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Ch. 9 Development Part 2 Warm Up • Which of the following regions in the United States leads the others in coal production? • A. Appalachian Mountains • B. Gulf Coast • C. Western Pacific • D. Upper Midwest • E. Southwest Texas Top 10 Countries HDI • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H4UdNzC2vMo Core and Periphery in World Economy Periphery Core Core Fig. 9-25: This north polar projection of the world shows that most of the MDCs are in a core area north of 30° N latitude. The LDCs are mostly on the Periphery periphery of this map. Where are Developed Countries? • Per Capita GDP Map GDP Where are Developed Countries? • Land Line Map Telephones Where are Developed Countries? • Cell phone map Cell Phones Where are Developed Countries? • Student/Teacher Map Student:Teacher Ratio Where are Developed Countries? • Health Expenditure Map Amount spent on health Where are Developed Countries? • Physicians Map Doctors per Person Where are Developed Countries? • Caloric Intake Map Calories per Person Where are Developed Countries? • Private Expenditure Map Personal $ spent on Health Where are Developed Countries? Core • More and Less Developed Regions Map Periphery Core Levels of Development • MDCs/Developed • Newly Industrialized Countries • LDCs/Developing Developed vs. Developing • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qb-3Ri5G2j4 Two Viewpoints of Economic Development • Optimistic • Abundance of resources • Humans working together can solve problems of unequal distribution • Pessimistic • Inaccessibility of resources is a serious challenge • Distribution ≠ demand • Investment is not allocated equally around the world Why are some countries less developed? • Development is a matter of productivity • Reasons for a lack of productivity – Lack of physical resources • Raw materials, access to trade routes, climate – Cultural traditions LDC’s are less productive because they lack technology! • Role of women, willingness to accept new technologies, ethnic tensions – Technology – Physical Capital – Infrastructure • Railroads, Airports, Highways, Telephone lines, Internet, schools, electric grid, and so on… – Political Stability – Globalization Warm Up • What would be considered a basic industry for the city of Pittsburgh? • A. automobiles • B. computer processors • C. meat packing • D. iron ore • E. steel production Reminders Tomorrow: • Ch. 9 Rdg Quiz • Ch. 9 Rdg Notes due! Wednesday: • South Asia Map Quiz • South Asia Map due Thursday: • FRQ Friday: • Ch. 9 Test • Review due Development Through Self Sufficiency • • • • • China and India Benefit: Spread development across all sectors Modest growth Isolate businesses in LDCs from MDC competition Limited imports, limited exports, government subsidies Self Sufficiency Example: India • Goal: Spread investment throughout all sectors of economy and regions • Slow and steady pace • For many years India used barriers to isolate their own businesses – – – – • Foreign companies had to get a liscence to import Once they had a liscence, quanitity was limited Heavy taxes on imports Indian businesses discouraged from exporting, Indian currency could not be converted. Problems with Self Sufficiency • • • • Inefficiency Little incentive to improve quality or price or production Large bureaucracy Abuse and corruption common Development Through International Trade • Countries identify unique assets • Concentrate on expansion of local markets into global trade • Singapore/South Korea/Taiwan/Hong Kong-concentrated 4 on manufactured goods especially clothing and dragons…used electronics low labor costs to promote development • Saudi Arabia-Concentrated on oil In recent years India has embraced the international trade model Rostow’s Model of Development • 1950s proposed a 5 stage development model For Rostow, • 1. Traditional Society (primary sector) development begins when • 2. Preconditions for takeoff (elite group establishes an elite group infrastructure and invests in tech) initiates new activities • 3. The takeoff (a select few industries experience rapid growth, such as textiles or food) • 4. The drive to maturity (tech diffusues to other industries, workers gain skills) • 5. The age of mass consumption (economy shifts from industry to consumer goods) Dubai • Explain how Dubai went through Rostow’s Model of Development: • Traditional Society • Preconditions for Takeoff • The Takeoff • The drive to maturity • The age of mass consumption Problems with International Trade • Uneven resource distribution (Zambia and copper) • Market stagnation—markets only have so much room • Increased dependence on MDCs. While building takeoff industries, LDCs have to cut back on $ for food, clothing, etc. for citizens. Then, those items must be purchased from MDCs. World Systems Theory • Immanuel Wallerstein • “core and periphery” • Core=more developed, use periphery’s resources No more colonization…now MDCs get their resources from LDCs through trade Financing Development • • • • • • It takes money to make money Loans from MDCs to buy infrastructure Direct investment from transnational corporations IMF and World Bank Microloans http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UF2zhS3bvVY Debt Map Fair Trade • Products are made and traded according to standards that protect workers and small businesses in LDCs • Craft products/10,000 Villages • Producer Standards – Worker-owned, democratic, no middlemen • Worker Standards – Fair wages, unions, enviro and safety standards Development and Gender • Gender inequality exists in every country of the world, some more than others • Gender Related Development Index (GDI) – Differences in conditions for men and women • Gender Empowerment Measure (GEM) • -How many political/economic opportunities for women GDI Female vs. Male Income Gender Inequality by the Numbers • Highest GDI score: Norway, .96 • US: per capita annual income in 2003 for males was $46,456 and for females $29,017 • Ratio of women:men in high school in MDCs: 99:100, in LDCs 60:100 • Exception is life expectancy, but still major differences in MDCs (6 years) and LDCs (0-1 years) Women • One group that is underrepresented around the world is women • For instance, despite being 51% of the total US population – There have only been 44 female senators (currently 20) – There have only been 300 female representatives – There have only been 4 female supreme court justices out of 112 – And there has never been a female President of the United States Gender Gap in Education Life Expectancy by Gender GEM by the Numbers • Economic power: income and professional jobs availability to women • Political power: managerial jobs and elected offices available to women Political Power of Women Words used to advertise toys for girls Words used to advertise toys to boys http://www.youtube.com/watch?v =eCyw3prIWhc Remember Hans? • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jbkSRLYSojo