This document contains the responses of student Diray Lianne T. to diagnostic questions and an exercise on globalization from Module 1 of BECED 1A. For the diagnostic questions, the student agreed with statements 1, 2, 3, and 5, and disagreed with statement 4. In the exercise, the student explains that globalization involves migration for work opportunities and increased incomes, which contributes to remittances and GDP, and cites an economist who views migration as a solution to global inequality rather than a problem.
This document contains the responses of student Diray Lianne T. to diagnostic questions and an exercise on globalization from Module 1 of BECED 1A. For the diagnostic questions, the student agreed with statements 1, 2, 3, and 5, and disagreed with statement 4. In the exercise, the student explains that globalization involves migration for work opportunities and increased incomes, which contributes to remittances and GDP, and cites an economist who views migration as a solution to global inequality rather than a problem.
This document contains the responses of student Diray Lianne T. to diagnostic questions and an exercise on globalization from Module 1 of BECED 1A. For the diagnostic questions, the student agreed with statements 1, 2, 3, and 5, and disagreed with statement 4. In the exercise, the student explains that globalization involves migration for work opportunities and increased incomes, which contributes to remittances and GDP, and cites an economist who views migration as a solution to global inequality rather than a problem.
1. Globalization is a process based on what I read in the article. Because migration
becomes the answer for the middle to low-income class to meet the necessities, and the other reason is that there are more work opportunities in other countries compared to their own countries. They received a large amount of salary. Due to the increase in people working abroad, remittances increase and reflect our gross domestic product (GDP). 2. The perspective comes from the economist. Branko Milanovic, a siberian- american economist. Milanovic said that migration would remain " the key mechanism whereby incomes of the poor in the world are to be raised" As opposed to being seen as an issue needing to be solved, international migration is a potential solution to global inequality.