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ch 12 vocab

TermDefinition
cottage industries production of goods in a home or small workshop, typically by hand or with low technology
economies of scale savings in cost of production that comes from increasing production of a good
industrial revolution cluster of inventions and innovations that brought large-scale economic changes in agriculture, commerce- and manufacturing in late eighteenth century Europe
hinterland an area of economic production that is located inland and is connected to the world by a port
situation the position of a city or place relative to its surrounding environment or context
network a set of interconnected nodes without a center
first mover advantage benefit a service or product receives by being the first to market
secondary hearths area to which an innovation diffuses and from which the innovation diffuses more broadly
globalization processes heightening interactions, increasing interdependence, and deepening relations across country borders
fordist manufacturing system in which raw materials are brought into a central location and component parts and the final product are produced at the same location and then shipped globally
vertical integration the merging of businesses that serve different steps in one commodity chain
location theory understanding the distribution of cities, industries, services, or consumers with the goal of explaining why places are chosen as sites of production or consumption
agglomeration cost advantages created when similar businesses cluster in the same location; for example, car manufacturers cluster in a city or region to tap into a skilled labor force and access infrastructure, services, and technology
least cost theory determining the location of manufacturing based on minimizing three critical expenses: labor, transportation, and agglomeration; model developed by Alfred Weber
friction of distance difficulty in time and cost that usually comes with increasing distance
intermodal where two or more modes of transportation meet (including air, road, rail, barge, and ship)
capitalism economic system where people, corporations, and states produce goods and services and trade them on the world market with the goal of making a profit
commodification transformation of goods and services into products that can be bought, sold, or traded
global division of labor the ability of corporations to employ labor from around the world, made possible by the compression of time and space through innovations in communication and transportation systems
time-space compression increasing connectedness between world cities from improved communication and transportation networks
just-in-time delivery production system in which parts are delivered as needed to the assembly line so that parts are not warehoused, stored, or overproduced
spatial fix the movement of production from one site to another based on the place-based cost advantages of the new site
node connection point in a network, where goods and ideas flow in, out, and through the network
commodity chain steps in the production of a good from its design and raw materials to its production, marketing, and distribution
outsourcing hiring employees outside the home country of a company in order to reduce the cost of labor inputs for the good or service
connectivity position of a place or area relative to others in a network
global sourcing tapping into companies that specialize in production around the world to manufacture goods
global production networks pattern of flows from raw material to global product to disposal or reuse of products that shows all the places connected through production
newly industrializing countries (NIC) states with growing industrial and service economies and an increasing presence in global trade
break-of-bulk point a place where goods are transferred from one form of transport to another; for example, in a port, cargoes of ships are unloaded and put on trains, trucks, or riverboats for inland distribution
deindustrialization decline in industry in a region or economy; happens when companies move industry to other regions or mechanize production
rust belt a region in the northeastern United States that once had an extensive manufacturing industry but has been deindustrialized during the post-Fordist era
high-technology corridor areas along or near major transportation corridors that are devoted to the research, development, and sale of high-technology products
Created by: pl229081
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