what is globalisation? why is it so important in trade?

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what is globalisation? why is it so important in trade?

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Anonymous 0 Comments

in general terms, it’s the idea that all the economies are interconnected – the US economy depends on imports from China, the EU, India, etc. – as much as they may depend on the US’s exports.

It’s not really a bad thing, at least when all the countries involved are playing nice with each other. But there’s various other socio-political things happening (eg: Ukraine) that shake things up to destabilize it; there’s other influences that might drag China’s market down, speculation that *perhaps* it’s related to China willing to keep trade open with Russia despite the Ukraine conflict.

;;

You can think of it as an analogy boiled down much more to a small neighborhood, and childhood kind of activities.

Lets say you start a lemonade stand. Your neighbor down the street also starts a lemonade stand – and while competition for customers is one thing, it actually drives both of you to make better lemonade, and work out the math for what kind of profit margin you can get.

But in doing so, you’re getting lemons from one neighbor, and your competition is getting lemons from another neighbor. Now there’s 2 lemonade stands, and 2 lemon producers.

One of your neighbors knows how to make tools and blow glass, but he’s the only one around to do it – that neighbor ends up supplying both of your lemonade stands with the pitchers & glasses to serve the lemonade; as well as the juicers and other equipment to make it.

You both have to look outside of your neighborhood for sugar – and you are able to negotiate an exclusive deal with a guy in the 2 blocks down. This is great for you because it keeps your costs of transporting the sugar. Your neighbor, however, is able to get superior quality sugar, but has to order it in from the next *city* over, not just 2 blocks away. Your neighbor’s lemonade is considered “better quality”, but it also costs a lot more and they charge more per glass.

That is – in a nut shell – globalization; except the neighbors here are different countries, and when we’re talking any local trade with the sugar, it’s you finding a sugar cane farmer in the same country, while your neighbor is turning to international exports.

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