Unit 7: Industrial and Economic Development Patterns and Processes
Sectors: different categories the economy can be divided into
One common way to group economic activity and employment is by its stage in the production process, from primary production onward
Another way is to categorize sectors by the types of products or services they create, such as mining or communications
Primary production includes agriculture, mining, energy, forestry, and fisheries
Secondary production includes the processing of the raw materials drawn from the primary sector
Reflects all forms of manufacturing
Tertiary production includes the transportation, wholesaling, and retailing of finished goods to consumers
Can include other types of services that could be categorized as quaternary, such as finance, or quinary, such as government
Quaternary production includes wholesaling, finance, banking, insurance, real estate, advertising, and marketing (business services)
Quinary production includes retailing, tourism, entertainment, and communications, government, or semi-public services such as health, education, and utilities (consumer services)
Important to consider the cash value of what is produced in one sector compared to other sectors
Helps explain why certain products and services are emphasized in an economy and why others might decline or be abandoned
Economically, what is measured is the combined cash value of what is produced, not the volume in bushels or weight in tons
Agriculture is the least valuable, despite the fact that a majority of the world’s population still lives in rural agricultural regions
Subsistence farming is very common in less-developed parts of the world as agriculture supporting the farm family and local people
Farmers in the Third World who farm plantations or work in cash-cropping generally send crops around in search of buyers
Farming is most commonly done on a commercial basis in more-developed countries with processed products sold and distributed globally
Commodity chain: exist from the small-scale, family-based producers selling directly from the farm or through local farmers’ markets to transnational supply networks selling to an international customer base
Tea production employs millions of people worldwide, most of them living in remote poverty-stricken rural communities
Most of the profits are made at the retail end of tea’s commodity chain and the oversupply of tea (combined with the poverty of the producers) is a matter of great concern to international aid groups
Natural resource production can be divided into two pairs of linked sectors based on their renewability and prices:
Mining and energy extraction can be valuable depending on the global commodity prices
Oil (petroleum) became highly valuable in 2008 and was traded for over $120 per barrel in mid-summer, only to fall below $50 per barrel by the year’s end
Fisheries and timber markets are not as volatile, but have increased in price and value over the years due to reduced supply
In these heavily regulated and increasingly protected natural resources, companies must use more technology and larger processing facilities to remain profitable and meet growing consumer demand
Minerals and fossil fuel energy are nonrenewable products
Some mineral products like metals and glass can be recycled
Energy sources that do not run on fossil fuels are generally renewable if managed properly
Alternative energy sources such as solar, wind, nuclear, tidal, and geothermal power tend to be more expensive to harness than fossil fuels and are thus less common
Products drawn from living resources like fisheries and forestry are renewable
How trees are cut and how fish are caught makes a difference in terms of overall ecosystem survival and sustainability
(EX: a two-mile-long microfilament gill nets to catch fish is considered an unsustainable practice that harms the ocean ecosystem)
Hallmark of economic development, and factory-made products far out-value those of agricultural and natural resource–based economies.
Manufactured goods are farm products and natural resources that have been taken through value-added processing
Durable goods and non-durable goods, divides production based on the amount of time the product is going to be used
Resource processing: oil refineries, metals, plastics, chemicals, lumber, paper, food and beverage, concrete and cement, glass
Textiles: clothing, shoes and leather products, artificial fibers and thread
Furniture: home, office, bedding
Appliances: home appliances, commercial equipment, power tools, lighting
Transport: automotive, rail, aerospace, shipbuilding, recreational vehicles
Health: pharmaceuticals, medical devices, personal care products
Technology: home computers, business computing and servers, industrial control devices, phones, television and audio entertainment
Services are intangible products, as opposed to manufactured goods, which are physically tangible or touchable
Low-benefit services: sectors in which the labor force tends to be hourly employees who receive few if any additional benefits, like paid vacation or health insurance
High-benefit services: sectors in which pay tends to be salaried and includes considerable fringe benefits like health, dental, and vision insurance; vacation; sick days; and retirement reimbursements
Service firms are typically classified by the type of activity performed as part of the service
The United States and Canadian services produce the majority of the countries’ economic value and employment
Roughly 80 percent of these economies’ value is drawn from services, only 19 percent from manufacturing and resources, and a mere 1 percent from agriculture
Deindustrialization: shifting away from manufacturing as the main source of economic production
Downside is that millions of factory workers lost jobs and many old industrial cities suffered from the economic downturn
Manufacturing businesses had to focus on highly priced manufactured goods like vehicles, heavy equipment, and computing devices to keep profits and investment up amid foreign competition and keep the remaining First-World manufacturing labor force paid and employed
Cheaper off-shore locations overseas to build factories
Deindustrialization has to do with the investment value of each sector
Investors in new businesses are looking to maximize their returns on investment, and services are the most valuable investments out there
Moving from natural resources to manufactured products adds a massive amount of value
To better understand services is to think historically about how technology has affected economies:
In agricultural history, the development of the plow is the technical advancement that revolutionized farming and radically increased the amount of land that could be cultivated.
During the industrial era, the product that made all manufacturing possible was steel (railroad locomotives to skyscrapers and automobiles are made possible by steel alloys).
In the service economy era, the computer makes all sectors of the service economy more efficient and capable of handling large numbers of consumers and data.
