Why is industry/manufacturing located where it is? • Begin theory…. Now! The Paris Basin is the Industrial base of France.

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Transcript Why is industry/manufacturing located where it is? • Begin theory…. Now! The Paris Basin is the Industrial base of France.

Why is industry/manufacturing located where
it is?
• Begin theory…. Now!
The Paris Basin is the Industrial base of France. Rouen
(above) is at the head of navigation point on the Seine River.
Location Theory
• Location Theory –
predicting where a business
will or should be located.
• Location of an industry is
dependent on economic,
political, cultural features as
well as whim.
• Location Theory Considers:
– Variable costs-energy,
transportation costs & labor
costs
– Friction of distance-increasing
distance =increased time &
cost
Location Models
Weber’s Model-The Least Cost Theory
Alfred Weber, (1868-1958) a German economists, published Theory
of the Location of Industries in 1909. His theory was the industrial
equivalent of the Von Thunen Model.
Manufacturing plants will locate where costs are the least.
Categories of Costs:
Transportation-the most important cost-usually the best site is where
cost to transport raw material and finished product is the lowest
Labor-high labor costs reduce profit-location where there is a supply
of cheap, non-union labor may offset transportation costs
Agglomeration-when a group of industries cluster for mutual benefitshared services, facilities, etc.-costs can be lower
Deglomeration-when excessive agglomeration offsets advantageeastern crowded cities
Booming Town
Bunny Fur
Bricks
Weber’s Least Cost Theory: Brick Bunny
Bulk Gaining Vs. Bulk Reducing.
Location Models
• Hotelling’s Model-Harold
Hotelling (1895-1973) this
economist modified Weber’s
theory by saying the
location of an industry
cannot be understood with
out reference to other
similar industries-called
Locational
Interdependence
• Losch’s Model-August
Losch said that
manufacturing plants choose
locations where they can
maximize profit. Theory:
Zone of Profitability
How has Industrial
Production
Changed?
How has Industrial
Production Changed?
Fordist – dominant mode of mass production
during the twentieth century, production of
consumer goods at a single site.
Post-Fordist – current mode of production with a
more flexible set of production practices in which
goods are not mass produced. Production is
accelerated and dispersed around the globe by
multinational companies that shift production,
outsourcing it around the world.
Time-Space Compression
• Just-in-time delivery
rather than keeping a large
inventory of components or
products, companies keep just
what they need for short-term
production and new parts are
shipped quickly when needed.
Global division of labor
corporations can draw from
labor around the globe for
different components of
production.
Modern Production
Outsourcing –
moving individual steps in the
production process (of a good
or a service) to a supplier, who
focuses their production and
offers a cost savings.
Offshore –
Outsourced work that is located
outside of the country.
Nike (A Light Industry)-Headquartered in
Beaverton, Oregon, Nike has never produced a shoe
in Oregon. Beginning in the 1960s, Nike contracted
with an Asian firm to produce its shoes.
Skopje, Macedonia-The swoosh is ubiquitous, but where is the shoe
produced? Nike has a global network of international manufacturing and
sales.
Maquiladora in Nuevo Laredo, Mexico repairs telephones for AT&T
New Influences on the
Geography of Manufacturing
• Transportation-intermodal connections where
air, rail, truck, ship and barge connect-eases
flow of goods-e.g. container shipping… Break
of Bulk
• Regional and global trade agreements-WTO,
Benelux, European Union, NAFTA,
MERCOSUR, SAFTA, CARICOM, ANDEAN
AFTA, COMESA, etc. goal to ease flow of
goods by eliminating trade tariffs or quotas
• Energy-coal was replaced by natural gas & oil
after WW II-transported by pipeline or tanker
• Europe-despite North Sea Oil-still must import
• Mexico & Canada oil and natural gas
• U.S. uses 27% if oil & 37% of natural gas produced in the world.
Dependent on imported oil
• OPEC: Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Iraq, Russia large oil reserves
Deindustrialization –
a process by which companies move industrial jobs to
other regions with cheaper labor, leaving the newly
deindustrialized region to switch to a service
economy and work through a period of high
unemployment.
Abandoned street
in Liverpool,
England, where the
population has
decreased by onethird since
deindustrialization
The Rust Belt
vs
The Sun Belt
THE END