Transcript Unit 6
Industrialization and Economic
Development
Unit VI
Intro
• Economic geographers study the locations and
reasons for economic patterns in the world’s
human landscape
• Fast Fact
– Almost half of the people in the world live on the
equivalent of less than $2 a day, and about 20%
live on less than $1 a day
– People in the 20 richest countries on average earn
37 times more than people in the 20 poorest
countries
Economic Classifications
• ECONOMY
– The system of production, consumption, and distribution
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PRIMARY SECTOR
SECONDARY SECTOR
TERTIARY SECTOR
QUATERNARY SECTOR
– Assemble, assemble, and process information
– Ex. University research and investment analysis
• QUINARY SECTOR
– Highest levels of decision making
– Ex. Legislature or presidential cabinet
Industrialization
• The growth of manufacturing activity in the
economy or a region
• Usually occurs alongside a decrease in the
number of primary economic activities
• Fast fact
– The amount of world trade since 1950 has increased
20 fold, from $320 billion to $6.8 trillion
– This increase in the trade of manufactured goods is
three time larger than the increase in the rate of the
production of those goods
The Industrial Revolution
• Began in England in the 1760s
• Later diffuses to other parts of western
Europe
• During this period… machines replaced human
labor and new energy sources emerged (Coal)
• At beginning it was textile focused industry
Cont…
• England’s Industrial Revolution defined by the
rise of assembly line manufacturing
• Industries powered by coal so they clustered
around coal fields
• Led to development of a clear industrial
landscape and working class housing area
• Along with industrial growth… transportation
infrastructure grew to allow improved
shipping supplies to urban factories
Cont…
• Farming also mechanized
• COMMODIFICATION
– Factory owners looking at their human labor as
commodities (objects for trade) with price tags
per hour
– As opposed to seeing them as people
In the beginning…
• Factory like labor first started in households
• Growth of factories initially by water sources
which supplied the energy
• Then factories grew near coal and could move
farther away from water
• Away from water, factories could build out rather
than up
• By the 1960s, oil replaced coal
– US, Russia, Venezuela were big oil suppliers prior to
the 60s
– Middle east emerged in the 60s
Diffusion of Industrialization
• By 1825 the technology had diffused to N.
America and Western Europe
• Thrived in places with coal deposits
– Ex. Ohio and Pennsylvannia
• By the 1920s production breaks down into
differentiated processes
– FORD PRODUCTION METHOD (FORDIST)
• Build out rather than up
• Only one floor so the product could by transported
throughout the assembly line without problems
WEBER’S LEAST COST THEORY
• ALFRED WEBER
• Predicted where industries would locate
based on the places that would be the lowest
cost to them
Assumptions of Weber’s model
• Assumes the cost of transportation is determined
by the weight of goods being shipped and the
distance to the market
• The heavier the good and/or the longer the
distance, the more expensive it is to ship
• Assumes industries try to minimize costs
• Assumes markets are in fixed locations
• Assumes labor is in fixed locations
• Like Von Thunen… assumed soil and
political/cultural landscape is uniform
Four factors of model
• Industry location driven by
– Transportation
– Labor
– Agglomeration
– Deglomeration
Transportation and Distance
• Must consider weight and distance
• Not just distance to market… but from raw
materials or energy sources to the industry
• During Industrial revolution, factories locate
near coal (energy), after invention of
electricity they were no longer tied down to
the energy source
• Also had to locate near raw materials
Cont…
• SPATIALLY VARIABLE COSTS
– Costs that varied or changed based on location
– Ex. Using heavy raw materials you might build
closer to the raw material
• WEIGHT LOSING PROCESSES
– Ex. Paper production
– MATERIAL ORIENTATION
Cont…
• WEIGHT GAINING PROCESSES
– Locates near market
– Ex. Soda Industry
– MARKET ORIENTATION
Cont…
• SPATIALLY FIXED COSTS
– Some industries maintain the same costs no
matter where they are
– Usually light products with high value
– Ex. Computer chips
– May be called FOOTLOOSE INDUSTRIES
Labor Costs
• Not only human costs but machinery and
money to purchase tools
• SUBSTITUTION PRINCIPLE
– When an industry substitutes labor costs for
transportation costs
– Labor costs decrease… Transportation costs
increase… in the long run they will save
Agglomeration
• Industries that clump together for mutual advantage
• Can share costs
• AGGLOMERATION ECONOMICS
– Saving money for both industries and consumers
• HIGH TECH CORRIDOR
• TECHNOPOLE
• BACKWASH EFFECT
– When other regions suffer a drain of resources and talent
• LOCATIONAL INTERDEPENDENCE
– Industries choose locations based on where the
competitors are located
– Ex. Off highway exits… Gas stations AGGLOMERATE based
on LOCATIONAL INTERDEPENDENCE
• Allows them to share the market
Deglomeration
• When an agglomeration becomes too
clustered/too crowded in negatively affect the
industry so they split up for more space
• “unclumping” of industry
Criticisms of Weber’s Model
• Does not identify the fact that markets and labor
are often mobile
• Labor force varies by
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Skill
Age
Gender
Language
Etc…
• Some transportation costs are not necessarily
proportional to distance
Contemporary Patterns and Impacts of
Industrialization and Development