The microchip–miniature processor circuits, has made desktop computers possible as well as smaller handheld and wireless devices
Used categorize countries in terms of their levels of economic development
Compare development level verbally and to acknowledge the patterns of uneven development in the world economy
First World: industrialized and service-based economies that have free markets, a high level of productivity value per person and a high quality of life
(EX: Norway, Switzerland, Iceland, Israel, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, South Korea, United States, Canada)
Second World: describes the communist countries of which only two communist states remain today: Cuba and North Korea
Centrally planned economies
Still restructuring their economy to free-market systems like the former Soviet Union and Eastern European states
Newly industrialized countries are still controlled by communist parties but that have adapted free-market reforms to their economies
Third World: countries with mainly agricultural and resource-based economies that have low levels of per-person productivity and a low quality of life
Underdeveloped states are found across Latin America, the Caribbean, Africa, and the Asian countries
Some made a distinct economic shift toward industrialization and urbanization
Others remain firmly in a rural, agricultural category
More developed countries (MDCs) and less developed countries (LDCs) are terms used to describe the relative economic differences between states
First- and Second-World countries generally tend to fit in the MDC category, while Third, Fourth, and Fifth Worlds are LDCs
Rule: $10,000 GNP per capita, above it are MDCs, below it, LDCs
Newly industrialized countries (NICs): Third-World states with economies that have made a distinct shift away from agriculture and toward manufacturing as the focus of economic development and production
In a constant process of building infrastructure (roads, ports, power plants, water systems, railways), which facilitate the construction and operation of factories
Have rapid population growth and are usually on the border of stage two and stage three of the demographic transition model
Experience rapid rural-to-urban migration as their economies industrialize and, as a result, urbanize
Funds to develop infrastructure and factories can come from internal sources, from foreign aid, or from foreign direct investment (FDI)
Technology transfer: where technical knowledge, training, and industrial equipment is provided to NIC governments to increase business efficiency and capacity
FDI is money from international private investors or investment firms in other countries who are looking to earn a profit
Development loans sought by NICs to help pay for new large-scale infrastructure projects
To help develop the necessary infrastructure to attract FDI, some NICs seek international development loans from organizations like the World Bank
(EX: electric power systems, dams, water purification and waste treatment centers, pipelines, highways, and national rail systems)
Foreign development aid is money provided by donor state governments in the First World that is not expected to be given back
When women are given an education, they contribute to forming capital, which lifts their communities, and their nations experience economic growth
High-tech markets in software development and computing services began to open up in India due to certain comparative advantages it has over other NICs
The English-language heritage of India’s colonial past with Britain has two distinctly positive effects:
Access to the American technology markets via language
A large number of educated workers who speak the language
Industrial development in China and the newly earned wealth of the Chinese people have combined to create a large demand for energy in industry and transportation
Coal has been the primary source for electrical production and is plentiful
Oil demand is high, as industry and Chinese citizens have more use for trucks and personal cars
Asian Tigers: a term used to describe the industrial economies of Asia that have been aggressive in terms of economic growth rates and their ability to compete for consumers
The building of a large manufacturing capacity in the Old Asian Tigers was the result of Cold War realities in the region
These states were seen as free-market bastions against the spread of Communism
Highly efficient factories and a focus on product quality in both Japan and Korea had created significant market share in the American automobile and electronics markets by the 1980s
Foreign competition along with the oil shocks of the 1970s triggered deindustrialization in the United States, Canada, and Western Europe
(EX: Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Singapore)
Manufacturing development in the New Asian Tigers was mainly funded through FDI that came from firms in New York, London, and Tokyo, as well as from companies in South Korea and Taiwan that constructed and operated the factories in the New Tigers
The New Asian Tigers offered cheap labor and low-cost land and resources, as well as few labor and environmental regulations that had become costly for businesses in the First World.
(EX: China, India, Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia, Vietnam)
Growth in all of Asia came to an abrupt halt in 1997
A banking crash in South Korea rippled through the region and resulted in a credit crisis
Money to develop new factories and infrastructure projects in the New Asian Tigers dried up as a result
Credit crunch: results from banks and investors holding back on industrial loans and investments
The 1997 Asian economic crisis also was the trigger for deindustrialization in the Old Asian Tigers
Large firms, like Japan’s Toyota and the Korean Hyundai conglomerate, had employed extra workers and their adult children under a traditional benefits system of guaranteed family employment
Industrialization rapidly transformed the global economic landscape and the way that people lived
Great Britain
The process of industrialization began in the second half of the 18th century in Great Britain
Two driving forces that undoubtedly contributed to Britain’s shift to an industrialized society: a significant shift in the size and distribution of the population.
The availability of coal and iron ore allowed British industry to rapidly mechanize
These two essential resources were ultimately the key combination behind one of the Industrial Revolution’s most important inventions: the railroad
Saw major shifts in the size and distribution of their populations in surrounding European nations and to the United States by the mid-19th century
Technological advancements in manufacturing enabled concurrent innovations in agriculture, spawning the Second Agricultural Revolution
The use of new mechanical devices in agriculture also reduced the need for farm labor, just as the proliferation of factories in centralized areas called for a much larger workforce in cities
Caused major shifts in family and class structures
Industrialization did not meant an end to child labor—it meant that children were sent to work in factories rather than alongside their parents on the family farm
Workers began to organize into cooperative societies and trade unions, which provided benefits and services to their members and began to advocate for higher wages and better working conditions
The latter part of the 19th century also saw a burgeoning middle class of professionals such as merchants, engineers, factory owners, doctors, and lawyers
Women were increasingly discouraged from joining the workforce and instead were expected to focus on raising children and maintaining a comfortable home
Productivity increased exponentially due to mechanization, helping turn these countries into economic powerhouses
Periods of explosive growth are followed by periods of economic crises
The productivity boom in industrialized
European countries left them hungry for both raw materials and new markets for their finished goods
European nations had been colonizing other parts of the world for centuries, the speed and scope of this “new imperialism” was unprecedented
Were able to easily colonize vast areas of Africa and Asia due to technological advancements
Economic indicators are used to help understand the variable levels of development and measure the degrees of uneven development between states
Gross domestic product (GDP): the dollar value of all goods and services produced in a country in one year
Measures the total volume of a country’s economy and is done without adjusting for international trade; therefore, it measures only the domestic economy: GDP = GOODS + SERVICES
GDP for the most-recent three-month quarter of the year grew by 3.5 percent over the previous three months
Gross national income (GNI): the dollar value of all goods and services produced in a country, plus the dollar value of exports minus imports in the same year
Measures economic value
GNI includes wealth gained when money comes from other countries for exports: GNI = GOODS + SERVICES + (EXPORTS – IMPORTS)
Trade Surplus: (EXPORTS > IMPORTS)
This is a positive number, and adds value to the economy.
