One of the other major issues with the apparent advantages of globalization though is that they often require the destruction of local economies first. It is kinda like burning down an orchard then showing how much more profitable sharecropping strawberries is. In many of these regions we saw decades of colonial forces taking away land (either directly or squeezing landowners till they have to sell) or destroying local resources then, after they decimated existing economies, offering all the displaced workers jobs at their companies instead. So it is solving a problem they created, but doing it in such a way that mostly benefits wealthy people far away.
I also noticed that the video didn't cover what happens to a local economy when work is outsourced. How corporations just circumvent labor laws and regulations in their country that were brought about by years and years of people unionizing and fighting for fair working conditions, undermining domestic wages. Domestic wages drop, creating a need for foreign, cheaply made products. It's a cycle that only benefit's the few on top.
+Robert Nicholls no. it raises gdp, which is not an accurate measurement of the wealth of a people by any means. When people talk about "rich countries" or "getting richer" they talk about gdp, which says exactly nothing about how well-fed and happy people are. It says nothing about how the capital and income is distributed among the population, or how much of the economy is based on real goods and production (as opposed to financial instruments etc.). Remember bhutan is one of the poorest countries of the world and yet, at the same time, one of the richest in happiness, with one of the most peaceful and equal and harmonious societies. And incidentally, it has an extremely unglobalised, agragrian economy.
+neeneko Globalisation generally destroys inefficient industries that can't compete with the worldwide competition. Such examples as the car industry in Australia dying as it is unable to compete with other countries (such as Japan and Germany's) economies of scale. Therefore only industries that are competitive thrive and a countries comparative advantage allows it to trade. The reduction of tariffs and quotas also benefit the people allowing consumers access to a wider range of cheap and affordable goods and services that wouldn't be available without globalisation and trade. Globalisation is sort of a wave effect as its up everyone, generally the rich more than the poor. This can be seen with South Korea which was regarded as a poor third world country up until the 1980s/1990s where the production of technology outsourced from Japan rose to higher standards of living, higher education, better quality of life, leading to South Korea to becoming an economic powerhouse and the developed country it is today.
Feels good to hear so much about my country, knowing that this raises awareness in people around the globe about what's going on in Bangladesh! Thank you for such a wonderful crash course, I'm a huge fan.
Please talk about the unsustainability a little longer. Especially when you call it the 'probably biggest problem with globalization'. It's the most interessting aswell in my opinion.
+millenniumdragn People have been saying it is unsustainable since it began. Thus far those have always been the shortsighted people. Meanwhile capitalism is the only force proven to bring dramatic improvement to billions of lives around the world. Maybe one day those shortsighted people will be proven right and then we will be back to where we were without capitalism, poor dirt farmers.
+Joe Lima Capitalism as it is today promotes uneconomic ie wasteful and destructive practices. It's cheaper to produce things halfway around the world because labour and raw resources are cheaper, as wasteful and exploitative practices are ignored or aren't covered by law. As destructive and exploitative practices are increasingly discouraged or covered by laws and legislation companies will have to look for alternatives as a way of competing with each other in a global economy. As we are already seeing, I believe that answer lays with automation. Robots that mine, refine, recycle, produce and transport quicker and more efficiently than human workers ever could means cheap products. But it also means less workers, so fewer people that can buy those products until a point is reached, an anomaly, the likes of which our species or any other on this planet has ever experienced. Plentiful, limitless resources and an true global efficient, renewable resource based economy.
+CasMullac Capitalism destroys jobs but it also creates jobs as well to buy those goods. Robots destroy mining jobs but create jobs that make robots and making robots is better paying than a mining job. Which increases a persons buying power.
Crash course is amazing and so are the hosts. From the topics covered to content created - These videos are super helpful regardless of the times! Keep up the amazing work team! ✨💯
I'm an Austrian type. A free market fan. And this video was pretty well-balanced. Showed both sides, including the sides I disagreed with. Congrats and thanks.
It might be slightly liberal leaning but it did give balanced information on both sides of the argument and left it open for the viewer to decide. It impossible to be completely unbiased but I think the did a pretty good job.
+Inorganic Vegan "Neoliberalism" in economics is right-wing economics in America. Neoliberals are actually more likely to be fans of Ayn Rand than someone who's not a neoliberal. "Liberal" in most parts of the world is more similar to the American term "libertarian" than it is to the American term "liberal".
+BlackysComments +Inorganic Vegan You both are suffering from Out Group Homogeneity. Stick your head out of your bubble for a second and realize the spectrum of ideas is far greater than the limited set you choose to isolate yourself in.
+freesk8 It's understandable that you think the video was "well balanced" because you feel satisfied with the thought that it wasn't all on your side, but a lot of people, in fact, probably the majority, won't agree with you or what's stated in the video. And this is because they "explained" without any real or critic historical vision. I mean, they evaded any significant mention of colonialism, responsible for the world's inequity. I think it's easy to enjoy the benefits of a good craddle.
All I got from this video is that nothing is perfect and nothing ever will, we kinda just have to try and do the best job and keep evolving.. life in a nutshell
From the tone of this video it feels like they've adapting the old Churchill quote to the issue; 'Globalization is the worst form of trade, except for all the others that have been tried...'
Here's the thing about globalisation: it is within a developed country's power to demand that companies that operate within it to maintain a certain standard of ethics if they desire to operate inside that country. I feel that this approach to globalisation almost deserves the otherwise nonexistent classification of micro-globalisation, since this is focusing on a very particular thread and not all of many other broader, intersectional ways that globalisation can be the proponent of change and global elevation.
Globalization is the process by which businesses or other organizations develop international influence or start operating on an international scale. Globalization brings lower costs on good, it also brings opportunities for production of international trade. A downside to globalization is that products used for trades are produced in very low income countries with hard laborers with little to no pay.
