What does 'deglobalization' mean for the world economy?

Deglobalization means the world is becoming less connected as it used to be, like when you stop sharing your toys with all your friends.

Imagine you and your friends each have a toy box full of different toys. For years, you’ve been trading toys, you get a dinosaur from Sarah, and she gets a teddy bear from you. This is like globalization, where countries trade goods and services freely.

Now, deglobalization is when some of you decide to stop trading as much. Maybe you just play with your own toys now, or only trade with the kids next door. That means less sharing, and sometimes, fewer toys for everyone.

This can happen because of things like big arguments between friends (like countries having disagreements), or maybe one friend moves away (like a country becoming more self-reliant).

What does this mean?

  • You might have fewer choices in your toy box.
  • Some kids might get more toys, and others less.
  • It can take time for everyone to adjust, just like when you learn new games with different rules.

But it doesn’t mean trading stops forever. Sometimes, you’ll still swap toys, but not as often as before. Deglobalization means the world is becoming less connected as it used to be, like when you stop sharing your toys with all your friends.

Imagine you and your friends each have a toy box full of different toys. For years, you’ve been trading toys, you get a dinosaur from Sarah, and she gets a teddy bear from you. This is like globalization, where countries trade goods and services freely.

Now, deglobalization is when some of you decide to stop trading as much. Maybe you just play with your own toys now, or only trade with the kids next door. That means less sharing, and sometimes, fewer toys for everyone.

This can happen because of things like big arguments between friends (like countries having disagreements), or maybe one friend moves away (like a country becoming more self-reliant).

What does this mean?

  • You might have fewer choices in your toy box.
  • Some kids might get more toys, and others less.
  • It can take time for everyone to adjust, just like when you learn new games with different rules.

But it doesn’t mean trading stops forever. Sometimes, you’ll still swap toys, but not as often as before.

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Examples

  1. A country stops importing cars from another country and starts making them locally.
  2. People in one city lose jobs because factories move to a cheaper place.
  3. Families pay more for food because goods come from farther away.

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