1:57AM
This week's column

Globalizations means fewer wars, less death
Two new reports about our world reiterate the overwhelmingly positive impact of globalization upon our planet, making it more peaceful and more just.
The "Human Security Brief 2007," compiled by Canada's Simon Fraser University, details the continuing overall decline in global conflict that began with globalization's rapid expansion around the planet in recent years, to include the complete absence of classic state-on-state war since 2003.
Read on at KnoxNews.
Read on at Scripps Howard.
Reader Comments (12)
1> a pandemic that spreads on the air transport network
2> further massive price volatility in basic supplies, causing places which have become dependent on trade to dry up and blow away
We have no reason to think the system we are in is stable - indeed, chaotic systems frequently feature quite violent crashes which have no cause other than the basic nature of nonlinear dynamics - and globalization is one such system. Add systemic incentives to underprice risk, and you have a world which has eaten it's reserves and become dependent on just-in-time, where underpriced risk is reported as profit, and where one serious system perturbation could starve hundreds of millions of people.
Like a motorcycle, while everything is fine, it works great. But one day you fall off, and wish you'd bought a car.
Instead of saying "The New World Order" could we consider a term such as "The New World Market?"
And, when others use the term "The Unipolar Moment," could we, instead, use a term such as "The Market Opportunity Moment?"
Such terms ("New World Market" and "Market Opportunity Moment"), emphasize -- not the United States in the driver's seat -- but, more correctly, globalization.
These new terms also seem to work well with other items Tom uses to help us understand today's steering forces in international affairs, to wit: "Three billion new capitalists" and "two billion new middle class consumers" -- (also terms that empahsize the dominant market aspect of today's world).
Just a thought.
You just can't base your vision on waiting for them, though.
As a result of the work down now overseas, when a company here cuts back it tends to cut back on it's overseas operation first. Why?
"Hey, they're Hondurans, they are over there, I don't have to face them when I lay them off, it's easier." [Did you know that almost all of our underwear is made in Honduras?]
So personal plus economic reasons come into play, and it makes any downturn less here, just as the upturn didn't show up here as much in local labor and capital.
Globalization is smoothing out the economic cycle for us.
Globalization is a linear system: Security > Rules > Money > Infrastructure > Resources ... Market stability. Do perturbative, nonlinear events happen? Sure, 9/11. And drawing from the diversity of human design, the will and capacity to connect, we heal, we recreate.
Impressions of the world, the way we each experience events, are not intractable. Thus, while expanding global consciousness with a watchful eye for perturbative events, normalizing the globalization nexus allows for monitor, detection, and intervention strategies.
Don't worry, be happy :-)
Are you suggesting that large perturbations are so improbable that we can ignore them? If so, can you explain the rational basis for that approach?
Systemic underpricing of risk is a huge factor in destabilizing the global economic order - it's the root cause of the current US debt crisis, for example, and has huge implications in terms of long-haul energy policy.
Vinay Gupta makes me wonder what his or her recommended answers, approaches and resolutions are. Perhaps utopic socialism?
Thanks again Tom.
http://guptaoption.com/2.long_peace.php is a pretty good summary of how I think we should be approaching things - I'm not going to try and summarize the case, but it's a long way from either utopian or socialism.