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Title: Government


1
Chapter 6
Government EconomicSystems
2
I. Economic Geography
  • Economic Activities

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Economic Activities
Primary Secondary Tertiary Quaternary
Natural Resource Connection
Location
Developing Developed
Examples
Use NR to produce or manufacture something new
No direct use provide services to people biz
No direct use process distribute info
Direct use
Close to NR or market, source of labor for
finished product
Anywhere -close to skilled labor, good comm.
transp.
At site of NR being used
Near market or customers
Subsistence Commercial
Cottage Industry Commercial Ind.
Small sector Largest sector
Smaller sector Larger sector
Fireman/police sales Car dealer bakery doctor Spa/
salon
research engineering education Govt Info
processing
Farming Mining Fishing Timber
Wheat - flour Gold-jewelry Fish oils Timber
lumber
5
Primary Economic Activities
Subsistence Farm
Commercial Farm
6
Secondary Economic Activities
Industry!
Commercial Industry
Cottage Industry
7
The US Economy
8
Best Location for a factory?Where all of the
following are present
  • Low labor costs
  • Skilled workers
  • Low energy costs
  • Access to easy transportation

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Tertiary Economic Activities
We live to SERVE
11
Quaternary Economic Activities
Information Processing
12
Morocco
13
B. Types of Economic Systems
  • 3 basic economic questions
  • What to make?
  • How much to make?
  • Who to make it for?

14
Traditional Economy (subsistence economy)
  • a. all goods svc produced consumed by the
    family/for family
  • b. Very little surplus or exchange of goods
  • c. Found in poor countries, mostly in rural
    areas

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Market Economy
  1. People freely choose what to buy sell
    according to the laws of supply demand
  2. Individuals or companies make decisions about
    production distribution competition
  3. Capitalism biz, industries, resources are
    privately owned
  4. In US, govt provides some svc imposes some govt
    regulations
  5. Pure capitalism govt plays NO part in economy

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3. Command Economy
  • Central Govt makes decisions about
    production/distribution - decides what to make,
    where to make it, how much to make, what price
    to charge, what to pay workers
  • Production doesnt necessarily reflect consumer
    demand
  • c. Communist economy govt owns, operates all
    major farms, factories, utilities, stores

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D. Mixed Economy
  1. Combo of command market economies
  2. Socialism state owns/operates some basic
    industries while allowing pvt enterprise in other
    parts of economy
  3. Belief that wealth should be distributed more
    equally all entitled to certain goods/svcs
  4. welfare states characterized by HIGH TAXES to
    pay for the many social svcs like housing, health
    care, child care, pensions

21
Mixed Economy (Socialism)
Government
Private Enterprise
Laws of Supply Demand
Determine price production
Determine price production
Operates some businesses
Owns some businesses
22
C. Level of Development (Standard of Living?)
  • 1. Measures of Development - determines
    economic progress and quality of life
  • a. GNP
  • b. GDP
  • c. industrialization
  • 2. Standard of Living
  • a. Measured by many factors
  • - personal income
  • - levels of education
  • - food consumption
  • - literacy rate
  • - quality of health care
  • - technology level
  • - life expectancy

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  • 3. Developed vs. Developing

Statistics Developed Developing
Infant Mortality Rate
Literacy Rate
Life Expectancy
GDP/GNP/GNIPPP
Urban
RNI
Dependency lt15
Transportation/Communication Network
Energy Production Energy Consumption


LOW
HIGH
HIGH
LOW
HIGH
LOW
HIGH
LOW
HIGH
LOW
LOW
HIGH
LOW
HIGH
LOW
HIGH
HIGH
LOW
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  • Middle Income Countries those btwn the
    worlds riches/poorest
  • a. Have features of both
  • - cities may be modern, rural areas poor
  • - urbanization increasing
  • b. Examples Mexico, Brazil, Argentina, South
    Africa

Rural Mexico
Mexico City
25
Developed or Developing?
26
Developed or Developing?
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3. How to improve Development?
  1. Wealthy nations can invest in developing
    nations (capital resources)
  2. Exchange goods svcs, ideas, info

29
D. Global Trade Patterns
  • Diff. countries have diff types quantities of
    resources
  • Options for obtaining needed resources
  • a. War?
  • b. Trade Network sell abundant items,
    buy items in short supply
  • - imports goods that are brought into
    a country
  • - exports goods that are sent out of a
    country

