Friedman begins by pointing out that the world is progressively becoming flat. He states that the only way people can get the best out of the change is to be the best themselves. This means only the people best suited…
This is a presentation about Tom Friedman’s book, called The World is Flat. Tom Friedman is a New York Times reporter and columnist who has won three Pulitzer Prizes and has had four or five bestselling books out. He gets some criticism for this book because some people think he’s a cheerleader for Globalization, and those people who are against Globalization don’t particularly like that. I think, in all fairness to Tom, although he’s very enthusiastic about his book and his subject, I think he just recognizes that, like it or not, Globalization is here, and here to stay. So maybe we need to understand it and figure out what we need to do about it, whether we think it’s good, or bad.…
While making documentaries for discovery channel, Thomas Friedman got an idea to go to call centres across the world and document young people on America’s standing. He says that Globalization took over when he was sleeping and that he couldn’t explain it. Tom travels to Bangalore and meets Nandan Nilekani who casually mentions that the world's economic playing field was being levelled. This propelled him to write a book on globalization and outsourcing called “The world is flat”.…
After several decades, General Motors decided to move shop to Mexico. Causing high impact on local culture, huge impact on the United States, thousands of people unemployed and on unemployment. Causing at least two states, Flint Michigan and Mesa, Arizona to lose money in the process.…
In his article, “The World is Flat, After All”, Friedman discusses the progression of the world via Globalization. Starting from the initial age of Globalization between 1942 and 1800 when countries were globalizing for resources and imperial conquest, to the secondary age with the corporate revolution (1800-2000), and finally, to today’s era of globalization that is not limited to where you live, what race you are, or how much money you have. Each stage of globalization brought about change by new technologies used in business and everyday life. The article highlights multiple points in history where cutting edge technology further globalized the world, such as the Microsoft Windows operating system, the undersea-underground fiber network, and the use of outsourcing. The most important part of Friedman’s article “The World is Flat, After All” is that the playing field for people, businesses, and countries is being leveled through globalization due to the many technological…
The video discussion, Tom Freedman, The World is Flat, is about Tom Freedman’s experience of how he learned the world is flat. By this, he means that anyone can send their own content to anyone in the world, basically for free. Tom believes the global economic playing field is being leveled. He believes this happened by three great eras of globalization. The first, globalization 1.0 started in 1492 and lasted until early 1800’s where the world shrunk from large to medium. The Spanish explored the Americas, and Britain colonized India, Portugal and East Asia. The next form of globalization was globalization 2.0. this is from the early 1800’s to 2000. This is when the world went global for markets and labor. The world went from medium to small.…
Friedman gets excited because the flattening of the world means that we as people who inhabit Earth are collecting all of our knowledge and putting it together into this worldwide network. By doing this we would start to emerge ourselves in an era of prosperity, innovation, and collaboration, by company’s communities, and individuals. Friedman states that is if terrorism and politics do not get in the way. The flattening of the world also fills him with dread both on a personal and professional level. On a more personal level it fills him with dread because with this flat world it not only opens up the playing field for the “software writers and computer geeks” to connect with each other in the workplace, but also opens up opportunities for the AL-Qaeda and many terrorist networks. Everything is being leveled to where anyone can very easily become empowered.…
The ‘flat’ world described by Friedman is definitely a more ‘connected world’ rather than a ‘level playing field’ since countries around the world have different political, social and economic conditions which make it rather ‘unflat’ . Richard Florida is quite right in his statement of the world being ‘spikey’ and, I would like to suggest ten ‘anti-flatteners’ or reasons that reflect the falt that we are far from being a truly flat or leveled world. The first and a very important one is ‘income inequality’. Even though people are able to collaborate and we have a global labor market, there is high wage gap at both domestic and international level. Global trade has moved the industry to developing nations, giving rise to sweatshops and child labor to drive down costs of production.…
Friedman, T. (2005). The world is flat: a brief history of the globalized world in the 21st century. London, : Penguin Books.…
Friedman goes on to say that he thinks free trade is a good thing in the long run because it will result in more American goods being bought by overseas markets, thus creating a need for more American jobs. His chief reason for dismissing objections is that economics is not a zero-sum game. He admits; however, that those who are low-skilled are very vulnerable to "current trends," but he expresses an abiding faith in the existence of an infinite array of human wants and needs that can endlessly fuel economic expansion. Friedman quotes Raghuram Rajan, director of research for the International Monetary Fund, who says that "everyone wins" in a world with a "bigger but more complex pie". With this new flat world there will be companies from other countries that will compete with American companies; therefore, I don't see how free trade will definitely result in more jobs for Americans in the long run. If more and more Americans are going to be at risk of losing low-skilled jobs to other workers in other countries, Americans should become embolden to seek higher education and higher-skilled jobs and compete with India and China. Chapter 6 in "The World is Flat" is about The Untouchables and Finding…
Thomas Friedman’s book The World Is Flat analyzes the progress of globalization and how it has changed core economic concepts. After traveling to numerous countries, he came up with the conclusion that the world is “flat,” in the sense that competitive playing fields between industrial and emerging market countries have been leveled. He provides frequent examples of how countries, such as China and India, are becoming part of large global complex supply chains. Freidman assures that change is inevitable and that internet and outsourcing tactics are shrinking the world from “small to tiny.” Through his use of empirical evidence and first-hand experiences, Friedman is able to provide the reader with a greater insight as to why to world is flat.…
2. Friedman mentions that the world has “flattened” in Globalization 3.0. What does “flattening” mean, and what are the key technologies that flattened the world? (3 points)…
global approach, including Thomas L. Friedman in his book The World Is Flat, argue that…
B. Thesis Statement: What this means is that the global economic playing field is being equalized or leveled and that world is getting smaller in terms of globalization.…
The software that he was using to understand the world’s economics was being produced in India, China, and Japan, these “third world countries” that we look down upon. Millions of Chinese speaking Japanese are running the backrooms of multimillion dollar corporations. McDonalds which does a global…