Singh, Ajit (2007): Globalization and Industrial Revolutions in India and China: Implications for Advanced and Developing Economies and for National and International Policies.
Preview |
PDF
MPRA_paper_24286.pdf Download (551kB) | Preview |
Abstract
This paper examines the impact on labour markets in advanced countries (ACs) of the integration of the two giant fast-growing countries, China and India, with the liberalised global economy. The integration is taking place under “current globalisation,” which consists of free trade, free capital movements and domestic labour market flexibility (instead of free international movement of labour). The first part reviews economic theory as well as several generations of empirical work on the effects of the fast expansion of exports from developing countries (DCs) on AC labour markets. Taking into account the positive, the negative, the direct and the indirect effects, the most up-to-date empirical research suggests that globalisation has a small overall effect on output and employment in the US, that is just as likely to be favourable as being unfavourable, depending on the time period and the countries considered.
The paper highlights the pioneering contribution of Freeman (2005), which suggests that even if trade with the South has not previously disadvantaged North workers, the doubling of the global labour force with India and China’s recent integration with the international economy may have profoundly unfavourable repercussions for AC workers. Two major points of constructive criticism of the Freeman thesis have been emphasised here: (a) the lack of analysis of the relevant demand side variables and (b) inadequate recognition of the inherent economic strength and dynamism of the US economy and its innovative large corporations. These should enable the U.S to maintain its technological leadership.
In relation to policy, the underlying question examined here is whether India and China’s industrial revolutions, which are a social imperative for these countries, can be sustained and made compatible with full employment and rising real wages for workers in the North. It is concluded that current globalisation cannot meet these twin objectives and that coordination and cooperation between nation states under alternative globalisation are much the better way, if not the only way of realising these goals. The reasons why this should be so are explained in the last part of the paper.
Item Type: | MPRA Paper |
---|---|
Original Title: | Globalization and Industrial Revolutions in India and China: Implications for Advanced and Developing Economies and for National and International Policies |
English Title: | Globalization and Industrial Revolutions in India and China: Implications for Advanced and Developing Economies and for National and International Policies |
Language: | English |
Keywords: | Labour Markets in Advanced Countires; Globalisation, Economic Policy |
Subjects: | A - General Economics and Teaching > A1 - General Economics A - General Economics and Teaching > A1 - General Economics > A10 - General |
Item ID: | 24286 |
Depositing User: | Ajit Singh |
Date Deposited: | 16 Aug 2010 11:51 |
Last Modified: | 19 Oct 2019 04:28 |
References: | Acemoglu, D (2005). Constitutions, politics and economics: A review essay on Pearson and Tabellini’s The Economic Effects of Constitutions, Journal of Economic Literature Volume XLIII, Number 4, pages1025-48. Ahluwalia, Montek (1986). Balance of Payments Adjustment in India 1970 –71 to 1983-84, World Development, Volume14, Number 8. Ahluwalia, Isher (1985). Industrial growth in India : Stagnation since the Mid-Sixties, Oxford University Press, Delhi. Atkinson, A.B. (1999). Is Rising Inequality Inevitable? A Critique of the Transatlantic Consensus, WIDER Annual Lectures 3, World Institute for Development Economics Research, The United Nations University. Atkinson, AB. (2000). The Changing Distribution of Income: Evidence and Explanations, German Economic Review, Volume 1. Atkinson, AB (2001). ‘A Critique of the Transatlantic Consensus on Rising Income Inequality’, World Economy, 2005, pages 433-452 Bailey, M.N. and Lawrence, R. Z., (2004). ‘What Happened to the Great US Job Machine? The Role of Trade and