Globalization, capitalism and the market: beyond a historical and flat-earth arguments.
James, Paul ; Gills, Barry K.
Capitalist production, trade, and market relations are driving
forces of contemporary globalization. (1) While globalization cannot be
reduced to its economic dimension as some economists have been prone to
do, there is no doubt about the central importance of capitalist
exchange and production in the extension of social relations across
world-space. (2) Ideas and practices as diverse as consumerism,
entertainment, liberalism, cosmopolitanism, tourism and sport are now so
bound up with processes of globalizing production and exchange that it
is difficult to extricate broader social relations from their grip. It
seems that everything can now be conceived of in terms of goods and
services that can be sold (commodification) or processes that are
organized to offer a return on investment (capital accumulation). (3)
Each of these processes has spread across the globe.
It should also be said that globalizing exchange goes back long
before the emergence of modern capitalism. Long-distance market
relations drew connections between peoples along lines of trade such as
the Silk Route between Europe and China; lines that stretched for
thousands of miles. In the contemporary period, layers of modern and
postmodern capitalism have taken these interconnections to new levels of
integration and intensity. The process remains uneven, but
notwithstanding the continuing importance of national and regional
economies today, globalizing capitalism is undoubtedly the dominant
framework of economics in the world. Debates abound in relation to what
this means economically, socially and politically. Across the political
spectrum 'capitalism' has become the taken-for-granted way of
naming the economic pattern that weaves together the current dominant
modes of production and exchange. Yet there is still not much in the way
of clarifying discussion that addresses the relationship between
globalization and capitalism, and its history in long-term processes.
This is the task of the present article. It begins by discussing the
emergence of a globalizing market before the consolidation of capitalism
and the subsequent consolidation of what some writers have called the
modern capitalist 'world system'. It examines the relationship
between global trade, commodity relations, and economic development
across the course of traditional and modern history, and into the
present, and argues that this is linked to a broader process of the
abstraction and spatial extension of social relations. (4)
The Market, Capitalism and Globalization: Some Conceptual Issues
The concepts of 'the market' and 'capitalism'
are caught up in deep controversies and vexed by historical disturbances
and long-term social change. Nevertheless, it is important to re-engage
with these two very central ideas in the history of thought, and to
attempt to shed some further light on their changing relationship with
processes of globalization. The market-capital relationship is a
perennial issue in the tradition of modern political economy. Two
central questions concern us here. How far back into history can we find
extended markets organized around traded commodities and the
accumulation of capital? Has it been since the end of the 19th century,
a few centuries ago, or several millennia? And to what extent has such
trade and value accumulation been associated with processes of
globalization? It is to these lines of inquiry that this first section
is dedicated.
Globalization is defined here as the extension of social relations
across world-space. In other words, globalization is not just
border-crossing activities or transnational extension. In setting up
this definition it should be unnecessary to say that economic
globalization is a subcategory of the broader category of
globalization(s), but it needs to be emphasized here because, all too
often, economists forget the adjective 'economic' and reduce
globalization to such processes. The problems go deeper. Martin
Wolf's definition, for example, is very careful to recognize that
economic globalization is only one kind of globalization, but his
definition succumbs to other problems. To treat economic globalization
as 'the integration of economic activities, across borders, through
markets', (5) is both too narrow (economic globalization does not
only occur through markets) and too vague (economic globalization
requires much more than an integrating economic transaction across a
political border). An adequate definition of globalization needs to rest
upon some sense of 'the global'; otherwise the reference point
could be a related kind of spatial extension such as
internationalization or regionalization. On the other hand,
globalization is neither total nor even totalizing, except perhaps in
the projections of its ideologues. It is not an end-state, even if the
world is sometimes projected as moving towards globality as such.
Neither does naming a process as globalizing depend upon there being an
already existent and comprehensive economic 'world system', or
indeed any kind of totalizing globality. Globalizing capitalism is
undoubtedly the dominant and increasingly pervasive economic structure
in the world today. However, even the concept of 'global
capitalism' is not sufficient a term to describe the complexity,
unevenness and contradictory nature of the dominant transformations that
are sweeping the world and, at one level, reframing the human condition,
including our relationship to nature. Contemporary globalization is only
one part of that matrix of transformations.
In summary, the concept of 'globalization' simply names
the various projections of relations of connection as they reach across
a socially constituted world-space. 'World-space' is
understood in the variable ways that it was lived during different
periods of history. Two millennia ago in the period of imperial Rome,
the city (urbis) reached out to the world (orbis). The known world was
not understood in the same way as planet earth of the 21st century,
where global cities so-called, such as New York, Paris, London, Tokyo,
have interconnected stock exchanges linked almost simultaneously in
electronically mediated world-standard time. Nevertheless, the Romans
did project their power into their world-space and that space was
conceived in global terms. Hence, at the risk of sounding simplistic,
because most definitions of globalization miss out on this basic point,
we are insisting that globalization involves some sense of the global,
either subjective or objective, and this takes fundamentally different
forms across world history.
There are further basic issues to work through. Firstly, it should
also be noted at the outset that the terms 'the market',
'capitalism' and 'globalization' are conceptual
categories which are used to generalize about a very large set of cases.
The terms convey some sense of comparative commonality across completely
different world-times and social settings. There is thus nothing wrong
with using these terms as analytically generalizing concepts. However,
problems quickly mount up when their application is associated with
conflating the three different things called 'globalization',
'capitalism' and/or 'the market' into a single
phenomenon. Likewise, when they are used to present one-dimensional
claims about their essential or transhistorically given
characteristics--that is, as opposed to their minimal definitional
characteristics. We say this to distinguish the present approach from a
tendency of both some neo-liberal and some orthodox marxist writers to
reduce globalization to a stage of capitalism. For example, arguing from
a lineage consistent with Lenin's classic work on imperialism as
'the highest stage of capitalism', Berch Berberoglu concludes
that manifestations of contemporary capitalism such as the increased
prominence of transnational corporations 'do not change the
fundamental nature of capitalism ... They cannot change the nature of
capitalism in any qualitative sense to warrant globalization a distinct
status'. (6) This has important political implications--in our
argument, there can be alternative forms of globalization. Another world
is possible.
