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Globalization
39.
Considering the question of human promotion in Asia, the Synod Fathers
recognized the importance of the process of economic globalization. While
acknowledging its many positive effects, they pointed out that globalization
has also worked to the detriment of the poor, 193 tending to push
poorer countries to the margin of international economic and political
relations. Many Asian nations are unable to hold their own in a global market
economy. And perhaps more significantly, there is also the aspect of a cultural
globalization, made possible by the modern communications media, which is
quickly drawing Asian societies into a global consumer culture that is both
secularist and materialistic. The result is an eroding of traditional family
and social values which until now had sustained peoples and societies. All of
this makes it clear that the ethical and moral aspects of globalization need
to be more directly addressed by the leaders of nations and by organizations
concerned with human promotion.
The
Church insists upon the need for "globalization without
marginalization".194 With the Synod Fathers, I call upon the
particular Churches everywhere, and especially those in the Western countries,
to work to ensure that the Church's social doctrine has its due impact upon the
formulation of ethical and juridical norms for regulating the world's free
markets and for the means of social communication. Catholic leaders and
professionals should urge governments and financial and trade institutions to
recognize and respect such norms. 195
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