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Economic Geography: Toward a Conceptual Framework

(http://faculty.washington.edu/krumme/207/concepts/)


Supporting & Related Pages:


Why Do We Need Conceptual Frameworks?


Economic Change and Development

In this context, we discuss the 'Sector Hypothesis' (clearly a "theoretical proposition") and suggested two points:

  1. more differentiation is needed, particularly within the tertiary sector (what kind? why?)
  2. that the forces underlying the proposed employment shifts can be divided into
    1. productivity-related forces and
    2. demand related forces. On the demand side we attribute importance to Engel's Law type factors. Here we want to understand the role of (what economists call) the "income elasticity of demand", namely the quantitative response of demand levels for a commodity or service to changes in income levels.
The Sector Hypothesis is only one example for the kinds of structural-compositional changes which we expect or can empirically identify a related to (and part of) economic development. It has been suggested (e.g. by Boulding) that change, development and economic growth are complex and ultimately involve "structural change" (i.e. change in the composition and interrelationships between parts of the whole population or economy). Not all of these structural changes can or always need to be identified. Some of them are more important than others -- either in terms of volume, or in terms of explanatory importance. The 'Sector Hypothesis' represents a first, important but insufficient, attempt to get to these development complexities by identifying regularities and commonalities in the changes of employment patterns. Our discussion of demographic processes (incl. the role of fertility rates) also belongs into this attempt to "decomplexify" development as complex change.


Components of the conceptual frameworks presented in class (Geography 207) can be traced to or reread in the following papers and books:

Beensen, Reimar. Komplexitätsbeherrschung in den Wirtschaftswissenschaften: Eine Heuristik. Berlin Verlag, 1970. [HB71.B45]

Bell, Daniel. The Coming of Post-Industrial Society: A Venture in Social Forecasting. Basic Books, 1973/76.

Boulding, K.E. "Toward a General Theory of Growth," Canadian Journal of Economics and Political Science, August 1953, 326-40.

Böventer, Edwin von, "Towards a United Theory of Spatial Economic Structure," Papers, Regional science Association, Vol.10, 1962.

Bunge, The Myth of Simplicity. Prentice Hall 1963.

Castells, Manual. The Rise of the Nework Society. Cambridge, Mass.: Blackwell, 1996.

Casti, John L., Complexification: Explaining a Paradoxical World Through the Science of Surprise. HarperCollins, 1994.

Cyert, Richard and James March. A Behavioral Theory of the Firm. Prentice Hall, 1963.

Dicken, Peter. Global Shift: Transforming the World Economy. 3rd ed., N.Y.: Guilford, 1998.

Emery & Trist, The Causal Texture of Organizational Environments," Human Relations, Vol.18, 1965, pp.21-32.

Galbraith, John Kenneth. The New Industrial State. various editions since 1967.

Gertler versus Schoenberger, "The Limits to Flexibility," Papers and Replies, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 1988 and 1989.

Hägerstrand, Torsten, "What about People in Regional Science?" Papers, Regional Science Association, European Vol. 1970.

Hayter, Roger. The Dynamics of Industrial Location: The Factory, the Firm and the Production System. Chichester: Wiley 1997.

Isard, Walter. General Theory. 1969.B

Kepner, Charles H. and Benjamin B. Tregoe, The Rational Manager: A Systematic Approach to Problem Solving and Decision Making. (Editions since 1965)

Leigh, R. and D.J. North, "The Potential of the Microbehavioral Approach to Regional Analysis," in: P.W.J. Batey, ed., Theory and Method in Urban and Regional Analysis. London Papers in Regional Science, Vol.8, London: Pion 1978, pp.46ff.

Lawrence, Paul R. and Jay W. Lorsch, Organization and Environment. Homewood: Irwin, 1967.

Machlup, Fritz, "Structure and Structural Change: Weaselwords and Jargon," Zeitschrift für Nationalökonomie 18(3), 1958.

Machlup, Fritz, "Theories of the Firm: Marginalist, Behavioral, Managerial," American Economic Review 57(1), March 1967, pp.1-33.

Malecki, Edward J., Technology & Economic Development: The Dynamics of Local, Regional and National Competitiveness. 2nd ed., Longman, 1997.

Mensch, Gerhard O., Stalemate in Technology: Innovations Overcome the Depression. Ballinger 1979 (Das Technologische Patt, 1975)

Nonaka, Ikujiro and Hirotaka Takeuchi, The Knowledge-Creating Company: How Japanese Companies Create the Dynamics of Innovation. N.Y.: Oxford Univ. Press, 1995.

Rifkin, Jeremy. The End of Work: The Decline of the Global Labor Force and the Dawn of the Post-Market Era. 1995.

Sandler, Todd, Economic Concepts for the Social Sciences. Cambridge University Press, 2001. [HB87.S234.2001/Suzz]

"... presents an overview and assessment of the conceptual advances in economics during the last century. The book relies heavily on engaging examples, intended to draw in the reader and to demonstrate the far-reaching application of economic reasoning to social phenomena...

Scitovsky, Tibor. "Can Capitalism Survive?" American Economic Review, May 1980.

Senge, Peter. The Fifth Discipline: The Art & Practice of the Learning Organization. N.Y.: Doubleday, 1990.

Storper, Michael. The Regional World: Territorial Development in a Global Economy. N.Y.: Guilford, 1997.

Szplett, Elisabeth S., "The Transactional Economy: Quaternary and Quinary Industry," in: B.M.Barr and P.J.Smith, ed., Environment and Economy: Essays on the Human Geography of Alberta. Pica Pica Press, 1984. [GF512.A4.E58]

Thomas, Morgan D. "Economic Activity Patterns and Economic Change," manuscript, 1962.

Tiebout, Charles M., "Location Theory, Empirical Evidence and Economic Evolution," Papers, Regional Science Association, Vol.3, 1957, pp.74ff.

Ullman, Edward L., "The Role of Transportation and the Bases for Interaction," in: W.L. Thomas, ed., Man's Role in Changing the Face of the Earth. 1956.


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