Measuring
globalization
Foreign Policy;
Washington; Jan/Feb 2001; Anonymous;
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Issue: |
122 |
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Start Page: |
56-65 |
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ISSN: |
00157228 |
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Subject Terms: |
Globalization |
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Classification Codes: |
9180: International |
Abstract:
"Unsatisfactory"
is the word that best describes the contemporary debate over globalization.
There seems to be a consensus that globalization is defined by increasing
levels of interdependence over vast distances. But few people have undertaken
the task of actually trying to measure those levels of interdependence. Like
the physical universe that Lord Kelvin sought to understand, globalization may
be too vast a concept to be fully captured by today's still limited set of
statistical measurements. Without some means to quantify the extent of
globalization, any meaningful evaluation of its effects will remain elusive.
The A.T. Kearney/Foreign Policy Magazine Globalization Index is presented. It offers
a comprehensive guide to globalization in 50 developed countries and key
emerging markets worldwide.
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Full Text: |
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Copyright
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Jan/Feb 2001 |
[Headnote]
Everyone talks about
globalization, but no one has tried to measure its extent .. at least not until
now. The A.T. Kearny/FOREIGN POLICY Magazine Globalization Index(TM) dissects
the complex forces driving the integration of ideas, people, and economies
worldwide. Which countries have become the most global ? Are they more unequal?
Or more corrupt?
When you can measure what you are speaking about, and express it in numbers,
you know something about it," the British physicist Lord Kelvin once
observed. "But when you cannot measure it, when you cannot express it in
numbers, your knowledge is of a meagre and unsatisfactory kind."
"Unsatisfactory" is the word that best describes the contemporary
debate over globalization. There seems to be a consensus that
globalization-whether economic, political, cultural, or environmental-is
defined by increasing levels of interdependence over vast distances. But few
people have undertaken the task of actually trying to measure those levels of
interdependence. For instance, how do we determine the extent to which a
country has become embedded within the global economy? How do we demonstrate
that globalization is racing ahead, rather than just limping along? And how do
we know just how worldwide the World Wide Web has become?
Like the physical universe that Lord Kelvin sought to understand,
globalization may be too vast a concept to be fully captured by today's still
limited set of statistical measurements. But that same challenge has not
deterred physicists from their relentless pursuit to measure with ever greater
accuracy the forces that hold the universe together. Nor should it deter those
who seek a deeper understanding of globalization and its impact on the
contemporary world. Without some means to quantify the extent of globalization,
any meaningful evaluation of its effects will remain elusive.
With this challenge in mind, we present the A.T. Kearney/FOREIGN POLICY
Magazine Globalization Index(TM), which offers a comprehensive guide to
globalization in 50 developed countries and key emerging markets worldwide. The
Globalization Index "reverse-engineers" globalization and breaks it
down into its most important component parts. On a country-by-country basis, it
quantifies the level of personal contact across national borders by combining
data on international travel, international phone calls, and cross-border
remittances and other transfers. It charts the World Wide Web by assessing not
only its growing number of users, but also the number of Internet hosts and
secure servers through which they communicate, find information, and conduct
business transactions.
The Globalization Index also measures economic integration. It tracks the
movements of goods and services by examining the changing share of
international trade in each country's economy, and it measures the permeability
of national borders through the convergence of domestic and international
prices. The index also tracks the movements of money by tabulating inward- and
outward-directed foreign investment and portfolio capital flows, as well as
income payments and receipts.
Given the unprecedented range of factors that the Globalization Index
encompasses, we believe that it is a unique and powerful tool for understanding
the forces shaping today's world. And the results of this year's index prove
startling. Much of the conventional wisdom cherished by both champions and
critics of globalization collapses under the weight of hard data, ranging from
the pace and scale of global integration and the characteristics of the
"digital divide" to the impact of globalization on income inequality,
democratization, and corruption.
The A.T. Kearney/FOREIGN POLICY Magazine Globalization Index(TM) may not
settle the question of whether globalization does more good than harm. But the
index provides an objective starting point for a debate that has typically
relied more on anecdotal evidence than empirical facts.
