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Title: Intro To Human Geography: People, Places,


1
Intro To Human GeographyPeople, Places,
LandscapesChapter 10Patterns of Development
Change
  • Paul Sutton
  • psutton_at_du.edu
  • Department of Geography
  • University of Denver

2
Outline
  • What is Economic Development?
  • How can one compare countries Economies
  • Measures of Gross National Product (GNP)
  • Geography of Exchange Rates
  • GNP and the environment
  • GNP and the quality of Life
  • Theories of Economic Development
  • Global Patterns of Economic development
  • National Economic Development Policies
  • Transportation Information Infrastructure and
    relationships to Economic development
  • Distribution of Wealth and Economic Development

3
What is Economic Development?
  • Economic Development Improving the economic
    productivity (as measured in money) of a nation.
  • Questions (absolute or per capita?) (How is
    wealth distributed?)

4
Why do governments want economic development?
  • to promote the general welfare, maintain
    domestic stability.
  • Raise standards of living to maintain power and
    authority
  • What effect is globalization having on economic
    development?
  • How do national policies vary with respect to
    promoting economic development?

5
Analyzing and Comparing the Economies of
different nations
  • Are national statistics apples and oranges?
  • The word statistic is derived from the word
    state. Benjamin Disraeli (past prime minister
    of Britain) knew that countries count things
    differently and might even lie in order to
    exaggerate their power or achievement or to
    conceal relative backwardness, thus many national
    statistics are unreliable.
  • .Lies, Damn lies, and Statistics
  • Can we think of examples where countries might
    lie about Birth Rates? Poverty? Nuclear
    Capability?

6
Example of Problems with StatisticsJapan in
1989
  • In 1989 the leading economic newspaper of Japan
    (Nihon Keizai Shumbun) reported the following
  • Japan is the worlds richest country with total
    assests of land, stocks etc. of 43.7 trillion
  • U.S. at that time only worth 36.2 trillion
    (according to the U.S. Fed Reserve Board)
  • Japans per capita wealth more than twice U.S.
  • The city of Tokyo worth more than the whole U.S.
  • - Does this make sense to you?
  • - Strikes me that Economics is a funny
    discipline

7
GNP and GDP definitions and problems
  • GDP (Gross Domestic Product) the total value of
    all goods and services produced within a country
  • GNP (Gross National Product) the total income of
    a countrys residents regardless of where income
    comes from
  • Example I declare the state of Suttonia I
    make wind chimes and drums on my land and make
    100,000 a year doing so. I also invest in a shoe
    factory in Indonesia making Nike shoes with slave
    labor. I receive 60,000 a year from this
    investment. Four people live in Suttonia and
    only I am working. The GDP of Suttonia is
    100,000. The GNP of Suttonia is 160,000. The
    GDP/capita is 25,000 and the GNP/capita is
    40,000 The GNP/GDP is 1.6 as is the
    GNP/Capita/GDP/capita ratio. The income of the
    other four residents of Suttonia is zero. What
    does that say about the distribution of wealth in
    Suttonia? See The GINI coefficient on the next
    slide
  • What do GNP and GDP mean relative to one another?
  • GDP measures economic productivity of a space
  • GNP measures economic productivity of a people in
    a space
  • If GNP greater than GDP the people of that space
    are deriving some of their wealth from people
    outside that space
  • If GNP is less than GDP the people of that space
    are producing wealth for people outside that
    space

8
The GINI coefficient A measure of the
distribution of wealth
9
What countries have what kind of GNP to GDP
ratios?
  • Kuwait (1990) GNP/GDP 1.35
  • United States (1990) GNP/GDP 1.01
  • Canada (1990) GNP/GDP .95
  • Ireland (1990) GNP/GDP .87
  • Brazil (1990) GNP/GDP .86
  • What number GNP or GDP is better for comparing
    peoples standard of living between nations?
    (mention GINI here)
  • What number GNP or GDP is better for comparing
    nations internal economies?