The typical lie is that globalization ALWAYS produces a net benefit Simply not true! Globalization creates an outsourcing of jobs in developed nations for cheaper markets. This sometimes kills the ability of consumers in developed nations to purchase the very items being outsourced. Globalization also encourages exploitation and victimization in, child sweat shop labor practices, over population, and environmental catastrophe, and a variety of other social problems. Globalization also produces the consolidation of markets. For example, cheap American corn has decimated the domestic Mexican corn market. Poor farmers are driven off their land and resort to entering the U.S. illegally to find work. Their now useless land is then bought up on the cheap by speculators. Without domestic food production, a country cannot feed itself and is extremely on foreign imports that can be cut off by war or natural disasters. Illegal labor creates an enhanced distribution channel for drug traffickers. Illegal labor leads to unemployment domestically,grows the welfare system which leads to long term dependency on government programs, and creates more income stratification and social unrest. ETC... ETC...ETC. Therefore, free trade and globalization is not the panacea that it is claimed to be.
Great points. I've recently have been listening to the teaching of Milton Friedman , nobel peace prize winner im economics, on youtube to better understand Free trade. He explains everything logically. In one video he explains that basically there.
The idea that free trade is always good for developing countries is... very debatable. Trade is indeed necessary, but the "free" part of it enables big companies from abroad to pin a developing country at doing what suits them and not produce other things. For example rules that require foreign companies not only to produce in a country but also to use a certain percentage of materials produced there are a start. The biggest problem is when a developing country only produces 2 or 3 raw materials or agricultural produces but has to import every technology. In these cases a form of protectionism, if well planned and directed, can enable the country to develop a higher level industry and not remain stuck at producing only goods for foreign companies.
2:54 Totally agree, it's actually shocking how much this little piece of rectangle SAVED my life. I shouldn't be as smart as i am, not even close, given my circunstances, but i bunched an insane amount of knowledge and info resources thanks to this. The very fact i learned by myself shows this.eee
Globalization and capitalism are perfect economic ideologies for countries/communities with only small and medium size business.. Everyone competes for the market share in a mostly fair environment, and the gap between the top and the bottom is not that huge.. However, once the economy starts to allow large size business, they just start to control everything (economy, politics, justice system, etc.), transforming an once sustainable economic environment into an oligarchy environment, with the top getting all the profit and benefits and the bottom just fighting to survive... The best example of this effect can be seen in US... US had a vibrant capitalist economy, following the first idea of small and medium size business, but now they are all about oligarchies and monopolies.. because of this US' economy is going backwards, middle class is disappearing, and the gap between top and bottom become so huge...
This video and the conversations contained below in the comment threads are fascinating. Conversations we need to have more of with civility, and some of these here are great examples of that. The main issue I see when reading through comment threads, and it shows up here, is that it is difficult for people to admit that some of their strongly held beliefs may fail under scrutiny using information they didn't know of previously or from perspectives beyond their own. If we can dispassionately remove our convictions for a short time to undertake the world-view of another to criticise ourselves and our world views then our opinions can understandings can only be strengthened either by tearing them down in light of falsifying evidence or built up by new information.
Would still be nice if workers in general could get roughly the value of their work instead of being pressed into the minimum possible standard of living by corporations
Globalization by its function is great, but the problem is not how it creates wealth to the corporations and workers, it's how this economic growth actually represents the develop of human capital and the decrease of rights exploitation. If the idea that money alone could balance a nation's social and evolutionary circumstances; the TTP would be the Earths solution to everything, right? Well, I guess that that's not how it looks like...
hi jacob and adriene, first of all congratulation to both of you and your whole team because you guys are doing wonderful job. i have enjoyed your video a lot and i have one request to make, could you please make videos on burning global economic issues like trade war etc and it's impact on various countries. i'd really be grateful to you guys.
I think people will look at us in the future like we look to colonization and slavery in the past. The worst thing is how unattentive we are, right now, to those issues.We see news here and there on TV, but our indifference towards those who live far away is staggering. After all, we are the ones who are the beneficiaries. That's so sad. And I know I contribute to it everyday and I try really hard to avoid it, but it also takes others' efforts to really make some difference.
+Canyu Believeit (IhateBs) We aren't harming other by supplying them with jobs/food/taking them out of poverty, but we could be doing so much more. That's the problem, we are no where near the potential we could be to helping them. The cost of a car could feed a family in extreme poverty for years.
***** Not necessarily. Economics are very complicated, that's not a certain outcome. I don't have suggestions for the likelihood of that or other outcomes; like I said, this is complicated, and I have very little understanding what would happen. Hence why I watch Crash Course Economics.
I totally agree with your opinion, we finance this unfair system, moreover I don't think the issue is the capitalism or the globalization, it is all about how we humans make usage and handle the system
hello .i'm really happy that i have known crash course on youtube and proud of being a fan of it ... i just want to suggest because of having a lot of informations during the episode( it's what make me happy and happier every episode that i watch)... to make in the end of every episode if it is possible a summary of what we have learned by watching the episode ...thank you
I'm very skeptical that our media would report on companies hurting laborers overseas or having unscrupulous business practices. In fact it seems like they have an incentive not to do that. Most consumers are in the dark about that stuff.
That is a naive statement. Yes they do use sensationalism to attract viewers. But we can see that there are many subjects that are avoided. Frauds committed on the highest scales of political power for example are systematically avoided, though they would attract a lot of attention.
I really dislike what was said about microcredit. Randomised controlled trials have shown that "Overall, on the substantial evidence it gathered, the study found no clear impact of the provision of microcredit on poverty” (Banerjee). Similarly, Karlan and Zinman found, using RCTs "the number of business activities and employees in the treatment group (micro-debtors) decreased relative to controls, and subjective well-being declined slightly". This is all happening while microlenders earn a massive amount of money on 40% interest rates per annum, effectively preying on the world's poor. Please do more research before announcing something both ethically and practically dubious a success.
Hello +CrashCourse Team, thank you for the video! It's very informative! But can you provide us with some readings to improve our understanding and informations?
This video got me thinking. Business and ethics do not go hand in hand. You can set things right but at the cost of personal financial gain, and some sections of ethics actually come into conflict with other sections such as this: If poverty and hunger were to be abolished the impact on our limited resources would be tremendous and would accelerate our demise as a species in the long term. I think we can never truly accomplish these issues as a result because there'll be a natural reaction that'll deter all our efforts. That doesn't mean must avoid solving these issues altogether for we'd be destroyed as well, our existence is marred by balance and we need to achieve it to live as harmoniously as possible.The problem is that to achieve only balance is not motivating enough for us humans to work together. I always thought that this is why people turn to religion for guidance on balance.
