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Who's afraid of globalization?
Published in The Saudi Gazette on 21 - 02 - 2017

GLOBALIZATION has become a much despised world today, thanks to the rise of right in the US and Europe and growing sentiment against immigrants and refugees. Not long ago though, Western pundits prescribed it as the panacea to all the problems of the world. Open borders and free trade were showcased as the be-all and end-all solution for struggling economies. Capitalism was the ultimate road to salvation and deliverance from poverty and all the attending afflictions.
It was largely due to that long and concerted campaign, aided by the persuasive Bretton Woods twins, the World Bank and IMF, that India and China, two of the biggest state-controlled economies, chucked the ideals of their founding fathers, Nehru and Mao respectively, embracing the glorious laissez-faire capitalism.
If it weren't for their enthusiastic adoption of free trade, unleashing their immense economic potential, it is hard to imagine the Asian neighbors as the world's fastest growing economies today. It's not just India and China; following the collapse of Soviet Union and defeat of socialist worldview, most countries around the world today more or less follow the same Western model of capitalism today.
After all, the world economy is dominated and run by the US, the world's largest economy, and its allies. In other words, this is the success and celebration of globalization, long preached and promoted by the West.
So why is it suddenly being panned in the West today? It seems globalization was great as long as it opened the doors to Western multinationals and their products in big, billion-plus markets. But with China becoming the factory floor of the world, this trend inevitably began to reverse.
Now if China has flooded world markets including those in the West with its cheap products and Japanese cars are pushing out those made in the US and Europe, India offers cheap IT solutions and bright, hardworking young men to run top US companies.
It's not just the Gulf Arab states that are dependent on the humble South Asian workers, whose blood and toil have spawned the so-called petrodollar economies; top Ivy League universities are also being increasingly peopled by the same modest men and women. It does not end there.
Thanks to the political and economic upheavals brought on by wars and conflicts, incidentally started by the empire, and one-sided, unfair trade practices, impoverished multitudes from the global South have been migrating up north.
This is something that champions of free markets hadn't clearly seen coming. For them globalization has always meant one-way street – the monopolization and exploitation of the Third World markets and their cheap human resource. All they want is their money sans their problems!
So it has become cool and rewarding for political and economic elites in the West to rail against immigrants and refugees, blaming them for taking away their jobs and creating all sorts of problems including terrorism and crime. But whose policies created these political and economic refugees?
If the Western economies are struggling and their population growth rate is stagnating, the new arrivals are hardly to blame. Most immigrants take up jobs — as has been the case in the Gulf — that no one in the West wants. They slog for long hours for relatively low pay. Indeed, if it weren't for the immigrants, the average age in America would be even lower than that of Europe, making it even harder to compete with the emerging economies.
It's just as well that it took someone from China to hold the mirror to the West. Speaking at the recent World Economic Forum in Davos, Jack Ma, the founder of e-commerce giant Alibaba, pointed out that over the last three decades the US had spent $14.2 trillion fighting 13 wars abroad. That money could easily have been invested at home, building infrastructure and creating jobs.
"You're supposed to spend money on your own people," he said. "It's not [that] the other countries steal jobs from you guys — it's your (own) strategy (that is responsible for this mess)."
Indeed, more than anything it was the catastrophic US wars in Middle East, cooked up by Bush, Blair and Company, that fueled the 2008 financial meltdown, wiping out Wall Street, not to mention the destruction of an entire country and loss of more than a million lives. Obama spent most of his eight years in White House putting out the fires started by his predecessor. And now his successor is trying hard to undo all that good work when he isn't busy blaming the rest of the world for Uncle Sam's woes.
Coming back to the debate; now that the poor and dispossessed of the Third World or global South are beginning to reach out for fruits of globalization, it has suddenly become a big, bad bogey and is being painted as "inequitable and unfair".
This when the world economy is still dominated by the US with at least 134 of Fortune 500 companies being American. As Fareed Zakaria argues, the US/Western companies have benefited immensely by having global supply chains that source goods and services around the world.
But this is changing, with the balance of world economy shifting eastward. In December 2016, for the first time since the fall of the Mogul empire, when India had been the world's largest economy, Indian economy surpassed that of UK, our former colonial masters. It wouldn't be long before China overtakes the US as the world's largest economy.
This week, ISRO launched 104 satellites in one go, setting a new world record and in a triumph of Indian scientists' enterprising spirit. At least 96 of those satellites belonged to the US while 3 were from the UAE.
It's not just India and China who are leading this proud pageant of Asian power. Some of the finest fabrics and international designer brands are today being produced in a poor country like Bangladesh.
So as you can see while globalization has had some adverse effects, especially on indigenous cultures, it has also benefited enterprising and hardworking communities and nations, pushing hundreds of millions out of poverty. It has generated immense wealth and huge economic opportunities where none existed. Having long pontificated to the rest of the world about the virtues of free markets and pushing it to adopt its model of growth, the West cannot cry now about the effects of globalization. This is a natural progression of things. You win some, you lose some! The future would be decided by the market forces.
Aijaz Zaka Syed is an award winning journalist. Email: [email protected]


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