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Summary Unit 2- Globalisation Notes

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A-level Human geography notes for Globalisation! Everything you need to know in a few short pages! My whole class used these notes I created and got great grades! :)

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  • March 19, 2021
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  • 2017/2018
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Globalisation
 Globalisation is the process by which the world is becoming increasingly interconnected
& therefore interdependent as a result of massively increased trade and cultural
exchange.

Globalisation width & depth

 A place’s width of globalisation is the length of it connections. For example, buying a
bottle of Fiji water in the UK has far connections.
 A place’s depth of globalisation is the number of connections between people & other
places penetrating further into society. For example, in Chad and Sudan, all its food &
culture is local so it is has few connections.

How globalisation has occurred
 The main driving force behind globalisation is the development of ICT which allows
cheap, reliable & almost instantaneous global communication.
 Information sharing, capital (money) transfers & global marketing can all take place
easily.
 Developments in transportation have also played a key role in globalisation. In
particular, advances in air travel & containerisation have meant both goods & people
may move around the world easily.

The transport revolution

 Transport costs & efficiency have hugely improved for example aircrafts are bigger so
unit costs for travel are reduced. Also, airport ‘hubs’ have allowed integrated global
travel & budget airlines have allowed cheap travel.
 High speed rail networks are also now available as well as the ‘container revolution
‘allowing integrated transport between road, sea, rail & air.

Measuring globalisation

 The KOF Index of globalisation measures the 3 main dimensions of globalisation:
economic, social & political.
 Within these dimensions many indices are measures such as actual economic flows,
economic restrictions, data on information flows, data on personal contact & data on
cultural proximity.
 Globalisation has led to economic growth for some countries whilst widening the
development gap, producing disparities in environmental quality, wealth distribution &
social wellbeing.

,  Some economic measures of development are; income per Capita, GDP & economic
sector balance but these are often affected by anomalous values which can make a
country seem richer/poorer than it actually is.
 Social development measures include the HDI index, Gender inequality Index &
environmental quality. These measures take into account factors useful for everyday
without primarily focusing on wealth.
 Global trends indicate a widening income inequality, measured using the Gini
Coefficient, which reinforces the theory that globalisation has produced winners &
losers.
 According to Kuznets curve, the more developed a place becomes, the more it cares
about the environment.

International Organisations
Definitions/key terms

 Free trade is a policy followed by some international markets in which countries
governments don’t restrict imports from or exports to another country.
 FDI is an investment made by a firm or individual in one country into business interests
located in another country. This includes may include offshoring, foreign merges, foreign
acquisitions & transfer pricing.
 Free market is a system of economic exchange, in which taxes, quality controls, quotas,
tariffs, & other forms of economic interventions by the government either do not exist
or are minimal.
 Economic liberalisation the lessening of government regulations and restrictions in
an economy in exchange for greater participation by private entities.
 Protectionism is when a country shields is domestic industries from foreign competition
by taxing imports.
 A tariff is a tax or duty that must be paid on a particular type of import or export.
 A quota is a limited quality of a particular product which under official controls may be
produced, exported or imported.
 Economies of scale– These are when more units of a good can be produced on a
larger scale, with fewer input costs. This means that as a company grows and production
increases, a company will have a better chance to decrease its costs.

National Governments
National government policies

 National governments are key players in globalisation when they adopt policies that
allow TNCs to grow inside their country.
 These policies include:

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