+Angelo Busato But... by developping new technologies and by innovating we are actually able to produce enough for everyone. There were famines when the population of the globe was not even 1 billion, today we are more than 7 billion and famines are rare. With globalization, new technologies and new ways to communicate we could easilly all live out of poverty. The information revolution will create a new world that wouldn't have been possible 10-20 or 50 years ago...
Does it seem to you that Adriene and Jacob really dislike each other? In this video, they are getting a little better at covering it up, but for the last few videos, whoa! Those are some extreme eye daggers whenever they have to stand beside each other! Maybe they should drop the format of having the two of them together at the start of the video. It really affects the mood of everything that follows.
i think the terms outsourcing and offshoring are a little bit mixed up here. outsourcing does not necessarily mean that jobs are moved to developing countries, it just means that some other company is doing the job.
+Ray Rivera It's really not that simple for debt, as loans allow people or business that money to jumpstart they might not otherwise get. Think about how many students wouldn't be able to afford College/University without debt
How come you talk about Microcredits about being this awesome amazing thing, when Microcredits are a HIGHLY controversial subject??? You should really make an entire episode dedicated to the pros and cons of microcredits.
+Nobody Who gets to have the things? No one wants to do the work if the people who don't do it get just as much. Go build me a space robot and send it off. I'll be sitting in front of the TV.
+R3Testa I don't think so, everybody knows if you want money you GTFO and go work in banking. I mean people in meaningful positions, like NASA, Microsoft Research or whatever, it doesn't really matter what the worlds TV watching paper pushers do.
+Nobody We're well on the way to that. Automation is reducing the need for work to get stuff done all the time. We could probably cut a working week down to 30 hours with current technology, and down to 20 in the near future.
What is Globalization, and why do you think the way in which Globalization occurs today is both good and bad? Globalization is when businesses spread internationally. Globalization can be good for businesses and allow them to save money by outsourcing jobs to countries with lower wages. A way globalization can be bad is that anyone who worked for a business that outsourced its jobs now doesn't have a job. Working conditions for lower wage workers in other countries are not good.
this was your most fair video... it will take 1000 years for it to raise a place like India to a western standard of living ...globalism is a sham overall
Instead of posting a comment, I will post instructions for a less abrasive shave for you, my hairy Jacob brother: 1. Detailed Grain Mapping The “grain” of the beard-the direction(s) the hairs grow in-can be completely counter-intuitive when it comes to the neck. They can even sometimes grow in a circular pattern. Understanding how the hair grows on your neck is the first step in overcoming shaving problems there. To accomplish this, create a map of your beard with a mapping aid like this one. Using a mirror and gentle circular motions of the fingers, determine the direction(s) your beard is growing in and sketch that onto the face map. Writing arrows in the direction of growth in each box will help you understand how to best shave those areas. Shaving with the grain initially is one of the basic concepts in shaving, particularly important if you are using a multi-blade cartridge razor. It’s a bit less important with a double-edged razor (you can “cheat” a little and follow the predominant direction without worrying about every twist and turn), but still necessary to keep in mind. Reducing the beard in stages is the key take-away here. 2. Careful Preparation Properly preparing the skin of the neck is often overlooked: copious amounts of hot water or gently cleaning the skin on the face doesn’t get to the neck. Pay attention and be sure that warm towel or “barbershop prep” lather covers the neck! Some shavers troubled by ingrown hairs on the neck should try a good, thorough scrubbing of the area before putting razor to skin. 3. Pre-shave Oil I’m not a big fan of pre-shave oils, but some have found that applying some on the neck helps reduce irritation. Wet your face, apply the oil, and then apply your shaving cream. 4. Use Cold Water to Shave Consider, after a normal prep, using cold water to shave with. Some shavers have reported a significant reduction in irritation with cold water shaving. Here is the Art of Manliness guide to cold water shaving. 5. Use a “Gentle” Razor With a High-Performance Blade First, what do I mean by a “gentle” razor? In the world of DE shaving, some razors have a reputation for being “gentle” because they’re engineered to expose less of the blade edge when shaving. While you won’t get as close of a shave with a gentle DE razor, it’s definitely much more comfortable and causes less irritation. Some popular gentle razors include the Merkur Classic, Weishi, and many of the vintage Gillette safety razors. On adjustable DE razors you can adjust the razor for a gentler or more aggressive shave. Dial down for a milder shave on the neck, then dial up for other parts of your face. One of the things you can do to further reduce irritation when shaving on sensitive areas like the neck is to combine a gentle razor with a high performance razor blade like the blades from Feather. A gentle razor that doesn’t expose much blade to the skin, coupled with a high performance blade, provides a much more efficient cut, reducing the chance for irritation. Adjusting a cartridge razor (like a Gillette Fusion) in this fashion is tougher as the variety of available blade sources is limited. If you’re using a cartridge razor, your best bet to reduce irritation is to go with a cartridge with fewer blades. However that is not “etched in stone,” so some experimentation may be necessary. 6. Flattening-Not Over-Stretching-The Skin Let’s face it - the neck is not a flat area; it’s a terrain of curves and odd angles. Many shavers will tilt their head upwards to pull the skin of the neck taut. This may help, but it doesn’t really flatten the area. Instead, try leaning forward and tilting the head back SLIGHTLY. Shorter strokes on the razor may also help cover flatter areas more consistently. 7. Use No Pressure on the Razor No pressure means NO PRESSURE! 8. Try Some “Advanced” Shaving Tricks on Small Areas This is not for everyone, but if you have small areas of stubble or rough patches, you can try some techniques like “J-Hooking” or “Blade Buffing” to cover those areas without re-shaving-and possibly getting irritation-over a wider area. However, over-doing these advanced techniques can be a prescription for trouble if not done carefully and judiciously. 9. Thoroughly Clean the Neck After the Shave A very thorough rinsing of the neck with warm water after the shave (before applying aftershave) will help remove any remaining lather residue, particularly important for those prone to ingrown hairs. I personally go one step further: after the warm water rinse, I soak a cotton pad in witch hazel and wipe down the area. You may be surprised what the pad picks up. Follow with a brief cool water rinse and aftershave product. 10. Settle for Less Do you really need that “baby’s butt smooth” neck? Maybe it’s time to skip that third pass and go for looking “presentable.”