30
  • Trade Balance
  • a. Trade Deficit occurs when a country imports
    more than it exports
  • - domestic biz lose profits, fail
  • - unemployment rises
  • - national debt increases
  • Can reduce imports by imposing tariffs (tax
    on imports) or by imposing quotas
  • - but whats the problem with these?
  • b. Favorable balance of trade occurs when a
    country exports more than it imports or 50/50

31
Trade Balance favorable or not?
  • 1. Which country imported the most goods in 1998?
  • 2. Which country exported the fewest goods in
    1998?
  • 3. Roughly how much did Portugal import and how
    much did it export in 1998?
  • 4. Which country shows the greatest difference
    between the amount it imported and the amount it
    exported?

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  • Trade Routes determined by geography,
    transportation technology and intl relations
  • a. 1500s ocean travel avoided
    geographical obstacles unfriendly nations
  • b. Today advances in communications
    computers allow for electronic trading

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II. Political Geography
  • What is a country?
  • Types of Govt
  • Conflict Cooperation

37
A. What is a country? 4 characteristics
territory, population, sovereignty, govt
  • Clearly defined territory
  • a. Includes land, water, natural resources
    (NR)
  • b. NR more important than size
  • c. Unequal distribution of NR has led to
    conflict
  • d. Natural division can serve as boundaries
  • e. Boundaries can shrink/expand due to war or
  • negotiation
  • f. Geog. Factors influence nations pwr to
    control territory (ex. Great Britain easy
    access to travel trade

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  • There are 3 primary types of boundaries
    geometric, natural and cultural.
  • Geometric boundaries follow lines of latitude,
    longitude, or certain compass direction between
    points. In the US, they were established to
    divide territories before settlers entered areas.
  • Natural boundaries are usually curvy b/c they
    follow the crests of mts or the center of rivers.
  • Cultural boundaries are borders based on cultural
    traits, such as religion, language

40
Geometric Boundary
49?N
Natural Boundary
41
Cultural Boundaries
42
  • Population
  • a. Vary in size (China,1.3B vs. Canada,
    33M)
  • b. Vary in population density (Mongolia,
    4.3/sq. mi vs. Bangladesh, 2,200 /sq. mi)
  • c. Vary in cultural diversity (USA vs.
  • Japan

43
  • Sovereignty (freedom from outside control)
  • a. Country is sovereign if it can rule itself
    or act independently -free to make own
    laws have own leaders
  • b. Can deal equally w/ other countries
    and protect its territory citizens - can
    negotiate/deal w/ other countries in
    peace (diplomacy) make trade agreements,
    deal with intl orgs.
  • c. Geog. Factors can help nation
    defend/maintain sovereignty (UK vs Poland)

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  • Government
  • a. Good govts protect lives,
    property,freedoms, rights of their citizens
  • - ensures conditions needed for
    economies to develop for people to
    prosper
  • b. Unstable govts dont last long or have
    little authority
  • - govt corruption
  • political leaders use
  • public office to enrich
  • themselves or their friends

46
A more comprehensive list of requirements
  • Has space or territory which has internationally
    recognized boundaries (boundary disputes are OK).
  • Has people who live there on an ongoing basis.
  • Has economic activity and an organized economy. A
    country regulates foreign and domestic trade and
    issues money.
  • Has the power of social engineering, such as
    education.
  • Has a transportation system for moving goods and
    people.
  • Has a government which provides public services
    and police power.
  • Has sovereignty. No other State should have power
    over the country's territory.
  • Has external recognition. A country has been
    "voted into the club" by other countries

47
B. Structure of Government
  • Government structure how govts are classified
    based on relationship btwn smaller units (states)
    the central govt
  • 1. Unitary central govt rules entire
    nation
  • 2. Federation Natl govt shares pwr w/
    state govts
  • 3. Confederation smaller levels of govt
    keep most of the pwr give central govt very
    limited pwrs

48
C. Government Authority
  • Govt Authority who has the power? Authoritarian
    (govt has the power) vs Democracy (people have
    the power)
  • Worldwide trend shows gradual shift from
    authoritarian towards democracy

