Globalisation involves the movement of people, knowledge, ideas, goods and money across national borders, influencing all countries economically, politically, socially and culturally.
Laws and regulations are put in place by intergovernmental organisations (IGOs) that affect what we can do to our environment, such as the Montreal Protocol (1987) which called for drastic reductions in the production of CFCs internationally.
Flows in globalisation are the movement of money for investment, trade or business production (capital), people who move to work in another country (labour), physical goods from one country to another (products), services that can be produced in a different country to where they are received (services), and any type of information that can flow from one place to another via the internet, SMS, phone calls etc (information).
There are millions of capital flows happening all over the world, with some of the world’s major flows occurring between core regions, the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the World Bank, and other major financial institutions.
Offshoring: Companies that make manufactured products will often have their factories in LICs due to lower labour costs, better taxes, weaker regulations for workers and weaker environmental regulations.
Global governance maintains global systems (e.g. the environment, politics, economics etc.) through global societal norms, global laws and global institutions.
Links through FDI: TNCs create links with other countries by investing in them, which benefits the country as this creates jobs and contributes to the economy.
An example of a global norm is gender equality, which is generally a norm for women to be equal to men, however in other countries, such as Saudi Arabia, equality is not a social norm.
In general, migration occurs from low income countries to high income countries due to there being more opportunity in high income countries, such as better employment and more freedom.
Outsourcing is the hiring of other companies to complete company tasks that are essential, but are not necessary to complete by the company itself, such as call centres, final manufactures, and advertising.
Companies can save money by upscaling their production by buying raw products in bulk, making large amounts of products quickly on production lines, and shipping large amounts of products.
Trade agreements work to benefit all parties that are involved, removing or lessening certain restrictions in return for another country doing the same.
Unequal flows can be beneficial to a country as they can bring benefits socially and economically, but can also cause inequalities and in some cases can lead to injustice or conflict.
Globalisation has accelerated due to trade agreements across the world, with millions of products being imported and exported into and out of countries every year.
Interdependence can cause issues for dependent countries due to unequal flows, as the global flows of people, money, ideas, and technology are not equal around the world.
Global supply chains minimise costs because each stage of production is specialised rather than having one factory that has to control every aspect of production, saving time and money.
Low income countries that lack money and technology have less influence over geopolitical events, which is problematic as they rely on the decisions made by richer countries, and only have the power to respond to the events rather than directly intervene.