Global-Divides
Global-Divides
Global Divide
In the contemporary world, the buzz word used to pertain to these
stratifications among nations is the term global divide. However, in the modern
world, how did we reach this point? What do you think so? Let’s find out.
First, Second, and Third Worlds
After World War II, the wartime allies (United States and Soviet Union)
entered a Cold War – a state of political tension and rivalry, from the mid-1940s to
early 1990s. The cold War came forth due to political doubts among wartime allies.
For instance, the US has always been wary of the Soviet Union’s communist
leanings and it has stated its position to contain the latter’s expansion. The Cold
War yielded two chief political factions: the Western Bloc, comprised by the
industrial/capitalist US and North Atlantic (UK, Canada, France, Italy, among others)
and the Eastern Bloc (Albania, Poland, Bulgaria, Romania, Czechoslovakia, Hungary,
and Afghanistan), led by the communist/ socialist Russian Soviet Federative
Socialist Republic. The Western Bloc has been referred to as First World countries,
while the Eastern Bloc has been referred to s Second World countries.
In 1974, Teng Hsiao-Ping, vice primer of the People’s Republic of China,
spoke to the United Nation General Assembly. In his talk, he profoundly noted the
distinction among Three Worlds: “The United States and Soviet Union make up the
First World. The developing countries in Asia, Africa, Latin America and other
regions make up the Third World. The developed countries between the two make
up the Second World.
The Brandt Report
In the 1980s, a comprehensive analysis of global economy was reported by
the Independent Commission on International Development Issues. The commission
was led by Willy Brandt, West German chancellor. This analysis was encapsulated in
Brandt Report.
Briefly, this report categorized countries in the northern hemisphere as
comparatively smaller in population and more economically affluent than countries
in the southern hemisphere – a categorization that gave birth to the Brandt line – an
imaginary line that divides the world into the developed north and the developing
south.
The bottom line of this report was the contention on mutuality – that for both
the northern and southern countries to thrive, global economy must be
restructured, for instance by transferring resources to southern economies, thus
ending poverty. In the early 2000s, another report, The Brandt Equation, was
prepared by James Bernard Quilligan, describing the new global economy as facing
“financial contagion”, and requiring “major international relief program” (Quilligan,
2010).
One result of the Global Village has been the increasing gap between rich and
poor both on a local and global scale, wealthy countries are concentrated in one
part of the world, while poor countries seem to be concentrated in another – WHY IS
THIS SO? Some of the poorest countries have not been able to take advantage of
new communications technologies to be competitive. According the UN Human
Development Report (1996): the richest 20% of countries controlled 70% of the
global income, by 1993, they controlled 85%. The share of the poorest 20% of the
world’s people had decreased from 2.3% to 1.4%, the shift towards a global world
economy threatens to widen this gap.
The 20% that owns almost 85% of the world’s wealth live almost entirely in
the industrialized nations in the northern hemisphere (in addition to Australia and
New Zealand) while the poorest 20% of people in the world are located in the
southern hemisphere. The Northern countries have the greatest wealth, highest
standard of living, and the greatest industrial development – but the lowest
population. The southern countries have the bulk of the world’s population, but less
of the wealth, low standard of living, and far less industrial development.
The Global South is a changing concept. While for the most part or the
modern world the Global South has been associated to poverty and dependency,
some of these countries are gaining momentum toward achieving their economic
and political goals. There is a good deal to learn about the experiences of the Global
South, especially about the issues they face and the struggles that their people are
going through. But at the same time, there is also plenty to learn about how
collective action and people's empowerment in these locales are paving way for
progress. Most essentially, the phenomenon of the Global South encourages us to
reflect on the affordances and the challenges that globalization poses for people
across economic strata.