Development
• Process of improving the material condition of
people through the growth and diffusion of
technology and knowledge
• MDCs vs. LDCs
– On an economic spectrum…
• Not just wealth…may have additional social,
economic, demographic factors involved
UN Human Development Index
• HDI
• Used to compare various development regions
• Three factors
– Life expectancy
– Average educational levels
– Standard of Living
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On a score from 0-1
Norway tops at .965
US around 8th place – 0.91
Democratic Republic of the Congo in last at .286
Economic component of HDI
• Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
– The value of total outputs of goods and services
produced in a country usually over 1 year
– Per capita = per person
– In US… GDP per capita is around 35,000 or $10-15
an hour vs. $0.50 in LDCs
PPP
• Purchasing Power Parity
• Calculating the exchange rates required for
each currency to buy an equal amount of
goods
• BIG MAC INDEX
• “Apples to Apples”
In comparison
• IN US… rich about 15 times more wealthy
• IN Guatemala… rich about 75 times more
wealthy that the poorest 10%
Informal Sector
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Data not reported
They are “off the books”
Not included in GDP
May limit the usefulness of GDP
Development Gap
• The widening gap between MDCs and LDCs
• GDP tripled in MDCs within the last decade
• GDP only double in LDCs within the last
decade
• Rate of Natural Increase (RNI) dropped 85% in
MDCs in the last decade… only 5% in LDCs
• NORTH – SOUTH GAP
– Northern Hemisphere is more developed
Structuralist Reasons for the
Development Gap
• Argue LDCs are locked into a vicious cycle of
entrenched underdevelopment by the global
economic system
• DEPENDENCY THEORY
– Says political and economic relations among countries
limit the ability of LDCs to modernize and develop
– Countries are INTERDEPENDENT
– IMMANUEL WALLERSTEIN’S THEORY
• WORLD SYSTEMS ANALYSIS
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CORE, PERIPHERY, SEMIPERIPHERY
Core depends on the Periphery
If there is a core there is a periphery
The core exploits the periphery
– Ex. Europe and Africa
Liberal theories of Development:
ROSTOW’S MODERNIZATION MODEL
• LIBERAL THEORIES
– Says all countries can develop
• MODERNIZATION MODEL
– “ladder of development”
Criticisms of Rostow’s Model
• Based on Anglo American and Western
European Development
• Does not account for “roadblocks” to
development like neocolonalism
• Considers each country independent rather
than interdependent
Reducing the Development Gap: The
self-sufficiency approach
• The ability to provide for its own people,
independent from foreign economies
• Investments should be spread over the entire
economy
• Ex. China, India, E. Europe, Africa all tried it…
didn’t work
– Corruption and inefficiency limited gains
– India never improved products
– Governments paid failing businesses to stay open
Reducing the Development Gap:
International Trade
• Pushes a country to identify its unique set of
strengths in the world and to channel
investment toward building on those
strengths
• COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE
• Japan and High tech products
Globalization
• The increasing sense of interconnectedness
and spatial interaction among governments,
cultures, and economies
• Originally just used to describe economics…
now it is more broad
• Ex. Spread of MTV
• May lead to resentment
• Disneyification… McDonoadlization
Multinational Corporations
• MNCs
• Or Transnational Corps… TNCs
• Headquarters in one country and production
facilities in others
• CONGLOMERATE
– One massive company that owns and operates
smaller companies
– Ex. A soda company also owns the bottling
company and food coloring company
Outsourcing
• Practice of an MNC to relocate a piece or all of
its manufacturing in other countries
Newly Industrialized Countries
• NICs
• Asian Tigers
– Taiwan, S. Korea, Hong Kong, Singapore
– Make up the Pacific Rim economic region
Foreign Direct Investment
• Investment in LDCs
• SPECIAL ECONOMIC ZONES
• EXPORT PROCESSING ZONES
– FREE TRADE ZONES
Maquiladoras
• Special economic zones in Mexico along the
US border
• Part of NAFTA
• Used to create jobs
New International Division of Labor
• Breaks up manufacturing process among
many countries
Free trade vs. Fair Trade
Structural Adjustment and
Privatization
• Structural Adjustment
– Stipulations that require the country receiving a
loan to make economic changes in order to use
the loan
• Privatization
– The selling of publicly operated industries to
market driven corporations
Non governmental organizations
• To assist in boosting economic development
and human rights throughout the world’s
peripheral regions
• NGOs supply resources and money
Globalization and the Environment
• Resources are being depleted
• Travel has increased
– ECOTOURISM
– Costa Rica has turned a huge percentage of its
land into protected areas that can be used for
ecotourism
– “Jungle Swing”
• Only damage to environment is the guidewires
Cont…
• Sustainable development
– A rate of growth and resource-consumption that can
be maintained from one generation to another
– UN called for conservation and careful use of
resources
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Avoid overfishing
Care for the soil
Preserve forests
Protect species from extinction
Reduce air pollution
Recycle
Use alternative fuels
Greenhouse effect
• Caused by CFC, CO2, Methane
• Causes world temp to rise
• Kinda like what happens in a car on a hot day
• Related to OZONE LAYER DEPLETION
– Global Warming
– May cause sea levels to rise