📌 Snapshot
- This is the concluding chapter of "Contemporary World Politics" and establishes globalisation as a multi-dimensional concept dealing with flows of ideas, capital, commodities and people that create "worldwide interconnectedness".
- It distinguishes the political, economic and cultural dimensions of globalisation, the role of technology as a critical cause, and the uneven impact across societies.
- It analyses India's transition from colonial export economy → post-1947 protectionism → 1991 economic reforms, and the resistance movements (left and right) including WSF and anti-WTO protests.
- CUET frequently tests: definition of globalisation, causes (technology), political consequences (welfare state → minimalist state), cultural homogenisation vs heterogenisation, McDonaldisation, soft power of US hegemony, 1991 reforms, WSF and Seattle 1999.
📖 Detailed Notes
2.1 Core concepts
Three vignettes from contemporary India make different faces of globalisation concrete. Janardhan works the night shift at a Bangalore call centre, speaking to clients halfway across the globe in an American accent; he illustrates the globalisation of services, an industry barely two decades old in India. Ramdhari rides a cycle made in China and notices that his daughter wants a Barbie doll manufactured in the United States — both examples of the worldwide movement of commodities that has brought brand-name goods to a small-town household. Sarika, a first-generation learner, accepts a job that her grandmother considers unwomanly: she stands at the centre of a conflict of values that globalisation has produced for women, and the new opportunities it has also opened for them (NCERT §The Concept of Globalisation, pp. 100–101). A parallel set of darker illustrations — farmers' suicides over the price of MNC seeds, Indian firms buying European rivals, retail shopkeepers fearing international chains, "lifted" Hollywood storylines, and militant threats to girls wearing western clothes — shows that globalisation is not always positive and not only economic (NCERT pp. 100–101).
The definition that follows is therefore deliberately cautious: globalisation as a concept fundamentally deals with flows — of ideas, capital, commodities and people across borders. The "crucial element," NCERT insists, "is the 'worldwide interconnectedness' that is created and sustained as a consequence of these constant flows" (NCERT §The Concept of Globalisation, p. 101). Three corollaries are immediately attached. First, globalisation is multi-dimensional; it has political, economic and cultural manifestations that must be distinguished — it is neither purely economic nor purely cultural. Second, its impact is vastly uneven across societies and within them. Third, "globalisation" is not the same as "westernisation" or "Americanisation" — although the soft power of US hegemony makes them empirically overlap (NCERT p. 102).
What causes contemporary globalisation? The four flows — ideas, capital, commodities, people — have been part of human history for centuries; merchant ships, religious missions and migrations are old phenomena. What is distinct about contemporary globalisation is the scale and speed of these flows (NCERT §Causes of Globalisation, p. 102). The single most important enabler is technology: the invention of the telegraph, telephone and microchip revolutionised communication, just as printing once laid the basis for modern nationalism. But technology alone is not enough — people must also recognise their interconnections with the rest of the world. Bird flu spreads regardless of borders; the 2004 tsunami struck multiple national coastlines; a financial crisis in one country sets off panic in another (NCERT p. 103).
The consequences of globalisation fall into three buckets. Political consequences form a three-aspect framework (NCERT §Political Consequences, pp. 103–104). First, globalisation has eroded state capacity: the old welfare state — directed at the economic and social well-being of its citizens — has, in much of the world, given way to a more minimalist state that performs only core functions such as maintenance of law, order, and security; the market has become the prime determinant of economic and social priorities, and MNCs have reduced governments' decision-making capacity. Second, the primacy of the state continues — the state remains the unchallenged basis of political community; old jealousies and rivalries between states persist; states continue to discharge essential functions. Third, in some respects state capacity has actually received a boost because enhanced technology enables states to collect more information about their citizens and to rule them better. Erosion and boost are simultaneous truths, not alternatives.