The approach that we are taking thus treats globalization as a
multivariate and historically uneven process that has come to be
increasingly pushed along by modern capitalism but cannot be reduced to
it. One way of express the complexity of this ever-changing matrix of
economic and other social relations is by strategically using the terms
'globalizations', 'markets' and
'capitalisms' in the plural. A second way is to take very
seriously the qualifying and cross-cutting adjectives that seem to
silently sit in front of the nouns 'globalization',
'market' and 'capitalism'--adjectives such as
'economic', 'cultural', or 'political', to
take one interrelating set; or 'traditional',
'modern' or 'postmodern', to take another
ontologically defined set. This means taking seriously the specification
of the dominant forms of each of these phenomena in a given period or
region, and specifying the ways in which they relate to each other under
different conditions. There have been myriad historical instances of
markets and capitalisms, comprising an immense variety of actual
practices, ideologies, institutions and technologies. According to the
present argument, there can be globalization without capitalism, market
relations which are not capitalistic, and globalizations which counter
the neo-liberal market. Nevertheless, our argument is that at least
since the 16th century, and intensifying across the later part of the
20th century into the present, capitalism and globalization have
developed in a mutually constitutive relationship. This can be expressed
in two opening propositions.
Proposition 1: Although the relationship between capitalism, the
market and globalization is uneven and changing, it is historically the
case that capitalism tends to be globalizing, and that modern
capitalism, in particular, is built on certain kinds of globalizing
market relations.
Proposition 2: There have been long-term, patterned and
constitutive relations between the changing forms of globalization,
different kinds of market relations, and different forms of capitalism.
A third area of controversy is over the relationship between the
more general concept of 'exchange' and that of 'the
market'. In the field of anthropology it has long been recognized
that 'exchange' is not only common in historically documented
social relations but indeed, in one form or another, possibly endemic to
all human cultures. So if this be the case, how do we then usefully
differentiate 'the market' and the broader concept of
'exchange'? Karl Polanyi famously offered a simple typology including such categories as reciprocal exchange and redistribution as
well as market exchange as alternative economic modes. (7) These are
descriptively helpful as long as they are not treated as mutually
exclusive or proceeding in 'stages' in some linear
progression. An alternative and preferable conception would be to posit
such categories and 'modes' as coexisting in often very
complex combinations or 'articulations'. In these terms a
further proposition can be expressed as follows:
Proposition 3: Market exchange involves an abstraction beyond
particularistic, reciprocal or face-to-face relations of exchange to the
instituting of relatively stable patterns of extended interchange.
In other words, it is a set of processes that marks a movement from
relations of interpersonal reciprocity or barter to the systematic use
of symbols of value-commensurability (money) and onto commodity
exchange. These two processes--monetization and commodification--have
historically been associated with globalization, and this association
goes back much further than the connection to capitalism as generative
system of production and exchange.
This proposition has the utility of examining the economic forms in
question (that is, commodity and monetary forms) as central aspects of
the globalizing market. It also allows us to sharpen the analytical
connections and distinctions between the following kinds of exchange
relations, and to make some tentative connections to the nature of
globalization:
* Reciprocal-exchange relations constitute the dominant form of
exchange in customary tribal formations. Even when extended over large
regions, as is the case for the Kula Ring of Melanesia, this form of
exchange is particularistic and drawn back into embodied relations. Such
relations can be carried globally on the back of other processes of
embodied globalization, but are not globalizing in themselves.
* Barter-exchange relations are usually associated with tribal and
traditional social formations and contained within relatively localized
settings. Such relations often continue to operate alongside the
emergence of money-based markets. However, characteristically, as
money-based markets become dominant and spatially extended,
barter-exchange tends to become more and more localized.
* Money-based markets are associated with commodity exchange, where
money contributes to allowing increasing geographical extensions. This
allows long-distance trade, in the first instance in high-value goods.
* Capital-based markets are those markets which include but are
abstracted beyond markets that simply use money in the transaction of
goods. These are a form of market relations that take for granted the
entity of accumulated abstract value (capital), and at a certain point
begin trading in capital itself.
* Capitalism is a sustained system, producing and exchanging
commodities and capital. It is impossible to conceptualize capitalism
without the development of an extensive institutionalization of
interconnected and extended market relations through which commodities
are traded and 'profit' is achieved. It is also necessary to
understand capitalism as grounded in labour relations with workers
employed for the accumulation of capital. Given the overriding dominance
of capitalism today, it is difficult to conceive of contemporary
globalization without the centrality of a generalizing system of
capitalism.
It is the last three forms that are associated with networks and
circuits of globalization. Money-based markets extend relations over
time and space, though this may range from being relatively restricted
in geographical terms to being global in reach; capital-based markets
intensify the process of economic extension, and tend to break with any
residual localizing restrictions even as they often rely on states or
other institutions to make that break; and capitalism, in its modern
form, reaches across 'a world without end' as a generalizing
system of production and exchange.
Historical Developments: The Emergence of Globalizing Markets
Extended exchange relations, may be found far back in human
history, thousands of years ago, and some of these exchange relations
were (remarkably perhaps) conducted over very long distances, even by
modern standards. Archaic tool-making--for example, from flint and other
soft and workable stone--seems to have traversed long distances even in
the remote human past. More recently, some seven or eight millennia ago,
the town of Catal Huyuk in Anatolia conducted a thriving long-distance
exchange involving the trade of obsidian artefacts, a volcanic black
stone that makes some of the sharpest blades known and is useful for
decorative and other purposes. Ancient Jericho in the Levant at a
comparably ancient, even pre-Neolithic time, conducted long-distance
exchange with bitumen, an important item useful for sealing objects from
intrusion by water, acting as an adhesive, and for decorative and
building purposes. In Oceania, there were extraordinarily long-distance
networks of maritime exchange of a variety of goods from the various
islands and land-masses involved, which constituted a kind of regular
circuit of exchange. We now realize that even in Neolithic times--that
is, several thousand years BCE--maritime exchange, including over long
distances, was conducted in the Mediterranean and conjoining seas in
small coast-hugging craft.
