trace how global stratification affects the life cycle of each state in the globe.

JHONNA MAE M. GANZALE
BSCRIM1 BLOCK A

What is global stratification?
The unequal distribution of wealth, power, prestige, resources, and influence among the world's nations is referred to as global stratification. Simply put, there is a huge disparity between the richest and poorest countries.

Effect of global stratification
Global stratification has a significant impact on people's life chances all around the world. As previously said, individuals in the poorest countries live in some of the most deplorable conditions. AIDS, malaria, malnutrition, and other fatal diseases are all too widespread. Many children and adults die before reaching adolescence, and many adults die before reaching middle age in the richest countries. Many people in the world's poorest countries are illiterate, and a college degree is as foreign to them as it is to us.
When there is an unequal distribution of resources between individuals and nations, global stratification arises.

Local culture is founded on the country's riches; when a country is less fortunate in not having been industrialized, the standard of living is also low. Rather than when the country was heavily industrialized. The new corporations bring more jobs and business to the country, allowing the local culture to achieve a greater level of living. The beneficial consequences of global stratification on our local culture are that when we outsource to these third-world countries, which are in greater need than the United States, it permits them to work.




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