Economic Geography
Five economic geographies
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Economic and social geography
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- Location theory
Five economic geographies
Since human geographers began to take questions of theory, philosophy and method seriously in the 1960s, Anglophone economic geography (globally by far the most influential cluster of ideas) has experimented with at least five influen- tial approaches, each with distinct perspectives on the question of geographically unequal livelihood possibilities; location theory, political economy, the ‘cultural turn’, feminist approaches, and geographical economics. Location theory August Lösch developed the radical position, for a German economist writing during the Third Reich, that market mechanisms under the rules of perfect competition could create a minimally unequal economic geographical landscape of loosely hierarchically organized central places, taking advantage of scale economies to deliver commodities at low prices (and minimal profits) to spatially dispersed rational consumers (Lösch 1954 [1940]). More than any of the initial genera- tion of German location theorists, he offered a vision of the invisible hand operat- ing in space that was taken up by American and British economists, geographers and regional scientists, to develop location theory in which competition organ- ized the geography of production in a way that delivered the goods (so to speak) to consumers. In this vision, the ‘economic’ in economic geography meant the micro-economic (and later macro-economic) laws of economics, such as supply 12 Eric Sheppard and demand curves and fully informed rational choice, and capitalism meant simply market exchange. Notwithstanding this grounding in economic theory, Lösch showed that geography did matter, in two ways. First, is morphogenesis; economic mechanisms can produce a spatially differentiated economic landscape, even when the geographical backcloth is undifferentiated (i.e. an unbounded uniform plain). Second, space trumps economic theory. Perfect competition is impossible on a uniform plain; rather imperfect competition prevails, with the implication that capitalists make non-zero profits (unlike the zero profits of stan- dard microeconomic theory), reducing consumer welfare. Nevertheless, competi- tion minimized these reductions, as well as differences between the real incomes of the most and least well off consumers (those closest and farthest, respectively, from producers). At the macroeconomic scale, and under the assumptions of mainstream economic theory, regional scientists showed that unrestricted mobility of labor, capital, know-how and commodities also generate spatial equilibrium outcomes that tendentially minimize profits and equalize economic welfare across regions for the average consumer. Together, these results had strong normative implications. As Lösch (1954: 4) put it: ‘The question of the best location is far more digni- fied than that of the actual location’. Inequalities in livelihood chances, defined here in terms of consumer welfare, could be reduced through the proliferation of market rationality, with the state intervening to address market failures due to the spatial nature of public goods. Philosophically, this approach aligned itself with the precepts of positivism, insisting on logical rigor and mathematical precision, and on observation as the independent arbiter of theory. Download 3.2 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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