The Brexit, French riots and Trump's presidency are somewhat related. The common thread is Globalization. Especially the movement of production of goods FROM the countries that consume the goods. Balanced Trade is OK but Free Trade ends with the family wage jobs drained out of the consuming countries.
So out of curiosity, how do areas of extreme poverty that produce little and consume little fit into larger theories on economics? Is there a good reason? Shouldn't free market as we understand it inherently seek to both find a way to increase spending as well as take advantage of very cheap labor? If so, how does it make sense that there can be what basically amounts to economic dead zones?
As a Bangladeshi , I know how much the apparel industry contributes to our economy . Almost every poor people I know are dependent on this industry to make money .
Microcredit could have been looked at more critically, especially with all the controversy about its use through wives as proxies and the frequency of it being used for operating costs, rather than investment. Not to mention the actual interest rates for the loan recipients.
Pokoirl YaSe you're completely wrong. If you're basically working as slave labour this isn't better for you than having no job. Just look at foxxcon factory as an example
Huh, but no job, no money, how can those people pay for their goods? In fact, having that type of job is really bad, but it would be worse if the people kept dying of hunger...
+Pokoirl YaSe I partially agree with you. I am from Taiwan and my grandparents worked in sweatshops. I remember my grandmother taking me to her work at a textile factory. The place was cramped, loud, cramped, and pretty dangerous. However, it paid the bill and allowed my parents to focus on their school and eventually starting their own business. The process helped my family climb out of poverty and eventually immigrate. I admit that my family is lucky, we made it while many other did not. If my grandparents had been unlucky they may get injured on the job and because of the lack of social safety net at the time, there is a good chance that my grandparents would have ended up on the street begging for handouts. It is important to remember that yes it is good to have jobs that translates to upward mobility, at the same time it is a gamble that is paid with blood, sweat, tears, and limbs. To only look at success stories while turning a blind eye to the broken lives created by these jobs is just as bad as only focusing on the broken lives.
Pokoirl YaSe if you could be more self sufficient like a subsistence farmer would that not better the more factories you have the more corrupt the government would become the more greedy all the entities involved would become less safe drinking water more military spending to suppress your free will think of it like this would you rather live in a rich modern nazi state where the government and fascist interests have more tools and resources to use to harm you or would you rather live in a cabin in the middle of no where away from the state and others drinking water from the ground trapping your own food growing your own this was the argument of one of the largest empires ever the monguls who rejected society
J.p Brandao it then becomes a argument against society as we know in which our purpose is to serve what we perceive as the betterment of our country or whatever we believe in our given geographic location and social status media and reality I think that if the factories where democratic to an extent and had labor unions then you could argue that they are benefiting the society or if they had a democracy instead of fascism authoritarianism and so on I personally would rather live in a place with clean air where I can hunt or gather my own food if given the choice between conformity to a ruling class like that but if you’re in that situation there’s not enough room for dissidence and it would be considered unruly and unreasonable and you’d have traditions intwined upon you for generations I guess this is why the communist party in China done away with their history pre communism definitely not advocating communism but suggesting reasonable things that in my mind related to why humans accept working conditions like that
One of the other major issues with the apparent advantages of globalization though is that they often require the destruction of local economies first. It is kinda like burning down an orchard then showing how much more profitable sharecropping strawberries is. In many of these regions we saw decades of colonial forces taking away land (either directly or squeezing landowners till they have to sell) or destroying local resources then, after they decimated existing economies, offering all the displaced workers jobs at their companies instead. So it is solving a problem they created, but doing it in such a way that mostly benefits wealthy people far away.
I also noticed that the video didn't cover what happens to a local economy when work is outsourced. How corporations just circumvent labor laws and regulations in their country that were brought about by years and years of people unionizing and fighting for fair working conditions, undermining domestic wages. Domestic wages drop, creating a need for foreign, cheaply made products. It's a cycle that only benefit's the few on top.
+SweatyTurtle they did briefly mention it, but nowhere in enough detail as i personally think these topics of both poverty and globalization warrant.
+Robert Nicholls no. it raises gdp, which is not an accurate measurement of the wealth of a people by any means.
When people talk about "rich countries" or "getting richer" they talk about gdp, which says exactly nothing about how well-fed and happy people are. It says nothing about how the capital and income is distributed among the population, or how much of the economy is based on real goods and production (as opposed to financial instruments etc.). Remember bhutan is one of the poorest countries of the world and yet, at the same time, one of the richest in happiness, with one of the most peaceful and equal and harmonious societies. And incidentally, it has an extremely unglobalised, agragrian economy.
+neeneko Globalisation generally destroys inefficient industries that can't compete with the worldwide competition. Such examples as the car industry in Australia dying as it is unable to compete with other countries (such as Japan and Germany's) economies of scale. Therefore only industries that are competitive thrive and a countries comparative advantage allows it to trade. The reduction of tariffs and quotas also benefit the people allowing consumers access to a wider range of cheap and affordable goods and services that wouldn't be available without globalisation and trade. Globalisation is sort of a wave effect as its up everyone, generally the rich more than the poor. This can be seen with South Korea which was regarded as a poor third world country up until the 1980s/1990s where the production of technology outsourced from Japan rose to higher standards of living, higher education, better quality of life, leading to South Korea to becoming an economic powerhouse and the developed country it is today.
+neeneko Detroit and the US Rust Belt!
Can I just say that this is helping my write/right a Sociology essay that I have due tomorrow?
Feels good to hear so much about my country, knowing that this raises awareness in people around the globe about what's going on in Bangladesh! Thank you for such a wonderful crash course, I'm a huge fan.
Please talk about the unsustainability a little longer. Especially when you call it the 'probably biggest problem with globalization'. It's the most interessting aswell in my opinion.
+MisteriousXeb We'll be getting into Environmental Econ soon! -stan
Unsustainablity aka capitalism.
+millenniumdragn People have been saying it is unsustainable since it began. Thus far those have always been the shortsighted people. Meanwhile capitalism is the only force proven to bring dramatic improvement to billions of lives around the world.
