Globalization influence on minorities.
Costescu, Mihai-Radu ; Costescu, Mihai-Alexandru
The integration of economic, political, and cultural systems has
been one of the major global trends at the end of the 20th century.
Advances in information technology and transportation have dramatically
expanded economic, political and cultural interaction among actors all
over the place. This process, called globalization, is indeed not a new
phenolmenon, but its scale and pace have considerably increased since
the 1980s driven by the internet revolution and major progress in
transportation and logistics, namely containerized cargo and
roll-on-roll-off cargo ships. These developments have led to
dramatically falling transport-tation and communication costs and
brought the world's markets and cultures closer together than ever.
Globalization is also characterized by institutional and political
reforms in many countries, just to mention gradual trade liberalization and international coordination of policies. The reduction of tariffs and
other barriers to trade, bilateral trade agreements and--very much
indeed--European integration and the fall of the iron curtain have been
additional drivers of the massive growth in world trade.
The growth in worldwide trade has picked up speed in the 1980s and
has by far exceeded output growth in the last 20 years. While the
world's gross domestic product (GDP) increased by 150 percent from
1980 to 2005, the volume of worldwide trade more than quadruplicated in
that period.
The process of globalization has acelerated even further in the
late 1990s due to the integration of major developing countries into the
world's markets. The impressive growth of the economies in China
and India has already attracted much attention and has had a huge impact
on international markets, already. However, it is fair to say that
globalization has just started and will most probably become much
stronger in scale and scope.
We will now refer to the European Union (EU), where, ever since
March 2000, the EU council, at Lisbon, decided that changes influencing
global economy are a positive and dynamic way to reach the goal of full
usage of labour. At Lisbon new objectives were adopted for the EU,
regarding the creation of the most competitive economical system in the
world, capable of a high rate of economic growth, in order to lead to
creating of more and better work places and to an increased social
cohesion.
These objectives rely on the European social pattern. Reliance on
this pattern and on its influence on economic progress does not
necessary mean the EU has an easier task. The European social pattern
needs to be improved for:
--meeting the requirements of globalization and transition to a
science-based economy and society;
--the fulfilment of social and demographic changes;
--meeting the economic and social life expectations of EU citizens.
Placing population in the center of EU policies is the key to
success for these actions. This means an adequate strategy oriented to
increased participation of all EU citizens to the economic and social
life.
Education with long term effects, improved skills and people
mobility at all levels, similar working conditions for public and
private sectors, all these are important requiremts for creating an
European labour market open to everyone, for a better work quality and a
stronger social cohesion.
Without important investments in perfectioning quality on labour
market, it will be hard to complete the Lisbon objectives and there is
also the risc of increased tension on the labour market, as a result of
a growing difference between the income of those with higher
qualification and those with low or no qualification.
But this will not happen if the EU programmes will not adress the
whole population--this is a fact that was proved by the experience many
Member States had. Still, this means serious efforts, both economic and
social.
As sweeping changes have taken place in the world's economies
in recent decades, they have reshaped the structure of employment on a
global scale. National economies are now more integrated into the global
system than at any other point in the recent past. The volume of
international trade and the magnitude of crossborder capital flows have
reached historically high levels. Advances in communications and
transport technologies have led to the establishment of complex
international production networks, with developing countries producing
an unprecedented level of manufactured exports within global supply
chains. Fundamental shifts in economic policies have accompanied the
process of globalization. These policies have emphasized maintaining low
rates of inflation, liberalizing markets, reducing the scope of the
public sector and encouraging cross-border flows of goods, services and
finance, but not labour.
It is commonplace these days to assert that globalization provides
enormous challenges as well as opportunities. This observation is
particularly relevant as regards employment. The era of global
integration has been associated with far-reaching changes in the
structure of employment, including pressures for increased flexibility,
episodes of Jobless growth," growing informalization and
casualization, expanding opportunities for the highly skilled, but
vanishing opportunities for the less skilled. New employment
opportunities have been created in many developing countries due to the
expansion of globally-oriented production, helping to reduce poverty and
raise incomes. However, contradictions abound. Many of the new
employment opportunities are precarious, and the size of the
"working poor" population remains staggering.
Employment is the primary channel through which the majority of the
population can share in the benefits of economic growth. In particular,
employment plays a critical role in ensuring that economic growth
translates into poverty reduction.
The latest "Employment in Europe 2007" report edition,
one of the most important means of the EU Comission in helping Member
States in analyzing, formulating and implementing policies for labour
market, offers a realistic image of the achievements in this domain, as
well as an analytical analysis of the way these policies are applied.
Based on the most recent data and a realistic analysis, the report is
the start up point for future discussions and implementation of national
or EU policies.
EU has irreversibly started the journey to creating a science-based
economy, to creating more work places, reducing unemployment and
increasing labour quality. Results obtained in the EU and in Member
States show how the EU strategy for labour market has lead to 3 major
domains that were adressed:
* increasing employment;
* implementing structural reforms and labour market modernization;
* completing social changes.
Economic growth is crucial. EU productivity has constantly raised
by 2% per year in the last 30 years, which lead to a double increase in
life standards for the last 40 years. But this means the future growth
has to be kept in the same limits, in order to maintain the employment
rate.
Here is where we can see how European countries depend on
eachother. As a consequence, trade among Member States must be given a
greater importance than trade with the rest of the world.
