Chapter 6: Globalisation — Impact on India

📚 JAIIB 2025 • IE & IFS • Module A • Chapter 6 of 11

Globalisation — Impact on India

How the world became one marketplace — definition, advocacy, India’s journey post-1991, fair globalisation pillars, protectionism, deglobalisation, and why the world is now pulling back.

⏱ 16 min read🎯 High Exam Weightage🧠 6 Memory Tricks⚡ 12 Flash Cards

Banky Goes Global! 🌍

Every time you process a foreign remittance, handle an NRI account, or see ‘Made in China’ on your phone — that’s globalisation at work. This chapter explains how India went from a closed economy to a global player.

“Sir, I know globalisation means world trade. But why are some countries now AGAINST it? And how does it affect MY branch?” 🤔
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Section 1 of 9

Why Read This Chapter?

Your branch handles global money every day

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Sir, I’m in a domestic branch — why should I care about globalisation?
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Banky, think about this: your branch processes foreign remittances via SWIFT, opens NRI accounts (NRE/NRO), handles export credit, and sells forex cards. ALL of this exists because of globalisation! When India opened up in 1991, foreign banks entered, FDI flowed in, your bank got foreign currency deposits, and your customers got jobs in MNCs. Understanding globalisation helps you explain to customers why the rupee fluctuates, why import duties change, and why global events (like Brexit or US-China trade war) affect Indian markets. This is your foundation for international banking!
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Exam Marks

2-4 direct questions — globalisation definition, OECD, protectionism types, fair globalisation pillars. Easy marks!

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Career Growth

Understanding global trade dynamics makes you the officer who can handle NRI business, export credit, and forex transactions

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Real Life

You’ll understand why iPhone prices change with tariffs, why IT jobs go abroad, and why chai costs more when crude oil rises

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Section 2 of 9

How Will It Benefit You?

Real career advantages

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Give me a real scenario!
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🌍 Scenario: An exporter walks in saying ‘Sir, the US imposed new tariffs on Indian textiles. Will my export credit be affected?’ You calmly explain: ‘This is protectionism — tariffs are one of 3 forms (along with import quotas and non-tariff barriers). Your export credit is still PSL-eligible. But you may want to diversify markets. Let me connect you with our trade finance team.’ The customer thinks: ‘This banker UNDERSTANDS world trade!’ 🌟
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Section 3 of 9

What Is This Chapter About?

30-second summary

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Quick version, sir!
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This chapter covers: What globalisation means (WTO definition: unrestricted cross-border flows of goods, services, capital, labour). How OECD popularised it in the mid-1980s. India’s globalisation journey since 1991 — increased PCI, better jobs, more consumer choices. Fair globalisation — 3 pillars: economic development + social development + environmental protection. And the reverse trend — deglobalisation, protectionism (tariffs/quotas/non-tariff barriers), triggered by Brexit, US-China trade war, COVID-19, and Russia-Ukraine conflict.
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Section 4 of 9

Key Definitions — Banky Asks, Mentor Explains

Every term explained like you’re 10

Critical Term
Globalisation
World economies becoming connected through trade, investment & technology
Since 1991

Banky’s Understanding: The term refers to the increasing interconnectedness of world economies, cultures, and inhabitants through cross-border trade in goods/services, technology, investment flows, people, and knowledge. WTO defines it as development towards ‘unrestricted cross-border flows of goods, services, capital, and labour force.’ The concept dates to the 18th century but OECD popularised it in the mid-1980s. Formally introduced in India with the New Economic Policy 1991-92.

🧒 Analogy: Like WhatsApp connecting your family group — globalisation connected all countries into one giant economic ‘family group’ where everyone trades, shares technology, and invests in each other!
Critical Term
Deglobalisation
Countries pulling BACK from global trade — opposite of globalisation
Recent trend

Banky’s Understanding: The process of reducing dependency and integration amongst countries. Countries are now pursuing inward-looking policies — prioritising domestic production, protecting local industries, restricting imports. Triggered by: Brexit, US withdrawal from Trans-Pacific Partnership, US-China Trade Disputes, COVID-19 pandemic, Russia-Ukraine conflict. As Michael O’Sullivan wrote: ‘globalisation is already behind us.’

