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Summary Globalisation CASE STUDIES Edexcel A Level Geography

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A complete document of all the specification listed case studies required for enquiry questions 1, 2, and 3 of 'Globalisation', Topic 3 of Unit 2 in A level Geography (Edexcel). Put together by an A* student. Includes the following case studies: IGOS, EU and ASEAN, China's 1978 Open Door Policy, AT...

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GLOBALISATION CASE
STUDIES
IGOs – WTO, IMF, World Bank
IMF – International Monetary Fund

Loans money from rich nations to countries that apply for help. In return, the recipients must agree
to run free market economies that are open to investment, allowing TNCs to enter more easily.

World Bank

Lends money on a global scale, headquartered in Washington DC. Gives direct grants to developing
countries, e.g., the Democratic Republic of Congo’s mega-dam project

WTO – World Trade Organisation

Advocates for trade liberalisation, especially for manufactured goods. Asks countries to abandon
protectionist attitudes in favour of untaxed trade.

Trade blocs – EU and ASEAN
EU: The European Union

Formed in 1993, the EU is a 27 member single market trade bloc, with a single currency (the Euro)
adopted by 19 members.

- It guarantees the free movement of goods, capital and people
- The only group of nations to grant all citizens of member states freedom of movement

ASEAN: The Association of South East Asian Nations

Established in 1967, ASEAN has 10 member states and a combined population of 660 million

- A uniform low tariff is applied between members for specified goods
- The ASEAN agreement also promotes peace and stability: its members have pledged to not
have nuclear weapons

China’s 1978 Open Door Policy
In 1978, China was a poor and politically isolated country that was ‘switched off’ due to communist
leadership.

Deng Xiaoping’s 1978 Open Door Policy allowed China to embrace globalisation while remaining
under one party authoritarian rule. This policy transformed China into an urban, industrialised nation
– today it is the world’s largest economy.

- Open Door Policy – this slowly introduced economic liberalisation by allowing foreign TNCs
into the country as well as FDI, whilst the country remained under a strict one party political
system.

, - SEZs were created on the coast – Shanghai etc – mega region of 120 million people in Pearl
River Delta. 400 million people escaped poverty in the country.

Open door approaches to globalisation:

 FDI from China’s TNCs expected to total US $1.25 trillion between 2015-25
 Joined WTO in 2001
 Foreign TNCs are now allowed to invest in some sectors of China’s domestic markets

Closed door approaches to globalisation:

 Google and Facebook have little or no access to China’s market
 Government only allows 34 foreign films to be screened annually
 Strict controls on some foreign TNCs

Indices of globalisation (AT Kearney and KOF
Index)
AT Kearney

 12 indicators spread across 4 categories - political engagement, technological connectivity,
personal contact, economic integration - complex points and weighting system.
 Uses more holistic indicators than KOF

Cons - Only includes 62 countries, heavy weighting given to ICT allows USA to gain high index score
despite low political engagement.

KOF Index

 24 indicators spread over 3 categories - political, economic and social globalisation
 Each indicator converted to index value, then data is analysed before comparing the new
scores with previous ones dating back to 1970

Cons - Only measures international interactions (not internal) and does not include recent
technological developments. Some cultural bias.

Switched off places – Sahel and North Korea
North Korea:

Ruled as an autocracy by a single family, North Korea has chosen deliberately to remain politically
isolated from the rest of the world.

 Ordinary citizens have no internet/social media access and there are no undersea data
cables connecting North Korea with anywhere else
 As a result, North Korea has a relatively low GDP and development, especially as it only
trades with China

The Sahel Region

A semi-arid area that extends along the Sahara Desert’s southern rim.

 Economically isolated – Low income levels means it lacks the market size to attract FDI, low
literacy rates makes it unattractive for offshoring

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