The cultural diversity critique of markets

Course Outline

International Trade

Course (61 videos)

The cultural diversity critique of markets

A common argument is made that markets and capitalism will lead to too little cultural diversity. While it's true that diversity across societies (how countries may be different from one another) is decreasing, diversity within societies (access to diverse products within one city or country) is increasing with trade. Diversity across time is also increasing, as there are greater incentives to innovate and sell on the global market. Exchange and capitalism encourage diversity in cultural goods and services.

Teacher Resources

Subtitles

Verified Available Languages


Thanks to our awesome community of subtitle contributors, individual videos in this course might have additional languages. More info below on how to see which languages are available (and how to contribute more!).

How to turn on captions and select a language:

  1. Click the settings icon (⚙) at the bottom of the video screen.
  2. Click Subtitles/CC.
  3. Select a language.
     


 

Contribute Translations!

Join the team and help us provide world-class economics education to everyone, everywhere for free! You can also reach out to us at [email protected] for more info.


Submit subtitles

 

 

Accessibility

We aim to make our content accessible to users around the world with varying needs and circumstances.

Currently we provide:


Are we missing something? Please let us know at [email protected]

Download

Creative Commons

Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
The third party material as seen in this video is subject to third party copyright and is used here pursuant
to the fair use doctrine as stipulated in Section 107 of the Copyright Act. We grant no rights and make no
warranties with regard to the third party material depicted in the video and your use of this video may
require additional clearances and licenses. We advise consulting with clearance counsel before relying
on the fair use doctrine.