Trade Deficit: (EXPORTS < IMPORTS)
This is a negative number, and removes value from the economy.
Per capita: “for every head” in Latin, meaning for each person
Gross national income (GNI) per capita: the estimated income of a person converted to U.S. dollars at currency exchange rates
A modified form of GDP per capita
Level of development comparisons are done by dividing the volume of the economy by the population, like so:
GDP per capita = (GOODS + SERVICES) ÷ POPULATION
GNI per capita = [(GOODS + SERVICES) + (EXPORTS – IMPORTS)] ÷ POPULATION
A relative standard of living measured by the services that such productivity provides for the population
Gross national income purchasing power parity (GNI PPP): an estimate that takes into account differences in prices between countries
Human Development Index (HDI): designed by the United Nations to measure the level of development of states based on a number of social indicators in addition to economic production
An indexed score from 0.00 to 1.00 is calculated for countries by combining GDP per capita, the adult literacy rate, average level of education, and total life expectancy
Intent is to provide a more balanced measure of development and indicate some of the factors that illustrate the negative impact of poverty on economic potential in Third-World countries
Gini coefficient: measures the level of income disparity between the country’s richest and poorest population groups on a scale of 0 to 100
Gender-Related Development Index (GDI): takes the same indicators used to calculate HDI but replaces GDP per capita with income
The sectoral structure can be considered in the evaluation of an economy
Other ways to measure an economy include measuring the size of the black market, income distribution, use of fossil fuels, and even “soft” indicators such as infant mortality rates and literacy rates
Each of the stages represents a type of economic context, and that the economy directly impacts the patterns of birth rates, death rates, and population
Developed in the 1950s by theorist Walt Rostow
Proposed that countries went through five stages of growth between agricultural and service-based economies
Each country had at least some form of comparative advantage that could be utilized in international trade and thus fund the country’s economic development over time
Traditional society:
Economy is focused on primary production such as agriculture and fishing
Country’s limited wealth is spent internally on things that do not promote economic development
Technical knowledge is low
Preconditions for takeoff:
The country’s leadership begins to invest the country’s wealth in infrastructure such as roads, ports, electrification, and school systems that promote economic development and trade relations with other nations
More technical knowledge is learned that stimulates the economy
Takeoff:
Economy begins to shift focus onto a limited number of industrial exports
Participates in traditional agriculture, but the labor force begins to shift to factory work
Technical experience is gained in industrial production and business management
Drive to maturity:
Technical (or technological) advancements diffuse throughout the country
Workers become increasingly skilled and educated, and fewer people are engaged in traditional activities like agriculture
Age of mass consumption:
An industrial trade economy develops in which highly specialized production such as vehicles, energy, and consumer products dominate the economy
Technical knowledge and education levels are high
Agriculture is mechanized (no longer traditional) and employs a small labor force
Negatives:
The colonial legacy and other barriers to development such as government corruption or capital flight are not accounted for in Rostow’s theory
He assumed that all countries could progress smoothly through the stages if their investment focused on trade and technology development
Dependency theory: holds that most LDCs (including all NICs) are highly dependent on foreign-owned factories, foreign direct investment, and technology from MDCs to provide employment opportunities and infrastructure
Third-World countries get stuck in a continuous cycle of dependency on First-World loans to pay for additional economic development needs
Prebisch thesis: detailed the dependency of Third-World economies on First-World loans and investments to pay for the building of new industries and infrastructure
At the heart stands a claim about the dominant role of First World–based transnational corporations (TNCs) and investors in a postcolonial exploitation of the Third World in which MDCs have economically and politically subordinated LDC populations
Some describe this as economic imperialism in a modern reference to the European empires of the colonial era
Creates additional economic risks, as Third- World economies are also subject to the level of demand for LDC-made products and the overall global economic climate
Market stagnation in an LDC product can be catastrophic to its economy and harm the quality of life of its citizens
LDC policies and programs that attempted to increase capital accumulation within Third-World national economies:
Internalization of economic capital: requires companies to deposit profits from factories in LDC banks and reinvest locally, preventing capital flight, which occurs when factory earnings are sent to banks back in the First World where they cannot be used to further local development in the LDC
Import substitution: Instead of buying simple First World–made consumer products like laundry soap, this approach calls for building laundry soap factories and producing it within the LDC. The manufacturing profits can then be sent to LDC banks and reinvested locally.
Nationalization of natural resource-based industries**:** foreign corporate ownership of oil fields and mines robs the national government and local companies of potential earnings
Profit-sharing agreements: In China, Vietnam, and a few local cases elsewhere, foreign companies are given permission to build new factories on land leased to them by the government.
Technology development programs: Some countries have used their limited public funds to invest in high-technology equipment and worker training for locally owned manufacturers.
By attracting international tourists, countries can gain large inputs of cash from foreign countries without having to export manufactured goods
Beach resorts, golf, skiing, wine regions, historical districts, and cultural attractions like festivals and archaeological sites can all create tourist draw
Ecotourism: tourism directed toward exotic, often threatened, natural environments, intended to support conservation efforts and observe wildlife
Regional free-trade agreements between states have become a common way to improve international trade
Supranational free-trade zones like the European Union (EU) and North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) have made regional economies of multiple states much stronger and have opened the doors of development for less-developed neighbors
Mexico has benefited significantly from its free-trade relationship with the United States and Canada. The NAFTA treaty, signed in 1991, went into full effect in 2001 with the full removal of all tariffs (taxes on goods that cross international borders) between the three members.
