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Globalization: Why Everything is Made in China in 5 Minutes - YouTube
Channel: Thought Monkey
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Remember the opening scene to the amazing
Nick Cage movie Lord of War?
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The one where you follow the life of a bullet
from its birth in a factory to its shipment
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from the Soviet Union to the jungles of Africa?
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When I watched that I was mesmerized.
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Almost all of our material goods make a similar
journey.
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From the extraction of raw materials found
in the Earth, to their production in a factory
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most likely somewhere in Asia, to the retail
store that you or I can head to down the street.
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Hello everyone.
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Thought Monkey here.
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Today we’re going to journey around the
world and discover why all of our stuff comes
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from places like China.
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The last time you looked at your T-shirt tag
you probably noticed that it was made in China,
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or Bangladesh, or Pakistan, or…wherever
- you get the point.
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But have you stopped to ask yourself why they
never say England, or France, or the U.S.?
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Well as most of us probably know already it
has to do with cost.
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But that’s only part of the story.
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Awhile back I read an interesting article
on NPR that talked about the journey of a
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t-shirt.
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In their investigations they found that the
cotton for most t-shirts are grown in either
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China, India or surprisingly the U.S. in places
like Texas.
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If the cotton is grown in the U.S. it is then
shipped over 7,000 miles to China or India
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where the milling process begins which transforms
the plant cotton into yarn or sheets.
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From there it is shipped another 1,800 miles
to Bangladesh where it is sewn into shirts
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by workers who are paid $40 a month in super
sketchy conditions.
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In 2013 for example a factory collapsed and
killed 1,100 garment workers.
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Most popular clothing companies like Gap,
Walmart, Target and well pretty much every
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store you can think of rely heavily on suppliers
from this region.
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When sewn the shirts are shipped another 8,000
miles back to the U.S. where they are delivered
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to retailers, folded neatly by workers who
are paid whatever the minimum wage in your
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city is and sold for $20 bucks a pop.
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The estimated miles traveled for any given
t-shirt from cotton farm to retail store?
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About 16,000 miles.
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$20 bucks for an item that has seen more of
the world than you or I have?
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Not bad.
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But why does this happen and how is it a viable
economic model?
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During the 19th century the process of industrialization
began which was basically the time when everyday
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household items became easier to make with
the use of machines and standardization and
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allowed the prices of items to decrease making
it more affordable for the public to buy.
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Along with this there was a transportation
revolution with the invention of the steam
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engine making shipping using boats or trains
much cheaper.
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At the same time Europeans were busy conquering
the world which had the sometimes very unwanted
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effect of integrating parts of the world with
other parts of the world.
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But nonetheless it happened and here we are.
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Because of this more and more nations began
to embrace international trade while at the
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same time vigorously competing with each other
to gain economic and military dominance over
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one another and their colonies.
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Eventually this competition grew to a tipping
point and WWI happened.
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Then WWII happened.
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Then the Cold War.
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Finally after the Cold War when most major
government decided to just chill the f*ck
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out, a period of rapid globalization happened.
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But it was really after the agreements made
by the international community after WWII,
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that laid the foundation to the kind of globalization
that we know and either love or hate or have
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no opinion about today.
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Most countries agreed to an international
monetary policy which basically has made it
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easier for countries to trade with each other
by eliminating or reducing taxes.
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This led to other economic agreements between
the international community and eventually
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the World Trade Organization which currently
provides a system for countries to make trade
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agreements with one another.
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There are also other bilateral agreements
between countries – for example the U.S.
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and South Korea has a Free Trade Agreement
which eliminates 95% of taxes or NAFTA between
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Canada, Mexico, and the U.S. which probably
ruined the lives of millions of poor corn
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farmers in Mexico – but that’s a story
for another time.
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Technology such as planes and sh*t has also
helped speed up globalization.
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Oh and the standardized shipping container
that can be seen on freight ships around the
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world was invented in 1956 making it super
easy for boats to load and unload stuff.
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When the internet came out CEOs could also
skype with powerful politicians around the
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world and set up agreements on how to best
take advantage of their constituents in China
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and India and other places that don’t care
too much about basic human rights.
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So why is this a viable economic model?
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Why can’t we just make our khakis in our
own developed countries?
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The answer is kind of simple.
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Obviously other countries pay their workers
dog sh*t.
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But they also can treat them like dog sh*t.
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In one story, a boss at Foxconn – a tech
manufacturing company – woke up an 8,000
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dorm-residing crew in the middle of the night
to start 12-hour shifts in order to pump out
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10,000 iPhones in 96 hours.
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Basically it’s easy to take advantage of
laborers in developing countries whereas in
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the U.S. we throw a hissy fit when our boss
asks us politely to cover for someone and
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has to pay us time and a half to do it.
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This economic model has been termed Neo-liberalism
which is a fancy word for a system of economics
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that chooses profit over people.
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In the end harvesting cotton from Texas, shipping
it to China, then to Bangladesh and then back
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to some mall in Texas is cheaper – due to
industrialization, low or no taxes between
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countries, and slave – I mean cheap labor.
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Thanks for watching.
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If you enjoyed the video please give it a
thumbs up below and subscribe to stay updated
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