10
Some problems with GNP and GDP measures
  • Both GNP and GDP measure goods and services
    exchanged in markets. Many countries
    (particularly the LDCs have large informal
    economies in which goods and services are not
    traded in markets)
  • How will the informal economy influence
    measures of wealth?
  • Does this exacerbate or mitigate differences
    between MDCs and LDCs?
  • Because these measures undercount rural
    subsistence farming etc. urban areas dominate
    measures of economic productivity
  • Sao Paulo, Brazil (10 of Population, 25 of
    economy)
  • Abidjan, Ivory Coast (15 Population, 70 of
    economy)
  • (Does Abidjan strike you as a likely Primate
    City?)
  • Could you survive for a whole year in the U.S.
    on 250?
  • How could the women of Kenya double Kenyas
    GDP?

11
The Geography of Exchange Rates and Purchasing
Power Parity
  • GDP and GNP measures are often fail because there
    are No Common Measures of Value
  • The value of products and services are measured
    in local currencies that are changeable and can
    be manipulated
  • How much would you have to pay for a 5 lb bag of
    rice in Denver? Beijing? Rural India?
  • Note It would be a fair question on the final
    for you to put the above prices in at least
    ordinal order by using geographic reasoning and
    knowledge

12
An interesting story about the U.S. Dollar
between 1985 and 1990
  • Between 1985 and 1990 the U.S. Government
    intentionally lowered the value of the dollar
    relative to the Yen and Western European
    currencies by 50.
  • This had profound consequences
  • 1) American Goods cheaper to buy outside U.S.
    Thus U.S. Exports up 80
  • 2) Foreigners invested Billions in the U.S. and
    millions more tourists to U.S.
  • (note the Japanese make Hondas in Tennessee
    now ?)
  • 3) In 1989 more tourism money to U.S. than out
    of U.S. (first time ever)
  • 4) Summary results Goods out (Exports up),
    Investment Tourists in
  • 5) Other results Real kicker for globalization
    Americans saw more foreigners on American
    soil, cultures exchanged yadda yadda yadda
  • 6) American investment money stayed at home,
    Exports to the U.S. dropped,
  • Many Foreign economies suffered
  • What do you think happened to the price of a
    Lexus or a Volkswagen during that time?

13
What is Purchasing Power Parity?
  • PPP attempts to measure what goods or services a
    certain amount of money will buy at different
    places
  • Just because the GDP/capita in Japan is 30,000
    does not mean that an average Japanese can buy
    the same amount of stuff that an American
    making 30,000 can.
  • Great Example Some 40 million Indians live in
    households making incomes of over 900,000 rupees
    (This is equivalent to about 30,000 U.S.
    dollars) However, its purchasing power is about
    600,000
  • Is it really appropriate to call India a poor
    country?

14
Gross Domestic Product and the Environment
  • Some Economists and their stupid accounting
    tricks
  • 1) Standard Business Practice
  • Machines and Buildings etc. counted as assets
  • As they deteriorate (are used up) they are
    depreciated
  • and this depreciation is called a loss.
  • 2) Standard National Accounting Practice
  • Call sales of Oil, Timber, Water profits
  • Ignore the loss of natural resources as losses
  • Call housing starts economic growth
  • Ignore loss of housing from flood, fire,
    earthquakes

15
An Oil Spill in Mexico
Good for the Economy? You betcha. Where best
U.S., Mexico, or Ecuador?
16
A wildfire in Laguna Beach
Do you think these people are hoping their homes
will burn down To help boost the local economy?
17
Gross Sustainable Product
  • If natural resources were treated as assets, then
    statistics might (would) demonstrate that
    protecting the environment is good economic
    policy
  • Many people are working on a new statistic Gross
    Sustainable Product (GSP)
  • The GSP would subtract the value of natural
    resources destroyed or depleted from the GNP
  • A Costa Rica study showed that 25 of GDP
    dissappeared due natural resource losses
  • A U.S. Study showed natural resource losses
    balanced by new resources found
  • Incorporating impacts to productivity of
    renewable resources like fisheries, forests,
    agriculture, and water supplies and incorporating
    costs of impacts of loss of ecosystem services
    will further erode measures of GSP
  • Is GSP a useful measure?

