Through the process of globalization, the trade dependence and int-
dependence of the developing countries have increased phenomenally than
ever before. The characteristic of this late twentieth-century
globalization process has been the new technological revolution that has
led to a high rate of world exports of electronics and other
high-technology products. This has marginalized most of the developing
countries exporting largely the low quality and low value-addition
manufacturing and primary products, barring a few exceptions like China,
India and Mexico. The fruits of globalization have, therefore, been
unevenly distributed so far across the developed and the developing
countries. Moreover, whatever little growth in exports of medium
technology products has been achieved by a few of them, is largely
driven by outsourcing of low value-addition and low- stage of activities
by the foreign multinationals. Outsourcing of software services, rather
than development of software packages, in India and assembly line for
automobiles in Mexico are the two glaring examples. These activities may
have boosted the total exports of these countries, but they have failed
to generate any feedback effect on the rest of the economy in terms of
skill formation, increase in overall productivity level and product
diversification.