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Flashcards in Bygy Deck (133)
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1
Q

How does globalisation occur?

A

International trade
International investment
Improvements in communications

2
Q

What has happened as a result of globalisation?

A

Countries have become more interdependent, they rely on each other

3
Q

How has in,robe nets in ICT affected globalisation?

A

Improvement ends including email, the Internet, phones, phone lines means it is quicker and easier for businesses to communicate with each other. A company may have its head quarters in one country and easily communicate with branches across the globe

4
Q

How has improvements in transport affected globalisation?

A

Improvements include more airports, high speed trains, larger ships making is quicker and easier to communicate face to face and to export supplies across the world and distribute products globally

5
Q

What is globalisation?

A

The process of the worlds economies becoming integrated, the world comes together as a single community

6
Q

What are call centres used for?

A

Used by companies to handle telephone enquiries for businesses

7
Q

How have call centres benefited from globalisation?

A

Improvements in ICT mean that’s if easy to phone faraway countries

8
Q

Why are call centres based abroad?

A

Labour costs are cheaper and so are running costs

9
Q

Give an example of a call centre

A

In 2004 Aviva moved 950 call centre jobs from the uk to India and Sri Lanka as it is 40% less

10
Q

How have localised industrial regions benefited from globalisation?

A

Improvements in ICT and transport mean some industries can develop around a specific region which is useful but they still have global connections

11
Q

Give an example of a localised industrial region

A

A lot of Motorsport companies have offices in Oxfordshire and Northampton, Renault have a headquarters there. They are close to silverstone race circuit and have lots of skilled workers. It is near an airport so people can easily fly there. Manufacturers use the Internet to send and receive information

12
Q

Give case study details on Motorsport valley

A

It employs 40,000 people 25,000 of which being engineers
80% of the worlds best engineers and designers work here
Annual revenue of £9billion
4,500 companies operate here 87% export produce globally
Sales exceed £5 billion of which 65% are exports

13
Q

What is Motorsport valley?

A

A cluster of world famous company headquarters of global Motorsport companies

14
Q

What businesses are located in Motorsport valley?

A

Aston Martin
Mercedes
Cosworth
Ricardo

15
Q

What are TNCs?

A

Companies that produce products sell products or is located in more than one country

16
Q

How do TNCs increase globalisation?

A

They link together countries through the production and sale of goods

17
Q

Why are TNC factories located in poor countries?

A

Labour is cheaper so more profit is made

18
Q

Why are TNC headquarters located in rich countries?

A

There are more people with administrative skills

19
Q

Ads of TNCs

A

Create jobs
Employees in poor countries get a more reliable income compared to farming
TNCs spend money to improve local infrastructure
New technology and skills are brought to poorer countries

20
Q

What are the ads of primary to the uk

A

Cheap fashion

Keeps uk important

21
Q

Dis ads of primark to uk

A

Bad working conditions

Bad press for unethical conditions

22
Q

Ads of primark to Bangladesh

A
4 mill employees 
3rd biggest manufacturing location
£13 bill in exports in 2009/10
Brings foreign currency in
40 mill are connected in the industry 
1:4 work in textiles
New standards
23
Q

Dis ads of primark on Bangladesh

A
$30000 pa 
If they complain primark can move anywhere 
People work more than 100hrs 
People live in bad polluted areas
Leakage
Child labour
No contracts
Abuse
24
Q

Ads of TNC in Bangladesh to propimark

A

Cheap labour
200,000 items made a day
Highly skilled designers but cheap manufacturers
No tax

25
Q

Disadvantages of TNC in Bangladesh on primark

A

Increased minimum wage

Bad press

26
Q

Disadvantages of TNC

A
Badly paid wages
Long hours 
Poor conditions
Leakage
Not secure jobs
27
Q

What is industrialisation?

A

The growth the manufacturing industry

28
Q

Why are call centres located in India?

A

Good internet access
Cheap labour- 1/10 of the wage in Europe or us
Highly educated workforce; 2 mill graduate a year
Speak English
Excellent international data communications

29
Q

What are the conditions in a call centre like?