18
GNP and Quality of Life
  • How would you think that GDP/capita covaries
    with Energy Consumption, Food Supply, Literacy
    Rates, and Access to safe drinking water?
  • The relationships are not always obvious. Is it
    possible for Mexico to have a lower Death rate
    than the U.S. and a lower life expectancy?
  • Variability of Quality of Life index can vary
    more within a nation than between nations. Do you
    think the GINI coefficient could predict within
    country variation?

19
The United Nations Human Development Index (HDI)
  • 1/3(Purchasing Power Parity) (1/3) Life
    Expectancy (1/3) Adult Literacy
  • A multi-variable Index
  • Uruguay 30, South Korea 33, Saudi Arabia 84
    (lower score better) The HDI endices for these
    countries opposite the GNP/Capita (2,620,
    5,454, 7,070)
  • These kinds of indexes are problematic because of
    debate over the variables to choose and the
    weights to be assigned to them
  • Population Growth and Economic Development (next
    slide)

20
The Relative Sizes of National Economies
This map type is called a Cartogram. What does
that mean?
21
Per Capita Gross National Product
What could I reasonably expect you to remember
from this map?
22
Categories of Per Capita GNP
Where are the People? Where is the money?
23
Human Development Index (1994)
Looks like a map of money to me..
24
Pre-Industrial, Industrial, and Post-Industrial
EconomiesCharacterizing the Nature rather than
the Magnitude of an Economy
  • Recall the primary (mining, farming), secondary
    (manufacturing), and tertiary (service) sectors
    of an economy
  • Sectoral Evolution Pre-Industrial, Industrial,
    and Post-Industrial economies have the largest
    proportion of their population in the primary,
    secondary, and tertiary sectors of their
    economies respectively
  • White man shows up in Africa and observes that to
    become great like me an economy evolves from
    primary to secondary to tertiary. (any comments?)

25
Pre-Industrial Societies
Many Societies today are still Pre-Industrial.
Despite the fact A large proportion of their
population works in the Agricultural Sector many
have difficulty feeding themselves.
How many of you work in Agriculture? Do you know
anyone that does?
26
Industrial Societies
  • As countries industrialize people move from
    agricultural labor to manufacturing. The
    proportion of workers in the primary sector
    diminishes as the proportion in the secondary
    sector increases. At some undefined point the
    economy is considered secondary or Industrial.
    In the U.S., for example, this transition
    occurred during WWI. (manufacturing employment
    exceeded agricultural employment) By 1925
    manufacturing emplyoment represented the largest
    single occupational group in the U.S.
  • Is this progress?
  • Upton Sinclair might Disagree?
  • (do you know who Sinclair is?)
  • What do WTO protesters have to do with this?

27
Post Industrial Societies
  • What happens after Industrialization? Some would
    argue exploitation. The standard line is that
    the workers of an Industrial society increasingly
    become involved in Service industries. Once
    that happens the economy is considered
    Post-Industrial. This happened in the U.S.
    sometime between 1929 and 1945. In 1990 the
    service sector of the economy represented over
    75 of the U.S. labor force. Where do you see
    yourself working in 5 years? Ironically some
    poor nations have large proportions of their
    population in tertiary or service sectors or
    their economies. GUESS WHY?
  • Bob Dylans Song Sundown on the Union
  • What does it say? (Who is Bob Dylan anyway?)
  • What does Separation of Production
    Consumption mean to you?

28
The Post-Industrial Economy
  • You Live in a Post-Industiral Economy.
  • What will you do for a living?
  • Is it sustainable?
  • To what extent are your needs met by the natural
    resources, labor, and capital in places outside
    the United States?
  • The U.S. GNP/GDP ratio is almost 1.0Did the
    1985-1990 devaluation of the Dollar relative to
    Yen and EU ameliorate this situation?
  • Ted Rall Cartoon BONUS PRIZE But Jean Paul
    Sarte said

29
How do the sectors of the Economy contribute to
Gross Product?
  • 1/3 Pop. primary, 1/3 Pop. secondary, 1/3 Pop.
    tertiary
  • DOES NOT MEAN
  • 1/3 GDP primary, 1/3 GDP secondary, 1/3 GDP
    Tertiary
  • Value Added/worker greatest in Secondary
    (Manufacturing) (for now anyway ?)
  • Millers get richer than Farmers Manufacturers
    get richer than Miners. Millers and Manufacturers
    typically get richer than their Sales Reps.
  • This is one reason why some places get richer
    than others.
  • Should the United States be concerned?

