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Globalization: Contents and Discontents

January 15-16, 2019

Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

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Å·ÃÀÈÕb´óƬ Development Research Group based in Kuala Lumpur organized its third international conference, with the theme Globalization: Contents and Discontents. The conference brought together policymakers and academics to discuss the consequences of various aspects of globalization including trade, migration, financial flows, cultural exchanges and the diffusion of ideas.

Watch the special feature videos from our keynote speakers:

  1. Shanta Devarajan, Senior Director for Development Economics (DEC) at the World Bank
  2. JP Singh, Professor of International Commerce and Policy at the Schar School of Policy and Government, George Mason University
  3. Bill Easterly, Professor of Economics at New York University and Co-director of the NYU Development Research Institute


Program

  • For at least twenty years, scholars have debated the pros and cons of globalization.  Jagdish Bhagwati, Anne Krueger, and others have made compelling arguments in favor of reducing trade and migration barriers to improve economic growth, and to have it more equitably distributed.  The sociologist Saskia Sassen in her 1998 collection of essays Globalization and Its Discontents raised doubts, saying that it resulted in ¡°hyper¡± mobile capital which has changed the nature of sovereignty and heightened the salience of inequality.  Joseph Stiglitz, in his 2002 book with the same title, critiqued how globalization was managed by international financial institutions and argued for policies that gave greater importance to the interests of individual countries.  The anthropologist Arjun Appadurai has influentially theorized that globalization is a multi-dimensional process that is not just about financial flows and trade but also about cultural flows and the exchange of ideas.  The historian C.A. Bayly borrowed from this perspective to understand how previous waves of globalization led to the Birth of the Modern World.  David Autor and Pinelopi Goldberg are some of the leading representatives of research that employs careful econometric analysis to examine the effects of globalization on macroeconomic conditions, labor markets, and inequality. More recently, Dani Rodrik has reframed the debate as being about ¡°smart globalization¡± versus ¡°maximum globalization,¡± an approach that is cognizant of the winners and losers from the powerful forces unleashed by globalization.  

    The goal of this conference is to revisit these and other issues to understand the processes underlying globalization and how they may, or may not, shape a better world.  The conference will be anchored by keynote presentations by noted experts: Shanta Devarajan (Senior Director for Development Economics at the World Bank), William Easterly (Professor of Economics at New York University) and JP Singh (Professor of International Commerce and Policy at Schar School of Policy and Government, George Mason University). The organizing committee is headed by Norman Loayza and Vijayendra Rao, Lead Economists with the Development Research Group.

  • All sessions were streamed live on the World Bank Malaysia¡¯s website and Facebook page. Click on links below to watch the live recordings.

    January 15, 2019

    9:00 am ¨C 10:45 am

    Opening Session [VIDEO RECORDING

    • Welcome: Mara Warwick (Country Director, World Bank)
    • Official Address: Marzunisham Omar (Assistant Governor, Bank Negara Malaysia)
    • Keynote Speech: Shanta Devarajan (Senior Director, World Bank): ¡°Has Globalization Gone Too Far¡ªor Not Far Enough?¡± 
    • Award Ceremony: The Sundaran Memorial Prize for Young Malaysian Researchers

    11:00 am ¨C 12:30 pm 

    Session 1: Macroeconomics and Finance [VIDEO RECORDING]
    Chair: Abigail Tay (Asia School of Business)


    • Presenter: Luis Serven (World Bank) 
      Co-authors: Luis-Diego Barrot and C¨¦sar Calder¨®n (World Bank)
      Discussant: Boon Hwa Tng (Bank Negara Malaysia) 

    • Presenter: Davide Furceri (IMF) 
      Co-authors: Prakash Loungani and Jonathan D. Ostry (IMF)
      Discussant: Sergio Schmukler (World Bank) 

    2:00 pm ¨C 3:30 pm
    Session 2: Trade and Welfare [VIDEO RECORDING]
    Chair: Jomo Kwame Sundaram (Khazanah Research Institute)


    • Presenter: Bob Rijkers (World Bank) 
      Co-authors: Erhan Artuc (World Bank) and Guido Porto (Universidad Nacional de La Plata)
      Discussant: Woan Foong Wong (University of Oregon) 

