Changes as a Result of the World Economy
| English | Chinese | Pinyin |
|---|---|---|
| outsourcing | 外包 | wài bāo |
| newly industrialised countries | 新兴工业化国家 | xīn xīng gōng yè huà guó jiā |
| special economic zones | 经济特区 | jīng jì tè qū |
Production goes global
- The world economy moves production to lower-cost countries.
- Outsourcing 外包 sends work to firms in cheaper locations.
- Offshoring moves a company's own operations abroad.
Sending a company's work to a firm in a cheaper location is called...
Outsourcing shifts work to lower-cost firms elsewhere.
Rising economies
- Newly industrialised countries (NICs) 新兴工业化国家 grew fast by making goods for export.
- Special economic zones 经济特区 attract investment with tax breaks and light rules.
- These policies moved some countries from periphery toward core.
Which concept?
Match each example to the world-economy concept it shows.
Areas offering tax breaks and light rules to attract foreign investment are special economic ____.
Special economic zones attract investment and factories.
Select all true statements.
Outsourcing, NIC growth, and SEZ tax breaks are true; global production does have downsides.
Match each term to its meaning.
Outsourcing = send work; SEZ = tax-break zone; NIC = fast industrialiser.
Winners and costs
- Global production creates jobs and growth in developing countries.
- But it can bring low wages, poor conditions, and pollution.
- It also costs jobs in the countries the work moved from.
Moving production abroad can both create jobs in the destination and cost jobs in the origin.
It is a double-edged change with winners and losers on both ends.
Moving production abroad is a double-edged change. It can lift a developing country toward the core (as with the NICs) and leave behind low wages, poor conditions, and lost jobs in the origin country. Weigh gains against costs on both ends.
A company outsources its factory work to a country with a special economic zone offering tax breaks. That country gains jobs and grows into a newly industrialised country — but workers there may face low pay, while factory workers in the origin country lose their jobs.
The world economy shifts production abroad via outsourcing and offshoring. Special economic zones and export-led growth turned some countries into newly industrialised countries (NICs), moving them toward the core — but with costs: low wages, pollution, and lost jobs in origin countries.