Chapter Nine Livelihood And Economy: From Blue Collar to Gold Collar – Principles/considerations guide manufacturing locational decisions, how these considerations.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Another name for the jobs we do to get the final product Environmental consequences of declining industries What is an output? Give 3 examples of physical.
Advertisements

Why Do Industries Have Different Distributions?
Location Theories Primary activities – draw from the land and are located where resources are located. Improvements in transportation and communications.
Industry: Part I APHG Copeland.
Chapter 16 LECTURE OUTLINE Geographies of Production and Consumption
Factory location as a cost-minimizing exercise
Manufacturing & Industrial Location Theory – Chapter 10 Material Transformation Urban→suburban Employment source Linkages Key decision Investment in place.
World Geography 3200/02 Factors That Influence the Location of an Industry, Factors That Influence the Location of an Industry,
Economic Principles.  Economics:the study of how human beings allocate scarce resources to produce various commodities and how those commodities are.
CHAPTER 5 SUPPLY.
Locational Factors for Industries
Responsibility Accounting and Transfer Pricing
Chapter 5: Supply Section 1
Chapter 5 SUPPLY!.
Spatial Patterns of Economic Activity: Industrialization and Interplay Between Site and Situation: Part Two It’s a lot but it’s all good…
Supply.  The concept of supply is based on voluntary decisions made by producers.  Supply; the amount of a product that would be offered for sale.
Lesson 3.1 WHAT IS AN ECONOMY?
Economic Development and Industry. MDC vs. LDC How do we measure development? MDC – high urbanization, industrialization, high std of living LDC – agriculture!!!,
Unit 5 Secondary and Tertiary Activities Introduction to Manufacturing Chapter 13 (text)
Economics Chapter 5: Supply Economics Chapter 5: Supply Supply is the amount of a product that would be offered for sale at all possible prices in the.
Demand and Supply Chapter 3
A Firm-Based Freight Demand Modeling Framework: Qi Gong and Jessica Guo, PhD. Transportation and Urban Systems Analysis Lab Civil and Environmental Engineering.
Chapter 4: The Market System Equilibrium prices and quantities are established in individual product and resource market All product markets and resource.
INDUSTRY AND SERVICES Chapter 12. Where Did the Industrial Revolution Begin, and How Did It Diffuse? Industrial Revolution: A series of inventions that.
Human Geography Jerome D. Fellmann Mark Bjelland Arthur Getis Judith Getis.
ENTREPRENEURS IN A MARKET ECONOMY
SUPPLY Chapter 5. What is Supply? Supply is the quantities that would be offered for sale and all possible prices that could prevail in the market.
Chapter 5: Theoretical Considerations Key factors underlying location decisions The Weberian model Relationship between scale, location and technology.
Firms, Trade and Location Chapter 5. Distance in economics  The relevance of transportation costs ( Box 5.1 )  CIF (cost, insurance, freight)  FOB.
Manufacturing Theories and Trend  Definition of manufacturing  The process of converting raw materials, components, or parts into finished goods that.
Chapter 1 marketing is all around us Section 1.1
Industry & Cost Learning Targets:
Industrial Locations Location Theories. Locations of Economic Activities Primary Economic Activities draw from the land and therefore are located where.
The Market Economy. Learning Objectives Define Economics and Economic system Define equilibrium price and equilibrium quantity Explain why the price of.
Locational Factors for Industries
Human Geography Jerome D. Fellmann Arthur Getis Judith Getis Jon C. Malinowski.
Key Question:.  What is the goal of any factory? Profit = Price - Costs Profit = Price - Costs  Assuming:  Labor cost the same / available anywhere.
ChapterSupply 9 9 Key Terms  Supply  law of supply  quantity supplied  supply schedule  variable:
CHAPTER 16 LECTURE OUTLINE GEOGRAPHIES OF PRODUCTION AND CONSUMPTION Human Geography by Malinowski & Kaplan Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Industrial Revolution was:. Industrialization Beginning of Industrial Revolution  When and where did the industrial revolution begin?  In Great Britain.
Industrial Models.  Primary industries have to be located near the source of materials  Secondary industries are becoming less dependent on resource.
Weber’s Least Cost Theory of Industrial Location.
Location, Location, Location. Site vs. Situation Situation factors: involve transporting materials to and from a factory –Minimize cost of transporting.
Chapter 6 Help Wanted: The Changing Geography of Jobs.
Weber’s Least Cost Theory. Locational Tendencies Primary: oriented toward raw material sources Secondary: complicated spatial expression, depending upon.
Chapter 22 Notes Industrial Activity and Geographic Location.
Chapter Five: Supply 12 th Grade Economics Mr. Chancery.
Understanding Supply and Changes in Supply
ENTREPRENEURS IN A MARKET ECONOMY
ENTREPRENEURS IN A MARKET ECONOMY
Why Do Industries Have Different Distributions?
Chapter 9: Competitive Markets
5.3 Factors That Influence the Location of an Industry,
Intro to Industrialization and Economic Development
Economic Geography – Development Strategies
Industry: Part I Rubenstein Chapter 11.
Secondary and Tertiary Activities
ENTREPRENEURS IN A MARKET ECONOMY
Monopolies Everyone Firm’s Goal.
Location theory Attempts to predict where business will or should be located. Based on 3 assumptions: That business owners want to maximize their advantages.
Pricing Concepts Chapter 19 Lamb, Hair, McDaniel
Industry & Manufacturing
Why do industries have different distributions?
Industrial Models.
Chapter 5 Economic Principles. Chapter 5 Economic Principles.
EQUATION 2.1 Demand Function.
Industrial Activity and Geographic Location
economics CHAPTER 4 : THEORY OF PRODUCTION and cost
What Affects Price Lesson 2.8, Group.
Site Factors Situation Factors Involve transporting materials to and
Presentation transcript:

Chapter Nine Livelihood And Economy: From Blue Collar to Gold Collar – Principles/considerations guide manufacturing locational decisions, how these considerations incorporated in theories – Tansnational corporations affect classical locational control – High-tech influences in older world patterns of manufacturing regions – Characteristics of tertiary, quaternary, and quinary service

Components of the Space Economy The set of simplifying assumptions and controls explaining the structure of the space economy include economically rational agents heeding the guidance of the market mechanism in reaching correct economic decisions. Price, supply, and demand establish market equilibrium, an abstraction geographers refine by recognition of spatial variations in demand and in production costs. Behavioral traits may modify but do not erase economically rational decision making. Concepts and Controls - people of economically rational: make decisions based on the cost-effectiveness. Maximizing profit is the driving force for human behavior about products, price and market location. Market Equilibrium (fig 9.2) Primary industries tied to the natural resources

Concepts and Controls Distance decay - the intensity of spatial interaction decreases with increasing separation of places (3.4), Human being are economically rational - to make cost-effective decisions - is intent on maximizing profit. Market mechanism - measured by price, which is a function of supply and demand. “the higher the price of a good, the more of it will be offered in the market” (the supply curve in 9.2a) “the lower the price of a good, the more attractive to customers” (the demand curve in 9.2b) Market equilibrium - where the supply and demand curves meet (decides the price of goods, the total demand, and the quantity bought and sold) Spatial decisions based on the supply, demand, and equilibrium price.

Secondary Activities - decisions in manufacturing Involve transforming raw materials into usable products, giving them form utility. On the demand side - distribution of pop, of purchasing power. On the supply side - costs of raw materials, distance from them and from markets, wages of labor, outlays for fuel, capital availability and rates. Secondary activities are the applications of power and specialized labor to the production of standardized commodities in factory settings.

Principles of Location - their relative weight varies among industries and firms. 1) some of the input cost are spatially fixed, which have no implication for comparative locational advantage. 2) others are spatially variable costs (9.3) 3) the ultimate aim of the economic activity is profit maximization, when the plants are situated at the least total cost location. Considerations of sales and market may be more important than production coast in fixing “best” locations. 4) fixed cost is not as important as the variable cost, the minimization of variable costs is the major spatial decision factor 5) Transportation charges are highly variable costs,, may become the locational determinants 6) agglomeration process - linkages brought industries together for common resources

Raw Materials - the more advanced the industrial economy of a nation, the smaller is the role played by true raw materials in its economic structure Material Orientation - copper smelting and iron ore beneficiation (scalping, sizing. logwashing, screening, cycloning and dewatering),pulp and paper, sawmills, fruit and vegetable in CA, meat packing in midwest. Multiple raw materials - decisions based on minimizing total cost (9.4) Gary and Cleveland Power Supply - early textile mills located near sites with available fuel (initially charcoal, later coking coal), Alumina production relies on electrical power - examples Kitimat plant on west coast of Canada and Lake Baikal in Siberia