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Globalization - History |  | Globalization - History: Encyclopedia II - Globalization - History |  | Since the word has both technical and political meanings, different groups will have differing histories of "globalization". In general use within the field of economics and political economy, however, it is a history of increasing trade between nations based on stable institutions that allow firms in different nations to exchange goods with minimal friction.
The term "liberalization" came to mean the combination of laissez-faire economic theory with the removal of barriers to the movement of goods. This led to specialization of natio ...
See also:Globalization, Globalization - Meanings, Globalization - History, Globalization - Nature and existence of globalization, Globalization - Characteristics, Globalization - Glocalization, Globalization - Anti-globalization, Globalization - Pro-globalization globalism, Globalization - Measurement of Globalization |  | | Globalization, Globalization - Anti-globalization, Globalization - Characteristics, Globalization - Glocalization, Globalization - History, Globalization - Meanings, Globalization - Measurement of Globalization, Globalization - Nature and existence of globalization, Globalization - Pro-globalization globalism, Marketization, Mundialization, Saskia Sassen, Global Empire, Westernization, The World Is Flat |  | |
|  |  | Globalization: Encyclopedia II - Globalization - History
Globalization - History
Since the word has both technical and political meanings, different groups will have differing histories of "globalization". In general use within the field of economics and political economy, however, it is a history of increasing trade between nations based on stable institutions that allow firms in different nations to exchange goods with minimal friction.
The term "liberalization" came to mean the combination of laissez-faire economic theory with the removal of barriers to the movement of goods. This led to specialization of nations in exports, and the pressure to end protective tariffs and other barriers to trade. The period of the gold standard and liberalization of the 19th century is often called "The First Era of Globalization". Based on the Pax Britannica and the exchange of goods in currencies pegged to specie, this era grew along with industrialization. The theoretical basis was David Ricardo's work on Comparative advantage and Say's Law of General equilibrium. In essence, it was argued that nations would trade effectively, and that any temporary disruptions in supply or demand would correct themselves automatically. The institution of the gold standard came in steps in major industrialized nations between approximately 1850 and 1880, though exactly when various nations were truly on the gold standard is contentiously debated.
The "First Era of Globalization" is said to have broken down in stages beginning with the first World War, and then collapsing with the crisis of the gold standard in the late 1920's and early 1930's. Countries that engaged in that era of globalization, including the European core, some of the European periphery and various European offshoots in the Americas and Oceania, prospered. Inequality between those states fell, as goods, capital and labour flowed remarkably freely between nations.
Globalization in the era since World War II has been driven by Trade Negotiation Rounds, originally under the auspices of GATT, which led to a series of agreements to remove restrictions on "free trade". The Uruguay round led to a treaty to create the World Trade Organization or WTO, to mediate trade disputes. Other bilateral trade agreements, including sections of Europe's Maastricht Treaty and the North American Free Trade Agreement have also been signed in pursuit of the goal of reducing tariffs and barriers to trade.
See Antecedents of Globalization for more extensive historical background on this subject.
Other related archives1850, 1880, 1900, 1910, 1920, 1930, 1950, 1960s, 1970, 1970s, 1990s, 1999, 19th century, 2000, Antecedents of Globalization, Anti-globalization, Appadurai, Arjun Appadurai, Bollywood, Child mortality, China, David Ricardo, Douglas Roche, European Union, French, GATT, General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, Geography, George Ritzer, Global Empire, Green Peace, Green Revolution, Hollywood, IMF, Indian food, Intellectual Property, International Court of Justice, International Criminal Court, International Monetary Fund, Internet, Iraq war, Jean-Marie Le Pen, Libertarians, Life expectancy, Linda Weiss, Maastricht Treaty, Management, Marketing, Marketization, Mundialization, NAFTA, NGOs, National Sovereignty, Noam Chomsky, North American Free Trade Agreement, OPEC, Pat Buchanan, Pax Britannica, Roland Robertson, Saskia Sassen, Say's Law, Senator, Sinicization, Strategy, The World Is Flat, US, United Nations Parliamentary Assembly, Uruguay, WIPO, WTO, WWII, Westernization, World Bank, World Trade Organization, World War II, activists, altermondialisme, anarchists, anecdotal evidence, anti-globalization, anti-racism, assimilation, calories, capital, capital controls, capitalism, communication satellites, communications, comparative advantage, containerization, copyright laws, corporate entities, corporatist, cultural diversity, debt, democracy, democratic globalization, developing nations, developing world, directly-elected, economic nationalism, environmentalists, fair trade, financial leverage, for-profit, foreign direct investment, free trade, free trade zones, global civilization, global financial systems, global justice movement, global telecommunications infrastructure, global village, glocalization, hybridization, illegal immigration, immigration, imperialistic, international trade, internationalization, interventionist, kilojoules, labor, labour, laissez-faire capitalism, left-wing, liberalization, localization, mass media, migration, multiculturalism, multinational corporations, nation states, nation-state, nationalists, nations, natural environment, neoliberal, neoliberalism, outsourcing, patents, peasant, pizza, pollution, protectionism, public-interest, reformist, representative democracy, revolutionary, social organisation, software, state, subsidies, tariffs, technology, telephones, terrorism, tourism, transport, travel, unions, universal suffrage, universal values, world citizens
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "History", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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