    • Presenter: Julia Seiermann (International Trade Centre) 
      Discussant: Norman Loayza (World Bank) 

    4:00 pm ¨C 5:30 pm
    Session 3: Social Transformation and Cultural Identity [VIDEO RECORDING]
    Chair: YB Liew Chin Tong (Deputy Minister of Defence)


    • Presenter: Sulin Sardoschau (German Center for Integration and Migration Research) 
      Co-authors: Hillel Rapoport (University Paris 1 Panth¨¦on-Sorbonne) and Arthur Silve (Universit¨¦ Laval)
      Discussant: Vijayendra Rao (World Bank)

    • Presenter: Michael Woolcock (World Bank) 
      Co-authors: Samuel Pursch, Andrea Woodhouse, and Matthew Zurstrassen (World Bank)
      Discussant: Shahridan Faiez (National Chamber of Commerce and Industry of Malaysia) 

    5:30 pm ¨C 6:30 pm

    • Keynote Speech: J.P. Singh (George Mason University): ¡°Global-Local Cultural Distances and Development Practices at UNESCO, WTO, and the World Bank¡± [VIDEO RECORDING
      Chair: Vijayendra Rao (World Bank)
  • All sessions were streamed live on the World Bank Malaysia¡¯s website and Facebook page. Click on links below to watch the live recordings.

    January 16, 2019

    9:30 am ¨C 10:30 am

    • Keynote Speech: William Easterly (New York University): ¡°Markets and Development:  Is the Washington Consensus Still Alive?¡± [VIDEO RECORDING] 
      Chair: Norman Loayza (World Bank)

    11:00 am ¨C 12:30 am
    Session 4: Migration and Labor Markets [VIDEO RECORDING]
    Chair: Hamdan Majeed (Think City)


    • Presenter: Caglar Ozden (World Bank) 
      Discussant: Renato Lima-de-Oliveira (Asia School of Business) 

    • Presenter: Christopher Parsons (University of Western Australia) 
      Co-authors: Anna-Maria Mayda (Georgetown University), Han Pham (University of Western Australia), and Pierre-Louis Vezina (King's College London)
      Discussant: Niaz Asadullah (University of Malaya) 

    2:00 pm ¨C 3:30 pm
    Session 5: Trade and Innovation [VIDEO RECORDING]
    Chair: YB Dr. Ong Kian Ming (Deputy Minister of International Trade and Industry, Malaysia)                         


    • Presenter: Thomas Sampson (London School of Economics) 
      Discussant: Ha Nguyen (World Bank) 

    • Presenter: Sina T. Ates (Federal Reserve Board) 
      Co-authors: Ufuk Akcigit (University of Chicago) and Giammario Impullitti (University of Nottingham)
      Discussant: Richard Record (World Bank) 

    4:00 pm ¨C 6:15 pm
    Session 6: FDI and Innovation [VIDEO RECORDING]
    Chair: Kenneth Simler (World Bank)


    • Presenter: Britta Glennon (Carnegie Mellon University) 
      Co-authors: Lee Branstetter (Carnegie Mellon University) and J. Bradford Jensen (Georgetown University)
      Discussant: Achim Schmillen (World Bank) 

    • Presenter: William Ridley (University of Colorado)
      Co-authors: Kun Jiang (University of Nottingham), Wolfgang Keller (University of Colorado), and Larry D. Qiu (University of Hong Kong)
      Discussant: Sui-Jade Ho (Bank Negara Malaysia) 

    • Presenter: Antoine Mandel (University Paris 1 Panth¨¦on-Sorbonne) 
      Co-author: Solmaria Halleck Vega (University Paris 1 Panth¨¦on-Sorbonne)
      Discussant: Melati Nungsari (Asia School of Business) 

    6:15  pm¨C 6:30 pm

    • Closing Remarks: Firas Raad (Country Manager, World Bank)

EVENT DETAILS

  • WHEN: Tuesday & Wednesday, January 15-16, 2019; 8:30AM-6:30PM
  • WHERE: The Forum, Level 1, Sasana Kijang, No 2, Jalan Dato' Onn, 50480 Kuala Lumpur
  • RSVP: Kindly RSVP by Wednesday, January 9, 2019