Electronic Offshoring’, Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, No. 2(Fall), pages 201-260. Baumol, W. (2002). The Free Market Innovation Machine: Analysing the Growth Miracle of Capitalism, Princeton, Princeton University Press. Baumol, W. J., Blackman, S. A. B., and Wolffe, E. N., (1989). Productivity and American Leadership: The Long View, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press. Beenstock, M. (1984). The World Economy in Transition, London and Boston, Allen and Unwin. Bhagwati, J. (1994). Free Trade: Old and New Challenges, The Economic Journal, Volume 104, Issue 423, pages 231-246. Blackaby, F. (ed.) 1979. Deindustrialisation, London, Heinemann Educational Books. Bosworth, B. and Collins, S.(2003). The Empirics of Growth: An Update, Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, Volume 2, pages113-206. Brandt, L.Rawski, G. and Sutton, J. (2006). China’s Industrial Development, forthcoming in China’s Great Transformation: Origins, Mechanisms and Consequences of the Post-Reform Economic Boom, Lorren Brandt and Thomas G. Rowski (eds.). Paper presented at the EUNIP Conference at Limerick in Ireland, June 2006. Cairncross (1979). What is deindustrialisation?, Deindustrialisation, Blackaby, F. (ed.), London, Heinemann Educational Books. Cooper, Richard (2005) Living with Global Imbalances: A Contrarian View Policy Brief for the IIE, Washington, November. Dasgupta, S. and Singh, A. (2005). Will Services Be the New Engine of Economic Growth in India?, Development and Change Forum 2005, Volume 36 Number 6. Dasgupta, S. and Singh, A. (2006). Manufacturing, Services and Premature Deindustrialization in Developing Countries: A Kaldorian Analysis, UNU-WIDER Jubilee Paper Series, Research Paper No. 2006/X, United Nations University. The Economist (2005). Manufacturing Employment: Industrial Metamorphosis, The Economist, Finance & Economics, 29 September 2005. Economist, The (2006). Inequality in America: The rich, the poor, and the growing gap between them, The Economist, 17 June, 2006. Epstein, G.A. (2005). Financialization and the World Economy, Edward Elgar, Cheltenham, UK Freeman, R.B. (1995). Are Your Wages Set in Beijing?, Journal of Economic Perspectives, Volume 9, Number 3, pages15-32. Freeman, R.B. (2005). What Really Ails Europe and America: the Doubling of the Global Workforce, The Globalist, 03 June, 2005. Glyn, A.J. (2006). Capitalism Unleashed, Finance, Globalization and Welfare, Oxford University Press, Oxford. Gottschalk, P. and Smeeding, T. (1997). Cross National Comparisons of Earnings and Income Inequality, Journal of Economic Literature, Volume 35, Number 2, pages 633-687. Harris-White, B., (2003), India Working: Essays on Society and Economy, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. Hicks, J.R. (1939). The Foundations of Welfare Economics, Economic Journal. Hicks, J.R.(1959). Essays in World Economics. Howes, C. and Singh, A. (2000). Competitiveness Matters – Industry and Economic Performance in the U.S., The University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor. IMF (2006). World Economic Outlook: Globalisation and inflation, International Monetary Fund, Washington DC, April. Izurieta, A. and McKinley, T. (2006) Addressing Global Imbalances: A Development-Oriented Policy Agenda, International Poverty Centre Working Paper No. 23. Jorgensen, D.W., Ho, M.S. and Stiroh, K.J. (2005). The End of the Boom, Investors Chronicle, 4 February 2005, page 39. Joshi, S. (2004). Tertiary Sector-Driven Growth in India- Impact on Employment and poverty’, Economic and Political Weekly, Special Article, September 11, 2004. Kaldor, N. (1966). Causes of the Slow Rate of Economic Growth of the United Kingdom, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. Kaldor, N. (1939). Welfare Propositions In Economics, re-published in the Essential Kaldor, Targetti, F. and Thirlwall, A.P. (eds.), page 84. Kaldor, N. (1976). Inflation and Recession in the World Economy, Economic Journal, Volume 86. Kaldor, N. (1979). Comment in Deindustrialisation, Blackaby, F. (ed.), London, Heinemann Educational Books. Katz, L. (1999). Technology, Change, Computerization and the Wage Structure, paper prepared for the Conference on “Understanding the Digital Economy: