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Have Trade Liberalization Policies Reinforced Core–Periphery Economic Hierarchies?

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  Have Trade Liberalization Policies Reinforced Core–Periphery Economic Hierarchies? Trade liberalization—the reduction of tariffs, quotas, subsidies, and other barriers to international commerce—has been a cornerstone of global economic policy for decades. Promoted by institutions such as the World Trade Organization (WTO), the International Monetary Fund (IMF), and the World Bank, trade liberalization is often presented as a pathway to growth, efficiency, and integration into the global economy. Developing nations have been encouraged—or in many cases pressured—to open their markets, integrate into global value chains, and embrace export-oriented strategies. Yet the question arises: have these policies inadvertently reinforced the core–periphery economic hierarchy ? In world-systems theory, the global economy is divided between core nations—highly industrialized, technologically advanced, and wealthy—and peripheral nations, often raw-material exporters or labor-intensive producer...

Does Global Capitalism Structurally Favor Industrialized Nations Over Raw-Material Exporters?

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  Does Global Capitalism Structurally Favor Industrialized Nations Over Raw-Material Exporters? Global capitalism, as a system of international economic organization, is characterized by market exchange, private property, investment flows, and competition for resources and markets. While it has generated unprecedented wealth, technological innovation, and global interconnectedness, it has also produced persistent inequalities between industrialized nations and raw-material exporting countries. A critical question arises: Does global capitalism structurally favor industrialized nations over raw-material exporters? An examination of trade patterns, historical trajectories, financial flows, technological asymmetries, and institutional power relations suggests that it does. This structural favoring is not merely the result of policy choices by individual states but is embedded in the global capitalist system itself, affecting the developmental options available to resource-dependent ec...

China’s EV Dominance: Market Innovation or State-Driven Industrial Policy?

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  China’s EV Dominance: Market Innovation or State-Driven Industrial Policy? Over the past decade, China has emerged as the undisputed global leader in electric vehicle (EV) production and adoption . In 2025, Chinese companies accounted for more than half of global EV sales, led by giants like BYD, NIO, Xpeng, and Li Auto. Cities across the country are increasingly populated by electric taxis, buses, and private vehicles, and China now dominates global battery production, raw material processing, and EV infrastructure development. This dominance prompts a critical question: is China’s EV supremacy a product of market-driven innovation , or is it the outcome of strategic state intervention and industrial policy ? The answer is complex, as China’s success stems from a synergistic combination of aggressive industrial planning, regulatory incentives, and entrepreneurial innovation , which together create a unique environment almost impossible to replicate elsewhere. 1. Early State Inte...

BYD vs Tesla: Who Really Controls the EV Future?

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  BYD vs Tesla: Who Really Controls the EV Future? The electric vehicle (EV) revolution has become the defining battle of the automotive industry in the 21st century. Two companies stand at the forefront of this transformation: Tesla , the Silicon Valley pioneer that redefined cars as software-driven, high-tech mobility platforms, and BYD , the Chinese industrial powerhouse that dominates both domestic and global EV production through scale, supply chain control, and affordability. Both are shaping the future of mobility—but the question is increasingly complex: who really controls the EV future? The answer depends on how one defines “control”: technological influence, market share, manufacturing scale, or geopolitical leverage. Examining these dimensions reveals that the EV future is not solely dictated by flashy technology or brand visibility —it is also determined by industrial capacity, government policy, and global supply chain mastery. 1. Tesla: The Software-Centric Vanguard ...

Should African Governments Establish State-Owned Machine Tool Enterprises, or Support Private Local Manufacturers?

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  Should African Governments Establish State-Owned Machine Tool Enterprises, or Support Private Local Manufacturers? The debate over industrialization strategies in Africa is not new. Since independence, African governments have grappled with how best to build local industries that can move their economies away from raw material dependence and toward value-added manufacturing. Among the industries most critical to this transition is the machine tool sector —the foundation of all manufacturing, sometimes called the “mother of industries.” But the central question remains: Should African governments establish state-owned machine tool enterprises, or should they instead prioritize supporting private local manufacturers? This question touches on issues of governance, economic philosophy, global trade, and Africa’s long-term industrial sovereignty. To answer it, one must weigh the advantages and disadvantages of state ownership against private-sector-led growth, and perhaps consider a h...

How Can African States Protect Infant Industries While Still Engaging in Global Trade?

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  How Can African States Protect Infant Industries While Still Engaging in Global Trade? How Can African States Protect Infant Industries While Still Engaging in Global Trade? One of the greatest challenges facing African economies is how to nurture infant industries —new or emerging sectors that lack the economies of scale, experience, and technology to compete against established global giants. Historically, many now-developed countries, from the United States to Germany to South Korea, used protectionist measures to give their domestic industries a chance to grow before fully opening up to global trade. For Africa, the dilemma is acute: while protection is needed to allow local firms to build capacity, African economies also depend heavily on global trade for revenue, technology, and investment. The question is: how can African states strike the right balance— shielding infant industries without isolating themselves from international trade networks ? Why Infant Industry Protect...