GEOG2400 SPRING 2003 THE GEOGRAPHY OF WORLD DEVELOPMENT - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 12
About This Presentation
Title:

GEOG2400 SPRING 2003 THE GEOGRAPHY OF WORLD DEVELOPMENT

Description:

... syndicates exist in many countries from Mexico down through Bolivia and sea, ... closely followed by Honduras and Bolivia (global average $7466, OECD average $23, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:38
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 13
Provided by: CSUHa
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: GEOG2400 SPRING 2003 THE GEOGRAPHY OF WORLD DEVELOPMENT


1
GEOG2400 SPRING 2003 THE GEOGRAPHY OF WORLD
DEVELOPMENT
  • CLASS 9
  • Focus on Regions
  • Latin (South and Central) America
  • Social and Economic Issues

Element 3 Sophomore GE Cluster Global Wealth,
Poverty and Inequality
2
Geopolitical Framework
  • Free-Market Democracies Dominate
  • The region has had independent nations much
    longer than other developing regions
  • Political stability has been a problem in the
    past, with military juntas frequently exercising
    power although all have faded to varying degrees
    to hold only background influence
  • The US has long supported free-market principles
    and attempted to minimize tendencies toward
    communism or even socialism among its Southern
    neighbors.
  • Most of the countries are free-market democracies
    in which privatization has occurred along with
    neoliberalization of the economies, opening them
    to foreign investment and eliminating some
    tariffs on imports
  • Many nations have been oligarchies (ruled by
    political elites made up of a few influential
    families) or banana republics, influenced heavily
    by multinational corporations engaged in
    plantation agriculture (e.g. United Fruit
    Company) or mining operations.

3
Economic and Political Unity
  • Regional Organizations can and will play a more
    dominant role
  • Of increasing importance is the operation of
    regional organizations that help coordinate
    national policy, forge economic and trading ties
    and increase political leverage.
  • Important supranatural organizations,
    governing/organizing bodies that include several
    states, include the Organization of American
    States, the Pan-American Health organization
    (regional branch of the WHO), and the
    Inter-American Development Bank.
  • Regional trading blocks are increasingly
    important and are designed to foster internal
    markets (complementary trade based on respective
    comparative advantages that minimizes the legacy
    of dependency and lessens the core-periphery ties
    to Europe and North America) and reduce
    counter-productive trade barriers and unnecessary
    competition between neighbors
  • Examples of such blocks include the Latin
    American Free Trade Association (LAFTA), the
    Central American Common Market (CACM), the Andean
    Group, Mercosur and, eventually, the Free Trade
    Zone of the Americas (should negotiations between
    the Bush Administration and Congress lead to its
    authorization).

4
Geopolitical Framework
  • Several Latin American countries have suffered
    from political turmoil, violence and
    destabilization
  • A number of countries, especially in Central
    America and the Andean region, have experienced
    political insurrections or ethnic struggles for
    independence or freedom from persecution.
  • These have included full-scale ideological
    civil-wars related to the Cold War (e.g.
    Sandistas in Nicaragua, FMLN in El Salvador),
    socio-political guerrilla campaigns (Sendero
    Luminoso in Peru, FARC in Colombia) and struggles
    to end persecution or marginalization of distinct
    regional groups, usually indigenous peasants
    (e.g. Central Highlands Maya in Guatemala,
    Zapatistas in Chiapas, Mexico)
  • Military-backed, usually right-wing dictators,
    have ruthlessly dealt with opposition movements
    through imprisonment and torture of political
    prisoners and the phenomenon of the
    desaparecidos too often with the help of the
    CIA and the School for the Americas based in the
    USA.

5
Fighting Organized Crime
  • Increasingly, many Latin American countries are
    having to deal with the growing problem of drug
    mafiosi cartels of organized crime syndicates
    that tap into the global demand for marijuana and
    cocaine, among other drugs, from plants grown by
    farmers as an important cash-crop in the region.
  • The most famous being Colombian (e.g. the Cali
    cartel), syndicates exist in many countries from
    Mexico down through Bolivia and sea, land and air
    routes through Central America and the
    neighboring Caribbean are principal smuggling
    paths to the lucrative US market.
  • Drug interdiction is a major foreign policy issue
    in the Americas and frequently, a Latin American
    nations military and economic aid from the US is
    tied to cooperation in crop eradication, etc.
  • The US DEA partners many Latin governments in
    covert operations against smugglers and
    processing facilities and in aerial spraying of
    drug plantations.
  • Similarly, US AID is actively involved in
    agricultural and rural development programs to
    provide incentives and alternatives to planting
    coca.