Data, Tools and Research, Washington DC, May 25-26, 1999. Kelkar, V. (2004). India: On the Growth Turnpike, Mimeo: Narayanan Oration, National Institute of Economics and Business, Australian National University, April. Kohli, A. (2006). Politics of Economic Growth In India, 1980-2005: Part I-The 1980s, Economic and Political Weekly, Special Article, April 1, 2006, pages 1251-1259. Krugman, P. (1994). Competitiveness: A Dangerous Obsession. Foreign Affairs, Volume 73, March-April, pages 28-44. Krugman, P. (2000). Technology, Trade and Factor Prices, Journal of International Economics, Volume 50, pages 51-57. Leamer, E. (2000). What’s the Use of Factor Contents?, Journal of International Economics, Volume 50, Number 1. Maddison, A. (2005). Memorandum by Professor Angus Maddison . Retrieved on 03/06/2006 from: http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/ld200506/ldselect/ldeconaf/12/12we14.htm Martin, R. and Rowthorn, RE. (2005). Accounting for Stability, Economic Studies, Volume 51, Number 4, pages 649-696. Nolan, P. (2004). Transforming China: Globalization, Transition and Development. Anthem Press, London. OECD (2005). Economic Surveys : China, Volume 13, September 2005. Opper, S. (2005). The Giant Graduates. China’s strive for High-Technology, CES ifo Forum Volume 6, Number 3, pages 43-48. Overholt, W.H. (2005). China and Globalisation, RAND Corporation Testimony Series, May 2005. Qian, Y., Lau, L. and Roland, G. (2000). Reform Without Lower: An Interpretation of China’s Dual-Track Approach to Transition, Journal of Political Economy, Volume 108, Number 1, February 2000, pages 120-143. Rajan, R. (2006). Foreword, World Economic Outlook: Globalization and Inflation, International Monetary Fund, April 2006, pages xi-xiii. Rodrik, D. (2001). The Global Governance of Trade As If Development Really Mattered, United Nations Development Programme Publications, UNDP. Rodrik, D., and Subramanian, A. (2004).Why India Can Grow At 7 Per Cent A Year or More – Projections and Reflections. Economic and Political Weekly, Special Article, April 17, 2004. Rodrik, D., Subramanian, A. and Trebbi, F. (2004). Institutions Rule: The Primacy of Institutions over Geography and Integration in Economic Development, Journal of Economic Growth, Volume 9, Number 2, June 2004. J Rowthorn, R. and Coutt, K. (2004). De-Industrialization and the Balance of Payments in Advanced Economies, UNCTAD, Number170, May 2004. Rowthorn, R.E. and Wells, J.R. (1987). De-industrialisation and Foreign Trade, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press. Piketty, T. and Saez, E. (2006). The Evolution of Top Incomes: A Historical and International Perspective, NBER Working Paper 11955, January 2006. Samuelson, P. (2004). Where Ricardo and Mill Rebut and Confirm Arguments of Mainstream Economists Supporting Globalisation’, Journal of Economic Perspectives, Volume18, Number 3, pages135-146. Sayers, R.S. (1965). The Vicissitudes of an Expert Economy: Britain since 1880, University of Sydney Press, Sydney. Sen, A. and Himanshu (2004). Poverty and Inequality in India, Economic and Political Weekly, Special Article, September 2004. Sichel, Daniel E. (2004). Comment on Baily and Lawrence (2004), Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, Number 2. Singh, A. (1977). UK Industry and the World Economy: A Case of Deindustrialization? Cambridge Journal of Economics Volume 1, Number 2, pages113-136. Singh, A. (1987). Manufacturing and Deindustrialization, New Palgrave, Macmillan, London. Singh, A. (1989). Third World Competition and De-industrialization in Advanced Countries, Cambridge Journal of Economics, Volume13, pages 103-120. Singh, A. (1990). The Stock Market in a Socialist Economy in Nolan, P. and Fureng, D. (eds.) The Chinese Economy and Its Future, Polity Press, Cambridge. Singh, A. (1995a). Institutional Requirements for Full Employment in Advanced Economies, International Labour Review, Volume135, Number432, pages1287-1289. Singh, A. (1995b). How Did East Asia Grow So Fast? Slow Progress Towards An Analytical Consensus, UNCTAD Discussion Paper No.97. Singh, A. (1995c). Review of Wood, Adrian, North-South Trade, Employment and Inequality, Economic Journal, Volume 105, Number 432, pages1287-1289. Singh, A. (1995d). Institutional Requirements for Full Employment in Advanced Economies, International Labour Review, Volume105, Number 4-5. Singh A. (1995e). The State and Industrialization in India: Successes and Failures and the Lessons for the Future, in The Role of the State in Economic Change, Chang, H. and Rowthorn, R.