LEADERS OF THE PACK
In recent years, indicators of global integration have shown remarkable
growth. The number of international travelers and tourists has risen, now
averaging almost three million people daily-up from only one million per day in
1980. The latest data from the United Nations Conference on Trade and
Development show that foreign direct investment jumped 27 percent in 1999 to
reach an all-time high of U.S. $865 billion, while total cross-border flows of
short- and long-term investments have more than doubled between 1995 and 1999.
Due to the falling cost of international telephone calls and the rising levels
of cross-border activity, the traffic on international switchboards topped 100
billion minutes for the first time in 2000. And with an online population
estimated at more than 250 million and growing, more people in more distant
places have the opportunity for direct communication than ever before.
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Is Globalization Slowing Down? |
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The Global Top 2o |
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The expansion of information technologies adds to globalization in ways
other than facilitating communication. Some nations fear that the Internet is
an engine driving U.S. cultural hegemony. Others see the Internet as a catalyst
for creating global cultural communities, from Moroccan sports enthusiasts
rooting for their favorite Canadian ice hockey team to antiglobalization
protestors mobilizing against the World Trade Organization and the
International Monetary Fund. The Internet is also an unprecedented means for
disseminating ideology to a global audience, whether it is pro-democracy
activists in Serbia rerouting dissident radio broadcasts to the World Wide Web
or Chechen rebels maintaining their own online news service.
The full impact of information technologies on political and social life is
not easily measured. But it is possible to gauge their effects on the economic
sector. Information technologies make it possible for nations to sustain deeper
levels of economic integration with one another. Nowhere is this integration
more evident than in financial markets, which use advanced information
technologies to move U.S. $1.5 trillion around the world every day. For the
United States, cross-border flows of bonds and equities alone are 54 times
higher now than they were in 1970. Such flows have multiplied by 55 times for
Japan and 60 times for Germany.
At first glance, these trends lend credence to the popular notion that
globalization is fast creating a world that, as former Citicorp Chairman Walter
Wriston put it, is "tied together in a single electronic market moving at
the speed of light." But a closer look reveals that global integration appears
to be growing no more rapidly now than it has been for years, and its pace may
even be slowing.
Why does globalization remain sluggish even as indicators of technological
integration-the number of Internet hosts, online users, and secure
servers-continue to grow exponentially? The data from our broad spectrum of
developed and developing markets suggest that global economic integration has
wound down to something of a crawl. The drop in total trade to and from the 50
countries surveyed weighs particularly heavy in this slowdown. The chief
culprit was the series of financial crises that rippled through Southeast Asia,
Latin America, and Russia in the late 1990s. Strong growth in portfolio
investments and foreign direct investment helped to moderate these declines,
and the value of world trade has rebounded since 1999. As a result, we see a
situation in which economic globalization slowed even as technological
globalization continued at a rapid clip [see chart on page 571.
Some nations have pursued integration with the rest of the world more
aggressively than others. The most globalized countries are small nations for
which openness allows access to goods, services, and capital that cannot be
produced at home. In some cases, geography has played an important role in
sustaining integrated markets. The Netherlands, for instance, benefits from
(among many other factors) its position at the head of the Rhine, which knits
together countries that account for almost three quarters of total Dutch trade.
In other cases, such as Sweden and Switzerland, relatively small domestic
markets and highly educated workers have given rise to truly global companies
capable of competing anywhere in the world. And a host of other factors has
contributed to the globalization of other small states. Austria, for example,
benefits from heavy travel and tourism, while remittances from large
populations living abroad contribute to Ireland's integration with the outside
world.
Tiny Singapore stands out clearly as the world's most global country [see
chart on opposite page]. The country far outdistances its nearest rivals in
terms of cross-border contact between people, with per capita international
outgoing telephone traffic totaling nearly 390 minutes per year. Singapore also
boasts a steady stream of international travelers, equal to three times its
total population. In contrast, the United States hosts only one sixth that
level of international tourists and travelers and can claim less than one
fourth the per capita outgoing international telephone traffic.