Economic consequences centre on the role of the IMF and WTO but extend far wider — globalisation is "about who gains and who loses" (NCERT §Economic Consequences, pp. 104–105). It has produced greater trade in commodities (reduced import restrictions), reduced restrictions on capital flow (investors from rich countries invest abroad for higher returns), and a vast spread of ideas via the internet. But NCERT flags one critical asymmetry: movement of people remains restricted, because developed countries "have carefully guarded their borders with visa policies" — capital and commodities cross borders faster than people. The debate has two sides. Critics (often on the left) argue that state withdrawal benefits only a small section; they call for social safety nets for those dependent on welfare, or even a halt to forced globalisation, describing it as re-colonisation. Advocates argue that de-regulation produces greater growth, that comparative trade benefits all, and that globalisation is inevitable — the best response is to engage it intelligently rather than resist (NCERT pp. 105–106).
Cultural consequences are presented as the simultaneous interplay of two opposite tendencies. Cultural homogenisation is the rise of a uniform global culture, which in practice has been the imposition of Western (specifically American) culture on the rest of the world — the "soft power of US hegemony". McDonaldisation is the term it uses for the process by which cultures "seek to buy into the dominant American dream", with the rich diversity of global cultural heritage shrinking as a result; the burger and blue jeans are the emblematic images (NCERT §Cultural Consequences, pp. 106–107). But NCERT immediately presents the opposite tendency: cultural heterogenisation. Cultures are not static; external influences sometimes simply enlarge our choices. The burger does not displace the masala dosa; the khadi kurta is worn with blue jeans; each culture becomes more different and distinctive after contact (NCERT pp. 107–108). The point is that cultural exchange is rarely one-way, and homogenisation and heterogenisation are happening simultaneously.
The section on India and Globalisation (NCERT p. 108) traces a three-phase history. During the colonial period, India became an exporter of primary goods and raw materials and a consumer of finished imports — globalised, but as a subordinate. Post-independence India chose protectionism to nurture domestic industry; critical sectors (health, housing, primary education) suffered, growth was sluggish, and import-substitution failed to keep up with the world. In 1991, responding to a financial crisis and the desire for higher rates of economic growth, India launched economic reforms that de-regulated trade and foreign investment — opening the way to today's globalised Indian economy.
Resistance to globalisation comes from both left and right (NCERT §Resistance, p. 109). Left-wing critics see contemporary globalisation as a phase of global capitalism making the rich richer and the poor poorer, and weakening the state's ability to redistribute. Right-wing critics fear the cultural erosion of national tradition, demand self-reliance, and want a return to protectionism. Both, paradoxically, use global networks of activists. The 1999 Seattle WTO protests, which alleged unfair trade practices by powerful states, and the World Social Forum (WSF) — a global platform bringing together human rights activists, environmentalists, labour, youth and women's groups against neo-liberal globalisation. The first WSF met at Porto Alegre, Brazil, in 2001; the fourth WSF met at Mumbai in 2004; the latest WSF was held in Nepal in February 2024 (NCERT p. 111). In India, resistance has come from Left parties and the Indian Social Forum, from trade unions and farmers' organisations protesting MNC entry, and from outrage over the patenting of Indian plants (Neem) by American and European firms. Right-wing resistance focuses on cultural influences — foreign television channels, Valentine's Day, and the westernisation of women's dress.
