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Industrial Activity and Industrial Activity and Geographic Location Geographic Location
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Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

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Page 1: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

Industrial Activity and Industrial Activity and Geographic LocationGeographic Location

Page 2: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

Economic Unit Study Guide*Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages)

*Location Theory/Harold Hotelling*Wallenstein’s Theory

*Self sufficiency and the practices of international trade*Compare and contrast the differences that distinguish

the developing from the developed world*Why are there regional economic difference within a country?

*Causes of deindustrialization - tertiary and quatenary economic sectors*Positive and negative effects of industrialization

*Globalization and the effects.

Page 3: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

• “Preindustrial World” – Industries did exist before the Ind. Rev. (e.g.

India – carpenters, textiles, silver,…) – Ind. Rev. began in Midlands of North-Central

England (Black Country – coal fields) & diffused eastward

– Affected production, transportation, and communication (steam-engine, locomotive, telegraph,…)

• The Location Decision – Primary industries – located near raw mat.s – Secondary industries – less dependent on

resource location

Page 4: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

– Economic models assume: • 1) People will try to maximize their advantages over

competitors, • 2) They will want to make as much profit as

possible, • 3) They will take into account variable costs –

energy, transportation, labor,…

– Friction of distance – the increase in time and cost that usually comes w/ increasing distance

– Distance decay – the impact of a function or activity will decline as one moves away from its point of origin

Page 5: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

• Key Concepts of Trans. & Comm.: • Require a specially designed and constructed

[cultural] landscape (roads, TV stations,…) • Cumulative causation – e.g. investment is

risky; usually occurs in developed states • Trans. & Comm. systems can be viewed as a

surface or a network:• 1) Surface: Pool table; move

freely (high potential for collisions); move at limited speeds

• 2) Network: faster movement, but restricted to certain paths (fewer collisions)

• We modify systems b/w both

Page 6: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

• Ullman’s Conceptual Frame: • Forms a basis for understanding the volume

& timing of the flows of goods b/w locations; 3 main concepts:

• 1) Complementarily – refers to the needs of one region matching the products of another (copper from AK to manufacturing cities)

• 2) Intervening opportunity – reduces attractiveness of more distant locations

• 3) Transferability – refers to the ease w/ which products can be moved Kennicott Copper Mine

Page 7: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

– • Harold Hotelling Model (Two dimensional) – Locational interdependence – the location

of industries can’t be understood w/o ref. to the location of other industries of like kind

– Two vendors located on pts. A & C, eventually gravitate toward pt. B (moving from this pt. will only hurt profitability)

– A third vendor complicates this (spatially)

Page 8: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

– • Least Cost Theory (1909) – Alfred Weber’s model – owners of

manufacturing plants seek to minimize three costs: 1) Transportation, 2) labor, and 3) agglomeration (too much can lead to high rents & wages, circulation problems)

– Weight-losing case: final product weighs less than raw mat.s; location = source

Page 9: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

– – Weight-gaining case: final product weighs more (or takes more space) than raw mat.s (e.g. addition of water); location = market

– Some argue Weber’s model doesn’t adequately account for variations in costs over time (e.g. taxation, consumer demand)

– Substitution principle – decreases in certain costs can offset increases in others

Page 10: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

• Christaller’s Central Place Theory – Revisited

• Distance affects the marketing strategies of enterprises

• Businesses identify one location, possess a monopoly

• Hexagons display a nesting pattern; Christaller’s theory is not as accurate today (diminishing specialization)

Page 11: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

– • August Lösch – Profit-maximization: firms will identify a

zone of profitability (not just a point) – Other businesses can come in and change

the configuration of that zone – Agglomeration can give the entire area a

competitive advantage

Page 12: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

• Factors of Industrial Location:

• Raw Materials-e.g. Japan has few, but grew into an ind. giant b/c of skilled labor & low wages

• Labor-e.g. 1994 – wages in Shanghai’s Pudong dist. = 1/40 Japan, 1/30 Taiwan

• Infrastructure-banks, transportation, communication, social services,…Open-air laundry in

Mumbai, India

Page 13: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

Resources and Regions:Resources and Regions:The Global DistributionThe Global Distribution

of Industryof Industry

Page 14: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

• Four Primary Industrial Regions: – Eastern North America (largest) – Western & Central Europe – Russia & Ukraine – Eastern Asia (fastest growing)

• Industrialization Through WWI – Britain - enormous comparative advantage – Industrialization expanded along coal

deposits: N. France – Belgium – N-C Germany – NW Czechoslovakia – S. Poland

– Colonialism supplied Europe w/ raw mat.s – Ind. Rev. diffused (exp.) from core regions

Page 15: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.
Page 16: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

– North America: only serious rival to Eur. – New York – great relative location, major

break-of-bulk (e.g. ship-to-rail) port – N. Am. benefited from nat. resources, trans.

networks, capital, and labor – Most of the rest of the world lagged far behind

(exceptions: Ukraine, Australia,…)

• Mid-Twentieth Century Industrialization – Oil & natural gas played a key role (U.S. is very

dependent on foreign sources today) – U.S. emerged as the world’s preeminent power

