Globalisation — Impact on India
From a closed, protected economy to the world’s 3rd largest by PPP — globalisation transformed India. But now the world is moving in reverse. As a banker, you need to understand both the benefits and the backlash.
Section 1 — Why Read This Chapter?
Globalisation shaped every aspect of modern banking
Forex & Trade Finance
Remittances, export credit, import financing, EEFC accounts — all globalisation-linked banking products. Understanding the concept helps you serve these customers better.
Risk Assessment
Export-oriented MSMEs face higher risk during protectionist waves. Knowing deglobalisation trends helps you flag early warning signs in export sector loan portfolios.
JAIIB Exam
Globalisation definition, OECD’s role, WTO’s definition, 3 forms of protectionism, deglobalisation, Brexit, TPP withdrawal — all directly tested concepts.
Section 2 — How Will It Benefit You?
Career edge from understanding global economics
Section 3 — What Is This Chapter About?
The chapter in 3 sentences
Section 4 — Key Definitions Like a 10-Year-Old
Every globalisation term made crystal clear
Globalisation’s four-stage journey — concept → India’s story → fair globalisation → reverse gear
Globalisation is defined as a rise in economic integration among nations. The WTO describes it as the development towards “unrestricted cross-border flows of goods and services, capital, and labour force.” Think of it simply: before globalisation, each country was like a separate village with its own rules, prices and products. After globalisation, it’s like one giant global marketplace where goods, money, people and ideas flow freely across borders. The concept dates back to the 18th century but retreated during World War I, the Great Depression and World War II. OECD popularised the term again in the mid-1980s. India formally embraced it with the New Economic Policy in 1991-92.
Protectionism occurs when a government enacts laws that restrict or prohibit international trade to protect home producers and workers from foreign competition. Imagine a local chai shop complaining that Starbucks is taking their customers — so the government taxes Starbucks heavily to make it expensive. That’s protectionism. It takes three main forms: (1) Tariffs — taxes on imported goods, (2) Import Quotas — limits on how much can be imported, and (3) Non-tariff Barriers — hidden restrictions like strict quality standards or complex customs procedures. Result of protectionism: decline in trade, price rise for consumers, and subsidies for protected industries. Some local jobs are saved but jobs in other export industries are lost.
Deglobalisation is the process of reducing dependency and integration amongst countries worldwide. It is the opposite of globalisation — instead of opening up borders, countries start closing them. It characterises periods in history when economic trade and investment between nations collapse. Modern triggers of deglobalisation include: Brexit (UK leaving EU), US withdrawal from Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), US-China Trade War, COVID-19 pandemic (disrupted supply chains), and the Russia-Ukraine conflict. The limited role of WTO’s Dispute Settlement Mechanism also contributes. The rise of populism — the idea that domestic production should be prioritised — is fuelling this reversal.
Fair globalisation is the idea that the benefits of globalisation must be shared equally — not just captured by large corporations and wealthy nations. It is supported by three interdependent pillars: (1) Economic development, (2) Social development, and (3) Environmental protection — all at local, national, regional and global levels. Fair globalisation must be: inclusive, democratically governed, provide equal access and opportunity, acknowledge diversity of national strengths, and protect workers’ rights. The cornerstone is addressing the needs and wants of all people — not just the powerful.