Without more evidence, the use of these examples of tribal and
traditional exchange networks cannot be taken to suggest that these
systems were global in their reach or even globalizing in their
projection. However, it cannot be ruled out either. The discussion is
intended to destabilize the sense that the bases of economic
globalization began in the 19th or even the 16th century. Janet
Abu-Lughod's classic article pushes the integrative process back as
far as the 13th century when she says 'the Occident (Western
Europe) and the Orient (as far as China) were linked together through a
system of trade and, to a much lesser extent, production that had begun
to form into what might be called a "world system" rather than
a set of "imperial systems"'. (8) Barry Gills (one of the
present authors) and Andre Gunder Frank suggest that the process of
development of world systems goes back even further to the Bronze Age period of 3000 to 1000 BCE. (9) These arguments are strong. However,
what we need to keep in mind here is that the concept of a 'world
system' is not in the first instance a claim to globality or even
globalization, even if sometimes World Systems theorists retrospectively
claim it to be so. (10) The concept of a 'world system' was
developed as a unit of analysis by Immanuel Wallerstein and others
because the usual political entities such as empire, city-state,
nation-state were inadequate to encompass the kind of economic entity
brought about by sustained surplus appropriation without a unified
political structure. In Wallerstein's words: 'It is a
"world" system, not because it encompasses the whole world,
but because it is larger than any juridically-defined political
unit'. (11) In other words, it is a system of the world, not
necessarily a worldwide system. For a sustainable argument to be made
about such systems being globalizing, it would be necessary to show
either that the processes involved objectively drew lines of connection
across such a world-space, or that the people involved subjectively
projected their exchange relations outwards to what they understood to
be a global arena. In this respect, for example, we find
'global' world maps going back to the Babylonians circa 600
BCE. This includes a clay tablet showing a round world and its
encircling earthly ocean, suggesting a particular kind of traditional
cosmological, as opposed to a modern rationalized understanding, of the
global. (12)
The spatiality of market exchange has been studied extensively,
including such theoretical constructs as 'central place
theory', 'location theory' in economics, and 'uneven
development theory' in marxism. (13) Such studies often intersect
with urban studies and the empirical study of settlement distribution
and settlement size. In modern terms, this also involves the examination
of the economic and functional hierarchy of urban centres, including,
most recently, the literature devoted to analysis of 'global
cities' as central nodes of contemporary global economic processes,
especially in relation to their commercial and financial functions. (14)
A further point can be added to the issue of the unevenness of
global history. It is not fruitful to impose a strict linear conception
of the assumed historical 'progression' of these forms of
exchange, moving from the more communal or reciprocal, through the more
'redistributive', and eventually (or inevitably) on to the
more commodified and market-rational forms of exchange. Economic
history, whether conceived as national, world or global, is not linear,
and contains instances of what would be conventionally understood as
historic 'retrogression' as much as 'progression'.
Such complexity of forms may be better understood not merely as a
mixture of modes, but also as a dialectic or layering of forms. (15) It
is quite possible to examine how the extension of the role of
'capital' in history progressed or developed without having to
ascribe the concept of 'capitalism' to the entire social
formation. Indeed the concept of 'capitalism' was not deployed
by Marx, but was a rather later sociological invention. Marx was
actually most interested in 'capital' itself, 'capital
accumulation', and the 'capitalist mode of production',
as analytical categories.
Deciding on what basis market relations constitute the dominant
mode of exchange in any given social formation or historical society has
always been a very difficult problem. Ultimately, it is a matter of
judgement by the historian or theorist and rests upon what criteria they
set for any such threshold in the overall ensemble of social relations.
The Weberian tradition handled this issue by invoking the categories of
'ancient capitalism', 'mediaeval capitalism' and
'modern capitalism'. While problematically describing the form
of capitalism by associating it with a particular epoch--in contrast to
our preference to distinguish between traditional, modern and postmodern
formations of capitalism, as categorical descriptions rather than
successive epochal designations--the Weberian designation has the
utility of recognizing how extensive commodification and market exchange
existed prior to the dominance of modernism. It recognizes how practices
of capital accumulation occurred in some pre-modern historical
societies. It also has a role in correcting or revising inherited
Eurocentric biases concerning the role of capital in global history. For
example, 'mediaeval capitalism'--or more usefully, traditional
capitalism--was most prominent not in Western Europe, which was for many
centuries a fairly poor and 'backward' economic zone, but
rather in the 'East', in virtually all of the vast Islamic
lands. This included 'Moorish' Spain (which played a still
under-appreciated role in the 'revival' of European
civilization), India, South-East Asia, and China, particularly during
the highly commercialized Song dynasty. (16) Traditional capitalism used
in this sense suggests a profoundly different social formation than
modern capitalism, particularly as it is classically defined in relation
to a system of profit-framed labour markets.
An additional dimension of the unevenness of global history can be
found in the following proposition:
Proposition 4: From antiquity to the present there has been a
structural mismatch or 'contradiction' between the spatial and
organizational boundaries of the dominant market economy and those of
the dominant polities. (17)
Such a mismatch or non-correspondence may be a pivotal causal
factor in the drive towards imperial expansion by those polities seeking
to secure lines of supply and sources of profit or wealth. It thus has
consequences for questions of globalization. This mismatch between the
space of markets and the space of states has deep historical precedents,
but it also bears upon the present era. The relevance here to questions
of globalization is that if imperialism has been a concurrent driving
force of globalization, then the link to the globalizing market economy
becomes redoubled as polities increasingly find it 'necessary'
or advantageous to expand outwards. Across history, polities have tended
to be dependent on an economic exchange nexus that is far larger or more
territorially extensive than that which it directly controls or
administers. This structural feature may therefore give rise to constant
insecurity and also competition or rivalry with other polities or
entities upon which the material prosperity and the security of any
single polity actually depends.