A
Late shifts
Overcrowding
Fake names 
Earn £3000 a year 
Qualifications
Infrastructures
30
Q

What happened in 1977 that help China industrialise?

A

Dang xiaopeng changed China’s policy to stimulate Chinese industry and encourage foreign investment

31
Q

What happened in 1979 which helped China industrialise?

A

The one child policy meant a lower population so an increase in disposable income in consumables

32
Q

What happened in 1978 which helped China industrialise?

A

The communist party started to introduce capitalist principle in the agricultural sector meaning people had an incentive to produce good products as opposed to trading produce for rewards with the state

33
Q

What happened between 1989 and 1994 that helped China industrialise?

A

The setting up of economic zones paved the way for foreign investment and tax incentives attracted interest from outside China

34
Q

What happened between 2000 and 2006 that helped China industrialise?

A

Cloth manufacture more than doubled and car production increased by more than six times and mobile ownership increased nine times

35
Q

What happened between 2000 and 2003 that helped China industrialise?

A

1/5 of exported garments were Chinese 50% of the worlds shoes 60% of the worlds bikes

36
Q

What also happened in 2003 that helped China industrialise?

A

Nest steel production was thought to be 25% of the total world output

37
Q

What happened in 2008 that helped China industrialise?

A

The 3 gorges dam generates 22,500 MW hydro electric power and has consequently allowed global development

38
Q

What happened in 2015 that helped China industrialise?

A

The Chinese president came to the uk to promote investment

39
Q

How have individual people tried to reduce global warming?

A
  • Conserving energy at home by using low-energy light bulbs, switching off electrical appliances, insulating lofts
  • walking or cycling to work or school rather than getting the car
  • reducing waste by reusing materials or recycling
  • buying organic food to reduce the use of chemical fertilisers
  • paying a carbon offset when making a journey
40
Q

How have local authorities tried to reduce carbon emissions?

A

The promote public transport by using park and ride schemes in towns and cities
Grants are available for people to insulate their homes
People are encouraged to recycle waste materials
Congestion charges discourage cars from entering the city centre

41
Q

What has the national response to carbon emissions been?

A

Tougher Mot tests
Higher road taxes
Supports transport initiatives such as bus lanes
Encourages recycling and waste reduction
Power stations are fitted with filters to reduce emissions
Reduce co2 by 60% by 2050
Produce 10% of electricity renewably by 2010, in 2005 it was 4%
Develop new sources of energy
Encouraging energy conservation

42
Q

What does the kyoto protocol state?

A
  • 37 industrialised countries that have signed the treaty are legally bound to reduce their co2 emissions by an average of 5.2% below their 1999 levels by 2012
  • only the USA and Australia have refused to sign
  • those that have signed including Russia accounts for over 60% of co2 emissions
  • over 170 have signed
  • the USA has refused to sign on the grounds that the costs of reducing co2 to the environment would harm its economy
43
Q

What are carbon credits?

A

Trading carbon between organisations or countries in order to meet the overall target. Organisations that have not used up carbon credits can trade credits on the open market, organisations that have exceeded their quota may choose to buy carbon credits rather than installing expensive equipment. Overall a balance is achieved and a target is met

44
Q

When has globalisation existed since?

A

1960s

45
Q

What is interdependence?

A

The relationship between two or more countries usually in terms of trade

46
Q

What is a transnational corporation?

A

Companies that spread their operations around the world in an attempt to reduce costs

47
Q

How have costs of telephone calls changed?

A

Decreased since 1930

48
Q

How have ocean freight and port charges per short ton of import and export cargo changed?

A

Decreased since 1930

49
Q

How has the average air transport revenue per passenger mile changed?

A

Decreased since 1930

50
Q

What is a satellite and how have they helped globalisation?

A

An object that revolves around the earth following a particular path or orbit. They allow telephone and data conversions to be relayed via transponders within the satellite

51
Q

How has submarine cables helped globalisation?

A

Allows global operations for both manufacturing and service industry

52
Q

What is the sea-me-we?

