Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byAlexander Joseph Modified over 9 years ago
1
What are we seeing here? 10% What countries are in red? 10% each What country is in teal? 20% What countries are in yellow and blue? 25% each
2
CHRIS FOWLER OCTOBER 1 ST 2010 Economic Geography Geog 207 Lecture 2: The World Economy
3
Chapter 1 World Economy: An Introduction Geographic Perspectives Economic Geography of the World Economy World Development Problems Four Major Questions of the World Economy Political Economies Geographical Information Systems
4
Geographic Perspectives Barney Warf’s Style: anything goes Use what is useful Key Points for this course: Why are activities located where they are? - Requires a knowledge of economics, business practices, human behavior with regard to economic choices - Interaction of space and time Why do these activities create such an uneven (unequal) global landscape? Requires a knowledge of underlying inequalities and differential access to resources of all types
5
Do we need space to understand the global economy? WRONG!
6
Yes
7
How does space effect the economy at small scales? Many, many answers to this question. No two geographers likely to agree. This course takes much of economics as a starting point Homo economicus Supply and demand Opportunity costs Profit seeking But geographers are, in general, much more willing to accept that these “rules” are just poor approximations. Behavioralism Humanism Just the tip of the iceberg….
8
How do we understand the economy at broader scales? Interdependence What happens in one place or time will shape/influence outcomes elsewhere Ex. U.S. housing crisis led to near collapse in several major economies Dynamism Relationships among places are constantly changing, and it is this change that makes space interesting Ex. Low cost transportation is creating port cities in places with no history of economic activity at all Structured The relationships among places need to be understood in terms of historical processes like inequality, colonialism, racism, etc… because they will shape future relationships as well Ex. Australia and Hong Kong have had very different economic trajectories despite their nominally similar colonial past.
9
Some specific areas of investigation Technological change Geopolitics Cultural homogenization/localization Transport & communication cost reductions Fall of centrally planned economies Rise of global capital markets Rise of institutions such as World Bank, IMF, WTO, OPEC, OECD….
10
Four Major Questions of the World Economy What should be produced, at what scale of output, and with what mix of inputs? How should factors be combined? Labor, capital, resource factors, etc. Where should production occur? Who should get output? How should it be divided?
11
Figure 1.1 Cartogram of GNP Areas are (supposedly) proportional to GNP
12
Figure 1.2 GDP per capita Highly variable among countries
13
Figure 1.3 The Global North and the Global South
14
Variations in Economic Structure Gross National Income Source: World Bank (2010) World Development Indicators
15
Accessed at http://www.time.com access date October 1 st 2010http://www.time.com High income Per capita Income: $41,674
16
Middle income Per capita income Egypt: $5,049 Per capita income Poland: $13,573
17
Accessed at http://www.time.com access date October 1 st 2010http://www.time.com Low income Per capita income: $1749
18
Global Shares of Population and Gross National Income (2008)
19
Structure of Production (% of GDP)
20
The Clark-Fisher Model of Structural Change Time Share of Output Agriculture Manufacturing Services Is This Model Inevitable?
21
Distribution of Gross Domestic Product (%) Why so high & why the decline? GDP = Final Sales to Government, Consumers & Investment Global Increase in Trade Note: 2008 Exports includes services
22
Imports/Exports 2006 ($ billions) High Income have much stronger trade in services than Low and Middle Income The U.S. Share of Services Trade is very high
23
Structure of Merchandise Exports (%)
24
Structure of Merchandise Imports (%)
25
Origin and Destination of Merchandise Exports (%)
26
Globalization P.9 “processes that make the world, its economic system, and its society more uniform, more integrated, and more interdependent.” Some dispute uniform Elements: culture, consumption, telecommunications, economy, transnational corporations, investment, labor, services, tourism. Role of IT. Globalization & Local Diversity
27
Globalization and MNC’s
28
Sample U.S. MNC’s Foreign Revenue
29
FDI in the U.S. – similar diagram could be drawn for any country
30
Another view of FDI
31
World Development Problems Environmental constraints The cycle of poverty (Fig 1.9) Low Real Income Unemployment Underemployment Low Output / Productivity Rapid Population Growth Low Level Of Saving Low Level Of Demand Low levels of Investment in Capital deficiency
32
Four Major Questions of the World Economy What should be produced, at what scale of output, and with what mix of inputs? How should factors be combined? Labor, capital, resource factors, etc. Where should production occur? Who should get output? How should it be divided?
33
The Four Questions for the World Economy
34
Economics – Key Topics Allocation of Scarce Resources Markets for Production, Distribution, and Consumption The Division of Labor Solving What, How, What Price, What Quantity, and Where Production Takes Place Types of Economic Systems Neoclassical versus Behavioral and Structural Approaches
35
Political Economies Alternative Systems: capitalism, command, and traditional – with systems of power & class that shape output Capitalist System (Fig 1.11) Command Economies Traditional economies The general demise of command and traditional economies in the face of globalization
36
The Circular Flow in the Capitalist System (set in space and time) (sales) Resource Market (prices) (consumption - resources) Businesses & Government (production) (sales) Product Market (prices) (production - labor) Households (consumption) Goods & Services $ to pay for consumption $ from product market Goods & Services Goods & Services Labor Income from work Savings & Investment: Capital Markets Public Goods: Taxation & Provision
37
Geographical Information Systems Manifold applications displaying attributes -Examples in this figure -Many other layers possible -Display current patterns and changes -Integrated with data from remote sensed sources with human system data bases including geocoded economic information
38
Summary and Plan The chapter plan Learning objectives at beginning of each chapter Study questions at end of each chapter Key terms Suggested readings Web sites
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.