Globalization and the Modern Capitalist Market
While it is impossible to pinpoint exactly when modern capitalism
began, we can certainly say it was an emergent formation in the 16th
century, and by the beginning of the 19th century a series of loosely
connected market systems had come together as a relatively integrated
global system. Many writers have argued that since the Napoleonic Wars there have been two major waves of economic globalization, associated in
the first with the consolidation of the British Empire, and in the
second with hegemonic consolidation of the United States after World War
II. Christopher Chase-Dunne, Yukio Kawano and Benjamin D. Brewer have
argued alternatively that there was in fact another wave of openness to
trade globalization in the early part of the 20th century during a time
of great power rivalry, overlapping with World War I. This challenges
one of the most common orthodoxies in economics literature--namely, that
globalization (or at least internationalization) burgeoned in the later
part of the 19th century and then collapsed until the postwar period,
when it thereafter grew exponentially. For example, Shale Horowitz
follows the 'two-waves' orthodoxy in concluding that,
'Following two world wars and the Depression, international trade
and finance had been in retreat for decades, and protectionist forces
seemed dominant in all major economies'. (18)
Some orthodox texts put the two waves in more absolute terms--and
therefore more problematically--proclaiming that globalization simply
collapsed during World War I. (19) Jeffry Frieden's detailed but
flawed tome, Global Capitalism, for example, makes a common mistake of
reducing economic globalization to the machinery of trade and investment
negotiation in a particular period:
[I]t took only a few months for the entire edifice of globalization
to collapse. World War One broke out on August 1914 and swept away
the foundations of the preexisting global economic order. For years
world economic and political leaders attempted without success, to
restore the pre-1914 international economy. The international order
disintegrated and imploded brutally into the Great Depression of
the 1930s and World War Two ... An international order whose
economic, political, social and cultural components had defined the
world for decades before 1914 disappeared completely. For eighty
years after 1914 global economic integration existed only in the
imagination of theorists and historians. (20)
This is an entertaining passage, full of bold hyperbole, but it
does not fit the broader evidence. There is no doubt that the period
from 1920 to 1950 was a period of turmoil, violence and economic
downturn: E. H. Carr, writing in the mid-1930s, classically called one
part of that period the Twenty Year Crisis. (21) However, processes of
globalization continued on in many forms. Similarly, we reject the
suggestion that World Wars I and II caused globalization per se to go
into reverse. This rejection is in part based on an obvious but most
often overlooked point: a world war is by definition a globalizing
event--it names the drawing of a significant proportion of the world
into a global conflagration. (22) World War I drew extensive military
relations across an expanding world-space; the interwar period, with the
exception of the depression years of 1929 and 1930, saw an expanding
global arms trade (as well as increasing foreign production licensing);
and World War II was arguably the first global war in human history,
with a ragged but intense impact on parts of the world that were
geographically a long way from the zones of slaughter. A parallel
counter-argument can be made against those who claim that economic
globalization collapsed in a few months. What collapsed was the Gold
Standard system, but even this took more than a decade, and the
Depression that developed in the 1930s was not just marked by a crash on
29 October 1929 on Wall Street in New York City. Other cities and
regions were affected. The Great Depression had global consequences with
major impacts as far afield as Latin America, Australia, South Africa and the commodity-exporting countries in Asia. It is an apparently
obvious point once it is made, but it is one almost always glossed over
in the economics literature.
The other 'obvious' thing that can be said, taking into
account both lines of interpretation discussed earlier in relation to
either two or three waves of modern economic 'openness', is
that while the relative global flow of trade and finance fell during the
great depressions of the 1890s and 1930s, other dimensions of economic
globalization were unevenly consolidating. Foreign Direct Investment
(FDI), one of the usual indicators of economic globalization, expanded
in real terms during that same period, even if it was highly
concentrated in a few countries. The phenomenon of globalizing
corporations continued to consolidate, even if business remained
concentrated in the primary products sector. This was the period during
which processed food and drink products, for example, emerged as global
brands. (23) Even if up until the 1980s the vast bulk of food was still
consumed in the country of processing, World War I marked the
globalization of some key commodities. Carried by the war economy, W. K.
Kellogg began to expand globally in 1914, as did Coca Cola, Nestle and
Kraft Foods. The interwar years were difficult, with some globalizing
companies such as Pepsi going bankrupt and/or being restructured, but by
the end of World War II many other companies had consolidated their
global reach. Coca Cola was being bottled in forty countries, and
Nestle's Nescafe had reached one million cases per annum sold
across the world.
It was the period before the development of shipping
containerization (the mid-1950s), which meant that processed food was
treated as 'break-bulk cargo' (by contrast with bulk cargo like grain or ore) and had to be handled item by item by longshoremen
lugging them onto wooden pallets that were then winched ashore. (24)
Nevertheless, break-bulk cargo was on the move globally. In general,
then, responses to the difficulties of the first half of the 20th
century can be said to have contributed to setting the conditions for
what became known as the Long Boom in the second half of the 20th
century. The state was important in this process, and the dominant form
of economic orthodoxy was Keynesianism. More basically, changes across
the first half of the 20th century in the techniques and technologies
(the means) of production and exchange, including in transportation,
factory mechanization (often described as 'Fordism' after the
particular form of Henry T. Ford's mechanization of the automobile
industry), and a particular form of workplace organization (namely,
Taylorism), meant that in the postwar period globalizing exchange and
production burgeoned. This was despite the slow collapse of colonial
imperialism as a major carrier of 19th-century global interchange. The
burgeoning was associated with a qualitative shift in the nature of the
economic system. It is a shift that can be described in empirical terms
and depicted in graphs that show lines jagging ever-upwards, but more
than that, it amounts to a change in the dominant condition of
capitalism and an overlaying of prior forms.
Proposition 5: Expressed narrowly in terms of the mode of
production, across the late 20th century we saw a shift from the
dominance of industrial capitalism to what might be called
techno-capitalism.
The concept of 'techno-capitalism' is intended to evoke
the importance of techno-science, computerization, automation, and the
emergence of a new class of intellectually trained technicians as
central to the process of production and exchange. (25) If we, in
addition, link this to the changing mode of exchange, dominated as it is
now by electronic communications and codification systems, we might want
to talk more broadly about techno-electronic capitalism. This is not
intended to suggest that the process is simply technologically driven.
Nor is it intended to suggest that the concept of
'techno-electronic capitalism' encompasses the
comprehensiveness of the transformations faced in the contemporary
world. What it recognizes is that, even taking into account the levels
of continuity, we do face a qualitative transformation in the nature of
capitalism.