6
Dependency Economic Growth
  • In the league table of 173 ranked world nations,
    most Latin American countries are middle income
    although inequality in wealth and other measures
    of development is still marked.
  • Based on GDP/cap US PPP, the spread of wealth
    from richest to poorest across the 17 nations was
    quite extreme, from a high in Argentina of
    12,377 to a low in Nicaragua of 2366, closely
    followed by Honduras and Bolivia (global average
    7466, OECD average 23,569).
  • Based on the broader Human Development Index that
    takes into account life expectancy and
    educational opportunity also, the top-ranking
    nations in 2002 were Argentina (33), Chile (38)
    and Uruguay (40) (all in the more temperate
    south) and the bottom nations were Honduras
    (116), Nicaragua (118) and Guatemala (120) (all
    in the tropical north).

7
Heavy Variations
  • The spread in social indicators is also highly
    varied, not surprisingly, mirroring heavily the
    relative economic standings.
  • Top ranking nations have high educational
    attainment rates, low probabilities of early
    death, and good health metrics.
  • Lowest ranking nations have the reverse,
    Guatemala, for example, having a probability of
    dying before 40 of 15, adult illiteracy at over
    30 and 60 of people below the national poverty
    line, with poor health metrics like 24 of lt5
    children clinically under weight.
  • Within nations (see maps of Mexico, Brazil),
    there will be heavy regional variations in most
    indicators, some a bias of geography, others of
    politics.

8
GDP Per Person
  • The richest 10 frequently have 40-60 of the
    wealth compared to the 20-30 typical for the
    OECD nations Mexico 42, Brazil 48.

9
Neoliberalization
  • Social safety nets, which were largely absent,
    are now even more scarce due to the free-market,
    small government approach adopted by many Latin
    nations.
  • Historical Development Strategies
  • Income substitution
  • Relied on policies that foster domestic industry
    by imposing inflated tariffs on all imported
    goods led to inefficiency, high debt (continued
    to run balance of pay deficits), inflation, etc.
  • Industrialization
  • Manufacturing emphasized since 1960s to get away
    from primary materials and add value to the
    economy
  • Maquiladoras Mexican assembly plants line the
    U.S. border but can be found in many nations,
    especially Central America
  • Automobile and consumer electronic manufacturing,
    and apparel
  • More than 4,000 exist in Mexico alone
  • Lower wages in Mexico cause job loss in the U.S.
  • Are frequently located in ZIPs tax-free zones
  • Provide employment and wages to host country but
    little else.

10
Improving Economic and Social Development
  • Social Development
  • Marked improvements since 1960
  • Declining child mortality rate, along with higher
    rates for life expectancy and educational
    attainment
  • Most countries had cuts of 50 or more in child
    mortality
  • Important role for non-government organizations
    (NGOs)
  • Humanitarian organizations, churches, community
    activists attempt to do what governments cant or
    wont do
  • Race and Inequality
  • Relative tolerance, but Amerindians and blacks
    over-represented among the poor
  • Hard to ignore ethnicity and race when explaining
    contrasts in income and availability of services

11
Gender Differences
  • The Status of Women
  • Many women work outside of the home (30-40)
  • Lower than rate in U.S. but comparable to many
    European countries
  • Legally, women can vote, own property, and sign
    for loans, but less likely than men to do so
  • Reflective of patriarchal tendencies
  • Divorce still stigmatized in many nations
  • Trend toward smaller families
  • Related to education and workforce participation
  • Has led to surprisingly rapid falls in total
    fertility rates and population growth.
  • In the poorer nations, rates are still much
    higher than the richer nations in the region.

12
Decreasing Birth Rates
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com