(eds.), Oxford University Press, Oxford, pages 170-186. Singh, A. (1996). The Plan, The Market and the Evolutionary Economic Reform in China, State Market and Development, Abdullah, A. and Khan, R. (eds.), The University Press Limited, Dhaka, page193. Singh, A. (2000). Global Economic Trends and Social Development, UNRISD Occasional Paper Number 9, UNRISD, Geneva. Singh, A. (2001). Income Inequality in Advanced Economies: A Critical Examination of the Trade and Technology Theories and An Alternative Perspective, Centre for Business Research, Working Paper No. 219. Singh, A. (2003). Elements for a New Paradigm On Special and Differential Treatment: Special and Differential Treatment, The Multilateral Trading System and Economic Development in the 21st Century. Prepared for the joint ICTSD-GP International Dialogue , April 2003. Singh, A. (2004). Globalisation and the Regulation of FDI: New Proposals from the European Community and Japan, Contributions to Political Economy, Volume 24, Number 1, 2005, pages 99-121. Singh, A. (2005). Special and Differential Treatment, The Multilateral Trading System and Economic Development in the 21st Century, in Elements for a New Paradigm on Special and Differential Treatment. Also published in Putting Development First, Kevin P. Gallagher (ed.), Zed Books, London, 2005, pages 233-63. Singh, A. and Ghosh, J. (1988). Import Liberalisation and the New Industrial Strategy. An Analysis of Their Impact on Output and Employment, Economic and Political Weekly, Special Number, November, pages 2313-42. Singh, A. and Zammit, A. (2000). The Global Labour Standards Controversy: Critical Issues for Developing Countries, South Perspectives, South Centre. Singh, A. and Zammit, A. (2004). Labour Standards and the “race to the bottom”: Rethinking Globalisation and Workers’ Rights from Developmental and Solidaristic Perspectives, Centre for Business Research, Working Paper No. 279. Slaughter, M.J. and Swagel, P. (1997). Does Globalisation Lower Wages and Export Jobs?, Economic Issues, Number 11, International Monetary Fund, Washington D.C. Srinivasan, T.N. (2003). Commentary 2.1. on Singh, Nirvikar. The Impact of International Labour Standards: a Survey of Economic Theory. International Labour Standards, History, theory and policy options, Kaushik, B., H. Horn, L. Roman, and J. Shapiro(eds.), Chapter 2, Blackwell Publishing. pages 182-186. Stolper, W. and Samuelson, P. (1941). Protection and Real Wages, Review of Economic Studies, Volume 9, Number 41, pages 58-73. Summers, L. H. (2006). Reflections on Global Account Imbalances and Emerging Markets Reserve Accumulation, L.K. Jha Memorial Lecture, Reserve Bank of India Mumbai, India, March 24, 2006 Taube, M. (2005). The Chinese Economy: How Much Market – How Much State?, CES Ifo Forum, Volume 6, Number 3, pages 3-7. UNCTAD (1995). Trade and Development Report, Geneva. UNCTAD (2005). Trade and Development Report, Geneva. UNDP (2005). Human Development Report 2005: International Co-operation At A Crossroad, United Nations Development Project, New York. Van der Hoeven, R. and Lübker, M. (2006). Financial Openness and Employment: The Need for Coherent International and National Policies, Working Paper, Number 75, Policy Integration Department International Labour Office, Geneva.. Whalley, J. (2006). China in the World Trading System, CES ifo Economic Studies. C:\Research all years\Research 2006\Integrating India and China\China India & glob'n 28 January 2007.doc Wolf, M. (2005). Various Columns through the year 2005 as sorted: http://www.ft.com/comment/columnists/martinwolf Wolf, M. (2006). Various Columns through the year 2006 as sorted: http://www.ft.com/comment/columnists/martinwolf Wood, A. (1994). How Trade Hurt Unskilled Workers, Journal of Economic Perspectives, Volume 9, Number 3, pages 57-80. World Bank (2002). World Development Report, Washington DC. |
URI: | https://mpra.ub.uni-muenchen.de/id/eprint/24286 |