This question of techno-scientific change is one of a number of
issues that needs to be handled very carefully in making the claim about
the changing dominant nature of capitalism. Here the metaphor of
overlaying levels of formation helps us to get beyond the usual
epochal-change or no-change arguments. The concept of
'techno-capitalism' does not mean that the volume of
agricultural production has diminished, (26) nor should it be taken to
suggest that industrial production has collapsed or faded away to be
replaced by the so-called knowledge industries. If we go through some of
the indicators, the difference should become apparent. Over the period
since the 1980s, old-style industrialism has been overlaid and reframed
by changing forms of organization, regulation and control, by new
immediacies of extensive communication, by an increasingly global
dispersal of production sites, and by the imperatives of finance
capital. Until the 1950s the predominant global trade was in raw
materials, and across the late 20th century this was gradually overlaid
by trade in manufactured items and services. However, this does not get
close to describing the comprehensiveness of the remaking of the
dominant processes of production and exchange. Much more importantly,
the movement of those raw materials, once intended to feed the
manufacturing plants of the industrial West, has been reorganized into
different production cycles, including through a subcontracting of
production by globalizing corporations to manufacturing zones outside
their main place of headquartering, usually into the Global South. There
have been increasing intra-firm trade and cross-border intra-firm
agreements; global dispersal of components manufacturing, drawn together
into assembly plants in just-in-time production; sub-licensing of
technologies and techniques, as well as trade in technology and
intellectual property rights to 'offshore' companies; and the
globalization of new forms of regulation (paradoxically) to enhance
global flows. (27)
Globalization and the Coming of a 'Borderless World'?
Another major controversy that any broad survey of economic
globalization needs to deal with is the question as to whether
globalization has ushered in a borderless world. Without an approach
that can talk about different levels of social formation we tend to get
one-dimensional arguments. The borderless world thesis is related to one
of the more dramatic claims in a field already beset by
hyperbole--namely, that we are witnessing the end of geography. (28)
Another particularly unhelpful and analogous claim is expressed by New
York Times journalist Thomas Friedman when he argues that the world is
flat: 'around the year 2000 we entered a whole new era,' he
says. 'Globalization 3.0 is shrinking the world from a size small
to a size tiny and flattening the playing field at the same time.'
(29) The 'borderless world' position as an overall
generalization about the globalizing economy no longer gets significant
active support in the academic globalization literature. However, it has
to be taken seriously because it remains a mainstream journalistic
misconception and has a small but active group of proponents in the
global economics literature (called 'hyper-globalists'). The
most prominent of these writers is Kenichi Ohmae, a neo-liberal
management strategist. It also has to be taken seriously because
implicit conceptions of a borderless world have crept into many
definitions of globalization. For example, the ex-World Bank economist
and critic of unfettered flows of capital Joseph Stiglitz, defines
globalization as 'the closer integration of the countries and
peoples of the world which has been brought about by the enormous
reduction of costs of transportation and communication, and the breaking
down of artificial barriers to the flows of goods, services, capital,
knowledge, and (to a lesser extent) people across borders'
(emphasis added). (30) Here, in a small slip of the pen, borders as
opposed to global flows are implicitly seen as artificial. This is not
inconsistent with Ohmae's definition of globalization as
'nothing but liberalization of the individual, consumers,
corporations and regions from the legacy of the nation-state in which
they belong'. (31)
The major proponents of the borderless world thesis qualify their
own grand claims, either without saying as much, or in no more than
behind-the-hand whispers. In the case of Ohmae, when he first wrote The
Borderless World, the notion of borderless globalization was treated as
an exciting and present imperative for most of the book; that is, until
the epilogue when he wrote, 'Can all this be true? ... Are national
borders really disappearing? ... We're not there yet. Many
companies are still dominated by a headquarters mentality, myopically
focussed on the markets close to them and dominated by one nationality.
Borders do matter and markets are still protected'. (32) Thomas
Friedman's The World is Flat, in parallel to Ohmae's
Borderless World, extols the Globalization 3.0 that he believes has
epochally supplanted what has gone before--then on page 375 he says,
'this is the point in the book where I have to make a confession. I
know that the world is not flat. Yes, you read me right: I know that the
world is not flat. Don't worry. I know'. This kind of
journalistic writing is both misleading and ethically dubious, giving
the impression that we all now live in an even world of boundless
opportunity and freedom, and that the oppressions and injustices in that
world are an untidy anachronism.
Ohmae, in his next book, returned to his central thesis that we
indeed live in a borderless world, as no doubt will Friedman in relation
to 'flatness'. Ohmae posited four developments as
characterizing the change: that investment is no longer spatially
constrained; corporations are increasingly globally oriented;
information technology has dissolved distances; and consumers are
driving demand beyond national borders. However, this time he qualified
the overall thesis by the proposal that trading and production zones
such as the Kansai region, Wales, Silicon Valley, or southern China have
become the natural units of global capitalism (that is, they have become
bordered zones in a borderless world). The consistent thread was that
Ohmae remained adamant that nation-states have become irrelevant
'bit players'. (33)
Arguably, the one economic process by which nation-state borders
are actually being crossed in a relatively unregulated way is in the
area of finance capital. This is the only area, apart from the movement
of electronic culture, that might lead one to posit the emergence of a
'borderless world' in order to dramatize the changes from the
past. However, even this has to be handled carefully. This may in a very
real sense be part of a 'new economy', but it is only one
level of a complex intersection of formations. (34) One of the key flows
of financial capital, for example, involves currency speculation, and
(in an apparent paradox) this cross-order flow depends upon there being
continuing national borders and therefore bordered currencies with which
to trade. If currencies were not related to different national markets
unevenly integrated into the global market, there would be not the same
profit to be made on currency speculation. The same could be said for
the process of financial arbitrage, viz., the process of moving capital
around to take advantage of different values for different objects in
different markets. Unless there were continuing frictions between
unevenly integrated national markets, global arbitrage would not be as
profitable as it currently can be. As the economist Dani Rodik writes,
the relationship between global and national markets still involves
negotiating boundaries:
Institutional and jurisdictional discontinuities serve to segment
markets just as transport costs or import taxes do. * In effect,
national borders and the institutional boundaries that they define,
impose a wide array of transaction costs.
These transaction costs arise from various sources. Most obviously,
contract reinforcement is more problematic across national
boundaries that it is domestically. Domestic courts may be
unwilling--and international courts may be unable--to enforce a
contract signed between the residences of two different countries.
