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UNIT 6 LESSON 2
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Unit 6 Lesson 2

Feb 23, 2016

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Unit 6 Lesson 2. Learning Objective. Understanding Economic as it applies to the industrial revolution. Remember:. Price Equilibrium Where supply (companies) and demand (consumer) meet. Economic Perspective. Many items were outside of consumer price point - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Unit 6 Lesson 2

UNIT 6 LESSON 2

Page 2: Unit 6 Lesson 2

LEARNING OBJECTIVE

Understanding economics as it applies to the industrial revolution

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INDUSTRIALIZATIONDeveloped 1st in England (already discussed) Continued throughout Europe, Russia, and the U.S.1840’s until early 1900’s

Eventually spread to Japan (China has industrialized areas)

Not all countries are industrialized, but have sections of industrialization (Think Rostow’s Model)

Industrial Revolution was: “a series of improvements in industrial technology that transformed the process of manufacturing goods” (Rubenstein, p. 393).

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INDUSTRIALIZATION CONT. Industrial Revolution actually includes:New social, economic, and political inventions, not just machinery onesChanges were gradual and ideas diffused over multiple decades

Improved processes in most industries, some significant ones: Iron: was always useful, but now ovens could be heated by coal and used more frequently

Coal: Wood was scarce and costly, was able to replace itTransportation: 1st canals then railroads allowed factories to attract large number of workers and then move finished goods

Textiles: Invented machines to untangle cotton prior to spinningChemicals: Dye cloth Food Processing: Canning in glass bottles; helpful for feeding factory

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ECONOMICS SNAPSHOTPrice Equilibrium Where supply (companies) and demand (consumer) meet

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ECONOMIC PERSPECTIVEProduction: “creates an object that is more valuable than the sum of the raw materials going into it This sum is called “value added” Example: $2.00 in wood becomes a $5.00 chair Value is added during production process

Mass production: created more goods in a rapid and efficient mannerMany items were outside of consumer price point Were not willing to pay a high price for cotton Decreasing the cost of cotton production increased the consumer demand (equilibrium price was met)

Producer wanted to increase output Still made profit and wanted to maximize profit

Just ONE example of goods and increase in both production & desire

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SITE AND SITUATION (REMEMBER US?)

Understanding site and situation is VITAL to understanding where industrialization occurs

Situation factors: involve transporting materials to and from a factory. Situation factors are MAN made. A firm seeks a location that minimizes the cost of transporting inputs to the factor and finished goods to the consumer

Site: Result from the unique characteristics of a location (will be there without man, would have been there BEFORE man)Think Natural: iron ore, water, rivers, bays, harbors, trees, wind, currents (HUB has a quiz I made for you to practice)

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RESOURCESIndustrialization occurred in areas with RESOURCES Typically included most or all of the following:Labor (Humans), coal, iron, and water (power or transportation)

Transportation was/is vital as well Initially water transport most importantProgressed to railroad transportation

Industrialization did not always occur in a major city Just somewhere in the country

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CAPITAL AS A RESOURCEMoney/Capital is a resourceYou need money to buildEurope (especially U.K.) hadmoney from its colonies which helped finance the industrialrevolution.

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MONEY MAKES MONEYIndustrialized countries had money before industrializationSold goods to colonies & money came back to themMoney helps to pay for innovation & inventions

During industrialization able to sell MORE goodsMake more money from coloniesFurther spurs more innovation & inventions

Exploited countries don’t have money to industrialize

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OH NO, WE NEED MORE RESOURCESJump ahead 50 years….Industrialized areas can run out of resources OR realize they need resources they don’t haveOil

Get it from colonies or territorial possessions Better transportation is vital to this development

Areas with these resources don’t have the money to develop it themselves

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WALLENSTEIN'S WORLD SYSTEM THEORY

This is a theory and a theorist; which are really important. Wallerstein’s theory is a bit different than others; it’s Macro and argues that countries stay where they are at.Globalization plays a key role.

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WORLD SYSTEM’S THEORY

1) The world economy has one market & a global division of labor

Which means the world focuses on capitalism and the goal is achieving profit. Which may means finding the cheapest location for resources or production.

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WORLD SYSTEM’S THEORY

2) Although the world economy has multiple states, almost everything takes place within the context of the world economy.

Which means colonialism set-up a system with the financial feedback loop previous discussed.

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WORLD SYSTEM’S THEORY

3) The world economy has a three-tier structure

Which means that different countries are part of different processes. Core, semi-periphery, or periphery. Core has higher processes that require higher education.

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TIMELINEColonization 1440’s onwardIndustrialization 1840’s onwardYour entire chapter 12 covers historical information on industrializing areas that you’re responsible for that’s not discussed

Transportation increases (trains, ships, cars) 1880’s onward Where resources gathered increases