Communist states like China and Vietnam began to reform the old Soviet-style command economy in which all economic production was managed and planned by the central government
The most significant reform is allowing foreign companies to open factories and retail services in these countries
China established the first special economic zones (SEZs) in 1980, in which foreign firms were allowed to build facilities in coastal port cities
SEZs: a type of export processing zone, defined as port locations where foreign firms are given special tax privileges to incentivize trade
Economic productivity has more than tripled in China and Vietnam since the introduction of the reforms
Immanuel Wallerstein developed a world systems theory that also sought to explain uneven development around the world in the 1970s
Believed the modern nation-state was birthed in Europe as a way of protecting capitalist interests, which were based on the same highly unequal division of labor as feudalism
Core nations are the most developed and economically influential in the world.
Hold significant cultural, military, and especially economic dominance over the rest of the world
Import goods from periphery nations, taking advantage of those countries’ cheap labor, raw materials, and agriculture
Periphery nations are the least developed.
Weak governments, high social inequality, dependent economies
Heavily influenced and exploited by core countries
Semi-periphery nations fall in between the core and periphery in terms of development and influence.
Can play both peripheral and core-like roles
Able to assert some dominance over the periphery, but they can also be influenced and to some extent exploited by the core
From Alfred Weber’s work, whose 1909 Theory of Industrial Location is still influential, the selection of optimal factory locations has much to do with the minimization of land, labor, resource, and transportation costs
Weber states that, in terms of location, manufactured goods can be classified into two categories based on the amount of input in relation to product output:
Weight-losing, or bulk-reducing, manufacturing involves a large amount of input that is reduced to a final product that weighs less or has less volume or bulk than the input
Weight-gaining, or bulk-gaining, manufacturing involves a number of inputs that are combined to make a final product that gains bulk, volume, or weight in the production process
In weight-losing processing in which there is only one major input, such as seafood packaging, lumber mills, and metal ore-processing or smelting, the industrial location is in very close proximity to the resource location.
(EX: The industrial location of steel factories is dependent on four major inputs: iron ore, coal, limestone, and water. Iron ore is most distance elastic, meaning it can be transported over short or long distances to the steel plant, whereas coal, limestone, and water need to be in close proximity.)
Weight-gaining manufacturing generally involves the assembly of several inputs into a finished product
The finished product is more bulky and thus more costly to transport, the factory location should be relatively close to consumers to minimize delivery costs
(EX: An issue for food products like bread is the limited shelf life that also affects industrial location. Bread, milk, and other perishable products tend to be manufactured in many individual plants that serve the local regions. This decentralized network approach keeps fresh products in stores longer by reducing transportation time. Bread production is so decentralized that bakeries are found in all cities and are an example of ubiquitous industries.)
A supply chain exists when parts are assembled into components that are then joined together to create larger finished products
EX: Automobiles are an example of heavy industry that requires a large supply chain network to support the assembly of a final product.
Fordist production (Fordism): relied on a single company owning all aspects of production, from steel manufacture to advertising.
In the Post-Fordist era, car companies changed and became dependent on large networks of regional supply chains.
Just-in-time production: methods in which suppliers send parts to assembly plants on an as-needed basis
The precise location of retail services is spatially dependent on the relationship between variable cost and revenue surfaces based on local geography
Spatial margin of profitability: the area where local demand for a service creates revenue higher than the local costs of doing business
Used to define these areas of maximization
The location of businesses in the service economy era (since the 1990s) has become a new area of research in economic geography
Recent work has focused on the location of high-benefit services
Footloose industry: businesses whose locations are not tied to resources, transportation, or consumer locations
Often corporate executives are interested in a location for a number of particular qualities that compose a “best fit” for their corporate culture
Economist Richard Florida has proposed that there is a creative class of high-benefit service-industry firms and workers
Local economic development programs have become focused on the attraction of “creative” firms and laborers
Refers to the concentration of human activities in a cluster or around a central place
Agglomeration economies: exist where firms with related or similar products locate together in clusters or regions
Together, the firms enjoy the advantages of a shared skilled-labor pool, specialized suppliers, and service providers and can share (or steal) technical knowledge on production or marketing
Deglomeration: occurs when a location is overloaded with similar firms and services
If local resources or the labor pool are fully utilized or over-utilized, some firms may seek alternate locations to expand to or may move all operations completely
As Japanese firms looked into American production sites, they found further reduced-cost advantages as they moved south from Michigan and Ohio.
These northern unionized-labor states had higher payroll and benefit costs which were ingrained into state workforce regulations.
Southern locations were right-to-work states where regulation does not favor unions and did not impact pay benefit costs.
North America:
American Industrial Belt or “Rust Belt” following deindustrialization
Canadian Industrial Heartland or Canada’s “Main Street”
Piedmont Industrial Region
Europe
British Midlands
Ruhr Valley
Northern Italy or the “Third Italy”
Asia
Japan
Korea
Taiwan
China
Economies of scale: achieved when producers expand their operations but incur lower per-unit costs in the process
When a company increases output of a single product, it can save money by purchasing supplies in bulk, managing more workers, financing large sums of credit at lower interest rates, and negotiating discounts for per-mile transportation costs in larger bulk amounts
Economies of scope: in which companies benefit from the increase in the number of different products under a larger brand name
Larger economies of scope are especially useful when one product at the end of its useful life, or product cycle, is replaced by a new model or alternative device
Women work more hours per day (in paid and unpaid labor) than men in every country in the world except in Anglo America and Australia
Women in the paid workforce are also growing in numbers across the world in both developed and developing countries and regions
Their role in society is changing and improving as opportunities for education, childcare, and maternity benefits open up
In 2000, the United Nations developed a mandate called the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), which was designed with the intention of eradicating poverty by the year 2015.