Citizens
Govt
Govt
Citizens
Authoritarian
Democratic
49
1. Authoritarian Govts
  • Dictatorship most common form of
    authoritarian govt. - an individual or
    small grp holds complete or absolute
    political pwr
  • - the leader has not been elected and often
    uses military/political terror to stay in
    pwr
  • - people not free to voice opinions
  • - dictators power usually not restricted
    by constitution or laws
  • - in a military dictatorship, the army is
    in control

50
Some of the worlds most notorious Dictators
Hu Jintao of China
Kim Jong-il of North Korea
Omar al-Bashir of Sudan
The 2008 Parade Magazine's "World's Worst
Dictators" list
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  • Totalitarian a govt that seeks to subordinate
    the individual to the state by controlling not
    only all political economic matters, but also
    the attitudes, values, and beliefs of its
    population

53
c. Communist State
  • Govt an economic system
  • The state plans controls the economy and a
    single-often authoritarian-party holds power
  • state controls are imposed with the elimination
    of private ownership of property or capital while
    claiming to make progress toward a higher social
    order in which all goods are equally shared by
    the people (i.e., a classless society)

54
  • d. Monarchy hereditary rulers
  • - ruling family headed by king or queen
    holds political power
  • - past ruled w/ dictatorial pwrs
    absolute monarchs
  • - present most are now Constitutional
    Monarchies share pwr w/ citizen bodies
  • - pwr rests w/ elected lawmaking body,
    monarch ceremonial or represents natl
    unity

Queen Elizabeth
55
Monarchy Today
  • Japan  Great Britain  Spain  Netherlands
    Sweden  Belgium   Norway  Saudi Arabia 
    Malaysia  Kuwait  UAE  Morocco  Luxemburg 
    Oman  Jordan  Qatar  Nepal   Brunei 
    Lesotho  Swaziland  Liechtenstein  Monaco 
    Bhutan  Samoa  Tonga  
  • - Empire  Kingdom  Kingdom  Kingdom  Kingdom 
    Kingdom Kingdom  Kingdom Kingdom  Emirate   
    Emirates  Kingdom  Grand Duchy  Sultanate 
    Kingdom  Emirate  Kingdom Sultanate  Kingdom
    Kingdom   Principality  Principality  Kingdom
    Chiefdom   Kingdom

56
Ceremonial Head of State vs. Absolute Monarch
Netherlands
Saudi Arabia
Belgium
Swaziland
Japan
Brunei
57
Misc. info about European Monarchies
  • Most European nations are Constitutional
    Monarchies
  • Sys of gov where monarch guided by constitution
    rights responsibilities are spelled out in
    written law or by custom
  • How a constitutional monarchy differs from U.S.
    Government?
  • Parliament Elect a party. Party leader becomes
    Prime minister. (determine elections)
  • Nationalized healthcare, housing, and industry.
  • Royal Family figure heads to unify nation have no
    political power. (Wealthy and help with tourism.)

58
2. Govts where people have the power!
  • a. Democracy citizens hold political pwr
  • - direct democracy
  • - representative democracy (most common)
    adult citizens vote for people who make the
    laws
  • - leaders chosen by voting in free elections
  • - value individual freedoms human rights

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3. Miscellaneous forms of govt.
  • theocracy religious leaders control the govt
    (Tibet Dalai Lama)
  • - rely on religious law
  • - consultation w/ religious scholars
  • aristocracy govt by the best or privileged class
  • Plutocracy govt by the wealthy
  • Kleptocracy govt by those seeking personal gain
    at the expense of the governed

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D. Conflict Cooperation
  • Political Conflicts
  • a. Competing feelings of nationalism (pride
    loyalty for ones country)
  • b. Differing culture traits (religion,
    ethnicity, etc)
  • c. Type of govt
  • d. Economic issues trade disputes,
    tariffs quotas

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  • Terrorism the use of violence fear as a
    political force.
  • a. some terrorists want independence for
    homelands that may be under control of another
    country
  • b. some terrorists have political goals to
    change policies
  • c. dont usually act under direct authority of
    govt but may be protected or supported
    financially

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  • Intl Cooperation
  • a. United Nations (UN) most countries are
    members
  • - goals to settle intl disputes, to prevent
    wars, humanitarian aid (disease,
    hunger, illiteracy)
  • b. Economic cooperation/free trade
  • - helps countries produce goods at
    lower costs reach larger markets. People
    can then buy these goods at lower prices
  • - reduce tariffs quotas
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