AP Human Geography – Flashcards
Unlock all answers in this set
Unlock answersquestion
Economy
answer
A system of production, distribution, and consumption
question
Primary Sector
answer
-Extraction or harvest of natural resources
-Countries where the primary sector drives the economy are considered "subsistence" or "pre-industrial
-Mining, agriculture, fishing, forestry
question
Secondary Sector
answer
-Process, transform, fabricate or assemble raw materials
-Reassemble, refinish, or package manufactured goods
-Manufacturing, processing (food processing, steel making, textile manufacturing, power production, construction
question
Tertiary Sector
answer
-Involve the sale and exchange of goods and services to individuals and businesses
-Activities link producers to consumers
-Includes wholesale and retail sales, commercial services (accounting, advertising, marketing) and personal services such as entertainment
question
Quaternary Sector
answer
-The growth in technology and business leads to specialization of services
-Handling and processing of information and capital
-Includes medicine, law, education, investment and finance, research and development, computer technology
question
Quinary Sector
answer
-Activities involve facilitating complex decision making and the advancement of human capacities
-Includes business executives, government officials, research scientists, financial and legal consultants
question
Commodity Chains
answer
These things trace the networks of labor and production of a given item from the extraction of raw materials to the consumption of the product.
-Raw materials
-Processing or manufacturing
-Distributing
-Selling
-Consuming
question
Vertical integration
answer
One company controls all the businesses along a commodity chain, thus minimizing costs
-Andrew Carnegie pioneered this, bringing coal and iron mines, steel mills, railroads into his US Steel empire
question
Horizontal integration
answer
Absorption into a single firm of several firms involved in the same level of production and sharing resources at that level
question
Economic rationality
answer
People make rational, self-interested economic decisions in determining:
-Location of economic activities
-How much and what to produce
-How much and what to purchase
question
Law of Supply and Demand
answer
Market equilibrium occurs at the intersection of supply and demand and determines the price of land, goods, services, and wages.
question
Economy of Sale
answer
Achieved through reductions in cost per unit due to increased production, realized through operational efficiencies.
question
Fordism
answer
Mass production, assembly-line techniques, organizational management, higher wages, etc. (i.e., modern-day corporate business)
question
Neo-Fordism
answer
Addition of "flexible" production, distribution, and marketing systems. Use of computers, just-in-time production/ vertical disintegration.
question
Adam Smith
answer
The "invisible hand" of competition, efficiency of the market place, laissez-faire economics
question
Free Market Systems
answer
Capitalism, laissez-faire, free enterprise
question
Planned Economies
answer
Mercantilism, socialism
question
Absolute Advantage
answer
Smith's idea that a given country can produce some good cheaper than another country.
question
Comparative Advantage
answer
Countries benefit from specializing in production of certain goods and trading for other goods, regardless of whether they enjoy an absolute advantage in the goods they produce.
question
Economic Rent Theory
answer
There are three types of land: no rent land, marginal land and optimal land.
This is the value of the difference in productivity between any given piece of land and the poorest piece of land producing the same goods (e.g. bushels of wheat) under the same conditions (of labor, capital, technology, etc.). Labor and capital improvements increase the value and rent of land.
question
Alfred Weber's Theory of Least-Cost Industrial Location
answer
Industrialists determine locations of "least cost" for their plants by weighing the costs of transportation, labor, agglomeration and deglomeration.
question
Weight Gaining
answer
Industries make a product that is heavier than the inputs. They locate near markets. Example: concrete
question
Weight Losing
answer
Industries use a large volume of raw materials , but the finished product is relatively light. Thus processing occurs near the source of raw materials to minimize transportation costs. Example: diamonds
question
Labor distortion
answer
Sources of cheap labor may make up for the cost of long distance transport. Example: garment industry
question
Maquiladoras
answer
Factories on the south side of the US-Mexico border (outsourcing). Produce cheap goods for American consumers and provide employment for 600,000 Mexican workers (mostly women).
question
Break-in-bulk Point
answer
commonly, a transfer point on a transport route where the type of carrier changes and where large-volume shipments are reduced in size.
question
Agglomeration
answer
Producers often cluster, frequently in major cities, because proximity can lead to savings.
question
External economies
answer
Proximity to other industries allows access to existing labor pools, markets, etc. Thus a company gains advantages beyond its own organization and production methods.
question
Localization economies
answer
When companies within a specific industry cluster, they create a demand for specialized suppliers and services, skilled labor, technology spillovers
question
Economic Base
answer
Industries that supply markets outside of the region are critical as a foundation - workers in the "base" industry need services, creating a multiplier effect.
question
Regional Multiplier
answer
The number of jobs created by the arrival of a new job in the "basic" sector.
