Economic Geography
Economic geographers and services
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Economic and social geography
Economic geographers and services
The contribution of scholars from other disciplines to the analysis and interpre- tation of service industries in economic development during the second half of the twentieth century has been considerable. The examples outlined above are by no means exhaustive and do not include research with roots in other disci- plines such as business or management studies (Berry 1999) or urban and 116 Peter W. Daniels regional planning. Although the above hardly does justice to the range of work on services by other disciplines, it does provide a backcloth for examining the question: how have economic geographers contributed to research on service industries over the same period? The answer partly depends on whether their contribution is assessed as direct or indirect. Although such a dichotomy is vulnerable to the charge of over-simplification, there are undoubtedly numerous economic geographers who have used service activities such as retailing, tourism, transport, warehousing, research and development, or ecommerce as a means to an end: such as searching for explanations for changes in the organisation and location of production, the form and structure of cities, deindustrialisation, addressing problems in regional development, or understanding the changing relationship between consumption and production. Few, if any of them, would claim to be economic geographers with a curiosity about services. They have been, and continue to be, less interested in service industries per se as a category of activities and functions that, however heterogeneous, have together re-shaped ideas about how economies at scales from the micro to the macro evolve over time and the influence of services relative to the erstwhile drivers of growth and change: the manufacturing and primary sectors. Some economic geographers remain implacably doubtful about services being anything other than subservient to manufacturing (or industrial) production. The best known is Walker (1985, see also Sayer and Walker 1992) who vigorously argue for an inclusive approach, whereby many services are only accessible or made possible by their incorporation within or justification through goods production. Some examples are transport, computer software, film, a consultancy report, or food outlets. The value of services is therefore dependent on material goods; this was possibly defensible a decade ago but is probably less the case today because certain information-intensive services such as computer software, film, publications of various kinds can be downloaded, stored and used without the need for storage on a material good such as computer disc. It is still necessary for a material good such as a computer to provide access to these services but, it could be argued, to a much lesser degree than before. Download 3.2 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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