A

A submarine cable system linking south east Asia, the Middle East, and Western Europe

53
Q

When WA Ethe sea-me-we developed?

A

1980s

54
Q

What extensions were added to the sea-me-we?

A

39,000km in length have advanced to Western Europe to the Far East and Australia

55
Q

What is sea me we designed to do?

A

Offer high speed transmission between the linked countries designed to meet demand in countries with growing economies

56
Q

What is a call centre?

A

Offices where groups of people work responding to telephone queries from customers, employees sit in front of computers giving them information that they use to answer they questions

57
Q

Why have call centre in India?

A

About 10% of the population speak English fluently
80% of 787 million living in towns are literate and 18% of these are graduates
Low staff turnover; working 9 hour shifts
Development if ICT allows fast clear communication
Operating costs between 10 and 60 percent lower that in the uk

58
Q

Where will TNCs tend to have their headquarters?

A

In richer spare as of the world

59
Q

Where does production for TNCs occur?

A

Often in poorer areas where labour costs are lower

Also in richer areas as there is a skilled workforce

60
Q

What is the multiplier effect?

A

Where initial investment and jobs lead to a knock-on effect, creating further jobs and providing money to generate services

61
Q

What is leakage?

A

Where profits made by the company are taken out of the country of origin and so do it benefit the host country

62
Q

What are the overall advantages of TNCs?

A

Multiplier effect
Additional income people have benefits local businesses
Training the workforce leads to the development of skills
Companies bring in new technologies
Infrastructure is improved
Improves trade

63
Q

What are the disadvantages of TNCs?

A

Leakage
Low wages
Susceptible to closure if underperforming
Incentives to attract companies are not well spent if companies are only there a short time
The government has no say on the future of the TNCs

64
Q

How has tape manufacturing industry changed in the uk?

A

The number of people fell from just over 6 million in 1981 to 3.5 million in 2003

65
Q

What caused the decline in manufacturing in the uk?

A

De-industrialisation, a decline in a certain type of manufacturing due to increased mechanisation and the need for industry becoming competitive which continues over a long period of time resulting in fewer people being employed in this sector and falling production

66
Q

Examples of government legislation that couple affect industry and manufacturing

A

Setting up areas where conditions are favourable for new industry
Providing advanced factories
Offering retraining and removal expenses
Ensuring educational reform is high on the list
Adding taxes to home produced goods so the exports are targeted

67
Q

What are assisted areas/ enterprise?

A

Areas that qualify for government help. Enterprise zones are on a smaller scale than assisted areas

68
Q

What are advanced factories?

A

Where buildings for production are built speculatively in the hope that their presence will encourage buisnesses to buy or rent an existing factory, removing the need to find a site or suitable premises

69
Q

What are do workers have the rights to in the Uk

A

Know how to do their job safely and are trained
Know how to get first aid
Know what to do in an emergency
Supplied with protective clothing

70
Q

What happened in 1970 with the trade unions?

A

Trade unions frequently held strikes and power cuts occurred. Companies such as Nissan and Toyota came to the uk understanding that strike action would not be allowed.

71
Q

List some facts about the impacts and demand for energy

A

-uK. Average earnings increased to £457 per week in 2007 up by 2.9% from 2006
-The average wage in China has risen to 1750 yuan a month, four times higher than in 1995
- private car ownership in China increased from virtually zero in 1997 to 24 million in 2005. Seven million were sold in 2006
- in the uk the number of families without a car fell for 32% to 27%
The number owning two or more cars rose from 24% to 29% in 10 years

72
Q

Social effects of increased demand for energy

A

Increase in emphysema and bronchitis, athe a
People cycle to work
Less holidays abroad

73
Q

Environmental impacts of increased in demand for energy

A

Landfills have built up adjacent to coal mines when unneeded material has been dumped
Transportation of oil ha stead to major oil spills
Global warming

74
Q

What has globalisation resulted in?