question
Deglomeration
answer
Excessive agglomeration can lead to high rents, wages, and transportation costs that negate cost-savings of agglomeration. Example: Detroit
question
Transnational Companies
answer
Companies that participate not only in international trade but also in production, manufacturing, and/or sales operations in several countries
question
Flexible Production
answer
Modern technology and communication (Neo-Fordism) has allowed TNCs to mass produce goods while quickly responding to shifts in demand
question
GDP
answer
Estimate of total market value of all goods and services produced within a country in a given year.
question
GNI
answer
The total income of a country, including worldwide production.
question
The Human Development Index (HDI)
answer
Economic: GDP per capita
Social: adult literacy, education levels, gender development index
Demographic: life expectancy at birth
question
Rostow (Modernization) Model
answer
According to the Rostow Modernization model, each stage is a function of productivity, economic exchange, technological improvements, and income. Economic growth occurs when advancing from one stage to another.
1. Traditional Society
2. Transitional Society
3. Take-off
4. The Drive to maturity
5. High Mass Consumption
question
Immanuel Wallerstein's World-Systems Theory
answer
The world system began with the rise of western Europe to world supremacy in the years from 1450 to 1670. Its capitalist economy emerged through:
Commercial agriculture
Colonial empires
International trade
These mechanisms redistribute resources from the periphery (and semi-periphery) to the core.
Thus, development requires underdevelopment elsewhere.
question
Cost Minimizing
answer
The _____ location for any economic activity depends on what it is producing. Different economic activities have different cost structures.
question
Transaction costs
answer
Additional costs of purchasing or selling a good or service beyond its actual price and transportation costs. Includes identifying buyers and sellers, finding and attracting skilled workers and investors, working our technological specifications and delivery schedules with parts suppliers and customers, learning new technologies and acquiring info and finally, dealing with delays.
question
Externalities
answer
Effects that are external to any one firm but internal to the cluster as a whole
question
Localization Economies
answer
This type of agglomeration can occur in an area as small as a few city blocks or as large as a metropolitan area. Eg. Lace in Brussels, Beglium; finance in NYC; fashion in Milan
question
Technological Spillovers
answer
Technological, scientific and business information that passes among people and companies. "Being in the loop"
question
Urbanization economies
answer
Cost-saving externalities derive from an in6crease in the size of the place and accrue to most firms in most industries
question
Producer services
answer
Engineering firms, advertising agencies, printing shops, accounting firms, corporate law firms, temporary employment agencies, freelance editors...etc
question
Spatial division of labor
answer
When different stages of production can be spatially separated, with each located to minimize its own particular cost structure ie. Apple
question
Nonbasic Industries
answer
Produce mainly for the local market, supplying the needs of the region's inhabitants and businesses
question
Footloose industries
answer
Industries that can shift easily based on cost of labor
question
Regional multiplier
answer
Money brought in from outside to employ workers in the basic industries and each job created in the base sector creates more jobs in the nonbasic sector
question
Modernization
answer
-1940s-1960s
-Progressive stages of economic growth, economic structural change, trickle-down economics
-Investment, substituion of capital for labor, technology transfer, large-scale industrialization projects
question
Dependency
answer
-1970s
-Human welfare, core-periphery model, circular and cumulative causation, neocolonialism, bottom-up economics
-Small-scale and rural enterprises, import substitution, nationalization
question
Neoliberal Counterrevolution
answer
-1980s
-Free market economics, transition economies
-Privatization, foreign direct investment, reduced role of the state, free trade, currency devaluation
question
Sustainable Development
answer
-1990s
-Global environmental change, environmental economics, women and development, children and development
-Partnership with developed countries, foreign direct investment, market mechanisms for environmental regulation, resource conservation, renewable resources, loads to women and very poor, women's and children's rights, appropriate technology
question
Polarization Effects
answer
Reinforce growth in the core at the expense of the periphery
question
Circular and Cumulative Causation
answer
Forces set into motion a squence of other fores that create a self-sustaining snowball effect. Capital. Labor. Innovation and Services.
question
Stage One
answer
The preindustrial structure of independent local centers with small market areas and little interaction.
question
Stage Two
answer
Early industrialization brings concentration of investment, wealth and power into a single, strong core. The periphery provides raw materials and labor to the core and the core provides manufactured goods to the periphery. The net result is a draining of wealth from the periphery to the core.
question
Stage Three
answer
As industry develps, the core remains the dominant center, but regional subcenters begin to emerge. The core and regional subcenters exchange manufactured goods and services while continuing to receive raw materials and labor from the periphery.
question
Stage Four
answer
Ultimately a mature and functionally interconnected space economy emerges in which the periphery has been absorbed into nearby metropolitan economies.
question
Neocolonialism
answer
Initial dependence on colonial mother countries set into motion a type of economic development that continues to render them economically dependent