industrialization and economic development lecture notes chapter 11
TRANSCRIPT
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Industrialization and Economic Development
Lecture NotesChapter 11
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• Industrialization – The growth of manufacturing
activity in an economy or a region
– Usually accompanied by a decrease in the number of subsistence farmers in a country or region as they leave the agricultural sector in favor of manufacturing jobs
• Economy– The system of production,
consumption, and distribution in a region
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Major Economic Classifications
• Primary Sector- the part of the economy in which activities revolve around getting raw materials from the Earth– 75% of LDC
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Major Economic Classifications• Secondary Sector- deals with
processing raw materials into finished products with greater value– Factories or Manufacturing
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Major Economic Classifications• Tertiary Sector- services are those
that move, sell and trade the products made in primary and secondary activities– Also involve professional services
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Major Economic Classifications• Quaternary Sector- involves
information creation and transfer– Assemble, distribute, process information– Manage businesses– University researchers/professors, Doctors,
Scientists, Investment analysts.
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Explaining and Predicting Industrial Locations
• Alfred Weber’s Least Cost Theory of Industrial Location– Wanted to predict and explain where factories
would choose to locate and grow– Called Least Cost Theory because it predicted
where industries would locate based on the places that would be lowest cost to them
– Industries used to criteria: • 1. The distance of transportation to the market• 2. The weight of the goods being transported
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Material (per case)
Rail Transport Cost
Road Transport Cost
Hops & Grain $.10/mile $.11/mile
Spring Water $.05/mile $.03/mile
Bottled Beer $.25/mile $.27/mile
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Assumptions in Weber’s Model• The heavier the good and/or the farther the
distance, the more expensive it is to ship• Industries are competitive and aim to
minimize their costs and maximize their profits
• Markets are in fixed locations• Labor exists only in certain places• Assumes a uniform landscape with equal
transportation paths and routs throughout the space (no mountains, lakes, rivers)
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Critics of Weber’s Model
• Weber’s theory does not identify the fact that markets and labor are often mobile and that the labor force varies in age, skill sets, gender, language and other traits
• Some transportation costs, unlike in his model, are not directly proportional to distance
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Concepts related to Least Cost Theory
• Early factories also had to consider their proximity to raw materials
• Spatial-variable costs- costs that change depending on the factories location– Example- Fish (perishable) packing factory
would be built as close to the boats to eliminate the cost of transporting to the factory
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Weight Gaining vs. Weight Losing Industries
• Weight Gaining Processes take raw materials and create a heavier final product– Beverage bottling- take the
liquid and fill into glass, aluminum, tin….
– Factories are usually built near the marketplace because the product is heavy to transport in its final form
– “Market Orientation”
• Weight Losing Processes are those manufacturing processes that take raw materials and convert them into a product that is lighter than the original raw materials.– Paper production- paper mills
are located near forests, trees convert to paper which is lighter and can be shipped long distances
– “Material Orientation”
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Footloose Industries
• Industries which are not restricted in where they can locate because of transportation costs
• Spatially Fixed Costs- industries which maintain the same cost of transportation regardless of location– Often produce lightweight products which
have extreme value– Ex) computer chips
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Agglomeration
• Occurs when industries clump together in the same geographic space
• Factories that are in the same area can share costs associated with resources, such as, electrical lines, roads, pollution controls
• Agglomeration Economies occur when the positive effects of agglomeration result in the lower price for consumers
• Example- High Tech Corridors such as Silicon Valley, California or Austin,Texas
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Deglomeration
• The “unclumping” of factories because of the negative effects and higher costs associated with industrial overcrowding
• Occurs when agglomerations become too congested and cause extensive pollution, traffic congestion, strained resources, strained labor
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Core-Periphery Model• States tat the world’s counties are divided into three groups• 1. the Core consists of industrialized countries with the highest
per capita incomes and standards of living– US, Canada, Australia, Japan, Western European countries
• 2. The Semi-periphery consists of countries that are newly industrialized and have not yet caught up to core countries in the level of development or standards of living– Brazil, India, China
• 3. The Periphery consists of LDCs with the low levels of industrialization, infrastructure, per capital income and standards of living– Most African countries (not South Africa), Parts of Asia, Parts of South
America
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Wallerstein’s World System Analysis
• Looks at the world as a capitalistic system of interlocking states connected through economic and political competition
• Linked to the core-periphery model because it assets that the unequal positions of countries grew out of early exploration and colonization
• Argues that colonization led to economic and political interactions among different regions in the world and the inequalities that resulted from the domination and exploitation be core countries of the semi peripheral and peripheral countries
• Theorized that the global core, semi periphery and periphery grew out of the competitive interactions among different countries
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Rostow Modernization Model
• Tried to explain and predict countries; patterns of economic development
• Model consists of five stages
• MDCs exists in stage 4 and 5
• LDCs exists in stage 1, 2 and 3
• Once a country starts building factories (investing in capital) it will begin to develop
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Critics of Rostow’s Model
• Based on projections on patterns of western European and Anglo-American countries
• Does not consider structural issues that might limit a country’s ability to develop
• Considers each country as independent rather than one piece of interlocking system of countries
• Stage 5 assumes that higher economic productivity leads to high mass consumption of goods and services.