2.2 Definitions to memorise
| Term | Definition | Page |
|---|---|---|
| Globalisation | A multi-dimensional concept dealing with flows of ideas, capital, commodities and people, creating worldwide interconnectedness | 101 |
| Worldwide interconnectedness | The crucial element of globalisation, created and sustained by constant flows | 101 |
| Welfare state | The older form of state directed at economic and social well-being of citizens | 103 |
| Minimalist state | State that performs only core functions like law and order and security of citizens | 103 |
| Social safety nets | Institutional safeguards to minimise negative effects of globalisation on the economically weak | 106 |
| Re-colonisation | Description by some economists of forced economic globalisation that leads to economic ruin for weaker countries | 106 |
| Cultural homogenisation | Rise of a uniform culture worldwide; actually the imposition of Western (US) culture on the rest of the world | 106 |
| Soft power of US hegemony | The phenomenon by which the politically and economically dominant US imprints its culture on less powerful societies | 107 |
| McDonaldisation | Cultures buying into the dominant American dream; shrinking of global cultural heritage | 107 |
| Cultural heterogenisation | The opposite effect, where each culture becomes more different and distinctive after interaction | 108 |
| Protectionism | Post-independence Indian policy of not allowing imports so domestic producers could learn to make things | 108 |
| World Social Forum (WSF) | Global platform of activists opposed to neo-liberal globalisation; first met at Porto Alegre, Brazil, 2001 | 111 |
| Four flows of globalisation | Ideas, capital, commodities, people — across borders | 101 |
| IMF & WTO | Multilateral institutions central to the architecture of economic globalisation | 104 |
| Comparative trade | Liberal argument that trade between countries benefits all | 106 |
| De-regulation | Removal of state controls over economic activity, a key tool of economic globalisation | 106 |
| MNCs (Multinational Corporations) | Firms operating across multiple countries; reduce governments' decision-making capacity | 103 |
| Telegraph–telephone–microchip | The three technologies that drive contemporary globalisation | 102 |
| Seattle 1999 WTO protests | Mass demonstrations against alleged unfair trade practices by powerful states | 111 |
| Porto Alegre 2001 (1st WSF) | First meeting of the World Social Forum | 111 |
| Mumbai 2004 (4th WSF) | Fourth meeting of the WSF | 111 |
| Neem patenting | Case cited by NCERT of Indian biological patrimony patented by US/European firms | 111 |
| 1991 Indian economic reforms | Response to a financial crisis and desire for higher growth — opened India's economy | 108 |
| Visa controls / movement of people | The one globalisation flow developed countries continue to restrict | 105 |
| Indian Social Forum | Indian counterpart of the WSF | 111 |
2.3 Diagrams / processes to remember
- Three opening character vignettes (pp. 100–101): Janardhan (services), Ramdhari (commodities), Sarika (values) — each illustrates one face of globalisation.
- Cartoons in the NCERT text (pp. 102, 104, 106): "Digital Economy", "Invading new markets", "Gosh, an Indian again!" — used as visual anchors for the political/economic/cultural dimensions.
- Three-aspect framework for political consequences (pp. 103–104): (i) erosion of state capacity, (ii) primacy of state continues, (iii) state capacity boosted by technology.
- Four flows of globalisation (p. 101): ideas, capital, commodities, people — note that movement of people is the slowest because of visa controls (p. 105).
- WSF timeline (p. 111): 1st — Porto Alegre 2001; 4th — Mumbai 2004; latest — Nepal February 2024.
- Process map — Concept (§Concept) → Causes (§Causes) → Political consequences (§Political) → Economic consequences (§Economic) → Cultural consequences (§Cultural) → India and Globalisation (§India) → Resistance (§Resistance) → India and Resistance (§India and Resistance).