This problem is particularly severe in the case of capital flows,
as financial contracts inevitably involve a promise to pay. (35)
In responding to the borderless world thesis, at least two
important issues arise. Firstly, the nature of the flow of different
kinds of objects and processes globally needs to be distinguished. Just
as we can distinguish between different trade patterns in relation to
bulk goods, low-value goods and high-value goods, and so on, further
distinctions can be made between more or less abstracted goods. More
abstracted goods--for example, objects produced in the 'tertiary
sector', non-tangible objects that can be digitalized such as
finance capital, intellectual capital, and electronic commodities--move
across the globe way in ways that are less constrained by borders than
'solid objects', if we can use that term (things produced by
primary and secondary industries). All that is solid has not melted into
air (to rewrite Karl Marx). Secondly, in responding to the borderless
world thesis there is no need to go in the opposite direction to say
that nothing has changed about borders under conditions of intensifying
globalization. This is a point made by Henry Wai-chung Yeung in
suggesting that some of the critiques of the hyper-globalists have
overly concentrated on providing evidence that the world is not yet
fully globalized, rather than analyzing the changing nature of borders
and the uneven effects of globalization. (36) As argued earlier, we
should be able to take for granted the point that globalization is not
an end state and that it is meaningless to talk about a
'fully' globalized world.
When one gets beneath the hyperbole about a borderless world, the
key point of contention that the hyper-globalists tend to hold onto is
their suggestion that the nation-state as a container of a (partially)
differentiated economy and market has become irrelevant. Not even the
purest neo-liberal economist would claim that all borders and all
sources of economic friction have dropped away in the contemporary
period. Even Kenichi Ohmae's claim for a borderless world rests on
an argument about a new kind of zoned (that is, bordered)
regionalization. However, he like many other writers, continues to argue
that the nation-state is an economic anachronism. In her essay, Saskia
Sassen sums up a more nuanced response that we use as a way of
concluding this section:
[T]he global economy to a large extent materializes in national
territories. Its topography is one that moves in and out of digit
space and national territories. This requires a particular set of
negotiations that have the effect of leaving the geographical
boundaries of the national state's territory unaltered, but do
transform the institutional encasements of that geographical fact,
that is, the state's territorial jurisdiction or, more abstractly,
exclusive territory ... This would mean that the global economy and
the national state do not relate to each other in a zero-sum
situation. (37)
Debating Capitalist Globalization, Development and Inequality
Another major set of controversies concerns the long-term or
systemic structural effects of globalizing market relations on a society
or civilization as a whole and on its historical experience. While the
liberal economist tends to regard the market form as nearly perfect or
perfectible, (38) another tradition and perspective (partly but not
exclusively derived from Marx's analysis in Capital) views the
market as inherently non-perfectible and indeed unstable and prone to
historically severe failures. (39) In the one tradition, there is
nothing inherently troubling, from any systemic perspective, about the
endless extension of market social relations and the commodification
processes that underlie this extension. On the contrary, many liberal
theorists seem to regard such linear processes as fairly unproblematic
and as a 'good' in themselves, historically speaking. The
other perspective, however, tends to see recurrent and sometimes
catastrophic economic, social and political failure and breakdown as
being a direct consequence of previous market extensions and
commodification processes that produced systemic crisis in the first
place. Certainly, the existence of serious recurrent systemic crisis in
the history of capitalism and of market relations is a subject worthy of
the closest investigation and consideration, and one which continues to
be central to contemporary argument in International Political Economy.
One study identified seventy-six currency crises and twenty-six banking
crises in the period of 1975 to 1995, the twenty years associated with
the transformation to the dominance of techno-electronic capitalism.
This controversy has obvious relevance for the present generation of
scholars and students of the global economy and its social formations,
and for the ongoing debate over the role of 'free market'
forces and globalization in relation to global stability, security,
social justice and environmental sustainability.
Indeed, the issue of how to understand inequality, hierarchy, and
asymmetry in relation to the role of the market and capitalism remains
of the greatest importance and relevance, both academically and in
everyday practice and experience. Is the market to be understood as
merely a socially neutral institution, with intrinsically egalitarian or
levelling characteristics and consequences? Or alternatively, is the
market to be understood as a form of highly asymmetrical social power,
anything but socially neutral in regard to inequality, hierarchy and
asymmetries in wealth and power? Pierre Bourdieu views the capitalist
market as a type of social relation whereby those who already possess
advantages tend to become even more advantaged, and those who lack prior
advantages tend to become even less advantaged, or one might say
'exploited' or perhaps 'marginalized' from the
processes of wealth creation and capital accumulation and the
considerable social and political power that is concomitant with these.
(40)
Many decades ago, the first attempts at a systematic critique of
the reigning economic and development theories of the West argued that,
far from being non-problematic, the extension of market relations and
globalizing capitalism itself was predicated upon a deeply entrenched
historical set of asymmetries and inequality. Their origins could be
found in centuries of western colonialism and imperial expansion, as
well as the activities of extremely powerful private corporations and
financial institutions. The centre-periphery relations of the past,
which had altered the global economy profoundly in order to privilege
the wealth creation and power of the western states and societies in
command of the system, were not merely 'historical'. Rather,
they were the continuing structure in which 'development' was
to supposedly take place in 'newly emerging' or
'developing' countries. Although formal independence had
arrived for most former colonies, this did not necessarily mean that
genuine or successful 'national capitalism' and 'national
development' would automatically take place. Or even that
nation-state formation would be easy or sustainable. All of these old
controversies remain unresolved today, both theoretically and in actual
practice. Let us say for now that it is surely the case that economics
(whether conceived of as nationally bound or, more accurately in our
view, as globally framed) cannot be properly understood without
systematic reference to issues of power, politics, unequal knowledge and
coercive as well as contractual or voluntary relations. The so-called
'free market', so extolled by some today, is neither free nor
based on a 'level playing field', as one of the key phrases in
neo-liberal economics would have it.
