Contemporary Patterns of Industrialization & Development - AP Human Geography

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Question

Which of these best explains why the 1970s and 1980s were so challenging for workers in the developed world?

Answer

In the 1970s and 1980s most of the developed world transitioned from a primarily industrial economy to a service-based economy. This had many benefits for the people of the developed world, such as higher wages and safer working conditions, but also brought with it many difficulties. The demand for unspecialized and factory-based labor declined rapidly and dramatically, as those jobs were transitioned overseas. Many workers were too old, or too deprived of any higher education, to transition smoothly into a new working environment, and unemployment and social unrest were rife throughout the developed world as a result.

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Question

The process of deindustrialization in the developed world has led to a transition into __________.

Answer

During the past half-century much of the developed world has experienced a process known as deindustrialization -factories and manufacturing centers have closed down in the United States of America, Western Europe, and Japan and those jobs have been outsourced to the developing world. This has led to the rise of “service-based economies” in the developed world. A “service-based economy” is an economy in which most of the workers are involved in providing services such as research, marketing, telecommunications, innovation, teaching, and so on.

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Question

In which of these regions of the United States have the effects of deindustrialization been felt most extremely?

Answer

During the late nineteenth and first half of the twentieth century the industrial center of the United States was the Midwest. Factories in Michigan, Ohio, Illinois, and Pennsylvania accounted for a disproportionate share of American industrial power. When, in the 1970s, American companies began to move their manufacturing centers abroad, the economy of the Midwest suffered dramatically. Unemployment rose very quickly and people began to migrate away from the region in search of work and a sustainable living situation. This has led the region to be called the “Rust Belt,” based on the rusting heavy machinery lying around throughout the Midwest. Cities like Detroit, Flint, Akron, and Toledo have felt this transition particularly extremely.

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Question

The shift in major urban areas moving from an economy based on industry to one based on a service-sector economy is known as __________.

Answer

Economic restructuring is a phenomenon that has accelerated in the last part of the twentieth century and into the twenty-first century. Economic restructuring is the process in which economies move from a blue-collar industrial base, especially around heavy industry and factories, into more of a white-collar service sector. This process is typical in most major American cities, which has produced a thinner middle class and more menial jobs.

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Question

In which decade did E-commerce first emerge?

Answer

“E-commerce” refers to the use of the internet to sell goods and services that would traditionally have required going to an actual store. It began in the 1990s as the internet exploded into existence all around the developed world. Many prognosticators at the time predicted that E-commerce would completely replace actual stores in a very short space of time, however that has not been the case. Instead we have seen an integration of E-commerce into the existing economy - where some things are bought online and some things are bought in person.

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Question

In the second half of the twentieth century most of the major corporations of the world transitioned their manufacturing centers from __________ to __________.

Answer

In the second half of the twentieth century most of the major corporations of the world transitioned their manufacturing centers from the developed world (countries like the United Kingdom, Germany, and the United States of America) to the developing world (countries like India, Mexico, and Brazil). The primary reason behind this is because it is extremely cost effective for the companies- they have access to much cheaper labor and, often, lower tax rates and other benefits. The consequences of this movement are still being felt and understood, but it has involved the transition of the national economies of much of the world.

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Question

What name is given to a company that is comprised of many smaller firms who all specialize in one aspect of the company's product development or sale?

Answer

A “conglomerate corporation” is a company that is comprised of many smaller firms who all specialize in various aspects of the company’s product development and sale. So a large corporation might have different firms responsible for harvesting raw materials, manufacturing products for sale, transporting products to different markets, advertising and marketing, and so on. In the twenty-first century almost all major corporations are “conglomerate corporations.”

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Question

What name is given to the process of transferring service-based jobs to other countries?

Answer

It has become common in recent years for companies to transfer service-based jobs, particular call centers, to other countries. This is called “outsourcing.” This is generally done because the company knows it can save money by paying the outsourced workers a lower wage to do the same job.

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Question

Which of the following American regions is incorrectly matched with its specialty?

Answer

All of the American regions are correctly matched with their regional economic specialties except Hartford. Hartford is a city in Connecticut and has an extremely high concentration of insurance industries. It is not known for tourism.

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Question

In the 1990s, many economists thought that E-commerce was going to eliminate __________.

Answer

E-commerce was the name given to any sales-related business conducted over the internet. When it first exploded in the 1990s, many economists expected E-commerce to completely eliminate and replace the business generated by actual in-person shops. These in-person shops are referred to as “brick and mortar businesses.” Instead, E-commerce has become an option available to consumers but not a replacement of traditional brick and mortar businesses.

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Question

All of the following are tertiary economic activities except __________.

Answer

Tertiary economic activities are activities in the service sector. Agriculture is a primary economic activity, focusing on use of natural resources.

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Question

In a bulk-reducing industry, the inputs weigh more than the final product. Which of these statements is true about bulk-reducing industries and how they try to offset the costs related to product inputs?

Answer

Since the inputs weigh more than the final products, and transportation is generally more expensive for heavier things, the bulk-reducing industries locate themselves near their inputs in order to pay less for the transportation of heavier items.

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Question

Why is longer-distance transportation cheaper per kilometer?

Answer

The cost of labor for loading and unloading goods from vehicles is considered a fixed cost, and this fixed cost doesn't change regardless of the distance traveled. Therefore, the longer the distance traveled, the cheaper the cost of transportation per kilometer traveled.

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Question

Which of these statements correctly explains the difference between "open shop" and "closed shop?"

Answer

A closed shop place of employment is a place of employment that will only hire members of a labor union. It is "closed" because it is restricted to only union members.

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Question

Which of these scenarios provides the best example of vertical integration?

Answer

Vertical integration happens when one company controls all aspects of its production process.

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Question

Which of the following regions of the world has the most gender equality in its workforce in terms of the number of women participating in the workforce?

Answer

Scandinavian countries top almost all measures of gender equity in the workforce and society. Bolstered by long traditions of welfare state policies and legislative approaches to encouraging equality, Sweden, Norway, Denmark, and Finland feature more women in the workforce than most other similarly industrialized nations.

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Question

Which of the following is NOT a major cause of increased globalization?

Answer

"Globalization" is a broad term that describes the increased interconnectivity between different regions and countries across the globe. While different cultures had always shared ideas and economic products, the nineteenth century saw a rapid rise in globalization that has continued into the twenty first century thanks to improved transportation, communication, mass culture, and foreign investment.

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Question

The Suez Canal was primarily built in order to __________.

Answer

The Suez Canal was built through eastern Egypt in order to connect the Arabian Sea with the Mediterranean. This dramatically reduced the shipping cost and time required for trading between Europe and the Far East (particularly India). Previously ships had had to sail around the whole African continent, a costly and time-consuming endeavor. The Suez Canal came into British control in the 1870s and remained there until the 1950s when it came under the control of independent Egypt following the 1956 Suez Crisis.

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Question

Which of these is a notable example of a maquiladoras?

Answer

“Maquiladoras” are export-processing cities that exist in northern Mexico, close to the border with the United States. They are major centers of industry for a wide variety of American companies who do their manufacturing in the region because it enables them to save a great deal of money. Of these options, only Ciudad Juárez could be considered a “maquiladoras.”

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Question

Maquiladoras are __________.

Answer

“Maquiladoras” are export-processing cities that exist throughout Northern Mexico. In “Maquiladoras” American companies take advantage of the relatively cheap labor available in the region, as well as the proximity to the markets of the United States, to produce goods cheaper than they could in America. Such cities exist in so-called "Free Trade Zones."

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