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Economic Geography Mrs. Brahe Global Studies Objectives At the end of this lesson, you will be able to: Identify the four basic types of economic activity Define the four levels of economic activity Distinguish among renewable, non-renewable, and inexhaustible resources Identify key components of economy support systems Distinguish between GNP and GDP and between developing and developed nations What is an Economy? An economy consists of the production and exchange of goods and services among a group of people Can be local, regional, national or international Economic Systems Definition: the way people produce and exchange goods and services Four types: Traditional – goods and services traded without using money (“barter”) Command – government controlled production (they own the means “planned”) Market – production is determined by demand (“capitalism”) Mixed – combination of command and market provides so that all will benefit Economic Activities People choose how they meet their needs Some people only raise enough food or animals to meet their need to eat and have little left over to sell to others = subsistence agriculture Other areas have market-oriented agriculture that produces crops or animals that farmers sell to markets Market oriented depends on the Law of Supply and Demand: A law which states that when supplies of goods and services become plentiful, prices tend to drop. When supplies become scarcer, prices tend to rise. Economic Activities Industries can be various sizes Small industry - family of craftspersons who produce goods to be sold locally, take place in home = cottage industries Large industry – commercial, meets needs in a large area Levels of Economic Activity Primary: gathering raw material Secondary: adding value to materials by changing form (manufacturing) Tertiary: providing business or professional services (salesperson, teacher, or doctor) Quaternary: information, management and research service by highly-trained people Natural Resources Three types Renewable: can be replaced naturally (ex: trees, seafood) Non-renewable: cannot be replaced once removed from the ground (ex: metals like gold, iron or non-metals like gemstones, limestone or even fossil fuels like petroleum and coal) Inexhaustible energy: unlimited, as a result of solar or planetary processes (ex: sunlight, wind, tides) Are abundant but not distributed equally around the world Location, quality and quantity of a country’s natural resources are important to its economy Economic Support Systems Producing and Distributing goods requires helpful support systems! Infrastructure – basic support systems needed to keep an economy going Includes power, communications, transportation, water, sanitation and education systems More sophisticated infrastructure = more developed country Measuring Economic Development Per capita income: average amount of money earned by each person in a political unit Gross national product (GNP): total value of all goods and services produced by a country over a year or other specific time (by… not necessarily in) Gross domestic product (GDP): total value of all goods and services produced within a country in a given period of time GDP 2005 GDP = Consumption + Government Expenditures + Investment +Exports - Imports Measuring Economic Development Levels of development Developing nation low GDP and limited development on all levels of economic activities Lack an industrial base, struggle to provide people with items to meet basic needs Developed nation High per capital income and varied economy (especially with quaternary activities like computer software development) Western Europe, Japan, Canada, United States… And we are done with Human Geography notes!