30
Rostows Stages of Growth
  • The natural evolution of peoples are to
    evolve from Hunter-Gatherer to Agriculture
    to Industrial to whatever.
  • Is this Social Darwinism?
  • Is it reasonable?

31
Why are some countries Rich and some countries
Poor?
  • Natural Environmental Endowments of Raw Materials
    etc. DO NOT explain National Wealth
  • The Theory of Environmental Determinism has
    problems with this
  • Adding Value to raw material is key to Wealth
  • Downstream Activities are key to wealth
    creation because they are nearer the source of
    money.
  • Processing, Manufacturing, Transporting,
    Advertising, Insuring, Marketing, and Financing
    the flow of goods is more profitable than
    extracting the raw materials they are derived
    from.

32
How did this happen?
  • Making things out of Copper Ore is more
    remunerative than the mining of the Ore itself
  • Grinding Wheat into flour is more remunerative
    than growing the Wheat in the first place
  • Raw Diamonds are valuable but the cutters,
    polishers, and sellers of Diamonds make more
    money than the Diamond miners.

33
Conceptual Value Added
  • The term Value Added has even been extended to
    conceptual value added, as in advertising. If a
    10million advertising campaign convinces people
    to spend 100 million more for Brand X than for
    Brand Y, when those brands are, in fact, nearly
    identical, then 90 Million of value has been
    added to Brand X conceptually. (pay no
    attention to the man behind the curtain) That 90
    million can provide a lot of jobs. The conceptual
    value added to products by the advertising
    industry in New York City today is far higher
    than the value added by manufacturing in many of
    the worlds greatest manufacturing cities. The
    trademark of a good is often more valuable than
    the good itself. Selling brand name cookies can
    be more profitable than the total sum of revenue
    generated by growing the wheat, sugar, eggs, and
    production of the cookies themselves. (the Girl
    Scouts are making a killing ?) The tertiary
    sector of the economy is chasing the secondary
    for value added domination.
  • Note If the world begins to pay attention to
    the man behind the curtain and realizes there is
    no reason to pay a difference when there is no
    difference, what will happen to the U.S. economy?
  • Does anyone out there get the man behind the
    curtain reference?

34
The United Fruit Company
  • Why is it that Oil producers can capture
    downstream activities but food producers cannot?
  • How many alternative sources of oil are there?
    How many alternative sources of food products?
  • The story of the United Fruit Company exemplifies
    the geography of Value Added. In the 19th
    century the company established banana
    plantations in Central America. Several countries
    came to depend economically on the export of
    bananas, and many aspects of their local cultures
    were consequently transformed. Their politics,
    for example, were manipulated internally by
    banana interests and externally by relations with
    the United States their social structures
    reflected peoples positions in the dominant
    export-oriented cash crop economy the peoples
    diet came to depend on imported staples. (ever
    bought clothes from Banana Republic ever
    wondered where the name came from or why?) The
    United Fruit Company owned the banana plantations
    and the ships that transported the bananas, and
    it marketed the bananas. Eventually many Central
    Americans began to resent the foreign control of
    the plantations, and they accused the company of
    Yankee Imperialism. The company responded by
    abruptly surrendering many of its plantations to
    local governments. This might sound like a
    financial sacrifice, but what really happened?
    The company was no longer tied to one supply (its
    own plantations), so it could bargain with
    several potential suppliers (and play one off the
    other). The producers increased production in
    order to raise their incomes, but they increased
    production faster than demand could be raised.
    This only lowered prices. Competition among the
    suppliers reduced the price of bananas still
    further. As a result, the new plantation owners
    got poorer. Transporting bananas and marketing
    them- adding conceptual value through name brand
    advertising- is considerably more profitable
    than growing them, and it supposedly causes far
    fewer headaches for the companys management.
    Eventually the company even changed its name to
    Chiquita Brands International, and it is now
    applying its valuable trademark to marketing
    other fruits from a great variety of sources
    worldwide. By focusing on downstream activities,
    the company transformed itself from a raw
    material supplier into a marketing company. Its
    profits fattened, while the countries that
    supplied the raw materiel got poorer. A similar
    tale could be told about almost any raw material
    or food supplier in the world today and its
    relationship with multinational corporations that
    control every aspect of handling and processing
    goods from the raw material to the final
    consumers. Compare the story of the United Fruit
    Company with the story of OPECs petroleum
    marketing networks. In that case, the suppliers
    of raw materials are themselves seizing control
    of downstream activities.