Maybe one day those shortsighted people will be proven right and then we will be back to where we were without capitalism, poor dirt farmers.
+Joe Lima Capitalism as it is today promotes uneconomic ie wasteful and destructive practices. It's cheaper to produce things halfway around the world because labour and raw resources are cheaper, as wasteful and exploitative practices are ignored or aren't covered by law.
As destructive and exploitative practices are increasingly discouraged or covered by laws and legislation companies will have to look for alternatives as a way of competing with each other in a global economy. As we are already seeing, I believe that answer lays with automation. Robots that mine, refine, recycle, produce and transport quicker and more efficiently than human workers ever could means cheap products. But it also means less workers, so fewer people that can buy those products until a point is reached, an anomaly, the likes of which our species or any other on this planet has ever experienced.
Plentiful, limitless resources and an true global efficient, renewable resource based economy.
+CasMullac Capitalism destroys jobs but it also creates jobs as well to buy those goods. Robots destroy mining jobs but create jobs that make robots and making robots is better paying than a mining job. Which increases a persons buying power.
Crash course is amazing and so are the hosts. From the topics covered to content created - These videos are super helpful regardless of the times! Keep up the amazing work team! ✨💯
I'm an Austrian type. A free market fan. And this video was pretty well-balanced. Showed both sides, including the sides I disagreed with. Congrats and thanks.
Actually, while the video was showing parts of both sides, the neo-liberalism was still strong in this one.
It might be slightly liberal leaning but it did give balanced information on both sides of the argument and left it open for the viewer to decide. It impossible to be completely unbiased but I think the did a pretty good job.
+Inorganic Vegan "Neoliberalism" in economics is right-wing economics in America. Neoliberals are actually more likely to be fans of Ayn Rand than someone who's not a neoliberal. "Liberal" in most parts of the world is more similar to the American term "libertarian" than it is to the American term "liberal".
+BlackysComments +Inorganic Vegan
You both are suffering from Out Group Homogeneity. Stick your head out of your bubble for a second and realize the spectrum of ideas is far greater than the limited set you choose to isolate yourself in.
+freesk8 It's understandable that you think the video was "well balanced" because you feel satisfied with the thought that it wasn't all on your side, but a lot of people, in fact, probably the majority, won't agree with you or what's stated in the video. And this is because they "explained" without any real or critic historical vision. I mean, they evaded any significant mention of colonialism, responsible for the world's inequity. I think it's easy to enjoy the benefits of a good craddle.
All I got from this video is that nothing is perfect and nothing ever will, we kinda just have to try and do the best job and keep evolving.. life in a nutshell
From the tone of this video it feels like they've adapting the old Churchill quote to the issue; 'Globalization is the worst form of trade, except for all the others that have been tried...'
TheFireflyGrave best comment I've ever seen
Here's the thing about globalisation: it is within a developed country's power to demand that companies that operate within it to maintain a certain standard of ethics if they desire to operate inside that country.
I feel that this approach to globalisation almost deserves the otherwise nonexistent classification of micro-globalisation, since this is focusing on a very particular thread and not all of many other broader, intersectional ways that globalisation can be the proponent of change and global elevation.
Ally J. Yess
that was an incredibly optimistic interpretation of micro finance. Micro credits are now seen as having failed the purpose of alleviating poverty
Adriene's talking mouth in the quotes pictures is quite creepy.
+mandith ikr
Ha! Agreed
+mandith it's creative
+mandith If you are 4 years old
+mandith Your profile picture is a lot more creepier.
This is such a great and informative video! It raised issues such as how economic advancement and environmentalism are related. Thanks Crash Course!
Epilepsy warning at 1:12
+Jerryrig Thank you.
+Jerryrig Yeah, what's up with that?
My mom has that, and its really helpful when she's given warnings like this.
+Jerryrig Seriously, you shouldn't be looking at a computer screen in the first place if you have epilepsy.
William Brown
If no computer or potential death are your choices, I would choose no computers.
Globalization is the process by which businesses or other organizations develop international influence or start operating on an international scale. Globalization brings lower costs on good, it also brings opportunities for production of international trade. A downside to globalization is that products used for trades are produced in very low income countries with hard laborers with little to no pay.
Finally! A discussion of globalization's pros and cons that is objective, and not filled with nothing but the lies of free traders.
Jason James what lies?
The typical lie is that globalization ALWAYS produces a net benefit Simply not true! Globalization creates an outsourcing of jobs in developed nations for cheaper markets. This sometimes kills the ability of consumers in developed nations to purchase the very items being outsourced. Globalization also encourages exploitation and victimization in, child sweat shop labor practices, over population, and environmental catastrophe, and a variety of other social problems. Globalization also produces the consolidation of markets. For example, cheap American corn has decimated the domestic Mexican corn market. Poor farmers are driven off their land and resort to entering the U.S. illegally to find work. Their now useless land is then bought up on the cheap by speculators. Without domestic food production, a country cannot feed itself and is extremely on foreign imports that can be cut off by war or natural disasters. Illegal labor creates an enhanced distribution channel for drug traffickers. Illegal labor leads to unemployment domestically,grows the welfare system which leads to long term dependency on government programs, and creates more income stratification and social unrest. ETC... ETC...ETC. Therefore, free trade and globalization is not the panacea that it is claimed to be.
Great points. I've recently have been listening to the teaching of Milton Friedman , nobel peace prize winner im economics, on youtube to better understand Free trade. He explains everything logically. In one video he explains that basically there.
“poverty isn’t a lack of character it’s a lack of cash” - Rutger Bergman
why do people dislike this? They do a great job doing a detailed balanced summary.
The idea that free trade is always good for developing countries is... very debatable. Trade is indeed necessary, but the "free" part of it enables big companies from abroad to pin a developing country at doing what suits them and not produce other things. For example rules that require foreign companies not only to produce in a country but also to use a certain percentage of materials produced there are a start. The biggest problem is when a developing country only produces 2 or 3 raw materials or agricultural produces but has to import every technology. In these cases a form of protectionism, if well planned and directed, can enable the country to develop a higher level industry and not remain stuck at producing only goods for foreign companies.
