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Globalization WHAP/Napp “In July 1944, with Allied victory a foregone conclusion, economic specialists representing over forty countries met at Bretton Woods, a New Hampshire resort, to devise a new international monetary system. The signatories eventually agreed to fix exchange rates and to create the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank (formally the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development). The IMF was to use currency reserves from member nations to finance temporary trade deficits, and the World Bank was to provide funds for reconstructing Europe and helping needy countries after the war. The Soviet Union attended the Bretton Woods Conference and signed the agreements, which went into effect in 1946. But deepening suspicion and hostility between the Soviet Union and the United States and Britain undermined cooperation. While the United States held reserves of gold and the rest of the world held reserves of dollars in order to maintain the stability of the monetary system, the Soviet Union established a closed monetary system for itself and the new communist regimes in eastern Europe. Similar differences were found across the economies of the two alliances. In the Western countries, supply and demand determined prices; in the Soviet command economy, government agencies allocated goods and set prices according to governmental priorities, irrespective of market forces. Many leaders of newly independent states, having won the struggle against imperialism, preferred the Soviet Union’s socialist example to the capitalism of their former colonizers. Thus, the relative success of economies patterned on Eastern or Western models became part of Cold War rivalry. Each side trumpeted economic successes measured by industrial output, changes in per capita income, and productivity gains.” ~ The Earth and Its Peoples 1- Why, particularly towards the end of the Second World War, did economic specialists meet at Bretton Woods? ___________________________________ 2- What was created to attempt to ensure economic stability in the world? __________________________________________________________________ 3- How did the Cold War affect economic cooperation? __________________________________________________________________ 4- What determined price in the Western countries? __________________________________________________________________ 5- How were goods allocated and prices determined in the communist world? __________________________________________________________________ 6- Identify one fact about a free market economy. __________________________________________________________________ 7- Identify one fact about a command economy. __________________________________________________________________ 8- What did many leaders of newly independent states prefer? __________________________________________________________________ 9- How did competing Cold War economic systems impact other nations? __________________________________________________________________ 10- How did the Great Depression change economic thinking? _______________ Notes: I. Overview A. Globalization 1. Process of accelerating engagement among peoples of the world 2. Vastly accelerated after WWII B. Bretton Woods 1. Negotiated “rules” for commercial dealings 2. World Bank and International Monetary Fund established C. Neo-Liberalism 1. Reduction of tariffs 2. Free global movement of capital 3. Encouraging Free Market a) Free Movement of Capital/Investing abroad D. Transnational Corporations (TNCs) 1. Produce goods/deliver services in many countries E. Migration of Labor 1. In search of jobs and wages Also “Brain Drain” educated professionals leaving Global South F. Impact of Economic Growth 1. Worsened rift between developed nations and developing world 2. Rich nations of Global North and poor nations of Global South G. Also Inequalities Within Global South 1. Oil-rich Middle East vs. Cash crop Nations 2. Making united action difficult H. Chiapas Rebellion in Mexico 1. Viewed globalization as negative seen as “eliminating people who are not useful” I. Antiglobalization 1. Criticizing globalization Protests against WTO (World Trade Organization) II. Overview – Influence USA and Reactions A. Collapse of USSR 1. US military dominance unchecked B. September 11, 2001 a) U.S. attacked Afghanistan/Had sheltered Osama bin Laden C. Iraq 1. U.S. attacked Iraq (2003) a) Hussein developing Weapons of Mass Destruction D. Effort to Contain Terrorism 1. Another global struggle after collapse of USSR E. Changing Realities - USA 1. Once world’s leading creditor/Now world’s leading debtor F. Impact of Vietnam War 1. Gave rise to charges that the Cold War had undermined American democracy 2. Had promoted a powerful “imperial presidency” a) A culture of secrecy/Obsession with national security b) A similar set of concerns arose with the invasion of Iraq G. The Movement of Ideas 1. Ideas increasingly traversed the planet 2. The Civil Rights Movement 3. The Youth Culture 4. 1968 a) Student-led movement in France protesting university conditions b) “Prague Spring” challenging Soviet rule in Czechoslovakia crushed 5. Ernesto “Che” Guevara became a heroic figure to third-world revolutionaries 6. Feminism a) Challenged relationships between men and women b) Had begun in West for suffrage c) Addressed inequities d) Addressed opportunities for women Complete the Review Quilt Below (Place Key Points in Each Box): Bretton Woods: International World Bank: Cold War: Monetary Fund (IMF): Free Market versus Command Economy: Globalization: Neo-Liberalism: Inequalities – Global North versus Global South: Feminism : “Prague Spring”: Ernesto “Che” Guevara: U.S. Invasion of Afghanistan: U.S. Invasion of Iraq: Civil Rights Movement: Youth Culture: WTO: Application: Questions from the World History AP examination 1. The Kyoto Accord of 1997 was 4. How did World War II intended to deal with the change the patterns of problems associated with international trade? (A) The illegal trade in small (A) No countries traded with arms Germany after the war. (B) The HIV/AIDS epidemic (B) The World Trade (C) The growing number of Organization was created biological-weapons programs soon after the war ended. (D) The climatic trend known as (C) The war diminished the global warming European powers’ control (E) The spread of nuclear over world markets. weapons (D) The USSR began trading more with Western Europe. 2. Which of the following is NOT a (E) The United States stopped nongovernmental organization trading with Asian countries. (NGO)? (A) Greenpeace 5. In Latin America, (B) The National Rifle modernization has Association often led to (C) Amnesty International (A) Greater social equality (D) Habitat for Humanity (B) Better control over illegal (E) The European Union drug trafficking (C) Diversified economies 3. Which of the following would be (D) A concentration of wealth in considered an integrating trend the hands of political and in global development today? economic elites (A) The worldwide proliferation (E) The establishment of of Internet technology communist regimes (B) Religious fundamentalism in Afghanistan 6. Which of the following (C) Discrimination against factors has NOT Turkish guest workers in interfered with African Germany modernization? (D) All of the above (A) The AIDS/HIV epidemic (E) None of the above (B) Lack of cultural or linguistic unity within African states 4. Postindustrial modes of economic (C) Negative population growth activity focus MAINLY on providing (D) Corruption (A) Manufacture goods (E) Interethnic conflict (B) Services (C) Raw materials (D) Plastics (E) Hand-crafted products