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| Genre/Form: | Documentary films |
|---|---|
| Material Type: | Videorecording |
| Document Type: | Visual material |
| All Authors / Contributors: |
Keely Purdue; Films for the Humanities & Sciences (Firm); Journeyman Pictures (Firm); Australian Broadcasting Corporation. |
| OCLC Number: | 43927162 |
| Credits: | Author/editor, Keely Purdue ; executive producer, Mark Stucke. |
| Performer(s): | Commentary: Jeffrey Sachs, Judy Carman, Stanley Fischer, Oronto Douglas. |
| Description: | 1 videocassette (42 min.) : sd., col. ; 1/2 in. |
| Details: | VHS. |
| Other Titles: | Globalization : winner and losers Globalization, winners and losers Globalization, winners & losers |
| Responsibility: | a Journeyman Pictures production, in association with Films for the Humanities & Sciences and ABC Australia. |
Abstract:
Reviews
Educational Media Reviews Online (1)
Globalization: Winners and Losers
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The film briefly discusses the topic of "cyber-millionaires," such as the Sabeer Bhatia of India, who sold Hotmail to Microsoft for US $400 million. Success stories like this are shadowed by India's poverty. Infosys has established a self-sufficient facility amidst the squalor of the city of Bangalore.
Because many banks worldwide have come to favor investing in real estate and stocks, these banks have sold off their gold reserves, causing the price of gold to plummet to a twenty-year low. This has caused the layoff of thousands of African gold miners, who have little or no other employment alternatives. This shift in banks' investment behavior has had another effect. After many Japanese banks invested in real estate, many of their high-risk debtors defaulted, which helped bring about the Asian financial crisis in 1998.
This film goes on to explain how countries, companies, and individuals must struggle and, in many cases, bend or break rules in order to survive in the global economy. The film discusses the rationale for the formation of multination conglomerates such as NAFTA and the EU, while demonstrating its unfortunate drawbacks. The film calls for global rules and consistent policies from bodies, such as the IMF and WTO.
This documentary is compelling and attentive to detail. While the film provides personal stories of grief, it identifies the story as the outcome of a chain of events. This film is truly appropriate for all viewers from high school on up. Highly recommended.