A

increased international trade
a company operating in more than one country
greater dependence on the global economy
freer movement of capital, goods, and services
recognition of companies such as McDonalds and Starbucks in LEDCs

75
Q

What could influence globalisation?

A

Improvements in transportation - larger cargo ships mean that the cost of transporting goods between countries has decreased. Economies of scale mean the cost per item can reduce when operating on a larger scale. Transport improvements also mean that goods and people can travel more quickly.
Freedom of trade - organisations like the World Trade Organisation (WTO) promote free trade between countries, which help to remove barriers between countries.
Improvements of communications - the internet and mobile technology has allowed greater communication between people in different countries.
Labour availability and skills - countries such as India have lower labour costs (about a third of that of the UK) and also high skill levels. Labour intensive industries such as clothing can take advantage of cheaper labour costs and reduced legal restrictions in LEDCs.

76
Q

Wind power in the uk facts?

A

Aim: to generate 10% of power by renewable energy sources
Role: to be responsible for one third of electricity generated
Location in 2008: mostly onshore

77
Q

What was agreed at the 2015 Paris climate change summit?

A

Limit global rise in temp to 1.5 degrees

$1 bill a year in climate finance for developing countries

78
Q

Why are windfalls good?

A

Attract fish
Sustainable
No co2

79
Q

Why are windfalls bad?

A
Noisy 
Eyesore
Harmful effects on wildlife
House prices reduce
More expensive
80
Q

Why has there been an increase in energy use?

A

Increased population means more people need energy

Increased wealth means more technology and more factories burning fuel

81
Q

What was the Kyoto protocol?

A

An international agreement to cut co2 emissions to help reduce global warming

82
Q

When was the Kyoto protocol?

A

1997

83
Q

What are food miles?

A

The distance travelled from where they are grown to where they are eaten

84
Q

What is the carbon footprint?

A

The amount of co2 generated by things people do

85
Q

What was agreed at the 2015 Paris climate change summit?

A

Limit global rise in temp to 1.5 degrees

$1 bill a year in climate finance for developing countries

86
Q

Why are windfalls good?

A

Attract fish
Sustainable
No co2

87
Q

Why are windfalls bad?

A
Noisy 
Eyesore
Harmful effects on wildlife
House prices reduce
More expensive
88
Q

Why has there been an increase in energy use?

A

Increased population means more people need energy

Increased wealth means more technology and more factories burning fuel

89
Q

What was the Kyoto protocol?

A

An international agreement to cut co2 emissions to help reduce global warming

90
Q

When was the Kyoto protocol?

A

1997

91
Q

What are food miles?

A

The distance travelled from where they are grown to where they are eaten

92
Q

What is the carbon footprint?

A

The amount of co2 generated by things people do

93
Q

What are the environmental impacts of palm oil?

A
85% produced in Malaysia or Indonesia 
1/2 products used contain palm oil
People depend on the rainforests that are destroyed
Endangered species
Speeds up global warming
94
Q

What is a locavore?

A

Someone who buys food locally within 100 miles of where they live

95
Q

Why is buying food locally good

A

Reduces carbon footprint
Reduces food miles
Better for you as no chemicals used
Supports local business

96
Q

What is bad about buying local food?

A

Farmers in LEDCs lose profit

Limit diet

97
Q

Why does eating meat consume the earth?

A

Uses water and crops
Deforestation occurs to make space
Give of methane

98
Q

How can we eat less meat

A

Stem cell grown meat
Insects
Vegan
Vegetarian

99
Q

What is good about stem cell meat

A

1 animal makes a billion burgers
No food
No methane

100
Q

What is magical land and why is it used?

A

Land that is only just good enough to be worth farming. It has to be used as there is increased pressure to produce food

101
Q

How does soil become damaged?

