However, a contrasting trend soon became evident
in the emergence of movements protesting against economic globalization and giving new momentum
to the defense of local uniqueness and perceived threat to national identity. The Indian intellectual
movement introducing “glocalization” (though not necessarily) provides an example in “hybridity”
to testify that economic globalization has always been influenced by an amicable cultural norm that
has, throughout ages, been an important mechanism in universalizing particularism as well as the
particularization of universalism. Today, economic globalization takes a standardized consumer culture
in contrast to both the Hindu scriptural ill-defined economic value systems and neo-Marxist stoic view,
which opposes international trade, commerce, and multinational finance.