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258 Terms

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Development

A process of improvement in the material conditions of people through diffusion of knowledge and technology.

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Gross Domestic Product (GDP)

The sum total of the value of all the goods and services produced in a nation

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  • Japan owned Toyota sales would go towards us GDP
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goods+services=GDP

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Gross National Product (GNP)

The total value of goods and services by citizens and corporations as well as foreign investments (usually in one year)

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  • Ex: Toyota's sales in the US go towards Japan's GNP
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domestic+international goods and services= GNP

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Gross National Income (GNI)

most accurate measurement because it accounts for trade

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  • because MDCs have a lot of of imports
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GDP+(exports-imports)= GNI

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economic sectors

"sections" of an economy. The three sectors are the primary, secondary, and tertiary sectors.

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Primary Sector

The portion of the economy concerned with the direct extraction of materials from Earth's surface,

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  • agriculture
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  • mining
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  • fishing
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  • forestry.
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  • High in LDCs
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  • Ethiopia: mining
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Secondary Sector

The portion of the economy concerned with manufacturing useful products through processing, transforming, and assembling raw materials.

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  • High in LDCs
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  • China
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Bulk-gaining product

An end product that is bigger or heavier than the raw materials used to make it, such as a bicycle

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Bulk-reducing product

A product that is smaller or lighter than the raw materials it uses, such as paper

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Tertiary Sector

The portion of the economy concerned with transportation, communications, and utilities, sometimes extended to the provision of all goods and services to people in exchange for payment.

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  • High in MDCs
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Quartinary Sector

Job sector with mostly knowledge based jobs such as education, technology, finances, etc.

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  • High in MDCs
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Quintinary Sector

highest level of decision making government officials and Business officials.

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  • Higher in MDCs
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Formal economy

The legal economy that is taxed and monitored by a government and is included in a government's Gross National Product; as opposed to an informal economy

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Informal Economy

Economic activity that is neither taxed nor monitored by a government; and is not included in that government's Gross National Product; as opposed to a formal economy

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  • Illegal: Drugs, human Trafficking
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  • Under the table: Babysitting
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  • makes of a larger amount of income in LDCs
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Island of development

Governments build up and concentrates economic development in a certain city that is surrounded by a less developed area

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  • Ex: seoul korea
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Gini Coefficient

A measure of income inequality within a population, ranging from zero for complete equality, to one if one person has all the income.

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  • Lower in MDCs
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Industrial Revolution

A series of improvements in industrial technology that transformed the process of manufacturing goods. A shift from agriculture based economies to industrial economies

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  • improved ag tech = food surplus
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Fueled city growth and development

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  • Driven by steam motor
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  • Started in Britain: lead to increased development in Europe
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  • 1820
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Why Europe

-Access to rivers

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-Lots of coal and natural resources

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  • large colonial empire = access to even more resources
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  • More science and innovation (small pop drove)
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Cottage Industry

Manufacturing based in homes rather than in a factory, commonly found before the Industrial Revolution.

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Weber's Least Cost Theory

theory that described the optimal location of a manufacturing firm in relation to the cost of transportation, labor, and advantages through agglomeration

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  • If raw materials are perishable or heavy the factory is situated close to the raw materials
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  • If finished product is heavier than the raw materials then the factory is located close to the market
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  • if an item is fragile even if it is a bulk losing product the factory will be close to the market
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Ex: potato chips

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agglomeration economies

the benefits that come from when firms and people locate near one another in cities and industrial clusters.

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  • sometimes referred to as growth poles
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Ex: Tech in Silicon Valley California

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Ex: Research triangle North Carolina

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  • Research hub: Duke, UNC, NC State
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Break of Bulk Point

A location where transfer is possible from one mode of transportation to another.

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  • can get more expansive with these switches
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Containerization

The transporting of goods in standard-sized shipping containers.

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  • made loading and unloading ships more time efficient
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Maquiladoras

The term given to zones in northern Mexico with factories supplying manufactured goods to the U.S. market. The low-wage workers in the primarily foreign-owned factories assemble imported components and/or raw materials and then export finished goods.

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Rostow's Stages of Economic Growth

theory that assumes all countries are capable of development along the same trajectory which encompasses five stages of linear development towards self-sustained economic growth and high levels of mass consumption

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  • Traditional Society
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  • Pre-conditions to take-off: leadership begins to invest in the country
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  • Take-off: Major export industry
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  • Drive to Maturity: Slow pop growth more specialized industry and skilled workers
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  • Mass Consumption: pop decline or negative tertiary sector
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-criticism: asumes everyone wants mass consumerism, based on European countries, asumes isolated economies

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Wallertein's World Systems theory

explains spatial relationships between countries and uneven economic development by classifying countries into Core, Semi-periphery, periphery

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  • Core: buys raw materials, pay for cheap labor, sell consumer goods @ high prices
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  • provides money flow to semi and periphery
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  • core and semi periphery: industrialized first
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  • rural to urban migration
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Development

improvement in human well-being through economic advancement

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Brandt Line

a line that divides the North and the South. It shows the divide between the more developed regions and the less developed regions.

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  • global north and south
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  • over generalization
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  • doesn't account for NICs
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Complementary

the degree to which one place can supply something that another place demands

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comparative advantage theory

theory that states that a country should sell to other countries those products that it produces most effectively and efficiently, and buy from other countries those products that it cannot produce as effectively or efficiently

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  • Ex: Florida and NE States: provides fruit
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  • lower opportunity cost
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opportunity cost

the loss of potential gain from other alternatives when one alternative is chosen.

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  • Leads to specialization of industry
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  • Supports comparative advantage theory
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-Ex: US wheat and Columbia Coffe

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Neo liberal Policies

economic policies that require a minimal

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role of the government assuming the desirability of free markets as the ideal condition not only for economic organization but also for political and social.

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-free market capitalism

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-open trade boarders

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-privatize

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-ex; EU, OPEC, Mercosor

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European Union

An international organization of European countries formed after World War II to reduce trade barriers and increase cooperation among its members.

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  • common currency: sink together
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  • limit tariffs
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Mercoser

regional trade agreement to promote the free trade of and movement of goods, people and currency

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-aims to be like EU