(escaped destruction of WWI) – American Manufacturing Belt - NE

Page 17: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

• Late Twentieth Century and Beyond

– “Four Tigers”: South Korea (Seoul), Taiwan (Taipei), Hong Kong, Singapore (industrial powers)

– China – rapidly growing in influence

– Japan is losing its dominance

– Pusan, South Korea

Page 18: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

- N. Hemisphere Ind. Zone: U.S. – Europe – Former USSR – E. Asia

- Secondary Regions – Mexico, Brazil, S. Africa, Egypt, India, Australia,…

Page 19: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

Concepts of DevelopmentConcepts of Development

Page 20: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

• Economic Activities (revisited) – Primary – ext.; Secondary – manufacturing – Tertiary – service (trans., sales, education,…) – Quaternary – exchange or application of info.,

knowledge, or capital (finance, insurance & real estate (FIRE activities), legal services,…)

– Quinary – higher order, specialized knowledge or skill (scientific research, high management)

– Relationship b/w industrialization and urban location changed over time • First industries were rural (e.g. water-powered)

• Mass production factories of early 1900s were urban based (e.g. cheap labor)

• Expansion of tertiary, quaternary, & quinary activities closely associated w/ growth of suburban areas (e.g. malls, edge cities,…)

Page 21: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

• Agglomeration (revisited): – Occurs when certain conditions are met: – 1) When a cluster of activities create enough

demand for support services – 2) Activities needing access to information &

control tend to concentrate (e.g. face-to-face is better, no matter how rapid other forms of comm. are (e-mail, phone,…))

– 3) When cultural institutions (schools, hospitals,…) are attracted to the area

– Deglomeration = too many activities (of the wrong type); traffic, pollution, capital shortages, inc. land prices,…

Page 22: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

• GNP (Gross National Product): – Total value of all goods and services produced

by a country in a single year (includes domestic & international)

– Does NOT: 1) include informal econ.; 2) reflect negative spinoffs (e.g. resource depletion, pollution, prisons,…), 3) illustrate distribution of wealth (UAE = >$15,000 p.c.)

– Alternative measures: 1) Occupational structure, 2) Productivity per worker, 3) Consumption of energy per person, 4) Trans. & comm. facilities per person, 5) Dependency (young & old) ratio, 6) social indicator rates (e.g. literacy, inf. mortality)

Page 23: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.
Page 24: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

• Core-Periphery (revisited) – World System’s Theory

(Immanuel Wallerstein)

– Core-periphery link canexist at many scales: w/in a region (Los Angeles is a core of S. Cal.), w/in a country (Johannesburg is a core of S. Afr), global (Japan is a core of E. Asia)

– North-South Line (W. German Chancellor Brandt) – map of economic development in 1960s (“1st” world (US, Eur, Japan) market economies dominating the “3rd” world, w/ “2nd” world (USSR & China) traveling down a state-planned economic path)

Page 25: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

Haiti - $410

Per Capita GNPs

Pakistan - $470

Japan - $32,350Egypt - $1,290

S. Afr. - $3,310

S. Korea - $8,600

U.S. - $29,240

Page 26: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

• GDP/GNP vs. GNI PPP – GDP/GNP = Gross Domestic/Nat. Product

– GNI PPP = Gross National Income w/ purchasing power parity (allow cross-country comparisons of economic aggregates on the basis of physical levels of output, free of price and exchange rate distortions)

Country (2000) GDP ($ bn) GNI PPP ($ bn)

Nepal 5.5 31.6

India 457 2,375

China 1,080 4,951

Japan 4,842 3,436

U.S. 9,837 9,601

Page 27: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

• Models of Development – Liberal: 1) Assume all countries are capable of

developing economically in the same way, and 2) disparities b/w countries & regions are the result of short-term inefficiencies in local or regional markets

– Structuralist: Economic disparities are the result of historically derived power relations w/in the global economic system; cannot be changed easily (misleading to assume all areas will go through the same process of development)

Page 28: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

• Modernization Model (a “liberal” model) – Walt Rostow – 1960s; 5 stages: – 1) The Traditional Society: high % in agr.

(subsistence), high % of national wealth spent on “non-productive” areas (military, religion)

– 2) Preconditions for Take-Off: Educated elite influence pop. to invest in tech. & infrastructure; inc. in openness & production

– 3) Take-Off: “Industrial Rev”; urbanization, industrialization, but still some trad. areas

– 4) Drive to Maturity: Tech. diffuses, ind. specialization, modernization occurs in core

– 5) Age of Mass Consumption: high incomes, widespread prod., majority in service sector

Page 29: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

Walt Rostow’s Modernization Model

Selected countries up to 1960

Page 30: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

• Dependency Theory (“structuralist”) – Political & economic relationships b/w

countries & regions control & limit the developmental possibilities of less well-off areas (e.g. imperialism caused colonies to be dependent – this helps sustain the prosperity of dominant areas & poverty of other regions)

– Only at later stages of development does the core have a positive impact on the periphery (grants, loans, special economic zones,…)