Sectors: different categories the economy can be divided into
One common way to group economic activity and employment is by its stage in the production process, from primary production onward
Another way is to categorize sectors by the types of products or services they create, such as mining or communications
Primary production includes agriculture, mining, energy, forestry, and fisheries
Secondary production includes the processing of the raw materials drawn from the primary sector
Reflects all forms of manufacturing
Tertiary production includes the transportation, wholesaling, and retailing of finished goods to consumers
Can include other types of services that could be categorized as quaternary, such as finance, or quinary, such as government
Quaternary production includes wholesaling, finance, banking, insurance, real estate, advertising, and marketing (business services)
Quinary production includes retailing, tourism, entertainment, and communications, government, or semi-public services such as health, education, and utilities (consumer services)
Important to consider the cash value of what is produced in one sector compared to other sectors
Helps explain why certain products and services are emphasized in an economy and why others might decline or be abandoned
Economically, what is measured is the combined cash value of what is produced, not the volume in bushels or weight in tons
Agriculture is the least valuable, despite the fact that a majority of the world’s population still lives in rural agricultural regions
Subsistence farming is very common in less-developed parts of the world as agriculture supporting the farm family and local people
Farmers in the Third World who farm plantations or work in cash-cropping generally send crops around in search of buyers
Farming is most commonly done on a commercial basis in more-developed countries with processed products sold and distributed globally
Commodity chain: exist from the small-scale, family-based producers selling directly from the farm or through local farmers’ markets to transnational supply networks selling to an international customer base
Tea production employs millions of people worldwide, most of them living in remote poverty-stricken rural communities
Most of the profits are made at the retail end of tea’s commodity chain and the oversupply of tea (combined with the poverty of the producers) is a matter of great concern to international aid groups
Natural resource production can be divided into two pairs of linked sectors based on their renewability and prices:
Mining and energy extraction can be valuable depending on the global commodity prices
Oil (petroleum) became highly valuable in 2008 and was traded for over $120 per barrel in mid-summer, only to fall below $50 per barrel by the year’s end
Fisheries and timber markets are not as volatile, but have increased in price and value over the years due to reduced supply
In these heavily regulated and increasingly protected natural resources, companies must use more technology and larger processing facilities to remain profitable and meet growing consumer demand
Minerals and fossil fuel energy are nonrenewable products
Some mineral products like metals and glass can be recycled
Energy sources that do not run on fossil fuels are generally renewable if managed properly
Alternative energy sources such as solar, wind, nuclear, tidal, and geothermal power tend to be more expensive to harness than fossil fuels and are thus less common
Products drawn from living resources like fisheries and forestry are renewable
How trees are cut and how fish are caught makes a difference in terms of overall ecosystem survival and sustainability
(EX: a two-mile-long microfilament gill nets to catch fish is considered an unsustainable practice that harms the ocean ecosystem)
Hallmark of economic development, and factory-made products far out-value those of agricultural and natural resource–based economies.
Manufactured goods are farm products and natural resources that have been taken through value-added processing
Durable goods and non-durable goods, divides production based on the amount of time the product is going to be used
Resource processing: oil refineries, metals, plastics, chemicals, lumber, paper, food and beverage, concrete and cement, glass
Textiles: clothing, shoes and leather products, artificial fibers and thread
Furniture: home, office, bedding
Appliances: home appliances, commercial equipment, power tools, lighting
Transport: automotive, rail, aerospace, shipbuilding, recreational vehicles
Health: pharmaceuticals, medical devices, personal care products
Technology: home computers, business computing and servers, industrial control devices, phones, television and audio entertainment
Services are intangible products, as opposed to manufactured goods, which are physically tangible or touchable
Low-benefit services: sectors in which the labor force tends to be hourly employees who receive few if any additional benefits, like paid vacation or health insurance
High-benefit services: sectors in which pay tends to be salaried and includes considerable fringe benefits like health, dental, and vision insurance; vacation; sick days; and retirement reimbursements
Service firms are typically classified by the type of activity performed as part of the service
The United States and Canadian services produce the majority of the countries’ economic value and employment
Roughly 80 percent of these economies’ value is drawn from services, only 19 percent from manufacturing and resources, and a mere 1 percent from agriculture
Deindustrialization: shifting away from manufacturing as the main source of economic production
Downside is that millions of factory workers lost jobs and many old industrial cities suffered from the economic downturn
Manufacturing businesses had to focus on highly priced manufactured goods like vehicles, heavy equipment, and computing devices to keep profits and investment up amid foreign competition and keep the remaining First-World manufacturing labor force paid and employed
Cheaper off-shore locations overseas to build factories
Deindustrialization has to do with the investment value of each sector
Investors in new businesses are looking to maximize their returns on investment, and services are the most valuable investments out there
Moving from natural resources to manufactured products adds a massive amount of value
To better understand services is to think historically about how technology has affected economies:
In agricultural history, the development of the plow is the technical advancement that revolutionized farming and radically increased the amount of land that could be cultivated.
During the industrial era, the product that made all manufacturing possible was steel (railroad locomotives to skyscrapers and automobiles are made possible by steel alloys).
In the service economy era, the computer makes all sectors of the service economy more efficient and capable of handling large numbers of consumers and data.
