The Titans of Globalization: 10 People
Who Changed the World
Forget about Bill Gates and Steve Jobs. The
globalized world has been shaped by some larger-than-life people who are all
but forgotten in modern times.
Jeffrey E. Garten’s new book, From
Silk to Silicon: The Story of Globalization Through Ten Extraordinary Lives,
pinpoints the 10 key people who changed the world and ushered in new eras of
globalization, starting with a nuanced look at Genghis Khan and hopping to
characters including a British prime minister and a Portuguese prince.
Garten is dean emeritus at the Yale School of
Management, where he teaches courses on the global economy and crisis
management. He previously worked for Presidents Nixon, Ford, Carter and
Clinton, and had an earlier career on Wall Street at Lehman Brothers and the
Blackstone Group.
Garten recently appeared on the
Knowledge@Wharton show on Wharton Business Radio
on SiriusXM channel 111. He described how
he chose the characters for his profiles and discussed the goods and ills of
globalization.
An edited transcript of his conversation
appears below.
Knowledge@Wharton: The
term “globalization” has become far more common in our language in the last 30
to 40 years. But it’s not just a term for the modern era — it has quite a
history going back many centuries. To understand the power of the word in
today’s conversation, we need to look back at how globalization has played a
key role in shaping our society over the years. You have a unique historical
viewpoint on a lot of things in life, correct?
Jeffrey E. Garten: Correct.
I think that it is very useful to have a historical context for talking about
today or for talking about the future. It gives our understanding more texture
and grounding in reality.
Knowledge@Wharton: The
term globalization has really taken on a life of its own in the last 30 years
or so.
Garten: Yes. When I look
back, the early 1970s stands out in my mind due to the OPEC oil embargo. An
awful lot of people became conscious that we were living in a smaller, more
interconnected world. After that embargo, there were more and more events that
really drove that point home.
“The history of the
human race is pretty much synonymous with the history of globalization.”
Knowledge@Wharton: What
is it today that encourages companies to look to expand their operations and
reach across the globe? What is it that has spurred on a lot of these companies
to take this viewpoint?
Garten: Looking at the last
30 years or so, all kinds of barriers between sovereign countries have really
dissolved. Trade barriers have declined. World tariff rates are very, very low.
Other kinds of trade obstacles, regulations and quotas are down more than they
had been in many, many years.
It wasn’t so long ago that most countries did not allow their
currencies to circulate globally, but that is a thing of the past. In a way, we
are dealing with a global market with fewer and fewer barriers.
If you are an American company asking, “Where’s the market?”
you’d have to conclude that maybe 80% to 90% is outside of the country. That
naturally leads to strategies that force companies to expand to all the corners
of the world.
Knowledge@Wharton: Your
book profiles 10 individuals who had a great impact on globalization in their
own ways. It is interesting that you go all the way back to look at Genghis
Khan and take a global perspective on his empire building.
Garten: Here is what I
tried to do. I started by thinking about the global setting in which we live
and how our world is getting smaller. I wanted to give it a really fresh
context. So I looked at globalization from pretty much when it started. I
concluded that it was about 60,000 years ago when some families in Africa
basically stood up and walked out. They were looking for more food and a more
secure situation. I concluded that the history of the human race is pretty much
synonymous with the history of globalization.
But I had to start somewhere and I couldn’t go all the way back,
so I decided to start with Genghis Khan, who lived in the 13th century. While
we all know of Genghis Khan for his brutality, I wanted to show that this guy
basically brought all the world – from the Pacific Ocean to what we used to
call Eastern Europe – under one political roof. After the brutal conquering, he
set up communication systems and transportation systems, and he figured out a
way to administer all these different cultures. In many ways, this was the
first age of globalization that we can relate to. This is when globalization
started in some kind of sophisticated way.
Believe it or not, in the time of his sons, you could travel
from what is now Korea all the way to Hungary. There were “Silk Roads,” there
were passports, there were places to stay and there were places to change your
horses. Of course, it wasn’t as sophisticated as it is now, but it was pretty
advanced.
Knowledge@Wharton: Starting
with Genghis Khan and going through the other people in your book, you include
John D. Rockefeller, Margaret Thatcher and Deng Xiaoping, among others. What is
the common ground amongst all of them? What makes them the perfect people to
bring into this book?
The second criteria is that they couldn’t be just thinkers; they
had to actually roll up their sleeves and execute their ideas. That narrowed
the field considerably. Over the ages there have been some really smart people
who had some ideas that were very futuristic, but I only picked those people
who actually turned those ideas into reality.
The third criteria required that the people be early pioneers so
that I could legitimately say that they inaugurated a new age. Among my
characters, there was a new age of empire, a new age of exploration, a new age
of colonization, a new age of global finance, etc. I basically had 10 ages
showing that these people started a trend that had an enormous amount of
game-changing momentum.
Knowledge@Wharton: Which
one or two people were the most entertaining and enthralling for you as you
were writing this book?