Page 31: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

• Conditions for Core Development: – Core – regions w/ concentrations of

employment, capital & economic control; develops w/ agglomeration

– Attract new investment through: • Backward linkages – supply firms w/ components &

services • Forward linkages – help firms find uses & markets

for their products • Ancillary industries – firms providing services for

other corporations • Investment into infrastructure & technology

Page 32: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

Images

of

New

York City

Page 33: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

• Conditions in the Periphery (revisited) – High rates of birth, death, infant mortality,

illiteracy, malnutrition, incidence of disease, rural populations, overcrowding in urban areas

– Women’s workloads are often heavier than men’s, landholdings are often fragmented (w/ poor harvesting tech.), soil erosion is commonplace, families often in debt,…

– A country’s core may illustrate “progress”, but often differs greatly w/ most areas

Page 34: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

Images

of

Lagos,

Nigeria

Page 35: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

Deindustrialization and the Rise Deindustrialization and the Rise of the Service Sectorof the Service Sector

Page 36: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

Deindustrialization and the Rise Deindustrialization and the Rise of the Service Sectorof the Service Sector

Page 37: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

• New International Division of Labor – Periphery regions are dependent on core

for manufacturing jobs, likewise …

– Core TNCs are dependent on periphery for cheap labor, fewer environmental regulations, and expanding markets

Page 38: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

• New International Division of Labor – Periphery regions are dependent on core

for manufacturing jobs, likewise …

– Core TNCs are dependent on periphery for cheap labor, fewer environmental regulations, and expanding markets

Page 39: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

• Deindustrialization – Regions with high labor costs & old

technology may experience deind. (core countries, “Rustbelt”) as new tech. can be more cheaply appropriated elsewere

– US Sunbelt drew investment away from NE b/c of lower rates of unionization, higher amenity values (i.e. place), gov’t contracts, …

Page 40: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

• Deindustrialization – Regions with high labor costs & old

technology may experience deind. (core countries, “Rustbelt”) as new tech. can be more cheaply appropriated elsewere

– US Sunbelt drew investment away from NE b/c of lower rates of unionization, higher amenity values (i.e. place), gov’t contracts, …

Page 41: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

– Specialized Economic Zones: area w/in a country in which tax incentives & fewer enviro. regulations attract foreign business/investment

– Manufacturing export zone – periphery; favorable tax, regulatory & trade arrangements

– High technology corridors – core; network of research, development & tech. enterprises

Page 42: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

A maquiladora in Mexico

A technopole – Silicon Valley

Page 43: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

• OECD - Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development

– Forum where gov’ts work together to address economic, social and environmental challenges

– Born after World War II to coordinate the Marshall Plan; today has 30 member countries (which produce > 2/3 world’s goods & services), w/ more than 70 developing and transition economies working w/ them

– Membership is limited only by a country's commitment to 1) a market economy, and 2) a pluralistic democracy

Page 44: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

OECD Member Countries Countries/Economies Engaged in Working

Relationships with the OECD

– OECD: Sometimes accused of neo-neo-colonialism colonialism (entrenchment of the colonial order (trade & investment) under a new (non-pol.) guise); some countries’ have a high % of their GNP being allocated to payment of interest on accumulated foreign debts

Page 45: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

– World Cities: John Friedmann (1980s) – Dominant in terms of their global-political economy; centers of control of the world economy, not the largest in terms of pop. or ind.

–Examples: N.Y.C., London, Tokyo, Sao Paolo,…

Page 46: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

• Tourism: A Service Industry Giant – Some countries have made agriculture their

main priority, others – industry, and others,… – Tourism & travel = 11% of all global jobs, and

11% of global GNP (~$4 trillion/yr.) – Investment by “host” country is huge: i.e.

building hotels diverts money that could be used for housing, education, …

– Many hotels are owned by MNCs, NOT the “host” country, affects local economy little

– A fast-growing industry as people are traveling more, however congestion at tourist sites is a rising problem (i.e. usually need a reservation for a campsite in Yellowstone in the summer)

Page 47: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

• Tourism: A Service Industry Giant – Some countries have made agriculture their

main priority, others – industry, and others,… – Tourism & travel = 11% of all global jobs, and

11% of global GNP (~$4 trillion/yr.) – Investment by “host” country is huge: i.e.

building hotels diverts money that could be used for housing, education, …

– Many hotels are owned by MNCs, NOT the “host” country, affects local economy little

– A fast-growing industry as people are traveling more, however congestion at tourist sites is a rising problem (i.e. usually need a reservation for a campsite in Yellowstone in the summer)

Page 48: Industrial Activity and Geographic Location. Economic Unit Study Guide *Rostow’s modernization model (5 stages) *Location Theory/Harold Hotelling *Wallenstein’s.

• Time-Space Compression: – Refers to the social and psychological effects

of living in a technologically advanced world – Time-space convergence – refers to the greatly

accelerated movement of goods, ideas, and information during the 20th c. made possible by tech. innovations in in transportation & communication

– Transition from Fordist ind. system to a faster, more flexible system that has opened new markets & brought places “closer together”

– World Wide Web - no accurate estimates of its economic impact, but it is growing