Definitions
Development and Growth
Geographic Regions
History
Random
100

what is economic internationalization

the extent to which nation economies interact with each other through the exchange of goods and services

100

consequences of a more global economy?

- loss of domestic control over nation's own economies

- increased intra-firm trade

- job opportunities vs job losses

100

what are the key industrial location factors?

- access to inputs

- availability of labour

- processing costs

- "pull" of the market

- transfer costs of alternative locations

100

what was canada's link to the world economy pre-19th century and mid 19th century

pre-19th c: export staples to European core countries

mid-19th c: exports flow south of the border


100

Explain the difference between hyperglobalizers, skeptics, and transformationlists

hyperglobalizers: emerge of a new world order, borderless economy

skeptics: economic globalization = overblown, a myth

transformationalists: globalization is ongoing & transformative; national economic space does not equal territory borders

200
define arm's length trade

exchanging goods and services with independent trading across countries

200

name and describe some issues with GDP and some alternatives 

doesn't include informal/unpaid sector, distribution of income, wellbeing?

PPP - exchange rates and purchasing power; adjust GDP as if a country's output is sold in USA

GNI - gross national income

HDI - human development index

GNHI - gross national happiness index

GPI - genuine progress index

200

describe the major manufacturing locations in north america

"rust belt" - northeast, great lakes, Canada

"sun belt" - southern california 

200

what was canada's link the the world economy in WW1 and WW2

WW1: pacific coast lumber industry develops

WW2: consolidation of parts of Ontario and Quebec as key manufacturing districts because of war efforts

200

describe each of the 4 types of economies

traditional: bartering, no gov't involved, tradition & religion

market: exchanges mediated by markets, supply and demand, limited gov't role, max profit and capital accumulation

command: exchanges mediated by gov't according to needs of state & public, focus on industrial goods and services

mixed: market & command, market controls exchanges, gov't involved in industries in areas of need

300

define what the economic problem is, economic agents, and economic institutions

economic problem: production of goods and services to satisfy unlimited wants with scarce resources

economic agents: any individual or group acting to make production and consumption decisions 

economic institutions: norms and rules that govern economic activity

300

key innovations in international trade and commerce

finance and banking, ship building & navigation, naval ordinance, communication

300

what are japan's three key industrial regions and describe them

- kanto plain (primary industrial region
- kansai district (heavy industry)
- toyama distrcut (paper & textiles)

300

explain the treaty of Tordesillas

pope drew a line dividing the world into east and west
Spain: west
Portugal: East
sparked five decades of amazing discovery

300

Is the economy new?

- trade is an "international integrator"

- antiquity: consolidation and formation of empires; trade leads to expansion

- global economy built on foundations of ancient history

400

describe time-space compression and circulation technologies

processes that revolutionize the qualities of space and time such that the ways in which we represent the world are altered

circulation technologies overcome frictions of space and time; transportation & communication

400

what is development

- economic growth and structural change

- growth -> basic needs -> poverty -> reduction -> free doms -> capabilities

- concept is endogenous to development process

400

what are the four asian tigers

singapore, taiwan, hong kong, south korea

400

drivers of the trade boom

- free trade

- industrial revolution

- transport and communication innovation

- gold standard

- International migration

- peace


400

name and describe the paths to economic growth

- primary product exports

- inward looking industrialization

- export oriented industrialization

500

explain absolute advantage and comparative advantage

absolute: a country has an absolute advantage over another in the production of a good if it can produce that good using smaller quantities of resources that can another country

comparative: a country has a comparative advantage in making a good in the production of which it is least inefficient compared with another countru

500

name and describe the theories of economic development

- stages of growth - the concept of economic growth, rises like a plane taking off, take off point being savings gap

- two sector model - think of the world as urban and rural, take rural unproductive workers to urban productive factories; high productive

- dependency theory - core vs periphery, core countries take resources from periphery countries

- endogenous growth theory - countries develop by focusing on factors of production

500

what are the manufacturing districts in china

guangdong district, northeast, east, chang

500

how was trade under the Roman Empire

- Trade under the Roman Empire

- Collapse and rise of new empires

- High Middle Ages:manorialism

- Crusades, roads, and towns

- European trade centers: Venice, Genoa

- The turn to the sea


500

what is geography

who really knows