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Discussion
Topics
By the
early 1990s, most of the world had converted to free-market
capitalism, setting the stage for the rapid growth of a new
global economy. Rapidly falling trade barriers and unrestricted
capital flows fueled by furious technological innovation and a
new global workforce would all combine to transform the world
economy.
"The
New Rules of the Game" examines the promise and perils of
globalization in the 1990s, focusing on the story of President
Bill Clinton's embrace of free-trade policies, the challenges
the world's leaders faced in taming the virulent contagion of
financial collapse in the developing world, and the violent
debate over globalization that suddenly surfaced in the
Seattle
protests.
In a story
that moves from the 1992 presidential campaign to the September
11 attack on America, this film confronts a series of issues:
the impact of free trade on the developing world and on American
workers; the perils of financial contagion when problems in one
developing country cause investors to pull their capital out of
all emerging economies; and the challenge of inclusiveness --
bringing the world's poor into the era of global growth. It cuts
through the rhetoric to show what "globalization" really is, and
what it will mean for our lives in the 21st century.
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