All posts tagged: globalisation

From the archive: How globalisation has transformed the fight for LGBTQ+ rights – podcast | News

From the archive: How globalisation has transformed the fight for LGBTQ+ rights – podcast | News

We are raiding the Guardian Long Read archives to bring you some classic pieces from years past, with new introductions from the authors. This week, from 2021: Much progress has been made in attitudes towards sexual equality and gender identity – but in many places a dramatic backlash by conservative forces has followed. By Mark Gevisser How to listen to podcasts: everything you need to know Source link

The Guardian view on globalisation: the world system risks undoing itself | Editorial

The Guardian view on globalisation: the world system risks undoing itself | Editorial

Next year marks the 110th anniversary of a global financial crisis that shaped the world. The crash of 1914 was the biggest systemic crisis that the City, the centre of imperial rent extraction, had faced. It was also, at the time, a largely unremarked upon event. The unprecedented closure of the London Stock Exchange did cause headlines, with this paper noting that the shutdown left brokers swarming outside like “ants around the destroyed heap”. In the summer of 1914, however, Britons could be forgiven for being preoccupied by a life-and-death struggle emerging on the continent. What makes the episode historically significant is the UK government’s unprecedented scale of spending to save the City. In 1914, the Bank of England invented quantitative easing by purchasing bad loans from the banks in order to support the economy. Britain’s declaration of war on Germany effectively rendered banks bust, since international bills of exchange, bills of trade and other financial instruments issued by enemy nations were unenforceable and hence in default. Since these were traded in London, the losses began to …