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Re: Friedman, outsourcing his intellectual honesty
By Friedman is irelavant Feb 28th 2007 at 5:10 pm EST
Thank you for posting this blog. What made Friedman an authority of globalization? Maybe statements like this.

“The hidden hand of the market will never work without a hidden fist—McDonald’s cannot flourish without McDonnell Douglas, the builder of the F-15. And the hidden fist that keeps the world safe for Silicon Valley’s technologies is called the United States Army, Air Force, Navy and Marine Corps.... Without America on duty, there will be no America Online.”

Yea, he said that. The book he wrote," The World is Flat", is filled with a bunch of babel which is rooted in baseless assumptions about the world today. The world is a very complex place. By most accounts the world is getting bigger if anything. States are breaking up into smaller states, nations are becoming more polarised, and ethnic clashes and rivalries are winning the day.

The narrow minded perspective of Friedman is annoying and the fact that so many professors make their classes read his work is beyond me.

Joseph Stiglitz eats him alive in this debate on C-Span. Stiglitz has a much different opinion on Globalization and he's an actual authority on the subject seeing as he was the former Chief Economist at the World Bank. Check it out. Link
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Stop the Presses! The World Is Not Flat!

Seriously, someone needs to alert Thomas Friedman as soon as possible. The over-mustachioed and under-informed pundit has made a name (and fortune) for himself as the prophet of a glorious future in which globalization makes all things possible and all things wonderful. The thing is, no matter how appealing and optimistic, his overly simplistic tripe is just wrong.

Pankaj Ghemawat, a professor of global strategy at IESE business school, has written a brilliant and concise piece in Foreign Policy that eviscerates the idiocy that has become conventional wisdom. Ghemawat shows how the vast majority (typically 90%) of “globalization indicators,” like investment and communication, continue to operate within a nation’s borders. But this isn’t just a matter of being wrong. With something as nebulous as globalization, the assumptions made by academics and public figures are taken as truth, not theory, and have powerful implications for policy. For example, the decades long assault on welfare expenditure has operated under the assumption that it is incompatible with globalized competition.

 As Ghemawat sharply observes:

The champions of globalization are describing a world that doesn’t exist. It’s a fine strategy to sell books and even describe a potential environment that may someday exist. Because such episodes of mass delusion tend to be relatively short-lived even when they do achieve broad currency, one might simply be tempted to wait this one out as well. But the stakes are far too high for that. Governments that buy into the flat world are likely to pay too much attention to the “golden straitjacket” that Friedman emphasized in his earlier book, The Lexus and the Olive Tree, which is supposed to ensure that economics matters more and more and politics less and less. Buying into this version of an integrated world—or worse, using it as a basis for policymaking—is not only unproductive. It is dangerous.”


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