The impacts of globalization will have to be explained separately when it comes to discussing the consequences of globalization.

A key question is whether the proletariat and growth have been developed in the same way with the unprecedented growth of globalization and its roaring global corporate capitalism. In general, there is no such turnout that the working class has come up with.

Internationalization of production and world markets are actually making the working class a problem everywhere. Efforts to view and control the capitalist system in many countries of the world are often employed by the working-class organizations in their own countries.

The financial attainment earned by organized power and the material wealth available from industrial growth has been hindering the formation of a strong working class. The globalization phenomenon often frustrates the proletariat. The proletariat fails to generate a universal working class character.

While capital is globalized, labor has not given that opportunity. Capital can be free to play, but it is denied to those who provide the workforce. The social controls and labor standards of the World

Trade Organization and the trade-related positions in business are also damaging the proletariat. The International Labor Organization (ILO) has taken a strong stand on the objections of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank and the World Trade Organization and strongly advocating globalization. So the ILO does not have the support of a rich nation.

Unprecedented changes have been made to the concept and nature of the working class in the advance of globalization. The working class has to face the globalization process because of the extreme unemployment, the casualisation, the feminization of the job, the elimination of labor unions and the elimination of social security schemes.

The labor unions are rapidly losing control and control over its members. Increasing wages and other economic benefits are somewhat different from the working class class. It is seen that governments with the Left Socialist Socialism are diligently implementing globalization policies.

These are often implemented by the policies of liberalization, privatization, withdrawal of investment, and withdrawal of the public sector, such as withdrawal of regulation, withdrawal from social security, and dismantling labor laws that are sufficient for globalization.

Many of the national governments have their own discrimination and control over their own voluntary or other mandates.

In short, the working class is the most loser in this stage of capitalist globalization. Organized working mass movements have become fragmented in global and national levels.