The microchip–miniature processor circuits, has made desktop computers possible as well as smaller handheld and wireless devices
Used categorize countries in terms of their levels of economic development
Compare development level verbally and to acknowledge the patterns of uneven development in the world economy
First World: industrialized and service-based economies that have free markets, a high level of productivity value per person and a high quality of life
(EX: Norway, Switzerland, Iceland, Israel, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, South Korea, United States, Canada)
Second World: describes the communist countries of which only two communist states remain today: Cuba and North Korea
Centrally planned economies
Still restructuring their economy to free-market systems like the former Soviet Union and Eastern European states
Newly industrialized countries are still controlled by communist parties but that have adapted free-market reforms to their economies
Third World: countries with mainly agricultural and resource-based economies that have low levels of per-person productivity and a low quality of life
Underdeveloped states are found across Latin America, the Caribbean, Africa, and the Asian countries
Some made a distinct economic shift toward industrialization and urbanization
Others remain firmly in a rural, agricultural category
More developed countries (MDCs) and less developed countries (LDCs) are terms used to describe the relative economic differences between states
First- and Second-World countries generally tend to fit in the MDC category, while Third, Fourth, and Fifth Worlds are LDCs
Rule: $10,000 GNP per capita, above it are MDCs, below it, LDCs
Newly industrialized countries (NICs): Third-World states with economies that have made a distinct shift away from agriculture and toward manufacturing as the focus of economic development and production
In a constant process of building infrastructure (roads, ports, power plants, water systems, railways), which facilitate the construction and operation of factories
Have rapid population growth and are usually on the border of stage two and stage three of the demographic transition model
Experience rapid rural-to-urban migration as their economies industrialize and, as a result, urbanize
Funds to develop infrastructure and factories can come from internal sources, from foreign aid, or from foreign direct investment (FDI)
Technology transfer: where technical knowledge, training, and industrial equipment is provided to NIC governments to increase business efficiency and capacity
FDI is money from international private investors or investment firms in other countries who are looking to earn a profit
Development loans sought by NICs to help pay for new large-scale infrastructure projects
To help develop the necessary infrastructure to attract FDI, some NICs seek international development loans from organizations like the World Bank
(EX: electric power systems, dams, water purification and waste treatment centers, pipelines, highways, and national rail systems)
Foreign development aid is money provided by donor state governments in the First World that is not expected to be given back
When women are given an education, they contribute to forming capital, which lifts their communities, and their nations experience economic growth
High-tech markets in software development and computing services began to open up in India due to certain comparative advantages it has over other NICs
The English-language heritage of India’s colonial past with Britain has two distinctly positive effects:
Access to the American technology markets via language
A large number of educated workers who speak the language
Industrial development in China and the newly earned wealth of the Chinese people have combined to create a large demand for energy in industry and transportation
Coal has been the primary source for electrical production and is plentiful
Oil demand is high, as industry and Chinese citizens have more use for trucks and personal cars
Asian Tigers: a term used to describe the industrial economies of Asia that have been aggressive in terms of economic growth rates and their ability to compete for consumers
The building of a large manufacturing capacity in the Old Asian Tigers was the result of Cold War realities in the region
These states were seen as free-market bastions against the spread of Communism
Highly efficient factories and a focus on product quality in both Japan and Korea had created significant market share in the American automobile and electronics markets by the 1980s
Foreign competition along with the oil shocks of the 1970s triggered deindustrialization in the United States, Canada, and Western Europe
(EX: Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Singapore)
Manufacturing development in the New Asian Tigers was mainly funded through FDI that came from firms in New York, London, and Tokyo, as well as from companies in South Korea and Taiwan that constructed and operated the factories in the New Tigers
The New Asian Tigers offered cheap labor and low-cost land and resources, as well as few labor and environmental regulations that had become costly for businesses in the First World.
(EX: China, India, Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia, Vietnam)
Growth in all of Asia came to an abrupt halt in 1997
A banking crash in South Korea rippled through the region and resulted in a credit crisis
Money to develop new factories and infrastructure projects in the New Asian Tigers dried up as a result
Credit crunch: results from banks and investors holding back on industrial loans and investments
The 1997 Asian economic crisis also was the trigger for deindustrialization in the Old Asian Tigers
Large firms, like Japan’s Toyota and the Korean Hyundai conglomerate, had employed extra workers and their adult children under a traditional benefits system of guaranteed family employment
Industrialization rapidly transformed the global economic landscape and the way that people lived
Great Britain
The process of industrialization began in the second half of the 18th century in Great Britain
Two driving forces that undoubtedly contributed to Britain’s shift to an industrialized society: a significant shift in the size and distribution of the population.
The availability of coal and iron ore allowed British industry to rapidly mechanize
These two essential resources were ultimately the key combination behind one of the Industrial Revolution’s most important inventions: the railroad
Saw major shifts in the size and distribution of their populations in surrounding European nations and to the United States by the mid-19th century
Technological advancements in manufacturing enabled concurrent innovations in agriculture, spawning the Second Agricultural Revolution
The use of new mechanical devices in agriculture also reduced the need for farm labor, just as the proliferation of factories in centralized areas called for a much larger workforce in cities
Caused major shifts in family and class structures
Industrialization did not meant an end to child labor—it meant that children were sent to work in factories rather than alongside their parents on the family farm
Workers began to organize into cooperative societies and trade unions, which provided benefits and services to their members and began to advocate for higher wages and better working conditions
The latter part of the 19th century also saw a burgeoning middle class of professionals such as merchants, engineers, factory owners, doctors, and lawyers
Women were increasingly discouraged from joining the workforce and instead were expected to focus on raising children and maintaining a comfortable home
Productivity increased exponentially due to mechanization, helping turn these countries into economic powerhouses
Periods of explosive growth are followed by periods of economic crises
The productivity boom in industrialized
European countries left them hungry for both raw materials and new markets for their finished goods
European nations had been colonizing other parts of the world for centuries, the speed and scope of this “new imperialism” was unprecedented
Were able to easily colonize vast areas of Africa and Asia due to technological advancements
Economic indicators are used to help understand the variable levels of development and measure the degrees of uneven development between states
Gross domestic product (GDP): the dollar value of all goods and services produced in a country in one year
Measures the total volume of a country’s economy and is done without adjusting for international trade; therefore, it measures only the domestic economy: GDP = GOODS + SERVICES
GDP for the most-recent three-month quarter of the year grew by 3.5 percent over the previous three months
Gross national income (GNI): the dollar value of all goods and services produced in a country, plus the dollar value of exports minus imports in the same year
Measures economic value
GNI includes wealth gained when money comes from other countries for exports: GNI = GOODS + SERVICES + (EXPORTS – IMPORTS)
Trade Surplus: (EXPORTS > IMPORTS)
This is a positive number, and adds value to the economy.
