and in the production base of advanced countries. It will change how production is organized, where it occurs, and who plays what role in the process. ” (Ref.i, Cohen,S.S. and Zysman,J. 1987) The global economy is changing dramatically with evidence of an increasingly extensive market for the production of goods and services and international trade. Methods of direct international investment are being controlled by an explosion of transnational corporations which span the globe. In effect there has been an increase of internationalisation. This is the, “notion that each country’s economy has become less self-contained and more part of a global process of production and change.” (Ref.ii, Harris,L.1988) In short, the world economy has become more open and accessible to each country’s fiscal activities with regard to trade, finance, investment and labour for example. This internationalisation is not a new phenomena and can be traced back many centuries to the first incidence of international trade. Throughout this evolution, internationalisation has affected different places in different ways, emphasizing a changing pattern of geographical inequality and the changing globalization of economic activity has proved its erratic nature, as Dicken (Ref.iii,1986) quotes Storper and Walker (1984), internationalisation can be described as, ” a mosaic of unevenness in a continuous state of flux”. Evidence of the evolution of a global market dates back to the period which Wallerstein has labelled the ‘long sixteenth century’. At this time (1450-1640), countries of the now Western World were witnessing an expansion of trade, with regard to rare items such as, spice, fine cloth and other exotic goods from exotic places, for the minority of its population. Also during this period, mercantilism became increasingly important as the core, semi-periphery, periphery notion was established. An important feature of this mercantilism for the core countries of the North, was colonialism as it was illustrative of a nation’s wealth and power. The earlier colonial powers were Spain and Portugal with their acquisitions in the Americas. They later became semi-peripheral and the North West of Europe, e.g.England, the Netherlands and France became the core economic leaders dominating the new world trading system. Industrialisation, which began in Britain in the late eighteenth century and which spread first across Europe then to the United States during the nineteenth century, enhanced the development of the already founded global economy. There existed more opportunities for trade between countries as most industrialising nations had to look beyond their borders for markets in which to sell their surplus output from the modern industries, and for extra raw materials needed when national supplies were exhausted, in an attempt to keep up with industrial demands. Imports were mainly from the core countries own colonies and exports of manufactured goods were primarily textiles, then heavier goods such as iron and steel. By 1870, Britain had become the ‘workshop of the world’ as it was producing almost one-third of the world’s entire manufacturing output. It can therefore be seen that from the first incidence of internationalisation of economic activity, the core-periphery structure emerged and that the industrialisation period, of the eighteenth century onwards, reinforced it. From the start, changing patterns within this structure are obvious; Spain and to a lesser extent Portugal, originally core countries, declined to semi-peripheral status and the U.S., initially a peripheral nation, improved itself to core status and the leading world industrial power of the twentieth century, taking Britain’s place. At the same time, peripheral nations had been involuntarily taking the back-seat in global economic activities and hence increasing the effects that this process has had on geographical inequality. Together with increasingly extensive flows of international trade, based on the core-periphery structure, the global economy has witnessed an expanded mobility of capital (and labour) from country to country. In particular, the outflows of money and workers from Europe to the mineral-rich overseas countries, helped to provide the increased supplies of foodstuffs and raw materials needed to feed Europe’s fast growing population and industry. So, during this period there was a redistribution of capital and labour, which became necessary for the expansion of the international economy. The global economy witnessed a considerable growth in foreign investment in the mid to late nineteenth century, with the establishment and growth of financial institutions, such as commercial banks and investment houses. These facilitated borrowing and lending and made foreign investment easier. Capital markets, such as ‘the City’, in London, became more diverse in dealings and thereby enhancing international trade and foreign investment. This method of importing and exporting capital is beneficial to both the lending and borrowing nation in that it facilitates the diffusion of technological knowledge and hence increases productivity in the borrowing nation. However, when it comes down to it, the recipient country is in debt and the gap widens between rich and poor. The international economy, which had grown up during the nineteenth century, came to a standstill with the outbreak of war in 1914. Four years of conflict involving all the great industrial nations left severe problems for the world economy that were never completely solved in the economic restructuring of the post-war period. World-wide depression of the early 1930’s and the collapse of the Gold Standard caused even more of a rapid decline in the world economy, and it was only after five more years of war that the shattered global economic system, could engage in post-war reconstruction. In order to rebuild the international economy, an International Conference was held at Bretton Woods, New Hampshire in July, 1944, where delegates planned the establishment of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (World Bank). These operations were to enable the transfer of goods and services from one country to another, free of restrictions on trade or controls; and to help finance post-war economic reconstruction and to aid the developing nations, respectively. In the immediate period after World War Two, world production rose and economic recovery continued and by the early 1950’s, the first stage of post-war recovery of the international economy had been largely completed. The manufacturing industry grew at an unprecedented rate as it became more internationalised in character and international co-operation produced large flows of resources, commodities, ideas and technology. However, this period of internationalisation of economic activities differed from that of the second half of the nineteenth century, in that the century before, an interdependence had strongly existed between the industrialising nations and a number of underdeveloped countries. Whereas in the post-war period, such interdependence was less evident as industrial countries had fewer economic incentives to aid the Less Developed Countries, hence widening the gap between North and South. Despite this obvious unevenness, the decade of post-war reconstruction can still be seen as one of the most successful periods in the history of the international economy. Also during this period of restructuring the world economy, the International Trade Organization (ITO) was set up to encourage the expansion of world trade and employment and the first General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) was signed which was principally a non-discriminatory approach encouraging international trade and also condemning quantitative trade restrictions. As a consequence, the Western industrial nations experienced an improvement in trading conditions, as there was a shift in foreign demand away from food and raw materials and towards capital goods. This created malevolence and disfavoured the exports of the previously primary producing nations. Throughout these highs and lows in the world economic system, first Britain was, and now the U.S. is, the major dominating power at the head of a small group of core economies. Recently, the U.S.’s domination of the global economy has been challenged by West Germany, and now Japan and the Newly Industrializing Countries (NIC’s) of East and South East Asia (Taiwan, Singapore, Hong Kong and South Korea.) Former peripheral nations, these NIC’s have grown substantially in manufacturing. However, global economic growth is