🧒 Analogy: Like leaving the WhatsApp family group because of too many arguments — countries are ‘leaving the group’ and doing things on their own!
Critical Term
Protectionism
Government shielding domestic industries from foreign competition
3 forms

Banky’s Understanding: When a government enacts laws to restrict or prohibit international trade, it’s protectionism. Takes 3 main forms: (1) Tariffs (taxes on imports), (2) Import Quotas (limits on quantity), (3) Non-Tariff Barriers (regulations, standards, subsidies). Results: decline in trade, price rise, and necessity of subsidy for protected industries. Some jobs in protected industries are saved, but jobs in other industries are lost.

🧒 Analogy: Like putting a big gate around your shop and charging entry fee to competing shopkeepers — you protect YOUR business but customers pay higher prices!
Critical Term
Fair Globalisation
Globalisation that benefits EVERYONE, not just the rich
3 pillars

Banky’s Understanding: Fair globalisation must be supported by 3 interdependent pillars: (1) Economic Development, (2) Social Development, (3) Environmental Protection. It must be fair, inclusive, democratically governed, and provide opportunities to ALL countries and people. The cornerstone: addressing the wants and needs of ALL people, not just corporations. Government measures must safeguard workers’ rights.

🧒 Analogy: Like a cricket match with fair rules — not just the batting team scoring but the bowling team also gets a fair chance. Both sides must benefit!
Critical Term
WTO Definition
World Trade Organization’s official definition of globalisation
Key for exam

Banky’s Understanding: WTO describes globalisation as the development towards ‘unrestricted cross-border flows of goods and services, capital, and labour force.’ This is the most cited definition in exams. Key words: unrestricted, cross-border, goods/services/capital/labour. Remember: WTO DEFINES it, but OECD POPULARISED it (in mid-1980s).

🧒 Analogy: Like the dictionary definition of ‘cricket’ — WTO wrote the official rulebook for what globalisation means!
Critical Term
India’s Trade Openness
How much India trades with the world as % of GDP
15.5%→55.6%→37.9%

Banky’s Understanding: International trade (exports + imports) as % of GDP: 15.5% in 1991 → 55.6% in 2011 → 37.9% in 2020. The ratio rose sharply after 1991 reforms, peaked around 2011, then declined as GDP growth outpaced trade growth. FDI net inflows: 0.03% of GDP (1991) → 2.42% (2020). India’s gradual and calibrated capital account liberalisation helped protect against external shocks.

🧒 Analogy: Like opening the doors and windows of your house — in 1991 India opened just one window (15.5%), by 2011 all doors were open (55.6%), then closed some windows again (37.9%)!
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Section 5 of 9

Chapter Explained in Simple Stories

So easy even Banky’s nephew understands

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Sir, explain this like a story!
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Three bite-sized stories coming up — impossible to forget! 🚀

🌍 Block 1: How the World Became One Marketplace

Imagine India in 1990: you could only buy Indian-made goods. No foreign cars, no international brands, no imported electronics. Your bank couldn’t do foreign transactions easily. Then came 1991 — India opened up to the world!

What happened? Foreign companies entered India — bringing technology, capital, and jobs. Indian IT companies started serving American clients. Indian farmers could export their produce globally. Your bank got NRI deposits, forex business, and international trade finance. The effects: increased per capita income, better employment opportunities, more options for customers.

International trade jumped from 15.5% of GDP (1991) to 55.6% (2011). FDI went from 0.03% to 2.42% of GDP. India became one of the world’s fastest-growing economies!

Key Term
New Economic Policy
India’s 1991-92 policy that formally introduced globalisation — opened economy to foreign trade, investment, and technology.
🧑‍💼 Banky: “So before 1991, we were like a shop with no signboard and locked doors? And then we opened everything? 🚪”

🤝 Block 2: The Good, The Bad, and The Fair

The Good: Technology transfer, job creation, economic development, higher living standards, more consumer choices. Your customers now have international credit cards, can remit money abroad, and invest in global markets — all because of globalisation.

The Bad: Not everyone benefits equally. Rich countries and corporations gained more. Workers in some industries lost jobs to cheaper imports. Inequality increased. Small farmers couldn’t compete with subsidised foreign agriculture.

The Fair Solution: Fair globalisation rests on 3 pillars: economic development + social development + environmental protection. Governments must protect workers’ rights, ensure inclusive growth, and safeguard the environment. It must provide equal opportunity to ALL nations.

Key Term
3 Pillars
Fair globalisation = Economic Development + Social Development + Environmental Protection. Must be inclusive and democratically governed.
🧑‍💼 Banky: “So globalisation is like a medicine — works great if taken in the right dose, but overdose can be harmful! 💊”

⚠️ Block 3: Globalisation in Reverse Gear — The World Pulls Back

Something strange is happening: after decades of opening up, countries are now closing down! This is called deglobalisation. Why?

