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Global Connections:Industry
Objectives
Identify the different types of industry sectors.
Explore the spatial relationships of trade.
Consider location factors for industries: why do industries locate where they do?
Analyze the impact of the global trade network and how it is changing.
Industries – Types of Economic ActivitiesPrimary industries – extraction of raw materials.Secondary industries – manipulation of raw or
altered materials into fuels or finished products.Tertiary industries – provision of services or non-
tangible goods.Quaternary – transportation, communications,
real estate, insurance, finance, management.Quinary – Research, education, and engineering –
creation of new ideas and technologies through expanded knowledge and skills.
Primary IndustriesStaple theory – the resources available to an area
shape its economic system through linkagesLinkages = all the extra activities that arise
alongside the primary industry.
Two perspectives toward the future:Mackintosh – an economy based on a primary industry
allows for further industrial development.Innis – dependence on a primary industry limits economic
growth through dependency on that commodity.
Price sensitivity! Prices don’t rise as quickly as manufactured goods! Lack of diversification!
GREAT map page 299.
Secondary Industries -Industrial Revolution
HowStuffWorks.com
Changes:Transportation – canals, river, road, rail, sea transportProduction – iron, coal, textiles, food production becomes more efficient, creates increased profits and productionEconomy – shift from agriculture to industry & tradeSociety – Women and children begin working outside the home; Middle class grows
*Fundamental changes in technology and systems of production beginning in England.
* Beginning in the late 1700s.
Industrial Centers
What Do You Notice?
What Factors Influence Industry Location? Situation
Proximity to inputs To save on transportation
costs bulk-reducing industries locate closer to inputs than to markets.
Proximity to marketsWhen it is more expensive
to transport the final product than the raw materials the industry locates closer to the markets. This is a bulk-gaining industry.
Transportation Mode of transport
impacts shipping costs.
Distance impacts cost and attractiveness of different methods.
Agglomeration!
Political policies (right to work laws)
What Factors Influence Industry Location?Site Factors:
Labor Costs / AvailabilityLand availability / CostsEnergy availability and costsEnvironmental regulationsAmenities / tax advantages
Systems of Production - Fordism
System of industrial production for mass production based on scientific management.
Deskilled laborReinforced social
hierarchyGrowth of MNCs
Requires reliable inputs – materials and labor
Need mass consumers!BORING.
Vertical Integration – control of multiple production stages directly or indirectly
Producer-driven commodity chains
Systems of Production – Flexible ProductionIncreased
manufacturing costs in the 70s and better technologies == Fordism Crisis
Consumer-driven commodity chains
More worker power / collaboration / critical thinking
Just – in –time deliverySmaller inventory can
be kept.
Outsourcing – subcontracting work that was once done in-house.
Offshoring -- transfer of internal or outsourced activity to an international location.
Globalization and Industry
Edward Burtynsky
Two Principle features of the Global Economy:
Two main components:1. Global assembly line – refers to a network of labor and production processes that produce a finished product for the global market.
2. Consolidation of companies into transnational corporations.
Where Are Your Clothes From?World Map
The Times They Are A-Changin’…
Is Wal-Mart Good For America?
Why does Wal-Mart get goods from China?What are the positive and negative
outcomes of the global economy, based on what we see in this brief film?
How much would an all-American iPhone cost?
Attraction of New Industrial Regions
Within the US shifting to the South and WestPartly because of the Right-to-Work laws in Southern
states that limit union powerInternationally
In Europe shifting to Eastern Europe, Spain, Portugal, Italy, and Greece under EU policy
Still see industry moving from MDCs to LDCs – East Asia, South Asia, and Latin America
Why?
New International Division of LaborTransnational corporations move some
segments of their production to low-cost areas.
Highly skilled positions remain in the more developed countries.
US role as a manufacturer is declining – more people in and profit from research, services, and advertising.
Review – Things to Focus on For ExamHow does geography help us understand industry?What was the Industrial Revolution? What factors influence industry location?
Site: Examples? Situation factors: Examples? Bulk-reducing and bulk-
gaining industries-what are they and examples? Globalization and industry—what are the principal
features? The main components? What is a global assembly line?
What is the New International Division of Labor? Where is manufacturing moving in the US and internationally? Why?
Wal-Mart video: Why does Wal-Mart get products from China? What are the positive and negative outcomes?