Trade Deficit: (EXPORTS < IMPORTS)
This is a negative number, and removes value from the economy.
Per capita: “for every head” in Latin, meaning for each person
Gross national income (GNI) per capita: the estimated income of a person converted to U.S. dollars at currency exchange rates
A modified form of GDP per capita
Level of development comparisons are done by dividing the volume of the economy by the population, like so:
GDP per capita = (GOODS + SERVICES) ÷ POPULATION
GNI per capita = [(GOODS + SERVICES) + (EXPORTS – IMPORTS)] ÷ POPULATION
A relative standard of living measured by the services that such productivity provides for the population
Gross national income purchasing power parity (GNI PPP): an estimate that takes into account differences in prices between countries
Human Development Index (HDI): designed by the United Nations to measure the level of development of states based on a number of social indicators in addition to economic production
An indexed score from 0.00 to 1.00 is calculated for countries by combining GDP per capita, the adult literacy rate, average level of education, and total life expectancy
Intent is to provide a more balanced measure of development and indicate some of the factors that illustrate the negative impact of poverty on economic potential in Third-World countries
Gini coefficient: measures the level of income disparity between the country’s richest and poorest population groups on a scale of 0 to 100
Gender-Related Development Index (GDI): takes the same indicators used to calculate HDI but replaces GDP per capita with income
The sectoral structure can be considered in the evaluation of an economy
Other ways to measure an economy include measuring the size of the black market, income distribution, use of fossil fuels, and even “soft” indicators such as infant mortality rates and literacy rates
Each of the stages represents a type of economic context, and that the economy directly impacts the patterns of birth rates, death rates, and population
Developed in the 1950s by theorist Walt Rostow
Proposed that countries went through five stages of growth between agricultural and service-based economies
Each country had at least some form of comparative advantage that could be utilized in international trade and thus fund the country’s economic development over time
Traditional society:
Economy is focused on primary production such as agriculture and fishing
Country’s limited wealth is spent internally on things that do not promote economic development
Technical knowledge is low
Preconditions for takeoff:
The country’s leadership begins to invest the country’s wealth in infrastructure such as roads, ports, electrification, and school systems that promote economic development and trade relations with other nations
More technical knowledge is learned that stimulates the economy
Takeoff:
Economy begins to shift focus onto a limited number of industrial exports
Participates in traditional agriculture, but the labor force begins to shift to factory work
Technical experience is gained in industrial production and business management
Drive to maturity:
Technical (or technological) advancements diffuse throughout the country
Workers become increasingly skilled and educated, and fewer people are engaged in traditional activities like agriculture
Age of mass consumption:
An industrial trade economy develops in which highly specialized production such as vehicles, energy, and consumer products dominate the economy
Technical knowledge and education levels are high
Agriculture is mechanized (no longer traditional) and employs a small labor force
Negatives:
The colonial legacy and other barriers to development such as government corruption or capital flight are not accounted for in Rostow’s theory
He assumed that all countries could progress smoothly through the stages if their investment focused on trade and technology development
Dependency theory: holds that most LDCs (including all NICs) are highly dependent on foreign-owned factories, foreign direct investment, and technology from MDCs to provide employment opportunities and infrastructure
Third-World countries get stuck in a continuous cycle of dependency on First-World loans to pay for additional economic development needs
Prebisch thesis: detailed the dependency of Third-World economies on First-World loans and investments to pay for the building of new industries and infrastructure
At the heart stands a claim about the dominant role of First World–based transnational corporations (TNCs) and investors in a postcolonial exploitation of the Third World in which MDCs have economically and politically subordinated LDC populations
Some describe this as economic imperialism in a modern reference to the European empires of the colonial era
Creates additional economic risks, as Third- World economies are also subject to the level of demand for LDC-made products and the overall global economic climate
Market stagnation in an LDC product can be catastrophic to its economy and harm the quality of life of its citizens
LDC policies and programs that attempted to increase capital accumulation within Third-World national economies:
Internalization of economic capital: requires companies to deposit profits from factories in LDC banks and reinvest locally, preventing capital flight, which occurs when factory earnings are sent to banks back in the First World where they cannot be used to further local development in the LDC
Import substitution: Instead of buying simple First World–made consumer products like laundry soap, this approach calls for building laundry soap factories and producing it within the LDC. The manufacturing profits can then be sent to LDC banks and reinvested locally.
Nationalization of natural resource-based industries**:** foreign corporate ownership of oil fields and mines robs the national government and local companies of potential earnings
Profit-sharing agreements: In China, Vietnam, and a few local cases elsewhere, foreign companies are given permission to build new factories on land leased to them by the government.
Technology development programs: Some countries have used their limited public funds to invest in high-technology equipment and worker training for locally owned manufacturers.
By attracting international tourists, countries can gain large inputs of cash from foreign countries without having to export manufactured goods
Beach resorts, golf, skiing, wine regions, historical districts, and cultural attractions like festivals and archaeological sites can all create tourist draw
Ecotourism: tourism directed toward exotic, often threatened, natural environments, intended to support conservation efforts and observe wildlife
Regional free-trade agreements between states have become a common way to improve international trade
Supranational free-trade zones like the European Union (EU) and North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) have made regional economies of multiple states much stronger and have opened the doors of development for less-developed neighbors
Mexico has benefited significantly from its free-trade relationship with the United States and Canada. The NAFTA treaty, signed in 1991, went into full effect in 2001 with the full removal of all tariffs (taxes on goods that cross international borders) between the three members.
