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Track 13: Globalization and Health

Track 13_ Globalization and Health

Track 13: Globalization and Health

Globalization
The term “globalization” refers to the process by which countries, peoples, and economies are linked and dependent on one another more and more. Through the dissemination of cutting-edge medical information, affordable medical technologies, and human rights, globalization has helped to enhance health. However, the neoliberal economic paradigm of liberalized trade, investment, and little government regulation has brought about a number of health problems. The health risks of neoliberal globalization are discussed in this article, starting with structural adjustment in the 1980s, moving through economic financialization in the 1990s and 2000s, and ending with the financial crisis and global recession of 2008, as well as the ensuing “austerity agenda” of state budget cuts. A consideration of high-level public measures that will guarantee that globalization works for “health for all” finishes the article.
In what ways does globalization affect health?      
Since the migration of Homo erectus out of Africa a million years ago, humans have experienced constant transformation. In this sense, the development of human societies and globalization have gone hand in hand. 5 Our current stage of globalization, however, stands out due to the unparalleled level of intensity and change.

To say that globalization is either “good” or “bad” for health is oversimplified and untrue. For instance, global migration is increasing as a result of spatial change.

Richer nations are concerned about the possible financial costs of ill people migrating from the developing world. Less acknowledged are the risks that high-income nations may export to other regions of the world through fast food and tobacco goods, as well as more subtly through macroeconomic policies that influence foreign direct investment and debt loads. Additionally, there is a propensity to underestimate the advantages of population mobility for high-income nations. For example, the influx of medical personnel from understaffed high-income nations can help those nations’ underfunded health systems (but at the expense of capacity in the developing world). 7 In other words, when more people and things move about, each community experiences a complex equation of benefits and drawbacks.