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From the
Introduction:
Opening Scene
If nothing else, the cycle from Asoke Street to my
street and from Amazon.country to Amazon.com served
to educate me and many others about the state of the
world today. The slow, stable, chopped-up Cold War
system that had dominated international affairs since
1945 had been firmly replaced by a new, very greased,
interconnected system called globalization. We are
all one river. If we didn't fully understand
that in 1989, when the Berlin Wall came down, we sure
understood it a decade later. Indeed, on October 11,
1998, at the height of the global economic crisis,
Merrill Lynch ran full-page ads in major newspapers
through America to drive this point home. The ads
read
The World Is 10 Years Old
It was born when the Wall fell in 1989. It's no surprise
that the world's youngest economy -- the global economy
-- is still finding its bearings. The intricate
checks and balances that stabilize economies are only
incorporated with time. Many world markets are only
recently freed, governed for the first time by the
emotions of the people rather than the fists of the
state. From where we sit, none of this diminishes
the promise offered a decade ago by the demise of
the walled-off world ... The spread of free markets
and democracy around the world is permitting more
people everywhere to turn their aspirations into achievements.
And technology, properly harnessed and liberally distributed,
has the power to erase not just geographical borders
but also human ones. It seems to us that, for a 10-year-old,
the world continues to hold great promise. In the
meantime, no one ever said growing up was easy.
Actually, the Merrill Lynch ad would have been a
little more correct to say that this era of Globalization
is ten years old. Because from the mid-1800s to the
late 1900s the world experienced a similar era of
globalization. If you compared the volumes of trade
and capital flows across borders, relative to GNPs,
and the flow of labor across borders, relative to
populations, the period of globalization preceding
World War I was quite similar to the one we are living
through today. Great Britain, which was then the dominant
global power, was a huge investor in emerging markets,
and fat cats in England, Europe and America were often
buffeted by financial crises, triggered by something
that happened in Argentine railroad bonds, Latvian
government bonds or German government bonds. There
were no currency controls, so no sooner was the transatlantic
cable connected in 1866 than banking and financial
crises in New York were quickly being transmitted
to London or Paris. I was on a panel once with John
Monks, the head of the British Trades Union Council,
the AFI, CIO of Britain, who remarked that the agenda
for the TUCs first Congress in Manchester, England,
in 1868, listed among the items that needed to be
discussed: "The need to deal with competition
from the Asian colonies" and "The need to
match the educational and training standards of the
United States and Germany." In those days, people
also migrated more than we remember, and, other than
in wartime, countries did not require passports for
travel before 1914. All those immigrants who flooded
America's shores came without visas. When you put
all of these factors together, along with the inventions
of the steamship, telegraph, railroad and eventually
telephone, it is safe to say that this first era of
globalization before World War I shrank the world
from a size "large" to a size "medium."
This first era of globalization and global finance
capitalism was broken apart by the successive hammer
blows of World War I, the Russian Revolution and the
Great Depression, which combined to fracture the world
both physically and ideologically. The formally divided
world that emerged after World War II was then frozen
in place by the Cold War. The Cold War was also an
international system. It lasted roughly from 1945
to 1989, when, with the fall of the Berlin Wall, it
was replaced by another system: the new era of globalization
we are now in. Call it "Globalization Round II."
It turns out that the roughly seventy-five-year period
from the start of World War I to the end of the Cold
War was just a long time-out between one era of globalization
and another.
While there are a lot of similarities in kind between
the previous era of globalization and the one we are
now in, what is new today is the degree and intensity
with which the world is being tied together into a
single globalized marketplace. What is also new is
the sheer number of people and countries able to partake
of this process and be affected by it. The pre-1914
era of globalization, may have been intense, but many
developing countries in that era were left out of
it. The pre-1914 era may have been large in scale
relative to its time, but it was minuscule in absolute
terms compared to today. Daily foreign exchange trading
in 1900 was measured in the millions of dollars. It
was $820 billion a day, according to the New York
Federal Reserve, and by April 1998 it was up to $1.5
trillion a day and still rising. In the last decade
alone total cross-border lending by banks around the
world has doubled. Around 1900 private capital flows
from developed countries to developing ones could
be measured in the hundreds of millions of dollars
and relatively few countries were involved. According
to the IMF, in 1997 alone, private capital flows from
the developed world to all emerging markets totaled
$215 billion. This new era of globalization, compared
to the one before World War I, is turbocharged.
But today's era of globalization is not only different
in degree; in some very important ways it is also
different in kind. As The Economist once noted,
the previous era of globalization was built around
failing transportation costs. Thanks to the invention
of the railroad, the steamship and the automobile,
people could get to a lot more places faster and cheaper
and they could trade with a lot more places faster
and cheaper. Today's era of globalization is built
around falling telecommunications costs -- thanks
to microchips, satellites, fiber optics and the Internet.
These new technologies are able to weave the world
together even tighter. These technologies mean that
developing countries don't just have to trade their
raw materials to the West and get finished products
in return; they mean that developing countries can
become big-time producers as well. These technologies
also allow companies to locate different parts of
their production, research and marketing in different
countries, but still tie them together through computers
and teleconferencing as though they were in one place.
Also, thanks to the combination of computers and cheap
telecommunications, people can now offer and trade
services globally -- from medical advice to software
writing to data processing -- that could never really
be traded before. And why not? According to The
Economist, a three-minute call (in 1996 dollars)
between New York and London cost $300 in 1930. Today
it is almost free through the Internet.
But what also makes this era of globalization unique
is not just the fact that these technologies are making
it possible for traditional nation-states and corporations
to reach farther, faster, cheaper and deeper around
the world than ever before. It is the fact that it
is allowing individuals to do so. I was reminded of
this point one day in the summer of 1998 when my then
seventy-nine-year-old mother, Margaret Friedman, who
lives in Minneapolis, called me sounding very upset.
"What's wrong, Mom?' I asked. "Well,"
she said, "I've been playing bridge on the Internet
with three Frenchmen and they keep speaking French
to each other and I can't understand them." When
I chuckled at the thought of my cardshark mom playing
bridge with three Frenchmen on the Net, she took a
little umbrage. "Don't laugh" she said,
"I was playing bridge with someone in Siberia
the other day."
To all those who say that this era of globalization
is no different from the previous one, I would simply
ask: Was your great-grandmother playing bridge with
Frenchmen on the Internet in 1900? I don't think so.
There are some things about this era of globalization
that we've seen before, and some things that we've
never seen before and some things that are so new
we don't even understand them yet. For all these reasons,
I would, sum up the differences between the two eras
of globalization this way: If the first era
of globalization shrank the world from a size "large"
to a size "medium," this era of globalization
is shrinking the world from a size "medium"
to a size "small."
This book is an effort to explain how this new era
of globalization came the dominant international system
at the end of the twentieth century -- replacing the
Cold War system -- and to examine how it now shapes
virtually everyone's domestic politics and international
relations.
Copyright
© Thomas Friedman