Brexit (UK left EU), US withdrew from Trans-Pacific Partnership, US-China Trade War (massive tariffs both ways), COVID-19 (exposed supply chain vulnerabilities — remember India couldn’t get PPE kits?), Russia-Ukraine conflict (energy crisis, food shortage). All these events showed: too much dependency on other countries is risky.

So countries are now pursuing inward-looking policies — prioritising domestic production (like India’s ‘Atmanirbhar Bharat’), imposing tariffs, and restricting foreign companies. Protectionism takes 3 forms: tariffs, import quotas, and non-tariff barriers. The result? Decline in trade, higher prices, but more domestic jobs.

Key Term
Protectionism Forms
3 types: (1) Tariffs (import taxes), (2) Import Quotas (quantity limits), (3) Non-Tariff Barriers (regulations, standards). All restrict trade.
🧑‍💼 Banky: “So COVID made countries realise ‘we can’t depend on China for everything!’ — and now everyone wants to make things at home? Makes sense! 🏠”
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Section 6 of 9

Exam Angle — Every Testable Point

All facts, numbers, definitions JAIIB tests

✅ Must-Know Facts — Highest Probability

  • Globalisation definition: increasing interconnectedness of world economies through cross-border trade, technology, investment
  • WTO definition: ‘unrestricted cross-border flows of goods and services, capital, and labour force’
  • OECD popularised globalisation concept in mid-1980s (NOT IMF, NOT World Bank, NOT ECB)
  • Formally introduced in India: New Economic Policy 1991-92
  • Effects on India: increased per capita income, better employment, more consumer choices, agriculture export opportunities
  • Fair Globalisation 3 pillars: Economic Development + Social Development + Environmental Protection
  • Deglobalisation: reducing dependency and integration — opposite of globalisation
  • Protectionism: 3 forms — Tariffs, Import Quotas, Non-Tariff Barriers
  • Protectionism results: decline in trade, price rise, subsidy for protected industries
  • Anti-globalisation triggers: Brexit, US-TPP withdrawal, US-China Trade War, COVID-19, Russia-Ukraine
  • India’s trade openness: 15.5% of GDP (1991) → 55.6% (2011) → 37.9% (2020)
  • FDI net inflows: 0.03% of GDP (1991) → 2.42% (2020)
  • India’s capital account liberalisation: gradual and calibrated — helped protect against external shocks
  • Political stability is NOT a benefit of globalisation (exam trap!)
  • Increased capital account convertibility is NOT a protectionism measure (exam trap!)

📝 Previous Year Questions

Q: Globalisation is defined as a rise in ___ among nations.
A: (a) Economic integration ✅
Q: Which organisation popularised globalisation in mid-1980s?
A: (b) OECD ✅ (NOT IMF, NOT ECB, NOT World Bank)
Q: Which is NOT a benefit of globalisation?
A: (c) Political stability ✅ — Benefits are: tech transfer, job creation, economic development
Q: Which is NOT a protectionism measure?
A: (d) Increased capital account convertibility ✅ — That’s liberalisation, not protectionism!
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Section 7 of 9

Memory Tricks That STICK

Lock every fact permanently

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Too many facts! Help! 🤯
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These tricks will lock everything in forever! 🧲

🧠 Trick 1 — Who Did What?

WTO defines, OECD popularised
WTO = Words (definition) OECD = Opinion (popularised)
WTO wrote the WORDS (definition). OECD spread the OPINION (popularised in 1980s). Two different roles — exam loves testing this!

🧠 Trick 2 — Fair Globalisation Pillars

Economic + Social + Environmental
ESE = Economy, Society, Environment (like ESG without the G!)
3 pillars: Economic, Social, Environmental development. Almost like ESG (Environmental, Social, Governance) but replace G with Economy. ESE not ESG!

🧠 Trick 3 — 3 Forms of Protectionism

Tariffs, Quotas, Non-Tariff Barriers
TQN = Tax, Quantity limit, New rules Tariff, Quota, Non-Tariff
T = Tariff (tax on imports). Q = Quota (limit on quantity). N = Non-tariff barriers (regulations, standards). TQN — three letters, three barriers!

🧠 Trick 4 — India’s Trade Journey

15.5% → 55.6% → 37.9%
15 to 55 to 38 (opened wide, then slightly closed)
1991: 15.5% (nearly closed). 2011: 55.6% (fully open — 4× growth!). 2020: 37.9% (partially pulled back). Like opening a door wide then closing it a bit.