A

Lack of vegetation leaves it prone to being washed away by rain, wind. After a bad harvest the soil is exposed and all the nutrients are taken leaving poor soil

102
Q

How can countries prevent other countries from getting water

A

Diverting water

Building dams

103
Q

If India prevents Pakistan from getting water what may happen

A

War could happen

Pakistan would not be able to farm at all

104
Q

How did India and Pakistan agree to share water

A

Signed a treaty in 1960; Pakistan had westward flowing water and India eastward

105
Q

Is the Indus water issue solved

A

No, India is happy but Pakistanis crops fail

106
Q

What health and safety issues are there for poor farmers

A

Chemicals cause rashes and chest problems

107
Q

Why is there a water shortage in Kenya

A

Water levels are falling
Land is used for flowers not food
Flower growers take more water than they should
Water is affected by fertilisers

108
Q

What is a subsistence farmer?

A

Self sufficient farmer, keep own crops, don’t sell

109
Q

What is a cash crop

A

Crops produced for commercial use rather than for the grower

110
Q

How do cash crops help poor farmers

A

More cash allows investment in the farm and other items to be bought

111
Q

If poor farmers have to buy fertiliser for cash crops what problem does this cause

A

Need to intensify production

Increase of fertilisers of pesticides

112
Q

Name special economic zones in China

A

Pudong district, Shanghai

113
Q

Why has food miles increased?

A

Growing population
Increased demand for ethnic food
Increase in want for out of season food

114
Q

What are the predicted effects of global warming in the uk

A
Droughts and floods more frequent
Windier weather
Extinction of plants  
Cost decrease
Sea levels rise 
Coastal erosion
115
Q

What does defeat estimate the annual average temperature rise to be?

A

Between 2 and 3.5 degrees

116
Q

Advantages of global warming

A

Fewer deaths due to cold weather
Longer growing seasons
Colder areas able to grow crops

117
Q

Disadvantages of global warming

A

Arctic ice may melt completely
Ski resorts close
Areas become prone to drought
Higher sea levels

118
Q

What are the global predicted effects for of global warming the world

A
Increased tropical storms 
Reduced rainfall
Higher rice yield
Floods in Bangladesh (sea levels) 
Too warm for coniferous forests
119
Q

What are economic zones?

A

areas with little to no tax

120
Q

What was the first initial event that triggered China’s rapid growth?

A

The election of deng xiaopeng in 1977 who changed China’s China’s policy to end chins isolation no stimulate industry

121
Q

Social impacts of increased energy use

A

More power plants must be built which are unsightly
These power plants may have leaks resulting in deaths
Creates jobs

122
Q

Economic impacts of increased demand in energy

A

Countries with lots of fossil fuels will become richer

Countries without will need to buy from them

123
Q

Environmental impacts of increased demand in energy

A

Co2 released which contributes to global warming
Acid rain
Deforestation

124
Q

Environmental impacts of increasing food production

A

Destroys habitats
Out of season food means learner carbon footprint and increase in number of food miles travelled
Lots of water used
Contributes to climate change

125
Q

DisAds of importing food

A

Costs a lot of money to ship food (trucks and trains)
Food spoils after it is picked or processed.
Sometimes more expensive
Out of season sometimes increases carbon footprint

126
Q

Ads of importing food

A

Come times cheaper

Variety of foods/fruits/veggies during your local off season.

127
Q

Ads of local produced food

A

Decreases pollution
Improves local economy (no leakage)
Fresher food
Creates local jobs

128
Q

Political impacts of increasing food production

A

Hostilities with countries over the control of water for irrigation

129
Q

Social impacts of increased food production

A

Never enough some people always starve

Poor working conditions

130
Q

Economic impacts of increased food production

A

Agriculture i a Huge part of developing countries economies

Revenue improves infrastructure

131
Q

Social impacts of cash crops

A

Provides skilful jobs
Germs and bacteria in tomatoes
92% of water used in agriculture so some people don’t have water
360 litres per year of water used

132
Q

Economic impacts of cash crops

A

Expensive salivation of water
500,000 seeds grown each day
15,000 mile journey in 80hrs

133
Q

Environmental impacts of cash crops

A
Marginal land used
92% of water for agriculture 
Water quality bad due to chemicals
Tomatoes from in Morocco have carbon footprint 3x lower that out of season in the uk 
Creating water shortage 
Moroccan environment degraded