Yet in recent years, Singapore has struggled to maintain high levels of
trade, foreign investment, and portfolio investment, which help support its
globalization lead. The Asian flu is partly to blame, since the financial
crisis undermined the entire region's economic performance. But Singapore's
slow progress in privatizing state industries, its failure to win endorsement
for a regional freetrade agreement, and its tight controls over Internet
development have also slowed its integration with other countries.
Another country that ranks high on the Globalization Index is the
Netherlands. But here, the story is largely economic. Within only a few short
years, the Dutch have both invested heavily in other countries and seen foreign
participation in their own economy rise to levels that few other nations have
been willing or able to sustain. In the wake of aggressive reforms that have
stripped regulations and enhanced labor flexibility, foreign investment
increased from 8 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) in 1995 to more than
19 percent of GDP in 1998. Likewise, portfolio investments grew from only 5
percent to more than 30 percent over the same period, the highest levels in the
world-more than double those in France and Germany and five times higher than
those in the United Kingdom.
With Sweden and Finland riding the wave of Internet development to similar
gains in integration with the rest of the world, the current globalization
rankings may well be in flux. Singapore could slip from the lead in the coming
years, as countries that are better positioned to benefit from global
communications technologies or that are more aggressive about reforms to
attract foreign trade and investment develop stronger ties with their
neighbors.
Yet despite signs of greater openness among these few leading countries,
many others remain stalled at much lower levels of integration, with little
indication of imminent change. Thus, there is reason to believe that the
countries at the top of the rankings are only running further and further away
from the pack.
THE DIGITAL ABYSS
Not all countries around the world have participated equally in the
transition to the new global economy. As the chart below indicates, the digital
divide between developed and emerging-market countries is now more like a
digital abyss. On many relevant measures-from the diffusion of Internet users
to the number of Internet hosts-the vast majority of economic activity related
to information and communications technologies is concentrated in the
industrialized world.
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Digital Divides |
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Globalization, Freedom, and
Corruption |
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But among industrialized countries, another digital divide exists. The Internet
has penetrated deeply in the United States, with neighboring Canada not far
behind. In both countries, over 25 percent of the population enjoyed Internet
access by 1998 (the last year for which data are available for all countries in
the survey). More recent estimates put that number above 40 percent in both
countries. Perhaps more important, the United States and Canada lead the world
in secure servers suitable for electronic commerce, signifying that their
well-developed Internet networks can be used effectively to enhance commercial
activities as well as personal communication.
In addition to the United States and Canada, Scandinavian countries also
rank among the world's most wired nations. Thirty-nine percent of Sweden's
population was online in 1998, growing to 44 percent in more recent surveys.
Finland and Norway led in Internet hosts, each with more than 70 servers per
1,000 inhabitants connected directly to the World Wide Web.
Indeed, if any region of the world exemplifies the changing face of global
integration, that region is Scandinavia, where Sweden, Finland, and Norway have
turned their traditional engineering and manufacturing prowess to work in the
information technology boom while further opening their countries to trade and
investment flows.
Scandinavia's technological takeoff should come as little surprise. In the
last century, Sweden was among the first countries to realize the full
potential of the telephone. It offered a means of mitigating distance in often
sparsely populated lands. Thirty years ago, Sweden's leading technology
company, Ericsson, was among the pioneers in mobile telephony, and this decade
the country has embraced Internet technologies far ahead of the curve.
Stockholm, with nearly 60 percent of its population online, is perhaps the most
wired city in the world.
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Globalization and Inequality |
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In similar ways, neighboring Finland suggests the possibilities of this
Internet-led revolution. In 1995, Finland topped all others in terms of
Internet access. Information technology made it possible for Finnish companies
to respond to competitive pressures by diversifying both their export markets
and their workforce. Recent studies show that over one quarter of Finnish
exports now go to countries beyond Europe, up from less than one fifth in 1990.
And nearly half the staff of Finland's 30 largest companies now operate
overseas, as compared to only 15 percent in 1983. Although other countries have
since pulled ahead in levels of Internet penetration, Finland has witnessed
rising levels of trade and investment that have pushed it into the fifth
position overall in the Globalization Index, much higher than it would have
placed only a few years ago. One other symbol of success: The market
capitalization of Nokia, Finland's global telecommunications giant, is now
higher than the country's gross domestic product.
