Consumers’ World and the Necessity of Change

July 27th, 2010 posted by admin
Consumers' World and the Necessity of Change

Countries such as the USA and organisations such as the EU are the largest consumers of resources, the largest producers, have the highest rates of fuel usage (including oil, gas, and red diesel), and the main moneyspenders in the modern-day world. People in these countries and organisations often consume and need more than the whole population of Africa and Australia constantly increasing the world prices and thus forcing many small and developing communities to permanently decreasing their life standards.

Because of all these reasons stated above, we now can encounter what can be easily called “social parasitism”-a term often ignored because it seems a bit brutal in societies where people stand for human rights and civil liberties, but at the same a quite accurate expression since people all over the globe have the same labour power but the resources that reach them are quite limited to suffice.

Recently many organisations, most of the international legal partnerships and socialists formations, are trying to induce the idea that the main moneyspenders should accept new rules to govern their economies. Such an example is proposed by legal scholars who proclaim the idea of the so called external production. Even thou the globalisation significantly improved the financial situation in Asia, the markets in Africa keep shrinking. This is the reason why, by convincing big companies to start their own business in Africa, scholars and legal professionals are aiming to inject new capitals and fresh money in the African countries infrastructures.

This on the other hand might be negatively accepted by people who would occasionaly lose thgeir jobs in the country from which the production is to be relocated. However, social workers claim that specialists are needed so if these workers are good in their proffesion that can still satisfy the needs of their companies without the need to shrink the market in their own country. The production increased, the prices decreased would inevitably lead to new fresh capitals, more accessible goods and gradual increase of the life standard in the developing country.

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