from industrialization to the new service economy

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From Industrialization to the New Service Economy AP Human Geography - Damon - April 2017 Container Ship Bringing Goods from Asia to U.S. Infosys Headquarters in Bangalore, India

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Page 1: From Industrialization to the New Service Economy

From Industrialization to the New Service Economy

AP Human Geography - Damon - April 2017

Container Ship Bringing Goods from Asia to U.S.

Infosys Headquarters in Bangalore, India

Page 2: From Industrialization to the New Service Economy

What Does This Graph Illustrate?

What changes have taken place in MDCs?

LDCs? When? Why?

Page 3: From Industrialization to the New Service Economy

Industrial RevolutionA. 1700’s - 1800’sB. Began in UK, diffused to Europe, later to U.S.

and rest of worldC. Manual (hand) labor replaced by machines

– New energy source: burn coal steam– New machines produced textiles (fabrics) & iron– Trade expanded - new canals, roads, railroads &

ships helped transportD. Early industrial locations were based on:

access to capital ($), coal fields and ports

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World Coal Deposits

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Location TheoryA. Weber’s Least Cost Theory: industry locates

where costs are lowest1. Transportation

–Bulk losing industry: if raw materials are bulkier than end product, locate close to raw materials–Bulk gaining industry: if end product is bulkier than raw materials, locate close to market (consumers)

2. Labor–Unskilled: found everywhere–Skilled: more difficult to find

3. Agglomeration: cluster together with similar industries to lower common costs

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https://youtu.be/jILgxeNBK_8

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Location Theory: Hotelling

Locational interdependence: Location of Industry A depends on location of Industry B

Goal is profit maximization

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Locations of Industrial Regions Pre-1950

Western and Central Europe

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North America

Manufacturing Belt - now called “Rust Belt”

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Russia

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East Asia

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The 4 Asian Tigers•Focus on exports & industrialization led to rapid economic growth from 1960’s to 1990’s

•Today:

• Hong Kong & Singapore = financial centers

• South Korea & Taiwan = global manufacturing hubs

•All have educated populations & high savings rates

South Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Singapore

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BRICS: Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa

Large, fast-growing economies, significantinfluence on regional affairs

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MINTs: Mexico, Indonesia, Nigeria, Turkey

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Fordist vs. Post-Fordist Style Production

A. Fordist: production of goods at a single location

B. Post-Fordist: production dispersed around the globe

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Page 21: From Industrialization to the New Service Economy

Time-Space CompressionTime and space are

compressed by increasing connectivity (advances in

communication & transportation)

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DeindustrializationIndustries move or close

Deindustrialized region must reinvent itself and work through a period of high unemployment

Ex.: Bethlehem, PA

Closed steel manufacturing

facility to become multi-million dollar

casino!

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From the Rust Belt to the Sunbelt

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Sunbelt Has Gained Jobs Due To Relatively Low Labor Costs and Taxes

Read about the Sunbelt:http://geography.about.com/od/specificplacesofinterest/a/sunbelt.htm

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Why The Sunbelt?“Industries such as aerospace, defense and oil boomed in the Sun Belt as companies took advantage of the low involvement of labor unions in the south .. and enjoyed the proximity to many U.S. military installations … The oil industry helped propel many southern states such as Texas and Louisiana forward … tourism exploded in Florida and southern California … high tech and new economy industries have been major drivers of growth in California and Texas as well as many other parts of the Sun Belt …

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Page 27: From Industrialization to the New Service Economy

2011 FRQ

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Outsourcing and Offshoring

• Outsourcing: moving individual steps of the production process to an outside supplier (subcontracting)

• Offshoring: moving individual steps in the production process out of the home country

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Tholon’s Top Cities for Outsourcing

What regional trends and patterns do you see in this data?

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China’s Locational Advantage: Manufacturing

Special Economic Zones (SEZs):Regions with special government policies promoting

manufacturing for export

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Busiest Ports of Call for Container Ships

What regional trends and patterns do you see in this data?

What does this tell us about development?

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https://youtu.be/Gn7IoT_WSRA

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Manufacturing Beyond China

“… growing labor supply, improved productivity, increasing affluence, more attention to education and training, increasingly integrated free trade area and economic community …”

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“The Race to the Bottom”

A phrase used to describe the idea that companies are always looking for the cheapest labor. The location of cheap labor can change over time.

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India’s Locational Advantage: Services

Populous, motivated, educated, English-speaking, wired to the world …

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High Tech Corridors and Technopoles:Centers of R & D, High Tech

Manufacturing

Example: Silicon Valley, California (San Jose) Many more here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_technology_centers

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2013 FRQ

Learn more about technopoles http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Technopole

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The iPhone EconomyClick this link to learn about the “iPhone Economy”:

http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2012/01/20/business/the-iphone-economy.html

What is the “iPhone economy” and what global and U.S. economic changes does it reflect?