2:54 Totally agree, it's actually shocking how much this little piece of rectangle SAVED my life. I shouldn't be as smart as i am, not even close, given my circunstances, but i bunched an insane amount of knowledge and info resources thanks to this.
The very fact i learned by myself shows this.eee
Globalization and capitalism are perfect economic ideologies for countries/communities with only small and medium size business.. Everyone competes for the market share in a mostly fair environment, and the gap between the top and the bottom is not that huge..
However, once the economy starts to allow large size business, they just start to control everything (economy, politics, justice system, etc.), transforming an once sustainable economic environment into an oligarchy environment, with the top getting all the profit and benefits and the bottom just fighting to survive...
The best example of this effect can be seen in US... US had a vibrant capitalist economy, following the first idea of small and medium size business, but now they are all about oligarchies and monopolies.. because of this US' economy is going backwards, middle class is disappearing, and the gap between top and bottom become so huge...
Now that both of the hosts have calmed down a little, they're really not too bad. This was a good episode.
This video and the conversations contained below in the comment threads are fascinating. Conversations we need to have more of with civility, and some of these here are great examples of that.
The main issue I see when reading through comment threads, and it shows up here, is that it is difficult for people to admit that some of their strongly held beliefs may fail under scrutiny using information they didn't know of previously or from perspectives beyond their own. If we can dispassionately remove our convictions for a short time to undertake the world-view of another to criticise ourselves and our world views then our opinions can understandings can only be strengthened either by tearing them down in light of falsifying evidence or built up by new information.
there’s something wrong with an economic model where the top 8 richest people have more wealth than the bottom half. this can’t be the only way
Would still be nice if workers in general could get roughly the value of their work instead of being pressed into the minimum possible standard of living by corporations
Globalization by its function is great, but the problem is not how it creates wealth to the corporations and workers, it's how this economic growth actually represents the develop of human capital and the decrease of rights exploitation. If the idea that money alone could balance a nation's social and evolutionary circumstances; the TTP would be the Earths solution to everything, right? Well, I guess that that's not how it looks like...
hi jacob and adriene, first of all congratulation to both of you and your whole team because you guys are doing wonderful job. i have enjoyed your video a lot and i have one request to make, could you please make videos on burning global economic issues like trade war etc and it's impact on various countries. i'd really be grateful to you guys.
I love learning
I think people will look at us in the future like we look to colonization and slavery in the past.
The worst thing is how unattentive we are, right now, to those issues.We see news here and there on TV, but our indifference towards those who live far away is staggering. After all, we are the ones who are the beneficiaries. That's so sad. And I know I contribute to it everyday and I try really hard to avoid it, but it also takes others' efforts to really make some difference.
True. "Voting with your wallet " is the best that we can do for now.
+Canyu Believeit (IhateBs) We aren't harming other by supplying them with jobs/food/taking them out of poverty, but we could be doing so much more. That's the problem, we are no where near the potential we could be to helping them. The cost of a car could feed a family in extreme poverty for years.
***** Not necessarily. Economics are very complicated, that's not a certain outcome. I don't have suggestions for the likelihood of that or other outcomes; like I said, this is complicated, and I have very little understanding what would happen. Hence why I watch Crash Course Economics.
I totally agree with your opinion, we finance this unfair system, moreover I don't think the issue is the capitalism or the globalization, it is all about how we humans make usage and handle the system
Hans Rosling! I love his videos!
Best small loan commercial I've ever seen.
Love the show guys.. I'm taking the systems from here to understand the economy in my own country
Lamprey Milt I don't understand
Thank you for not making awkward jokes in this episode. These hosts are improving.
So what happens when the price of shoes and shirts goes up? does that mean the wages of these sweatshop workers goes up too??
Highly recommend Professor Jeffery Sachs free online sustainable development course. I also bought his textbook. Really life changing.
hello .i'm really happy that i have known crash course on youtube and proud of being a fan of it ... i just want to suggest because of having a lot of informations during the episode( it's what make me happy and happier every episode that i watch)... to make in the end of every episode if it is possible a summary of what we have learned by watching the episode ...thank you
I'm very skeptical that our media would report on companies hurting laborers overseas or having unscrupulous business practices. In fact it seems like they have an incentive not to do that. Most consumers are in the dark about that stuff.
That is a naive statement. Yes they do use sensationalism to attract viewers. But we can see that there are many subjects that are avoided. Frauds committed on the highest scales of political power for example are systematically avoided, though they would attract a lot of attention.
Very well done on such a difficult subject
I really dislike what was said about microcredit. Randomised controlled trials have shown that "Overall, on the substantial evidence it gathered, the study found no clear impact of the provision of microcredit on poverty” (Banerjee). Similarly, Karlan and Zinman found, using RCTs "the number of business activities and employees in the treatment group (micro-debtors) decreased relative to controls, and subjective well-being declined slightly".
This is all happening while microlenders earn a massive amount of money on 40% interest rates per annum, effectively preying on the world's poor. Please do more research before announcing something both ethically and practically dubious a success.
I love the hosts!
Me too, mate. :) Especially Adriene. Heh.
1:11 the image flickers. Anyone have that problem?
idk if im late or not but it flickers for everyone
Glitchenyia Only a little late
I love this video! Good job, guys!
Hello +CrashCourse Team,
thank you for the video! It's very informative!
But can you provide us with some readings to improve our understanding and informations?
This video got me thinking. Business and ethics do not go hand in hand. You can set things right but at the cost of personal financial gain, and some sections of ethics actually come into conflict with other sections such as this: If poverty and hunger were to be abolished the impact on our limited resources would be tremendous and would accelerate our demise as a species in the long term. I think we can never truly accomplish these issues as a result because there'll be a natural reaction that'll deter all our efforts. That doesn't mean must avoid solving these issues altogether for we'd be destroyed as well, our existence is marred by balance and we need to achieve it to live as harmoniously as possible.The problem is that to achieve only balance is not motivating enough for us humans to work together. I always thought that this is why people turn to religion for guidance on balance.
