Still Made in the U.S.A.

October 24, 2006 by sgreenla

There’s a fascinating series in this week’s Wall Street Journal on manufacturing in the U.S. I tagged the first installment today with our class tag, FSEM100j. Apparently, manufacturing isn’t dead in the U.S. yet. What do these companies have to teach us about how to compete with lower cost workers in the rest of the world? Stay tuned and we’ll find out.

My Research Topic

October 19, 2006 by sgreenla

I plan to do my own expert study at the same time that you guys are doing yours. The question I want to explore is the effect of globalization on wages in the U.S. and abroad. Some people see globalization as a “race to the bottom”; after all, if foreigners will do the same job as Americans, business will naturally want to outsource. The only way Americans will keep jobs is if they’re willing to work for the same wages as Indians or Chinese do. Or so the argument goes.

Friedman, by contrast, argues that globalization is a “race to the top” in which outsourcing will allow foreign wages to catch up with those in the developed world.

So which is it? A race to the bottom or a race to the top?  Stay tuned…

When the Washington Post and the Wall Street Journal Agree, What Should One Conclude?

October 17, 2006 by sgreenla

Both the Washington Post and the Wall Street Journal have recently published articles on the upcoming decision to repeal or maintain one of the many tariffs on steel. What does it mean when the “liberal” Post and the “conservative” Journal come to the same conclusion–that the steel tariff has outlived its usefulness? I’ll leave it up to you to decide.

Technology Changes the World in a Big Way for a Small Group

October 17, 2006 by sgreenla

There have been a number of recent really thought-provoking (at least for me) newspaper articles about globalization. I tagged them via del.icio.us but wanted to blog specifically about a couple. The first one was For India’s Traditional Fishermen, Cell Phones Deliver a Sea Change. What struck me about this article was how a small but profound technology that most of us take for granted could have a huge impact on the economic lives of a group of people in the developing world.

Clearly, the fishermen will gain here, but it’s not merely at the expense of the fish wholesalers. Rather, there’s a much more powerful dynamic at work here. This scenario is not a zero sum game. The advent of cellphones turns fishing into a much more competitive industry, where fishermen will end up selling in ports where the demand is highest. This should result in a net creation of economic value, not just a transfer of existing wealth from wholesalers to fishermen.

2006 Nobel Peace Prize

October 17, 2006 by sgreenla

The winner is…Dr. Muhammad Yunus, an economist from Bangladesh. This is the first time in memory that economists have won two different nobels in the same year. More importantly, next time you think that a single person, even you, can’t change the world, think about this.

International Trade Story

September 29, 2006 by sgreenla

Phil Miller at Market Power reports on a story about tutors for U.S. secondary school students available on-line for only $2.50 an hour. How do you suppose they manage that?

Man Bites Dog

September 29, 2006 by sgreenla

I had dinner with a friend and his mother (who I also know) tonight. In the conversation, she mentioned that her other son, who lives in Texas, had just found a job–he is a computer engineer who, for the last few years, has been working in a series of temporary jobs as a contract employee with salary but no benefits. His previous job ended a week ago, and he was very pleased to get a new job, a “real job” his mother explained with salary, benefits and no expiration date. Why am I telling this? Oh, the firm who hired him is from India. They are located there, and he is in Texas–a new twist on in-sourcing.

Scottish Truth

September 12, 2006 by sgreenla


Scottish Truth

Originally uploaded by Clark~.
I searched one of the Creative Commons categories for “globalization” and got this really interesting photo. There’s also a really interesting commentary attached to the image at it’s source. (You can click on the photo to see this.)

Do you recognize this man?

September 12, 2006 by sgreenla



UMW Faculty Academy

Originally uploaded by Cyprien.

Once a familiar face, he’s now become an icon in our memories.

Response to Anya

September 12, 2006 by sgreenla

Anya raised a really good question in her last post, where she asked about what format to use for the first graded essay. The short answer is that not having used this assignment before, I’m not really sure. Let’s think about it.

I would start with by listing the questions you want answers to about globalization. For each question, I would write a paragraph to explain why you feel the question is important. Then I would add an introduction to the paragraphs saying something like Globalization is a huge topic. Here are the questions I think are most important. Then I would list them.

Does this make sense? You should think of this not so much as a formal essay, but as a tentative summary of your thinking. Remember, you will be able to revise this over the semester.