A readily measurable aspect of globalization is the increasing exchange of capital, products and services across national boundaries, spurred by expanded use of container shipping and other technological improvements as well as falling barrier. The interdependence is most apparent with global supply chains, as manufactured goods like vehicles and electronics are assembled with components produced around the world, and it’s increasingly rare for any country to be the sole source of any one complex product. Countries aim to increase exports but worry about too many imports and trade imbalances, even as their consumers pursue low prices. Disagreements on subsidies, tariffs, quotas or unfair practices are debated by the World Trade Organization.

Food That Travels Well

Calculating food miles to deliver environmental protection could be like comparing apples and oranges
James E. McWilliams
August 8, 2007

The Cutting Edge

In India, a bad hair day means failing to harvest enough strands
Margot Cohen
August 8, 2007

Cows Can Fly While World's Poor Starve

“EU's 'crazy agricultural policies' rob poor countries of over Euro 35 million in agricultural exports daily, says charity”
Grace Sung
October 3, 2002

Global Trade Talks Collapse Over Agricultural Subsidies

Representatives of wealthy nations still anticipate some agreement with developing nations over subsidies
Carter Dougherty
June 25, 2007

The Next Globalization Backlash

Seeking high returns and bargains, wealthy governments shop for US corporations
Sebastian Mallaby
July 3, 2007