问题:
                    [单选,材料题] What can be the ultimate result of the  inflow of the resources?
                    根据以下材料回答下面的题目:
	Benefited or Hurt
For the most part, it seems, workers in  rich countries have little to fear from globalization, and a lot to gain. But  is the same thing true for workers in poor countries? The answer is that they  are even more likely than their rich country counterparts to benefit, because  they have less to lose and more to gain. Orthodox economics takes an optimistic  line on integration and the developing countries. Openness to foreign trade and  investment should encourage capital to flow to poor economies. In the  developing world, capital is scarce, so the returns on investment there should  be higher than in the industrialized countries, where the best opportunities to  make money by adding capital to labor have already been used up. If pool  countries lower their barriers to trade and investment, the theory goes: rich  foreigners wilt want to send over some of their capital.
If  this inflow of resources arrives in the form of loans or portfolio investment,  it will supplement domestic savings and loosen the financial constraint on  additional investment by local companies. If it arrives in the form of new  foreign controlled operations, FDI, so much the better: this kind of capital  brings technology and skills from abroad packaged along with it, with less  financial risk as well. In either case, the addition to investment
ought to push incomes up, partly by raising  the demand for labor and partly by making labor more productive. This why  workers in FDI receiving countries should be in an even better position to  profit from integration than workers in FDI sending countries. Also, with or  without inflows of foreign capital, the same static and dynamic gains from  trade should apply in developing countries as in rich ones. This gain from  trade logic often arouses suspicion, because the benefits seem to come from  nowhere. Surely one side or the other must lose. Not so. The benefits that a  rich country gets though trade do not come at the expense of its poor country  trading partners, or vice versa. Recall that according to the theory, trade is  a positive sum game. In all these transactions, sides exporters and importers,  borrowers and lenders, shareholders and workers can gain.
According to the passage, who may be reasonably afraid of the globalization?
                    
                        A . It will supplement domestic savings
B . It will loosen the financial constraint
C . It will push incomes up
D . It will bring technology and skills from  abroad