Garten: One of them is
Prince Henry the Navigator. He was a Portuguese prince in the 15th century. He
basically put together ships, crews and brought together all of the latest
nautical technology in the world and then forced Portuguese explorers to go
down the coast of Africa. They discovered India and China. Those very same
ships also discovered the New World. This was fascinating because it really was
the dark ages. For somebody to have the wherewithal to think about seaborne
exploration in this way was amazing.
The second guy is someone named Cyrus Field. Cyrus Field was an
American businessman who had no knowledge of technology whatsoever. And yet he
built the transatlantic telegraph. To demonstrate how dramatic it was, imagine
this: Back in the 1850s, news traveled from Europe to the U.S. no faster than
it had 3,000 years before. It was basically dependent on the winds. But in one
minute, when that telegraph was connected, we had real-time communications
across the oceans. Within a couple of years, the entire world was wired. This
is a very interesting story because it is a story of failure after failure
after failure, and then finally a success.
This technological advancement also makes us think about the
Internet today. We are rightfully astounded at what the Internet has been able
to do, but in fact, the Internet was a far less dramatic advance because it
came on top of the radio, telephone and TV. We could already watch wars in
other countries in real-time. But when the transatlantic telegraph was
connected, that was a discontinuity of proportions that I don’t think we can
get our heads around.
Knowledge@Wharton: Let’s
talk about Robert Clive. His impact on the British Empire is staggering.
Garten: At the age of 17,
Robert Clive went to India as a clerk. Within 15 years, he was the head of what
was called the East India Company, which was a big British company in India
that had its own army. As the head of the company and the head of the army, he
conquered India for the British Empire. This was a major development because
the British Empire was a force of massive globalization. You may remember the
expression, “The sun never set on the British Empire.” This was the first
really big step. This guy with no connections in England, with no money,
basically rose in Calcutta and oversaw this company. My story explains how he
conquered one part of India after another and how this put the British on the
road to become the greatest global power until the U.S. came along.
Garten: They basically
introduced markets around the world, the rule of law, and the kind of
government that we considered to be representative….
Knowledge@Wharton: Was
it basically between World War I and World War II that the shift to the U.S.
started to happen?
Garten: Yes, after World
War I, Britain had kind of exhausted their resources. By World War II, the U.S.
really had to take over for them.
Knowledge@Wharton: John
D. Rockefeller is interesting. A lot of Americans will know the name. But the
fact is, he was a game changer on two fronts – energy and philanthropy.
Garten: That was the really
big surprise. He retired at a fairly young age with extraordinary wealth,
having created the global oil industry. Then he proceeded to build the
Rockefeller Foundation and Rockefeller University. From the beginning, they
were global organizations and run like businesses, not charities. This was
really the beginning of global philanthropy. Both of those institutions are
still around today. They are extremely vibrant and very much at the forefront
of this whole industry of global philanthropy, which is key to globalization,
both today and in the future.
Knowledge@Wharton: Margaret
Thatcher had an enormous an impact not only on her territory, but also all
across Europe. Her fingerprints were on the whole globe.
Garten: I think so. I think
this may be the most controversial selection because Thatcher was such a
controversial character. But since the Russian Revolution, most of the world
was moving in a socialist direction and that was accelerated by the Depression.
Ultimately, governments became much, much bigger within economies. It was
Margaret Thatcher in the late 1970s and 1980s who basically reversed that tide
and put the world on a free market track. She set such a powerful example, that
her example spread to other parts of Europe. While I can’t prove a direct
causal relation, at this time China began to open up to the world and
de-regulate.
What makes Thatcher so significant is that those forces that she
unleashed and encouraged are at the heart of all of our controversial issues
today. In opening up markets, she created a lot of prosperity but she also
created wide inequality. Looking at our U.S. election today, you can see the passion
surrounding different aspects of globalization. What has trade done to us? All
of that really stems from the decisions that Margaret Thatcher made.
Ultimately, globalization is not necessarily an alloyed, good thing. It is just
the most powerful force acting on us, and we’ve got to deal with it.
Knowledge@Wharton: I
find Andrew Grove [who died March 21 at 79] very interesting. We’re in a
digital age and everything we do is connected, but not a lot of people will
know the name Andrew Grove. He is really at the base of this entire Internet
revolution.
Garten: Yes, that’s my
contention. More than Bill Gates and more than Steve Jobs. However, I ended my
book at the end of the 20th century, which eliminated the major work that Steve
Jobs did. But Andrew Grove figured out how to manufacture the microprocessor in
mass global amounts. That microprocessor is in everything that is part of the
modern industrial revolution that we are now going through. Microprocessors are
in your cell phones, autonomous cars, 3D printers, etc. And it was Grove who
figured out a manufacturing method that basically allowed these microprocessors
to be manufactured everywhere.
He also had one of the most dramatic biographies of anyone,
having escaped the Nazis and then escaped the Soviets. Anyone who finds
immigration controversial ought to look at a guy like Andrew Grove, who came
over at the age of 20, not speaking English, and basically changed our country.
http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article/heroes-of-globalization-10-people-who-changed-the-world/?utm_source=kw_newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=2016-04-07
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