Section 5 — Chapter Explained in Blocks
All 5 sections of the chapter broken down clearly
Two sides of globalisation — both must be understood for sound banking decisions
🌐 Block 1 — Globalisation: Concept & Origins
- Defined as a rise in economic integration among nations
- Ancient concept — dates to 18th century
- Retreated during WW1, Great Depression, WW2
- OECD popularised it again in mid-1980s
- WTO definition: “Unrestricted cross-border flows of goods, services, capital and labour”
- Formally introduced in India: New Economic Policy, 1991-92
- Drivers: Investment, technology proliferation, educated workforce, market economy, robust institutions
🇮🇳 Block 2 — Globalisation’s Impact on India
- Significant changes in economic policy, production and consumer behaviour
- Cultural impact — exposure to global lifestyles and products
- Post-1991: Average growth rate much higher than prior decades
- Exports became a growth engine
- New technologies implemented — boosted long-term productivity
- Effects: Higher per capita income, better employment, more consumer choices
- New agriculture export options + farm mechanisation + commercial farming
⚖️ Block 3 — Fair Globalisation
- Key proposition: Mutual understanding and dialogue to promote social cohesion
- Fair globalisation = creates opportunities for all + shares benefits equally
- Government must safeguard ALL citizens’ interests including workers
- Three interdependent pillars: Economic development + Social development + Environmental protection
- Must be: Inclusive, democratically governed, fair access for all nations
- Must acknowledge diversity of national strengths and developmental needs
- Cornerstone: Addressing needs and wants of all people
🔄 Block 4 — Reverse Gear: Protectionism & Deglobalisation
- Deglobalisation = reducing dependency and integration among countries
- Three forms of protectionism: (1) Tariffs (2) Import Quotas (3) Non-tariff Barriers
- Protectionism results: Trade decline + price rise + subsidies for protected industries
- Some jobs saved locally, but export jobs lost elsewhere
- Modern triggers: Brexit, US TPP withdrawal, US-China trade disputes, COVID-19, Russia-Ukraine conflict
- WTO Dispute Settlement Mechanism’s limited role fuels this shift
- Rise of populism: “Inward-looking policies are better” narrative gaining ground
Section 6 — Exam Angle Points
Everything JAIIB tests from this chapter
✅ Must-Know Facts for JAIIB
- Globalisation definition: Rise in economic integration among nations
- WTO definition of globalisation: Development towards “unrestricted cross-border flows of goods and services, capital, and labour force”
- Organisation that popularised globalisation in mid-1980s: OECD
- Globalisation formally introduced in India: New Economic Policy, 1991-92
- India’s LPG reforms: Liberalisation + Privatisation + Globalisation (1991)
- Benefits of globalisation: Higher per capita income, better employment, more consumer choices, technology transfer, agriculture export opportunities
- Globalisation is NOT a benefit: Political stability (exam trick — it is an economic concept)
- Three forms of protectionism: Tariffs, Import Quotas, Non-tariff Barriers
- Increased capital account convertibility is NOT a protectionism measure — it is the opposite (exam trick)
- Deglobalisation definition: Process of reducing dependency and integration among countries
- Deglobalisation triggers: Brexit, US withdrawal from TPP, US-China trade disputes, COVID-19, Russia-Ukraine conflict
- Fair globalisation pillars (3): Economic development + Social development + Environmental protection
- Protectionism results: Decline in trade + price rise + subsidies for protected industries
- Globalisation has cultural, political and environmental implications — not just economic
- Globalisation concept dates to: 18th century (ancient concept)
- Globalisation retreated during: World War I, Great Depression, World War II
📝 Actual PYQ Answers (from book’s Check Your Progress)
Section 7 — Memory Tricks
Lock globalisation concepts into your memory permanently
Trick 1 — Three Forms of Protectionism
Trick 2 — OECD Popularised Globalisation
Trick 3 — Fair Globalisation Pillars
Trick 4 — Deglobalisation Triggers
Trick 5 — Globalisation’s History
Trick 6 — Protectionism Effects
Section 8 — Visual Summary Diagram
The complete chapter as one clear visual
Complete mind map — concept, India’s journey, protectionism triggers and fair globalisation principles
Section 9 — Quick Revision Flash Cards
Read these 10 minutes before your JAIIB exam!
⚡ Chapter 6 Complete — Globalisation: Impact on India
- Globalisation = rise in economic integration among nations | Ancient concept from 18th century
- Retreated during WW1, Great Depression, WW2 | Revived by OECD in mid-1980s
- WTO definition: “Unrestricted cross-border flows of goods, services, capital and labour force”
- India formally adopted globalisation via New Economic Policy in 1991-92 (LPG reforms)
- Impact on India: Higher per capita income, better employment, more consumer choices, technology transfer
- Post-1991 average growth rate much higher than prior decades | Exports treated as growth engine
- Fair globalisation: Creates opportunities for all + shares benefits equally
- Fair globalisation’s 3 pillars: Economic development + Social development + Environmental protection
- Protectionism = government laws restricting/prohibiting international trade to protect local producers
- 3 forms of protectionism: Tariffs + Import Quotas + Non-tariff Barriers
- Protectionism results: Trade decline + price rise + subsidies for protected industries
- Deglobalisation = process of reducing dependency and integration among countries
- Modern deglobalisation triggers: Brexit + US TPP withdrawal + US-China trade war + COVID-19 + Russia-Ukraine
- Rise of populism + limited WTO Dispute Settlement role fuelling inward-looking policies globally
Banky says: “Now I can explain to my customer exactly why their export orders dropped!” 🎉
You can now define globalisation, explain its impact on India, name all 3 forms of protectionism, list deglobalisation triggers, and describe fair globalisation’s pillars. The world is your branch — and you understand it now! 💪