The fact that Sweden, Finland, and the rest of Scandinavia have been able to
nurture fast-moving technological developments with their traditionally
lumbering regulatory and tax regimes offers an unexpected contradiction,
confusing traditional assumptions about how high levels of regulation impede
globalization. But what about areas of relatively high regulation where no
technological takeoff has yet been achieved? Look no further than continental
Europe to see the negative effects of an unfavorable business climate on
integration. Indeed, most of the countries in the euro zone, weighed down by
their relatively low scores in Internet development, rank at the bottom of the
top 20 globalized countries.
Concerns about the disparities between industrialized and developing
countries, especially with respect to Internet access and use, have touched off
a worldwide debate about the global digital divide. Rather than a division
between developed and developing countries, however, the divide at this moment
reflects the vast technological advances in North America and the Scandinavian
countries compared with the rest of the world. Together, those two regions
stand on one side of a gaping digital chasm that appears to have left much of
the remaining world behind.
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If this "digital abyss" is to be bridged, developing nations have
the most ground to cover. But deciding how to use their limited resources poses
a difficult dilemma. Malaysia offers but one example of the perverse choices
that can ensue. In an effort to attract investment and develop its
high-technology capabilities, Malaysia has spent more than U.S. $3.6 billion on
its Multimedia Super Corridor. At the same time, over 70 percent of the
nation's primary schools lack computer facilities, and almost 10 percent lack
proper connections for water and electricity. The result is an impressive
infrastructure not sufficiently supported by human capital.
For other countries, Internet development cannot proceed unless more
fundamental concerns about infrastructure are addressed. In Chile, one of the
most prosperous emerging markets, 57 percent of the fixed telephone lines and
58 percent of the mobile-phone subscribers are located in the capital city,
leaving most of the country without Internet access. And Africa's
underdeveloped telecommunications sector has left much of that continent without
reliable connections to the World Wide Web. For instance, the Democratic
Republic of the Congo still has no direct link to the Internet, and a large
number of African countries can count no more than a few hundred active
Internet users.
MORE EQUAL THAN OTHERS
Antiglobalization critics frequently claim that globalization increases
income inequality. This assertion is elegant in its simplicity, but it ignores
a host of other important factors. The level of income disparity in an economy
might have more to do with history, economic growth, price and wage controls,
welfare programs, and education policies than it does with globalization or
trade liberalization.
Moreover, the empirical evidence suggests a very different story about
income disparity and globalization [see chart on pages 62-63]. Emerging-market
countries that are highly globalized (such as Poland, Israel, the Czech
Republic, and Hungary) exhibit a much more egalitarian distribution of income
than emerging-market nations that rank near the bottom of the Globalization
Index (such as Russia, China, and Argentina). There are some exceptions:
Malaysia, for instance, is more globalized but less equal than Poland. But the
general pattern of higher globalization and greater income equality holds for most
countries, both in mature economies and emerging markets.
These findings should reinvigorate the debate over whether countries are
poor and unequal because of globalization, or because they are not globalized
enough. Moreover, efforts to redress global inequality should be tempered with
the recognition that many countries with skewed income distribution patterns,
including Brazil and Nigeria, also have large populations. That only
underscores the difficulty of pulling the mass of humanity out of poverty.
A CAT SCAN OF GLOBALIZATION
Trade, foreign direct investment, international telephone calls, Internet
servers-considered individually, statistics on each of these phenomena are accurate,
albeit insufficient, measures of global interdependence. Yet, just as a CAT
scan creates a three-dimensional image of the human anatomy from a series of
two-dimensional images, the A.T. Kearney/FOREIGN POLICY Magazine Globalization
Index(TM) provides a comprehensive view of global integration through an
analysis of its component parts.
There is, of course, an irony associated with trying to measure
globalization on a nation-by-nation basis. Even the least integrated countries
are being drawn together by new forces beyond their ability to control, whether
it is global warming, the spread of infectious diseases, or the rise of
transnational crime. And some of the most significant aspects of
globalization-the spread of culture and ideascannot be easily quantified. These
and other challenges highlight the need for a closer and more refined
examination of the forces driving global integration, not to mention further
refinement of the tools used to measure it.
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