manufacturing is being followed by a global redistribution of white-collar work.
This has only recently begun. As this advances, it will lead to a fundamental
geographic redistribution of work that is also nearly certain to have profound
effects on the global economy. These two themes are not new as Dicken (2004)
touched upon these in his lament that geography was being left out of the
globalization discussion. To presage my concluding discussion I will argue that
geography has been so swept into the study of clusters and the interest in cultural
studies that it is missing the macroforces that are transforming the world
economy.
This chapter speculates on the implications of the digitization of work and
what the global improvement in telecommunications and transportation
networks means for the creation of a global work force and, by extension, a
global labor market. This will threaten those in developed nations whose skill
levels are not sufficiently superior to those in developing nations to justify receiv-
ing developed nation’s wages. For all economies it suggests,
ceteris paribus, that
workers wherever they are will be rewarded more equally.
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