+Angelo Busato But... by developping new technologies and by innovating we are actually able to produce enough for everyone. There were famines when the population of the globe was not even 1 billion, today we are more than 7 billion and famines are rare. With globalization, new technologies and new ways to communicate we could easilly all live out of poverty. The information revolution will create a new world that wouldn't have been possible 10-20 or 50 years ago...
Such a good thing to watch on Thanksgiving weekend. Thank you guys!
Does it seem to you that Adriene and Jacob really dislike each other? In this video, they are getting a little better at covering it up, but for the last few videos, whoa! Those are some extreme eye daggers whenever they have to stand beside each other! Maybe they should drop the format of having the two of them together at the start of the video. It really affects the mood of everything that follows.
I would love to hear some discussion of the transnational corporations and their accumulation of wealth and the increasing income inequality.
hello where do you put your sources?
Would've been great to have this before my Geo Exam :(
i think the terms outsourcing and offshoring are a little bit mixed up here. outsourcing does not necessarily mean that jobs are moved to developing countries, it just means that some other company is doing the job.
ayy my man clifford. he carried me through econ :)
this video is about to get me out of a hole for my exam
Wow! Thanks! That's a really comprehensive video.
I like how this is not centred on capitalism and also questioning the economy. Good job!
The ACDC belt is distracting
This was surprisingly unbiased
As a Bangladeshi I dont know whether to be proud or sad after watching this video
don't forget the climate change factor....discounted the rest of the video after that stunned comment
Just get rid of the debt based money system and corrupt leaders
+Ray Rivera Simple as that my friend, but not so simple to execute that idea ;(
+Ray Rivera It's really not that simple for debt, as loans allow people or business that money to jumpstart they might not otherwise get.
Think about how many students wouldn't be able to afford College/University without debt
+The Highscorer (Your Daily Mighty Videos) To add to your post; starting a business with no money to be lent is a challenge.
+Ray Rivera Check out the venus project
+Andrew Elie I had not heard of the Venus Project. Understanding how the monetary system is set up is key to see how much better it could have been.
no mention of land theft? its kind of a major factor here...
thank you
2:24
Exact second i was looking for
Ok, but why don't they talk about protectionism? subsidies? trade bariers? These limit globalisation and they ignore these phenomenons....
1:58 I actually didn't thought that was possible, 1 in 7 is an absurd number too.
thank a lot miss Adrien and Mr Gakob
How come you talk about Microcredits about being this awesome amazing thing, when Microcredits are a HIGHLY controversial subject??? You should really make an entire episode dedicated to the pros and cons of microcredits.
The best way to get people out of extreme poverty/poverty is free education!
Or just affordable ones, Thats the real issue right now.
Just have robots getting resources from the stars and eliminate scarcity (of physical things. Time will always be scarce.)
+Nobody Who gets to have the things? No one wants to do the work if the people who don't do it get just as much. Go build me a space robot and send it off. I'll be sitting in front of the TV.
+R3Testa Easy, everyone gets to have one. Suspend the entertainment industry until people stop being lazy and help out.
Jackboy019
LOL. "No TV" doesn't make people work, and you're punishing the productive people, too, mom.
+R3Testa I don't think so, everybody knows if you want money you GTFO and go work in banking. I mean people in meaningful positions, like NASA, Microsoft Research or whatever, it doesn't really matter what the worlds TV watching paper pushers do.
+Nobody We're well on the way to that. Automation is reducing the need for work to get stuff done all the time. We could probably cut a working week down to 30 hours with current technology, and down to 20 in the near future.
Would the extreme poverty threshold be increased over time w.r.t. inflation?
the microcredit bit was eye opening.
I like what you guys do.
Great video as usual.
What is Globalization, and why do you think the way in which Globalization occurs today is both good and bad?
Globalization is when businesses spread internationally. Globalization can be good for businesses and allow them to save money by outsourcing jobs to countries with lower wages. A way globalization can be bad is that anyone who worked for a business that outsourced its jobs now doesn't have a job. Working conditions for lower wage workers in other countries are not good.
Done
Thank you for your great information!!!
The answer is really complicated
this was your most fair video... it will take 1000 years for it to raise a place like India to a western standard of living ...globalism is a sham overall
Instead of posting a comment, I will post instructions for a less abrasive shave for you, my hairy Jacob brother:
1. Detailed Grain Mapping
The “grain” of the beard-the direction(s) the hairs grow in-can be completely counter-intuitive when it comes to the neck. They can even sometimes grow in a circular pattern. Understanding how the hair grows on your neck is the first step in overcoming shaving problems there. To accomplish this, create a map of your beard with a mapping aid like this one. Using a mirror and gentle circular motions of the fingers, determine the direction(s) your beard is growing in and sketch that onto the face map. Writing arrows in the direction of growth in each box will help you understand how to best shave those areas.
Shaving with the grain initially is one of the basic concepts in shaving, particularly important if you are using a multi-blade cartridge razor. It’s a bit less important with a double-edged razor (you can “cheat” a little and follow the predominant direction without worrying about every twist and turn), but still necessary to keep in mind. Reducing the beard in stages is the key take-away here.
2. Careful Preparation
Properly preparing the skin of the neck is often overlooked: copious amounts of hot water or gently cleaning the skin on the face doesn’t get to the neck. Pay attention and be sure that warm towel or “barbershop prep” lather covers the neck! Some shavers troubled by ingrown hairs on the neck should try a good, thorough scrubbing of the area before putting razor to skin.
3. Pre-shave Oil
I’m not a big fan of pre-shave oils, but some have found that applying some on the neck helps reduce irritation. Wet your face, apply the oil, and then apply your shaving cream.
4. Use Cold Water to Shave
Consider, after a normal prep, using cold water to shave with. Some shavers have reported a significant reduction in irritation with cold water shaving. Here is the Art of Manliness guide to cold water shaving.
5. Use a “Gentle” Razor With a High-Performance Blade
First, what do I mean by a “gentle” razor? In the world of DE shaving, some razors have a reputation for being “gentle” because they’re engineered to expose less of the blade edge when shaving. While you won’t get as close of a shave with a gentle DE razor, it’s definitely much more comfortable and causes less irritation. Some popular gentle razors include the Merkur Classic, Weishi, and many of the vintage Gillette safety razors. On adjustable DE razors you can adjust the razor for a gentler or more aggressive shave. Dial down for a milder shave on the neck, then dial up for other parts of your face.
