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Paper 3 · Global Politics · Globalisation

Globalisation, 1944 to today

Globalisation advanced from Bretton Woods to China's WTO entry, then met backlash - the 2008 crash, Brexit and Trump's America First. The exam question: is globalisation in retreat?

The arc at a glance

1944Bretton Woods opens
1973Oil shock
1989Berlin Wall falls
1994NAFTA opens
1995WTO opens
1997Asian financial crisis
2001China joins WTO
2007-08Global financial crisis
2016Brexit backlash
2017-21America First

Click any step to jump to it - the lit step is the one showing below. Globalisation builds to a 2001 peak, then faces crisis and backlash. Green = expanded or strengthened · Amber = mixed or contested · Red = restricted or weakened.

The timeline

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Timeline tucked away while you test yourself. Close the quiz to bring it back.

1944

What happened. The Bretton Woods era opened, creating the post-war institutions that drove the first wave of globalisation.

What it shows. The institutional foundation of the global economy. Bretton Woods opens

1973

What happened. Arab OPEC members imposed an oil embargo, quadrupling prices and triggering Western recession.

What it shows. Interdependence transmitting a shock worldwide. Oil shock

1989

What happened. The Berlin Wall fell, opening the second wave of globalisation with the end of the Cold War.

What it shows. Markets expanding across the old divide. Berlin Wall falls

1994

What happened. NAFTA integrated the North American market from January 1994.

What it shows. Regional trade liberalisation deepening globalisation. NAFTA opens

1995

What happened. The World Trade Organization replaced GATT, adding binding dispute settlement.

What it shows. A rules-based system locking in free trade. WTO opens

1997

What happened. The Asian Financial Crisis began with the Thai baht collapse and spread across East Asia, requiring IMF bailouts.

What it shows. Financial globalisation spreading instability. Asian financial crisis

2001

What happened. China acceded to the WTO, integrating the world's most populous economy.

What it shows. The high-water mark of economic globalisation. China joins WTO

2007-08

What happened. The 2007-08 financial crisis began in US subprime mortgages and spread into worldwide recession.

What it shows. The peak before globalisation began to falter. Global financial crisis

2016

What happened. Brexit: 51.9% of UK voters chose to leave the EU, triggering Article 50.

What it shows. Sovereignty concerns overriding integration. Brexit backlash

2017-21

What happened. The Trump administration left Paris, the TPP and the Iran deal, favouring bilateral over multilateral deals.

What it shows. A great power retreating from the multilateral order. America First

Roll up and down: use the arrows, scroll or swipe inside the box, the up and down keys, or click any step in the arc above.

The account: what changed?

The first half of the story is acceleration: Bretton Woods, the fall of the Wall, NAFTA, the WTO and China's accession built a deeply integrated, rules-based world economy that peaked around 2001.

The second half is strain and backlash. The 1997 and 2008 crises showed how fast shocks travel; Brexit and America First showed voters and great powers turning against integration. Whether that is a pause or a reversal is the live debate.

The judgement line: Economic globalisation is no longer advancing unchecked: crises and a political backlash (Brexit, America First) have stalled the hyper-globalised model. But the institutions, supply chains and digital flows remain, so this is better read as globalisation slowing and fragmenting than ending.
Turn it into an essay: which dates argue which way

The same events split by side. Build each paragraph around one point from each column, then judge.

Globalisation is in retreat

  • 2008 crash spread worldwide and dented faith in open markets.
  • Brexit (2016) - a major economy chose to leave its bloc.
  • America First (2017-21) - the US left Paris, the TPP and the Iran deal.
  • The 1997 and 2008 crises showed the risks of deep interdependence.

Globalisation endures

  • Bretton Woods institutions (IMF, World Bank, then WTO) still run the system.
  • WTO (1995) locked in binding, rules-based trade.
  • China's WTO entry (2001) tied the largest economy into the order.
  • Supply chains, finance and digital flows remain deeply integrated.

The best answers distinguish economic globalisation (stalling) from cultural and digital globalisation (still advancing), then judge the overall direction.

Quick check: ten questions
Question 1 / 10Score 0
Use it in the 30-marker

For "is globalisation in retreat?", weigh the building wave (Bretton Woods, WTO, China 2001) against the backlash (2008, Brexit, America First), then judge whether the slowdown is a pause or a reversal.

Distinguish the dimensions: economic globalisation may be stalling while cultural and digital globalisation keep advancing - that nuance lifts AO2.

Lock in the cases and concepts behind the timeline.
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