2.5 Key Articles / Treaties / Events
| Reference | Source / Subject | NCERT cite |
|---|---|---|
| 1991 Indian economic reforms | Response to financial crisis; opened the Indian economy | p. 108 |
| 1999 Seattle WTO protests | Mass demonstration against unfair trade practices | p. 111 |
| 2001 World Social Forum, Porto Alegre | First WSF meeting | p. 111 |
| 2004 Fourth WSF, Mumbai | India hosted the fourth WSF | p. 111 |
| February 2024 WSF, Nepal | Latest WSF cited in NCERT | p. 111 |
| Colonial-era India | India as exporter of primary goods, consumer of finished imports | p. 108 |
| Telegraph (19th century) | First technology that revolutionised communication | p. 102 |
| Telephone | Second technology revolutionising communication | p. 102 |
| Microchip | Contemporary technology enabling digital globalisation | p. 102 |
| Bird flu / tsunami | Examples of cross-border phenomena that drive global recognition | p. 103 |
| Neem patent controversy | Patenting of Indian plants by American/European firms | p. 111 |
| IMF & WTO | Multilateral economic institutions central to globalisation | p. 104 |
| Welfare state → Minimalist state shift | Political consequence of globalisation | p. 103 |
| McDonaldisation | American cultural dominance image | p. 107 |
| Indian Social Forum | Domestic counterpart of WSF | p. 111 |
2.4 Common confusions / NTA trap points
- Globalisation ≠ Westernisation ≠ Imperialism. NCERT explicitly says globalisation is multi-dimensional, not purely economic, and not the same as westernisation.
- Welfare state vs Minimalist state: Globalisation does not abolish the state — it shifts state from welfare functions to core functions of law/order/security (p. 103). NTA loves the trap that "globalisation = end of state".
- State capacity has both decreased AND increased: The same chapter says it is reduced (MNC entry) AND boosted (technology-aided information). Both are correct — don't pick only one.
- Cultural homogenisation vs heterogenisation: Both are simultaneously consequences of globalisation. Homogenisation = imposition of Western culture; heterogenisation = each culture becoming more distinctive.
- India's 1991 reforms were a response to a financial crisis AND a desire for higher growth — not just one cause.
- First WSF was in Porto Alegre, Brazil (2001), not Mumbai. Mumbai hosted the 4th WSF in 2004. The Seattle protests of 1999 were against the WTO, not the WSF.
- Movement of people is restricted — capital and commodities move freely, but visa controls remain. Trap items assume all four flows are equally free.
- Technology drivers named are telegraph, telephone, microchip — NOT the steam engine or the printing press (printing is mentioned only as a historical comparison).
- Janardhan/Ramdhari/Sarika — each maps to one face (services/commodities/values). Trap items shuffle the mapping.
- McDonaldisation ≠ fast-food industry growth — it refers to cultural assimilation into the American dream, not the literal spread of fast-food chains.
🎯 Practice MCQs
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Q1. the crucial element that defines globalisation is:
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Answer: B
Q2. Which of the following statements about globalisation are correct? I. Globalisation is a multi-dimensional concept with political, economic and cultural manifestations. II. The impact of globalisation has been uniform across all states and societies. III. The scale and speed of flows make contemporary globalisation distinct from earlier periods. IV. Globalisation is a purely economic phenomenon.
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Answer: B
Q3. Under globalisation, the transition from the 'welfare state' is to a:
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Answer: C
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Q4. Match the following with the aspect of globalisation each illustrates: | Person / Example | Aspect | |---|---| | 1. Janardhan (call centre worker) | i. Conflict of values / new opportunities | | 2. Ramdhari (buys cycle made in China) | ii. Movement of commodities | | 3. Sarika (first-generation learner taking a job) | iii. Globalisation of services |
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Answer: B
Q5. Which of the following is NOT identified as a critical cause of contemporary globalisation?
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Answer: D
Q6. Assertion (A): Globalisation results in an erosion of state capacity. Reason (R): The state has completely lost its primacy and is no longer the basis of political community.
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Answer: C
Q7. the developed countries have prevented one particular flow from increasing as much as the others. Which flow is it?
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Answer: D
Q8. The term 'McDonaldisation' of the world to describe:
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Answer: B
Q9. India embarked on a programme of economic reforms in 1991 primarily as a response to:
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Answer: C
Q10. Which of the following statements about the World Social Forum (WSF) is correct?
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Answer: C
Q11. The "soft power of US hegemony" in cultural globalisation refers to:
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Answer: B
Q12. Which of the following correctly pairs an Indian resistance movement with its concern?
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Answer: B
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