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Published byMarilyn Snow Modified over 8 years ago
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Why Are Location Factors Changing? Chapter 11: Industry Key Issue 4
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New Regions of Industry Site factors are leading to industry in new locations Minimizing labor costs is the biggest goal of many factories today Within MDC’s Movement to peripheral areas In US, movement to South & West Interregional Movement in US South lag behind in industry after Civil War Right-to-Work laws encouraged many industries to locate south Laborers don’t HAVE to join a union Easier to control wages & benefits Textiles Moved from NE to SE Interstate helped move to markets
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New Regions of Industry Movement in Europe Convergence regions – have lower wages Found in East and South Europe Competitive & Employment Regions – Western Europe Losing many industrial jobs Same as in US, but encouraged by Government to help low-wage states (countries)
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New Regions of Industry International Shifts Trends 1970’s: In Europe – ½ of industry, In US – 1/3 of industry, Others – 1/6 Today: In Europe – ¼, US – ¼, Others – ½ Regions: E. Asia – China, Japan, S. Korea Likely to pass US S. Asia – driven by India Huge textile production Business services (Chp. 12) Latin America – closest low wage region to US Maquiladora plants close to US border to lower shipping costs MDC’s are losing massive numbers of textile and steel industry jobs
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New Regions of Industry Outsourcing Transnational companies using low-cost labor in LDC’s New International Division of Labor: use of low-skill, cheap labor in LDC’s and skilled labor in MDC’s Outsourcing vs. vertical integration Vertical integration – company controls everything Ex. auto company makes all the parts for its cars Outsourcing – company hires/pays other companies to make parts for the company Ex. Parts for seats made in other countries, but seats assembled in US
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Traditional Industrial Regions Tradition regions use to location factors: Proximity to SKILLED Labor Industries requiring skilled laborers stay where the skilled laborers are Fordists vs. post-Fordists Fordists – each person does a specific job Post-Fordist (lean production): Teams – workers figure out how to perform what is required Problem solving – consensus to solve problems Leveling – managers are treated same as employees Just-In-Time Delivery Helps to reduce inventory and tying up capital Two disruptions: Labor unrest – stop in production or transportation “Acts of God” – natural disasters or major world events
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