35
Output of Secondary Sector as Percentage of GDP
36
What is this a map of?
  • Is the a map of A) Pop Urban B) Rice
    Production/Capita C) Pop with AIDS
  • Note Darker Red is Higher number

37
What is this a Map of?
A) Automobiles/Capita B) HDI C) Total
Fertility Rate
38
What is this a Map of?
A) GNP/Capita B) The Crude Death Rate C)
Kangaroos/Capita
39
What is this a Map of?
A) Percent Urban B) Population Density C)
Infant Mortality
40
Government Involvement in the National Economy
  • Communism Govt owns the natural resources and
    the productive Enterprises in the name of the
    workers. Known as top down or command and
    control economy
  • Example countries include Cuba, China
  • Laissez-faire Capitalism Minimal government
    involvement in The business affairs of the
    country Example countries include United
    States, Britain
  • Capitalism with State ownership of some
    industries. Many Latin American countries have
    nationally owned industries (e.g. Pemoco in
    Mexico). Many European nations have nationally
    Owned industries (25 GNP France, 11 in Germany)
    However, Privatization of these industries is
    running rampant particularly in Eastern Europe.
  • State Directed Capitalism Many Asian countries
    do not own the private enterprises however,
    their governments plan and regulate Their
    economies. This kind of situation is often
    referred to as an Industrial Policy
  • Example story South Korea is considered a
    capitalist, free-market economy, yet the
    government proposes national economic plans and
    subsidises some new industries. Industry is
    dominated by combinations of corporations that
    are affiliated by inter-locking dictatorships and
    ownership. Japan and Taiwan are similar. In the
    U.S. such situations/relationships would be
    broken up as illegal trusts.
  • Fascistic top down Industrial Policy while not
    communism has its strengths and many people
  • Feel that the U.S. should adopt some sort of
    Industrial Policy to fight forces outside the
    U.S.

41
Domestic Economic Geography
  • Countries try to organize their population,
    territory, and resources for economic production.
  • Education, Training, National Pride, and
    political stability are key to successful nation
    building
  • Internal Population Mobility Workers are
    expected to move to jobs. Countries try to
    maintain spatially homogenous unemployment.
    Large spatial variability suggests inefficiency.
  • Why do people still live in Buffalo, NY?

42
States with Frontiers
  • Manifest Destiny and other propaganda motivated
    much of the American population west. We occupied
    valuable territory and have benefited greatly
    from westward migration.
  • Brazil has similar concerns. They located their
    planned capital city Brasilia in their
    hinterlands. With economically and ecologically
    disatrous results.
  • The Island of Java is only 7 of Indonesias
    territory yet it houses 60 of its population.
    The government has made efforts to spread its
    population with little success.
  • Russia has similar problems with Siberia
  • Canada and many African nations have similar
    spatial distribution of population problems.