One of the things you can do to further reduce irritation when shaving on sensitive areas like the neck is to combine a gentle razor with a high performance razor blade like the blades from Feather. A gentle razor that doesn’t expose much blade to the skin, coupled with a high performance blade, provides a much more efficient cut, reducing the chance for irritation.
Adjusting a cartridge razor (like a Gillette Fusion) in this fashion is tougher as the variety of available blade sources is limited. If you’re using a cartridge razor, your best bet to reduce irritation is to go with a cartridge with fewer blades. However that is not “etched in stone,” so some experimentation may be necessary.
6. Flattening-Not Over-Stretching-The Skin
Let’s face it - the neck is not a flat area; it’s a terrain of curves and odd angles. Many shavers will tilt their head upwards to pull the skin of the neck taut. This may help, but it doesn’t really flatten the area. Instead, try leaning forward and tilting the head back SLIGHTLY. Shorter strokes on the razor may also help cover flatter areas more consistently.
7. Use No Pressure on the Razor
No pressure means NO PRESSURE!
8. Try Some “Advanced” Shaving Tricks on Small Areas
This is not for everyone, but if you have small areas of stubble or rough patches, you can try some techniques like “J-Hooking” or “Blade Buffing” to cover those areas without re-shaving-and possibly getting irritation-over a wider area. However, over-doing these advanced techniques can be a prescription for trouble if not done carefully and judiciously.
9. Thoroughly Clean the Neck After the Shave
A very thorough rinsing of the neck with warm water after the shave (before applying aftershave) will help remove any remaining lather residue, particularly important for those prone to ingrown hairs. I personally go one step further: after the warm water rinse, I soak a cotton pad in witch hazel and wipe down the area. You may be surprised what the pad picks up. Follow with a brief cool water rinse and aftershave product.
10. Settle for Less
Do you really need that “baby’s butt smooth” neck? Maybe it’s time to skip that third pass and go for looking “presentable.”
Jacob Pakman this needs more likes lol
That ACDC belt though...
...Convincing my mom to get me a new phone 2:53
This was actually a fairly balanced video.
globalisation is great as long as the countries involved are working on a level playing field.....
If workers in the developing world would be treated "fairly", everything you buy would cost 3 times more.
The Brexit, French riots and Trump's presidency are somewhat related. The common thread is Globalization. Especially the movement of production of goods FROM the countries that consume the goods. Balanced Trade is OK but Free Trade ends with the family wage jobs drained out of the consuming countries.
Those thing are very related. There are revolts happening all over the world. But also, and surprisingly in developing countries.
Love the belt
you guys are the best !
So out of curiosity, how do areas of extreme poverty that produce little and consume little fit into larger theories on economics? Is there a good reason? Shouldn't free market as we understand it inherently seek to both find a way to increase spending as well as take advantage of very cheap labor? If so, how does it make sense that there can be what basically amounts to economic dead zones?
thanks for the video, discount Mark Cuban and Arianna Huffington!
The "microcredit" part got me goosebumps..
Watched! amazing!!!!
Who uses a acronym for an uncommon phase? What does DFTBA means?
As a Bangladeshi , I know how much the apparel industry contributes to our economy . Almost every poor people I know are dependent on this industry to make money .
Is it true about declined povetry? I mean- may be 1,3$ now have less purchasing power then before?
They should probably make a part 2 and 3, this is quite overly simplified
Microcredit could have been looked at more critically, especially with all the controversy about its use through wives as proxies and the frequency of it being used for operating costs, rather than investment. Not to mention the actual interest rates for the loan recipients.
that ACDC belt buckle is 2edgy4me.
Higher wages you say? so they can lose their jobs? 5:16
Havin'a bad job in a poor country is better than no job at all
Pokoirl YaSe you're completely wrong. If you're basically working as slave labour this isn't better for you than having no job. Just look at foxxcon factory as an example
Huh, but no job, no money, how can those people pay for their goods? In fact, having that type of job is really bad, but it would be worse if the people kept dying of hunger...
+Pokoirl YaSe I partially agree with you. I am from Taiwan and my grandparents worked in sweatshops. I remember my grandmother taking me to her work at a textile factory. The place was cramped, loud, cramped, and pretty dangerous. However, it paid the bill and allowed my parents to focus on their school and eventually starting their own business. The process helped my family climb out of poverty and eventually immigrate.
I admit that my family is lucky, we made it while many other did not. If my grandparents had been unlucky they may get injured on the job and because of the lack of social safety net at the time, there is a good chance that my grandparents would have ended up on the street begging for handouts.
It is important to remember that yes it is good to have jobs that translates to upward mobility, at the same time it is a gamble that is paid with blood, sweat, tears, and limbs. To only look at success stories while turning a blind eye to the broken lives created by these jobs is just as bad as only focusing on the broken lives.
Pokoirl YaSe if you could be more self sufficient like a subsistence farmer would that not better the more factories you have the more corrupt the government would become the more greedy all the entities involved would become less safe drinking water more military spending to suppress your free will think of it like this would you rather live in a rich modern nazi state where the government and fascist interests have more tools and resources to use to harm you or would you rather live in a cabin in the middle of no where away from the state and others drinking water from the ground trapping your own food growing your own this was the argument of one of the largest empires ever the monguls who rejected society
J.p Brandao it then becomes a argument against society as we know in which our purpose is to serve what we perceive as the betterment of our country or whatever we believe in our given geographic location and social status media and reality I think that if the factories where democratic to an extent and had labor unions then you could argue that they are benefiting the society or if they had a democracy instead of fascism authoritarianism and so on I personally would rather live in a place with clean air where I can hunt or gather my own food if given the choice between conformity to a ruling class like that but if you’re in that situation there’s not enough room for dissidence and it would be considered unruly and unreasonable and you’d have traditions intwined upon you for generations I guess this is why the communist party in China done away with their history pre communism definitely not advocating communism but suggesting reasonable things that in my mind related to why humans accept working conditions like that
But all that shipping takes resources to move, there must be some sort of now v. later tradeoff we're making as well.
Are you also covering external cost and pigovian tax?
yeah free trade!