Communist states like China and Vietnam began to reform the old Soviet-style command economy in which all economic production was managed and planned by the central government
The most significant reform is allowing foreign companies to open factories and retail services in these countries
China established the first special economic zones (SEZs) in 1980, in which foreign firms were allowed to build facilities in coastal port cities
SEZs: a type of export processing zone, defined as port locations where foreign firms are given special tax privileges to incentivize trade
Economic productivity has more than tripled in China and Vietnam since the introduction of the reforms
Immanuel Wallerstein developed a world systems theory that also sought to explain uneven development around the world in the 1970s
Believed the modern nation-state was birthed in Europe as a way of protecting capitalist interests, which were based on the same highly unequal division of labor as feudalism
Core nations are the most developed and economically influential in the world.
Hold significant cultural, military, and especially economic dominance over the rest of the world
Import goods from periphery nations, taking advantage of those countries’ cheap labor, raw materials, and agriculture
Periphery nations are the least developed.
Weak governments, high social inequality, dependent economies
Heavily influenced and exploited by core countries
Semi-periphery nations fall in between the core and periphery in terms of development and influence.
Can play both peripheral and core-like roles
Able to assert some dominance over the periphery, but they can also be influenced and to some extent exploited by the core
From Alfred Weber’s work, whose 1909 Theory of Industrial Location is still influential, the selection of optimal factory locations has much to do with the minimization of land, labor, resource, and transportation costs
Weber states that, in terms of location, manufactured goods can be classified into two categories based on the amount of input in relation to product output:
Weight-losing, or bulk-reducing, manufacturing involves a large amount of input that is reduced to a final product that weighs less or has less volume or bulk than the input
Weight-gaining, or bulk-gaining, manufacturing involves a number of inputs that are combined to make a final product that gains bulk, volume, or weight in the production process
In weight-losing processing in which there is only one major input, such as seafood packaging, lumber mills, and metal ore-processing or smelting, the industrial location is in very close proximity to the resource location.
(EX: The industrial location of steel factories is dependent on four major inputs: iron ore, coal, limestone, and water. Iron ore is most distance elastic, meaning it can be transported over short or long distances to the steel plant, whereas coal, limestone, and water need to be in close proximity.)
Weight-gaining manufacturing generally involves the assembly of several inputs into a finished product
The finished product is more bulky and thus more costly to transport, the factory location should be relatively close to consumers to minimize delivery costs
(EX: An issue for food products like bread is the limited shelf life that also affects industrial location. Bread, milk, and other perishable products tend to be manufactured in many individual plants that serve the local regions. This decentralized network approach keeps fresh products in stores longer by reducing transportation time. Bread production is so decentralized that bakeries are found in all cities and are an example of ubiquitous industries.)
A supply chain exists when parts are assembled into components that are then joined together to create larger finished products
EX: Automobiles are an example of heavy industry that requires a large supply chain network to support the assembly of a final product.
Fordist production (Fordism): relied on a single company owning all aspects of production, from steel manufacture to advertising.
In the Post-Fordist era, car companies changed and became dependent on large networks of regional supply chains.
Just-in-time production: methods in which suppliers send parts to assembly plants on an as-needed basis
The precise location of retail services is spatially dependent on the relationship between variable cost and revenue surfaces based on local geography
Spatial margin of profitability: the area where local demand for a service creates revenue higher than the local costs of doing business
Used to define these areas of maximization
The location of businesses in the service economy era (since the 1990s) has become a new area of research in economic geography
Recent work has focused on the location of high-benefit services
Footloose industry: businesses whose locations are not tied to resources, transportation, or consumer locations
Often corporate executives are interested in a location for a number of particular qualities that compose a “best fit” for their corporate culture
Economist Richard Florida has proposed that there is a creative class of high-benefit service-industry firms and workers
Local economic development programs have become focused on the attraction of “creative” firms and laborers
Refers to the concentration of human activities in a cluster or around a central place
Agglomeration economies: exist where firms with related or similar products locate together in clusters or regions
Together, the firms enjoy the advantages of a shared skilled-labor pool, specialized suppliers, and service providers and can share (or steal) technical knowledge on production or marketing
Deglomeration: occurs when a location is overloaded with similar firms and services
If local resources or the labor pool are fully utilized or over-utilized, some firms may seek alternate locations to expand to or may move all operations completely
As Japanese firms looked into American production sites, they found further reduced-cost advantages as they moved south from Michigan and Ohio.
These northern unionized-labor states had higher payroll and benefit costs which were ingrained into state workforce regulations.
Southern locations were right-to-work states where regulation does not favor unions and did not impact pay benefit costs.
North America:
American Industrial Belt or “Rust Belt” following deindustrialization
Canadian Industrial Heartland or Canada’s “Main Street”
Piedmont Industrial Region
Europe
British Midlands
Ruhr Valley
Northern Italy or the “Third Italy”
Asia
Japan
Korea
Taiwan
China
Economies of scale: achieved when producers expand their operations but incur lower per-unit costs in the process
When a company increases output of a single product, it can save money by purchasing supplies in bulk, managing more workers, financing large sums of credit at lower interest rates, and negotiating discounts for per-mile transportation costs in larger bulk amounts
Economies of scope: in which companies benefit from the increase in the number of different products under a larger brand name
Larger economies of scope are especially useful when one product at the end of its useful life, or product cycle, is replaced by a new model or alternative device
Women work more hours per day (in paid and unpaid labor) than men in every country in the world except in Anglo America and Australia
Women in the paid workforce are also growing in numbers across the world in both developed and developing countries and regions
Their role in society is changing and improving as opportunities for education, childcare, and maternity benefits open up
In 2000, the United Nations developed a mandate called the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), which was designed with the intention of eradicating poverty by the year 2015.