Even in the 19th century, and long into the 20th century, European
and western powers, and globalizing capital, continued to practise
highly 'unfree' economics, relying on elaborate imperial
systems of international economic management and regulation, and on very
sophisticated systems of subsidy, industrial policy and hidden or
neo-protectionist devices, that again were designed to maintain the
advantages of the already privileged, wealthy and powerful of the world
system. This legacy, although reinterpreted for a new world-time, still
largely defines the current asymmetrical global economic and political
architecture of both global capitalism today and the world market
system. In the present era, the richest and most powerful states and
companies, the inheritors of the former imperial and colonial world
order, continue to impose unilateral restructuring, especially
'liberalization', 'marketization' and
'privatization', on the weakest and poorest societies and
peoples on this planet. All the while the IMF and other global agencies
continue to impose extremely stringent criteria of 'reform'
that effectively undermine the state's capacity to provide support
to the poorest and most vulnerable people in their societies. In a world
where the richest one per cent of people earn as much as the poorest 57
per cent, and where over one billion people live on less than seventy
pence per day (expressed in Pound Sterling), there appears to be an
inherent contradiction between the promises of the reigning or hegemonic
economic doctrines of global capitalism and market ideology and
persistent and deepening global poverty and despair. A recent study
conducted by UNCTAD on the consequences of greater trade liberalization
among the thirty-six poorest countries in the world during the 1990s has
in fact concluded that, 'The incidence of poverty increased
unambiguously in those economies that adopted the most open trade
regimes'. (41) Even despite reforms to the IMF in relation to
structural adjustment policies, there is unfortunately a continuing
tendency among the very rich and powerful to 'blame the
victim' and insist on an ever-expanding list of preconditions for
vitally needed economic assistance. What the rich and powerful continue
to refuse to do is seriously acknowledge their own historical and
contemporary responsibility for the structural causes of such global
poverty, underdevelopment and reproduction of poverty, rather than true
'development'.
Conclusion
We are living in a vastly different world from that of 19th-century
extended mercantile and imperial trade. Even more from the globalizing
trade regimes of the Silk Road a millennium ago. However, there are
continuities between these worlds and our own that are worth exploring.
Analyzing both the continuities and discontinuities of globalization,
the market and capitalism is intended to highlight questions of
different social formations and their consequences. The shift from
industrial capitalism to the emergent dominance of techno-electronic
capitalism has been associated with an intensification of the processes
of spatial extension, including globalization. Ironically, at the same
time it has been accompanied by ideologies of globalism that present all
of the problems of the contemporary world as stemming from the limits to
be placed on an otherwise borderless world. Today, we seem to be beset
by phalanxes of free-market ideologues and advocates of neo-liberal
solutions to every economic and social problem or issue, while at the
same time we witness continued and tragic global poverty on a scale
never before imaginable in the whole of human history. It is indeed a
very strange contradiction. Such a consideration brings in the even more
problematic matter of how moral issues and ethical concerns relate to
the market and to capitalism. In a world that is supposedly ever more
secular and 'rational' in orientation, we oddly enough see
around us a very visible resurgence of religious mentalities and
movements, and many if not most of these are increasingly political in
nature. What is this possibly telling us in the context of the current
discussion? Perhaps that many people, whatever their cultural or
religious traditions or context, are deeply troubled by the instability
and the gross injustices they experience or witness in this new global
capitalism under the dominance of free-market ideology and continued
western global power. They are repelled by what they see as sheer greed
on the part of those who are already the most wealthy and powerful. They
are critical of their unwillingness to relinquish these privileges and
attempt to ceaselessly increase them, at the direct expense of the
peoples and the environment of the world. Religious teachings may offer
some a sense of security, identity and moral compass for making sense of
a bewildering world and to find a place to stand in it. It also may
offer a moral critique of the contemporary excesses of both the market
and capitalism rooted in a deep sense that there are alternatives to
such practices.
When the late John Kenneth Galbraith analyzed the greatest
'market failure' of the 20th century, what he called 'The
Great Crash' of 1929, his conclusion was that the essential cause
of this great failure could be summarized most directly in a single
word: greed. (42) In many traditions, both secular and non-secular,
there have been important injunctions in relation to how the market
should be regulated (most prominently in the Chinese, Islamic and
mediaeval Christian traditions) and what limitations should be placed
upon capitalist pursuit of profit and expansion. We need not now view
these sentiments as being merely primitive or historically naive, but
rather as expressions of a deeply human concern for the equilibrium of
life as a whole--a desire to maintain things in a sense of balance and
proportion, between the common and individual good, as the ultimate
objective. We would do well to continue to place this concern at the
centre of analysis even as we learn to more adequately map and analyze
the dominant forms taken by different kinds of globalizations.
(1.) This article was written in conjunction with work done for an
anthology that we have just finished editing together called
Globalization and Economy, Vol. 1. Globalizing Markets and Capitalism,
London, Sage Publications, forthcoming, 2007. Most of the articles
referenced in the present essay are reproduced in that anthology.
(2.) Among the vast range of writings see, for example, B. Amoroso,
On Globalization: Capitalism in the 21st Century, Basingstoke, Palgrave,
1998; J. Stiglitz, Globalization and its Discontents, New York, W. W.
Norton, 2002; J. A. Freiden, Global Capitalism: Its Fall and Rise in the
Twentieth Century, New York, W. W. Norton, 2006; and Mark Rupert and M.
Scott Solomon, Globalization and the International Political Economy,
Lanham, Rowman and Littlefield, 2006.
(3.) It is now commonplace to argue that contemporary globalizing
capitalism is associated with the potential commodification of
everything. This point has to be put very carefully. We would suggest
that while almost all avenues of social life have been opened to
processes of commodification, this is not to say that everything has
been commodified. See C. C. Williams, A Commodified World, Mapping the
Limits of Capitalism, London, Zed Books, 2005.
(4.) To be completely clear, when we say traditional and modern
history, we are talking about dominant formations of history and not
suggesting that all of post-16th century history can be characterized as
modern per se. Interleaved with modern formations are continuing
traditional and tribal formations, as well as emergent formations, such
the development of postmodern forms of financial exchange--exchange that
instrumentalizes the relativization of time and space for the purpose of
capital accumulation--that became institutionalized in the late-20th
century.
(5.) M. Wolf, Why Globalization Works, Yale University Press,
Newhaven, 2004, p. 14.
(6.) B. Berberoglu, Globalization of Capital and the Nation-State,
Lanham, Rowman and Littlefield, 2003, p. 3
(7.) K. Polanyi, The Great Transformation: The Political and
Economic Origins of Our Time, Boston, Beacon Press, 1944, chs 4-5.
(8.) J. Abu-Lughod, 'The Shape of the World System in the
Thirteenth Century', Studies in Comparative International
Developments, Winter 1987-88, p. 3.
(9.) B. K. Gills and A. G. Frank, '"World System
Cycles", Crises, and Hegemonial Shifts, 1700 BC to 1700 AD',
Review, vol. 15, no. 4, 1992, pp. 621-87.
