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Chapter 7 Lecture
Human Geography: Places and Regions in Global Context
Sixth Edition
Wendy A. MitteagerState University of New York, Oneonta
Geographies of Economic Development
© 2013 Pearson Education, Inc.
Key Concepts
• Economic development• Carrying capacity• Sustainable development• Division of labor• Fair trade• Deindustrialization• Economic globalization• Flexible production systems
Figure: Chapter 7 Opener Migrant workers in China boarding a train home.
© 2013 Pearson Education, Inc.
• Unevenness• Gross domestic product
(GDP)• Gross national income
(GNI)• Purchasing power parity
(PPP)
Patterns of Economic Development
• Three types of changes– Structure of region’s economy– Forms of economic organization– Availability & use of technology
Apply your knowledge: What kind of statistics besides GNI provide an indication of international disparities in economic development?
© 2013 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 7.1 GNI is one of the best single measures of economic development. Use this map to compare the core countries with the peripheral and semiperipheral countries.
Patterns of Economic Development, (cont’d)
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Resources and Development
• Cultivable land
• Carrying capacity
• Industrial resources
Figure 7.3 Deforestation of rainforest in Cameroon.
Figure 7.2 Major sources of energy are unevenly distributed.
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Resources and Development, (cont’d)
Figure 7.4 Some countries are fortunate in having a broad range of cultivable land. Others must rely on exploitation of one major resource for economic development.
© 2013 Pearson Education, Inc.
Apply your knowledge: Provide examples of renewable energy projects in the U.S. How can they change the ecological footprint? How might their growth be impeded?
Figure 7.6 Promoting local economies
Resources and Development, (cont’d)
• Sustainable development• Ecological footprint
• Obstacles – Reliance on fossil fuels– Rate of growth in periphery– Institutional framework
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• Newly industrializing countries (NIC’s)
• Foreign direct investment
• Transnational corporations (TNCs)
Economic Structure
• Primary, secondary, tertiary, and quaternary activities
• Division of labor• Manufacturing value
added (MVA)
Apply your knowledge: Consider a product you own and map out the product’s development through the primary, secondary, and tertiary activities.
© 2013 Pearson Education, Inc.
Primary Economic Activities, 2002
Figure 7.7 The geography of primary economic activities
© 2013 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 7.B The city of Shenzhen
Figure 7.C New affluence Figure 7.D Real estate boom
China’s Economic Development
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Economic Structure, (cont’d)
• Trading blocs• Autarky• Neoliberal polices
Figure 7.8 Manufacturing in South Korea
Figure 7.9 World economic forum in Switzerland, 2011
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Economic Structure, (cont’d)
Figure 7.10 One reflection of dependency: the index of commodity concentration of exports, 2002
© 2013 Pearson Education, Inc.
Economic Structure, (cont’d)
• International debt• Elasticity of demand• Terms of trade
– Ratio of prices
• Import substitution
Apply your knowledge: Determine the current debt of three countries. What main factors have contributed to each countries’ debt?
Figure 7.12 Cocoa production, Ghana
© 2013 Pearson Education, Inc.
Economic Structure, (cont’d)
Figure 7.11 The 2008 debt crisis
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Fair Trade
Figure 7.13 Fair trade coffee in Uganda Figure 7.14 A fair trade shop in Canterbury, England
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Stages of Economic Development
Figure 7.15 A model based on the idea of successive stages of economic development, nowregarded as overly simplistic.
© 2013 Pearson Education, Inc.
Regional Economic Development
• Regional inequalities• Geographical path dependence• Initial advantage• External economies• Localization economies
Apply your knowledge: Identify an example of localized economics functioning in your own community. What industries are clustering together and how can this result in cost savings?
© 2013 Pearson Education, Inc.
Regional Economic Development, (cont’d)
• Webs of functional interdependence• Agglomeration effects• Backward and forward linkages• Ancillary industries• Cumulative causation• Backwash effects
Apply your knowledge: Identify and research three cities that have experienced a backwash effect and the reasonsfor the backwash effect in each locale.
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Regional Economic Development, (cont’d)
• Modification of regional core-periphery patterns
• Spread effects• Import substitution• Agglomeration
diseconomies• Deindustrialization• Creative destruction Figure 7.18 An abandoned Packard automobile
plant in Detroit, Michigan.
© 2013 Pearson Education, Inc.
Regional Economic Development, (cont’d)
• Government intervention• Growth poles
Apply your knowledge: Identify two regions that have experienced deindustrialization. What industries were lost? Did they experience creative destruction? Has government intervention played a role?
Figure 7.19 The London congestion charge was introduced in 2003.
© 2013 Pearson Education, Inc.
Globalization and Economic Development
Figure 7.20 The impact of containerization on world trade
Figure 7.21 24-hour trading between major financial markets
© 2013 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 7.22 Banks in trouble: customers in line in Santa Monica, 2008.
Figure 7.23 U.S. President George W. Bush addresses the nation about the financial crisis on October 10, 2008.
Globalization and Economic Development, (cont’d)
© 2013 Pearson Education, Inc.
Economic Globalization
• Global assembly lines and supply chains
• Conglomerate corporations
• TNCs and globalization• Flexible production
systems– Fordism– Neo-Fordism
Figure 7.26 Nestle is the main food company for Disneyland Paris
© 2013 Pearson Education, Inc.
Economic Globalization
• Just-in-time production• Vertical disintegration• Strategic alliances
• Export-processing zones• Homogenization of
consumption• Experience economy
Figure 7.27 Principal maquiladora centers on the United States–Mexico border
© 2013 Pearson Education, Inc.
Apply your knowledge: Consider the eateries you dine at most often. Are they locally owned or chains owned by large corporations? If they are chains, research what business they replaced in that location.
Wal-Mart’s Economic Landscape
Figure 7.E Wal-Mart locations in the Atlanta metropolitan region
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Geographies of Office Employment
• Decentralization – Back-office functions
• Outsourcing• Clusters of
specialized offices• Offshore financial
centersFigure 7.30 Workers at a call center in India.
© 2013 Pearson Education, Inc.
The Pleasure Periphery
• Tourism• Alternative tourism
Figure 7.32 Ecotourism:birdwatchers in Panama
Apply your knowledge: Choose a popular tourist location and list costs and benefits of tourism for this place and its inhabitants.
© 2013 Pearson Education, Inc.
Future Geographies
• Availability of resources
• Expansion of world economy
• Globalization of industry
• Transportation technologies– High-speed rail
systems– Smart roads– Smart cars
Figure 7.34 Energy-consuming goods: in an Apple Store in Beijing, China
© 2013 Pearson Education, Inc.
End of Chapter 7
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