43
National Transportation Infrastructures
  • Transportation and Communication Infrastructures
    enable economic, population and information
    mobility.
  • Problems arise when transporation corridors are
    undeveloped (e.g. Columbian oil fields controlled
    by rebels and drug dealers.)
  • Economic growth in profoundly enabled by
    transportation. India is working on this.
  • Africa is characterized by Tap Routes which
    benefit foreign exploitation more than
    pan-African development

44
National Communications Infrastructure
  • You have lived in the buzz of the information
    economy. You cant eat information, you cant
    drive it, nor will it build your house
    nonetheless, it is clearly a tertiary if not
    fourth economy. Only time will tell how valuable
    information is.
  • In any case, a wealth of diverse sources of
    information supports both economic efficiency and
    development, and political liberty.
  • How Diverse is the information you presently
    receive? Why?
  • The U.S. and Canada have 40 of the worlds
    phones. Africa 1
  • This is changing rapidly (see next slide)
  • Information is a very unusual commodity. We could
    spend a whole quarter on this issue and only
    scratch the surface.
  • Any comments on your impressions of the Info Age
    you live in?

45
New Paths for Economic Development
  • Wireless technology like Cell Phones are changing
    old ideas of economic development
  • Poor nations can develop sophisticated
    communications infrastructures without building
    expensive Land-Line com networks.
  • If China industrializes on the established
    patterns of Western Europe and the U.S. their CO2
    emissions will dwarf historical emisssions.
  • Is there an energy consumption analog to the
    communications revolution/bypass. I hope so.

46
National Spatial Data Infrastructure
  • Some people are arguing that Spatial Data that
    can be used in Geographic Information Systems
    also have institutional and public good value.
  • A good NSDI allows for more efficient use and
    allocation of resources, better urban and
    regional planning etc.
  • There is a huge digital divide in terms of
    hardware, software, data, and human capital

47
National Trade Policy
  • Why do countries vary in the degree to which they
    participate in world trade and circulation?
  • To develop their own economy.
  • To ensure National Security.
  • To protect/maintain cultural identity.
  • Two Distinct approaches to addressing above
    concerns
  • Import-Substitution Export-Led

48
Import Substitution
  • Some countries subsidize infant industries in
    the hope that they will eventually achieve
    economies of scale and be able to compete in the
    global market place. (e.g. Brazil computers,
    BTW it didnt work)
  • The philosophy of Import Substitution is one of
    self-sufficiency and potential independence
  • Countries that chose Import Substitution as
    national economic polices fell behind countries
    that chose Export-Led policies. However, the
    tides are turning and debate is growing as to
    what policy is best.
  • The U.S. protects its textile workers with
    subsidies to the tune of 145,000 per job saved
    per year in the U.S.
  • Cheap labor outside the U.S. raises difficult
    questions

49
Export Led
  • Export Led National economic policies have been
    the darling policy of economists in the recent
    past.
  • Nations that adopted Export Led Policies (the
    Asian Tigers) have enjoyed greater economic
    growth than nations adopting Import
    Substitution Policies.
  • Export Led policies rely on global capital
    markets to facilitate international investment
    and global marketing networks to distribute
    products.

50
Import Substitution vs. Export Led National
Economic Policies
  • In many respects the debate of Export-Led vs.
    Import Substitution led economic growth national
    policy is a debate about globalization vs. Local
    or Regional Diversity.
  • Export-Led economic policy essentially recognizes
    and accepts dominant patterns of power and will
    ultimately result in a world of powerful Chinese,
    Americans, Europeans, Japanese, and eventually
    every ethnicity/nationality However, the
    differences will dissappear and the international
    distribution of wealth will be uniform across the
    globe. The internal distribution of wealth will
    NOT be uniform.
  • Import Substition economic policy is an attempt
    at fighting globalization, maintaining national
    identity, and establishing independence
    culturally, economically and ideologically.

51
Some Comments on GlobalizationWhats Better, a
homogenous globalized world or, a world of
differences economically, socially, and
culturally?
  • Once were homogenized we wont lynch people
    because they are black, hate them because they
    are Jewish, or blockade them because they live in
    Iraq. (Sounds good to mebut)
  • Will Mc-Gumbo from McDonalds really taste as
    good as a down-home gumbo from New Orleans tastes
    today?
  • Will the allure of Mulan or Dark Angel really
    work once the differences she derives her
    identity from are gone?
  • (The media (particularly Disney) play strange
    roles in the forces for globalization Bigger
    Markets eh?)
  • Are we ready to celebrate diversity? Pay for it?

52
What is this a map of?
  • Everything and Nothing. In a globalized
    world.
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