Globalisation, Intl Trade and Cooperation (2022-2023)
Class
Lessons
Here is the class outline:
Join the class onlineGlobalisation, International Trade and International Cooperation 1 section
|
|
|
Week 1 - INTRODUCTION
13 Feb
Globalisation is a multi-dimensional concept. We shall begin by exploring different angles from which it can be understood and how the module is organised. 1 section
|
|
|
Week 2 - MICRO- AND MACRO-ECONOMIC DRIVERS OF GLOBALISATION
20 Feb
The development of the current international trade and financial system has been driven by the need for multinational corporations to securely conduct business transnationally and the states' need to integrate international business into their economic policies. In this session we shall see how these micro- and macro-economic forces have shaped the current international financial system. 2 sections
|
||
|
Week 3 - THE ORIGINS OF CAPITALISM
27 Feb
In order to secure the trade with the colonies significant investments were required which exceeded the State's sole financial capacity. Hence, private investors organised themselves in new forms of corporations allowing for increased capital provision and reduced risk. 1 section
|
|
|
Week 4 - THE TRANSITION FROM COLONIAL IMPERIALISM TO THE CURRENT GLOBAL REGIME
13 Mar
Until World War One the European empires were the uncontested leaders of the global economic development. This situation started to decline as from the moment they challenged each other's power at an industrial scale and with the abandonment of the gold standard. 1 section
|
|
|
Week 5 - THE POST-WW2 GLOBAL ORDER
20 Mar
At the end of the second world war the victors prepared for the post-war political and economic organisation of the world. From these negotiations emerged the United Nations and the “Bretton Woods” organisations. This evolution will be analysed in parallel with the emergence of the modern multinational corporation and the petrodollar environment. 1 section
|
|
|
Week 6 - BRETTON WOODS AND INTERNATIONAL TRADE
27 Mar
The International Monetary Fund (IMF), the World Bank (WB) and the General Agreement on Trade and Tariffs (GATT) are the institutions initiated at the Bretton Woods conference. We shall have a look at their respective missions and governance structures. But first we have to respond to the question: "Why is a global governance of trade needed?" 1 section
|
|
|
Week 7 - MONETARY STABILITY & ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT1 section
|
|
|
Week 8 - THE GATT AND THE WTO
3 Apr
The GATT and it's successor, the WTO have been the driving forces behind trade liberalisation during the last 70 years. However, the increasing complexity of the services and product exchanged throughout the world and the ever accelerating rate of innovation are increasingly challenging to the agreement on multi-lateral accords. 1 section
|
|
|
Week 9 - GLOBALISATION AS A DIALECTIC OF NETWORKS
6 Mar
Globalisation has developed as a dialectic between bottom-up and top-down, local and global, centralised and distributed networks. We shall see in these sessions how this dialectic has developed over time. 1 section
|
|
|
Week 10 - POLICY REPORT PRESENTATIONSFind examples and recommendations here on how to prpare for your presentation and final paper. 1 section
|
|
|
Week 11 - GLOBALISATION TRENDS
17 Apr
It appears that the architecture of the post-WW2 global institutions is showing weaknesses in the current circumstances. However, new trends have emerged that are leading to further globalisation, such as the climate change, regional economic integration, etc … 1 section
|
|
|
Week 12 - DE-GLOBALISATION TRENDS
24 Apr
Demographic shifts, environmental concerns, political competition, are sources of questioning of the benefits of globalisation. The last decade has seen a resurgence of nationalism that is may have significant consequences for the re-balancing of the world economy in the short and medium term. 1 section
|
|
|
Week 13 - THE FUTURE OF THE GLOBAL MONETARY SYSTEM
1 May
New energy policies and new technologies, such as blockchains and artificial intelligence are reshaping our economies at a rapid rate. We shall investigate what consequences may be expected from these developments on the economies in the foreseeable future. 1 section
|
|
|
Week 14 - THE FUTURE OF INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTIONS
29 May
The last sessions of the course will be dedicated to an interactive discussion about the future of our current institutions and the question wether the concept of globalisation still is relevant within the perspective of the students' expected life span. 1 section
|
|
|