Comparative advantage was for many years the standard of
international trade which it was originated by David Ricardo, a British
Economist. However, the rapid pace of innovation and newer technologies
entering the market in rapid flows at the time, have diminished the concept of
comparative advantage to stand still. American economist Paul Krugman
introduced a new concept for which he was awarded the Nobel Prize in his “The
role of increasing returns to scale and network effects” theory. The process of
globalization includes maximizing returns by arranging transnational mergers and
share production agreements that bring together new partners with mutual
interests and strengths into a more competitive global economy. These processes
permit the connection of technology and innovation more efficiently with the
objective of creating higher standards of living for all involved.
Notwithstanding, globalization has benefited more the emerging economies as
they catch up with the rest of the world while aging economic concepts and
technologies are slower to adopt a rapidly changing world. The negative effect
in the developed economies is the generation of worker displacement and
unemployment by the older methods of production. The slow motion for
implementing new technologies in the developed world is provoking nationalistic
concerns making it a difficult transition for these affected industries and
governments that must now deal with the social changes and pressures that the
new economies bring about. These trends translate into a changing nature for
international competition and weights heavily on new technologies in the
exercise of international trade. In the meantime, economic and social concerns
arise as a result of these rapidly moving waves of change and the cultures are
slow to adapt creating new frictions between and within societies.
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