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Approaches to improving Economic Development
• Self Sufficiency Approach– Pushes LDCs to provide for
their own people, independent of foreign aid
– LDCs should spread investments and development equally across all sectors of its economy
– LDCs should limit and heavily tax imports
– Critics argue that the approach stifle competition, which decreases efficiency and innovation
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International Trade (Export-Oriented) Approach
• This approach pushes LDCs to identify what it can offer the world and then direct investments toward building that industry
• A country has a “comparative advantage” when it is better at producing one product than other countries
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Structural Approach
• The movement to improve socioeconomic development in LDCs involves supranational organizations like the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund that regulate international trade and supply money to LDCs
• Structural Adjustments are requirements attached to a loan from a lending agency that force the country receiving the loan to make economic changes in order to use the loan– Increase privatization, sell public industries, become
more market oriented
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Non Governmental Organizations
• Charities and private organizations that provide money, supplies and resources to LDCs
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Globalization
• Term used to describe the increasing sense of interconnectedness and spatial interactions among governments, cultures, and economies
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Multinational Corporation• Businesses with headquarters in one country and
production facilities in one or more other countries• “Transnational Corporations”• Primary agents of globalization• Conglomerate Corporations- that one massive
corporation owns and operates a collection of smaller companies that provide it with specific services– Coca-Cola might own the
bottling company and the food coloring company
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Outsourcing
• Practice of a Multinational Corporation relocating a piece or all of its manufacturing operations to a facility in another country
• Idea is to take advantage of low labor costs, low tax rates, cheaper land prices– Nike headquarters is in the USA but
their shoes are made in factories through Asia
– Even though transportation costs are higher they make more money with the savings of outsourcing
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Asian Tigers• Taiwan, Singapore, South Korea, and Hong Kong• Development of high tech products made in these
countries led to rapid economic growth in late 20th century
• The Pacific Rim Economic Region is Taiwan, Singapore, South Korea, Hong Kong, China and Japan
US Corporations
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Special Economic Zones• Regions that offer special tax breaks,
eased environmental restrictions, and other incentives to attract foreign business.
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Export Processing Zones• Regions that offer tax breaks and
loosened labor restrictions in LDCs to attract export driven production processes– Often referred to as Free Trade Zones
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Maquiladoras Zones• Economic zones on the Mexican-USA
border• Multinational corporation outsource labor
to these maquiladoras, taking advantage of low labor costs
• Due to NAFTA, the goods are shipped to the US tariff free
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Free Trade vs. Fair Trade• Free trade is the concept
allowing Multinational corporations to outsource without any regulation except for the basic forces of market capitalism
• Fair Trade involves oversight of foreign direct investment and outsourcing to ensure that workers throughout the world are guaranteed a living wage for their work– Critics argue that
women are the most exploited for their work and pay
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Globalization and the Environment
• Sustainable Development- the rate of growth and resource consumption that can be maintained from one generation to another
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Ecotourism• Tourist operations that aim to do as little
harm to the environment as possible– Instead of tearing down a forest to build a
theme park, they incorporate the forest into the park
– Instead of tearing down the Sugarmill, they retool it into a shopping and movie area