Interdependence existing among Member States can become a power factor,
but it is important that it will be used in a positive way.
Social, economic and labour market policies are requirements,
well-defined and easy to apply for the populaion--this is even more
important as EURO was introduced or is to be introduced in the following
years in all EU countries--and, at the same time, policies based on
strategical and political previsions. The complete labor usage in a
science-based economy can only be achieved through a realistic plan of
economic, productivity and life standard growth.
An interesting situation was met with the Eastern enlargements of
the EU in 2004 (ten states) and 2007 (two more). At that time, offensive
managers placed priority on getting access to labour (especially skilled
labour) from Central and Eastern Europe (CEE). Defensive managers have
focused on walling off "deep" Eastern Europe from CEE and
erecting mobility barriers against NMS workers. Initially, it seemed as
if the primary management would involve the Commission walking the CEE
states through a welter of well-established (if patchwork) regulations
regarding free movement of persons, which had become a core principle
for the single market in both theory and deed by the 1990s. But
technocratic debate over mutual recognition of things like professional
certificates was soon swamped in the late 1990s by the high politics of
Member States. Germany and Austria, in particular, raised strong
objections to immediate free movement of CEE workers, and the EU was
ultimately obliged to negotiate the right of individual OMS to limit
entry for up to seven years after membership. Here, one could say the
Commission was an unsuccessful advocate for offensive management. The EU
also had substantial influence over the CEE states' efforts to
control their own external borders to the East. Here, they largely
shared the defensive position of the Member States. Though the EU had
little experience in guiding the development of external border
policies--traditionally the domain of the nation state--there is good
evidence that they pushed CEE states to seal those borders in a variety
of ways.
Now it is a good opportunity to talk about the Equal Economic
Opportunities Programme that aims at advancing ECMI's (European
Centre for Minority Issues) expertise on issues relating to the
participation of minorities in economic life. Specifically the programme
has two goals: first to advance theoretical understandding of economic
inclusion/exclusion of minorities, and then to provide practical advice
to national governments and other relevant policy-making bodies on how
to devise policies to combat the problem of economic marginalisation.
Minorities' ability to participate in economic life is
strongly affected by the context in which they live. This context refers
to a number of different situational variables including:
1. the extent to which minorities are dispersed across the
territory of the state or are geographically concentrated;
2. the location of minorities, e.g. in the capital city, in
deprived urban regions or in the rural periphery;
3. the presence or absence of a kin-state and the relationship of
the host state therewith;
4. general socio-economic processes that are taking place in the
country or region concerned, such as privatization or rapid integration
into the global economy.
Minority participation in economic life is also dependent on quite
often localized informal institutions, such as the existence of (often
mono-ethnic) economic networks, as well as minorities' own
expectations of their 'place' within society. ECMI's
ability to provide advice on the issue of economic participation is
therefore dependent on its understanding of these different contexts and
of how certain policies may affect minorities in different ways in
different contextual settings. For this reason, it is necessary first to
conduct research in order to devise a methodology on how to deal with
the problem of economic participation and then to think about how to
apply that methodology.
While equal opportunities for minorities has long been a focus of
concern within the field of human rights, little work has been carried
out on how to promote equal economic opportunities for members of
minorities, despite a few declarative statements in a number of legal
instruments that are intended to protect members of national minorities
from economic discrimination. Similarly, although social exclusion in
general (with which economic exclusion is often associated) has been a
focus of EU policy-making since the launch of the so-called Lisbon
Strategy in 2000, few attempts have been made to shed light on the link
between social and economic exclusion on the one hand, and ethnicity on
the other.
Thus, we can say that, even if EU managed to obtain a high
performance level in incrasing employment, there still are major
objectives to be achieved:
* reducing the differencied between the main population of a
country and it's minorities, if we are to talk about employment or
active population;
* full employment in EU by promoting labour market integration to
all persons, particularly to older persons, nationality not being a
criteria;
* reducing unemployment and, most of all, reducing young people
unemployment;
* increasing regional and social cohesion.
Economical and social pregress needs the european social pattern to
be improved and to include the "reality" of central and east
european countries. At the same time, we must not forget that the last
countries that became EU members, in 2004 and 2007, came with important
labour market problems which lead to the necessity, at least for the
next years, to supervise their evolution. Free labour mobility, one of
the central elements of an economical and social integration, is not, as
proven by todays realities, only a factor for economical growth, but
also a potential disturbance element for certain social problems. In my
opinion, I think it is important for the EU to carefuly observe this
situation and to try to control the social and economical exclusion of
minorities, so that all the European objectives to have the possibility
to be met without severe perturbations.
Bibliography:
(1.) J. Heintz, Globalization, economic policy and employment:
poverty and gender implications, Geneva, International Labour Office,
2006.
(2.) W. Jacoby, EU enlargement: managing globalization by managing
Central and Eastern Europe, Brigham Young University, 2007.
(3.) G. Pehnelt, Globalization and inflation in OECD countries,
Jena Economic Research, 2007.
(4.) Fred W. Riggs, Globalization, ethnic diversity and
nationalism: the challenge for democracies, Annals of the American
Academy of Political and Social Science, 2002.
(5.) EU Policy Paper, Minorities and the EU: Human Rights, Regional
Development and Beyond, Evangelia Psychogiopoulou, Hellenic Foundation
for European and Foreign Policy.