Social Sciences, asked by rajesh8994, 11 months ago

the impact of globalisation is not unique or equal on producers and labourers

Answers

Answered by ashu7042
1
β€œThe impact of globalisation has not been visualised uniformly among producers and
workers.” Support the statement with facts.
Answer: Everyone has not benefitted from globalisation. While people with education, skill and
wealth have made the best use of the opportunities offered by globalisation, the others have not
shared the benefits. While producers have become MNCs, the workers are facing many problems.
Globalisation and competition among producers have changed the life of the workers. Most
employers want to employ workers flexibly which means: jobs are no longer secure. Earlier
workers were employed permanently. Now, they employ the workers temporarily, when there is
pressure of work, otherwise they are dismissed.
Answered by tejasweety
1

hey mate


here is your answer


Globalisation is now deeply rooted in the world economy and still perceived as a double-edged sword. Though globalisation has created huge business potential, it adversely affects labour interests. The recent incidents of labour unrests at Suzuki Motor's India plants brought this debate to the forefront. Undoubtedly, globalisation has played a key role in the growth of Indian automobile industry in general and that of Suzuki Motor's India venture, in particular. But, at the same time, it is held responsible for creating an environment of labour conflicts. This paper examines various developments relating to labour troubles at Suzuki Motor's Manesar plant in India and concludes that globalisation alone can't be blamed for the fiasco. More importantly, the paper emphasizes that both labour & management of Suzuki and the Indian Government can learn a lot from the incident and take precautionary measures so that such unpleasant events do not recur in future.


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