🧠 Trick 5 — Anti-Globalisation Events

BUCCR
BUCCR = Brexit, US-TPP, China-US trade, COVID, Russia-Ukraine
Five major events: B-U-C-C-R. Each one pushed the world towards deglobalisation. BUCCR sounds like ‘BUCKER’ — the world is ‘bucking’ against globalisation!

🧠 Trick 6 — Political Stability Trap

NOT a benefit of globalisation!
Globalisation brings MONEY not PEACE (Economic benefit, not political!)
Exam trap: ‘Political stability’ is NOT a benefit of globalisation. Benefits are economic: tech transfer, jobs, development. Globalisation can actually INCREASE political tension (trade wars!).
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Section 8 of 9

Visual Summary — Chapter Map

Entire chapter in one diagram

Globalisation — Impact on India — Chapter 6 Map GLOBALI- SATION 📈 BENEFITS ↑PCI ↑Jobs ↑Consumer choice Tech transfer | Trade growth ⚠️ PROTECTIONISM (TQN) Tariffs | Quotas | Non-Tariff Barriers → Less trade, higher prices 🇮🇳 INDIA’S JOURNEY Trade: 15.5% → 55.6% → 37.9% GDP FDI: 0.03% → 2.42% GDP | Since 1991 🤝 FAIR GLOBALISATION 3 Pillars: Economic + Social + Environmental Inclusive | Democratic | Equal opportunity 🔄 DEGLOBALISATION BUCCR: Brexit, US-TPP, China-US, COVID, Russia-Ukraine → Inward policies bankerbro.com/ • JAIIB IE&IFS Chapter 6
Section 9 of 9

Flash Revision — Last-Minute Cards

Read these 10 minutes before exam

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EXAM IN 15 MINUTES! 😰
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12 cards — read twice, you’ll get every question right! 💪
Globalisation Definition
Increasing interconnectedness via cross-border trade
WTO: unrestricted flows of goods, services, capital, labour
Who Popularised It?
OECD — in mid-1980s
NOT IMF, NOT World Bank, NOT ECB — biggest exam trap!
India Entry
New Economic Policy 1991-92
Formally introduced globalisation in India
Effects on India
↑ PCI, ↑ Employment, ↑ Consumer choice
Exports as growth engine, technology transfer
Fair Globalisation
3 Pillars: Economic + Social + Environment
Must be inclusive, democratic, provide opportunities to ALL
Deglobalisation
Reducing dependency — opposite of globalisation
Inward-looking policies, domestic production priority
Protectionism
TQN: Tariffs, Quotas, Non-Tariff Barriers
Result: less trade, higher prices, subsidies to protected industries
Anti-Globalisation Events
BUCCR mnemonic
Brexit, US-TPP, China-US war, COVID, Russia-Ukraine
Trade Openness Journey
15.5% → 55.6% → 37.9% of GDP
1991 → 2011 → 2020 | Opened wide, then pulled back
FDI Growth
0.03% → 2.42% of GDP
1991 → 2020 | 80× increase in FDI inflows!
NOT a Benefit
❌ Political Stability
Benefits are economic: tech, jobs, growth — NOT political!
NOT Protectionism
❌ Capital Account Convertibility
That’s liberalisation! Protectionism = tariffs, quotas, NTBs

⚡ Chapter 6 Complete — Globalisation — Impact on India

  • Globalisation = increasing interconnectedness of world economies through trade, investment, technology
  • WTO DEFINES it, OECD POPULARISED it (mid-1980s) — exam tests this distinction!
  • India formally adopted globalisation with New Economic Policy 1991-92
  • Effects: increased PCI, better employment, more consumer choices, agriculture export opportunities
  • Fair globalisation: 3 pillars — Economic + Social + Environmental development
  • Deglobalisation = reducing dependency — triggered by Brexit, US-China war, COVID, Russia-Ukraine
  • Protectionism: 3 forms — Tariffs, Import Quotas, Non-Tariff Barriers (TQN)
  • India’s trade: 15.5% GDP (1991) → 55.6% (2011) → 37.9% (2020)
  • FDI: 0.03% → 2.42% of GDP (1991→2020) — 80× growth!
  • Political stability is NOT a benefit | Capital account convertibility is NOT protectionism — exam traps!

Banky says: “Now I understand why my NRI customers are worried about trade wars!” 🎉

You now know the full globalisation story — from WTO’s definition to India’s 1991 opening to today’s deglobalisation trend. Next time there’s global news, you’ll explain it like an economist! 🌍💪

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