(10.) I. Wallerstein, 'Globalization or the Age of Transition?
A Long-Term View of the Trajectory of the World System',
International Sociology, vol. 15, no. 2, 2000, pp. 249-65.
(11.) I. Wallerstein, The Modern World-System: Capitalist
Agriculture and the Origins of European World-Economy in the Sixteenth
Century, New York, Academic Press, 1976, 15; see also, C. Chase- Dunn,
Global Formation: Structures of the World Economy, Oxford, Blackwell,
1989.
(12.) J. Harwood, To the Ends of the World, Sydney, ABC Books,
2007, pp. 10-12.
(13.) For a recent example of the latter approach, see for D.
Harvey, Spaces of Global Development: Towards a Theory of Uneven
Geographical Development, London, Verso, 2006.
(14.) See, for example, S. Sassen, The Global City, 2nd edn,
Princeton, Princeton University Press, 2001; M. Abrahamson, Global
Cities, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2004.
(15.) B. Gills, 'World System Analysis, Historical Sociology and International Relations: The Difference a Hyphen Makes', in S.
Hobden and J. M. Hobson (eds), Historical Sociology of International
Relations, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2002, pp. 14161; and
'Globalization as Global History: Introducing a Dialectical
Analysis', in M. A. Tetreault, R. A. Denemark, K. P. Thomas and K.
Burch (eds), Rethinking Global Political Economy: Emerging Issues,
Unfolding Odysseys, London, Routledge, 2003, pp. 89-108.
(16.) We say this with an awareness that using the term
'mediaeval' in this context is, ironically, residually
Eurocentric. See A. Gunder Frank, Reorient: Global Economy in the Asian
Age, Berkeley, University of California Press, 1998.
(17.) B. K. Gills and A. Gunder Frank, 'The Cumulation of
Accumulation', in Frank and Gills (eds), The World System: Five
Hundred Years or Five Thousand?, London, Routledge, 1996.
(18.) S. Horowitz, 'Restarting Globalization after World War
II: Structure, Coalitions and the Cold War', Comparative Political
Studies, vol. 37, no. 2, 2004, p. 127.
(19.) See, for example, M. M. Weinstein's introduction to his
edited volume, Globalization: What's New?, New York, Columbia
University Press, 2005: 'globalization collapsed between the world
wars and recovered only slowly thereafter' (p. 2).
(20.) Freiden, Global Capitalism, p. xvi.
(21.) E. H. Carr, The Twenty Year's Crisis: 1919-1939, London,
Macmillan, 1939.
(22.) P. James and J. Friedman (eds), Globalization and Violence:
Vol. 3, Globalizing War and Intervention, London, Sage Publications,
2006.
(23.) D. Held, A. McGrew, D. Goldblatt and J. Perraton, Global
Transformations: Politics, Economics and Culture, Cambridge, Polity
Press, 1999, pp. 239-42.
(24.) M. Levison, The Box: How the Shipping Container Made the
World Smaller and the World Economy Bigger, Princeton, Princeton
University Press, 2006.
(25.) The term 'the intellectually trained' comes from
Geoff Sharp. See his 'The Idea of the Intellectual and After',
Arena Journal, New Series, nos. 17-18, 2002, pp. 269-316.
(26.) It does, however, mean that agriculture, even in the Global
South, is increasingly framed by such abstract processes as the movement
of finance capital. See, for example, U. Patnaik, 'Global
Capitalism, Deflation and Agrarian Crisis in Developing Countries',
Journal of Agrarian Change, vol. 3, nos. 1- 2, 2003, pp. 33-66.
(27.) See, variously, Held, McGrew, Goldblatt, and Perraton, Global
Transformations; P. Dicken, Global Shift: Reshaping the Global Economic
Map in the 21st Century, 4th edn, London, Sage Publications, 2003; J. H.
Jackson, The World Trading System: Law and Policy of International
Relations, 2nd edn, Cambridge, MIT Press, 1997; and J. Braithwaite and
P. Drahos, Global Business Regulation, Cambridge, Cambridge University
Press, 2000; Weinstein (ed.), Globalization: What's New?
(28.) R. O'Brien, Global Financial Integration: The End of
Geography, New York, Council on Foreign Relations Press, 1992.
(29.) T. L. Friedman, The World is Flat: A Brief History of the
Twenty-First Century, New York, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2005, p. 10.
(30.) Stiglitz, Globalization and its Discontents, p. 9.
(31.) K. Ohmae, The Next Global Stage: Challenges and Opportunities
in the Borderless World, Singapore, Pearson Education, 2005, p. 122.
(32.) K. Ohmae, The Borderless World: Power and Strategy in the
Interlinked Economy, New York, HarperCollins, 1990, p. 211.
(33.) K. Ohmae, 'Where Borders Fall in a Borderless
World', Introduction and Chapter 1, The End of the Nation-State:
The Rise of Regional Economics, New York, Free Press, 1995.
(34.) J. Hinkson, 'Global Crisis: Political Economy and
Beyond', Arena Journal, New Series, no. 12, 1998, pp. 67-81.
(35.) D. Rodik, 'Feasible Globalizations', in Weinstein,
Globalization: What's New?, p. 202.
(36.) H. Wai-chung Yeung, 'Capital, State and Space:
Contesting the Borderless World', Transactions of the Institute of
British Geographers, New Series, no 23, 1998, pp. 291-309
(37.) S. Sassen, 'Territory and Territoriality in the Global
Economy', International Sociology, vol. 15, no. 2, 2000, p. 374.
(38.) See, for example, the approach of Eric Weede, in 'The
Diffusion of Prosperity and Peace by Globalization', The
Independent Review, vol. 9, no. 2, 2004, pp. 165-86.
(39.) See, for example, Wallerstein, 'Globalization or the Age
of Transition?'
(40.) P. Bourdieu, 'New Liberal Speak: Notes on the New
Planetary Vulgate', Radical Philosophy, vol. 105, January-February
2001, pp. 2-5.
(41.) UNCTAD, The Least Developed Countries Report, New York and
Geneva, UNCTAD, 2004.
(42.) J. K. Galbraith, The Great Crash of 1929, (1954),
Harmondsworth, Penguin Books, 1980.
* Author's note: this applies more to traded goods and
services than it does to financial flows.