Deck 5: Theoretical Considerations

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Question
One of the world's largest region for producing computer software is

A) Research Triangle Park (NC).
B) Emilia-Romagna (Italy).
C) Silicon Valley (CA).
D) Route 128 (Boston).
E) Badden-Wurtenburg (Germany).
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Question
The functions of management include all of the following EXCEPT

A) allocating resources.
B) raising capital.
C) keeping abreast of government rules and policies.
D) making investment decisions.
E) all of the above are functions of management.
Question
Which of the following is NOT TRUE about the process of capital intensification?

A) is essentially the substitution of capital for labor
B) is a long term trend under capitalism
C) when firms seek to reduce costs and raise productivity by using machines instead of workers
D) is most likely to be used when labor costs are low
E) is most likely to be used when labor costs are high
Question
Weber's location theory emphasized the role of which of the following in the locational decisions of firms?

A) capital
B) labor costs
C) transportation costs
D) human capital
E) managerial and technical skills
Question
Factors associated with the decline in innovation in the U.S.include all of the following EXCEPT

A) a decline in federal support for basic research.
B) a widespread lack of interest in the U.S. public for science.
C) many organizations in the U.S. focus on the short-term returns.
D) difficulties in obtaining venture capital.
E) foreign competition and high labor costs.
Question
The behavioral approach

A) focuses on the psychology of the decision making process.
B) focuses on people's behavior.
C) emphasizes historical context and social relations.
D) derives from neo-classical economics.
E) is the scientific method.
Question
Which of the following factors is the most important determinant of a firm's location in most industries?

A) land
B) labor
C) capital
D) technical skills
E) all of the above are equally important
Question
Those skills necessary for the continued invention of new products and processes are

A) technical skills.
B) research and development (R&D).
C) are usually beyond the reach of small firms.
D) all of the above.
E) only technical skills and (R&D).
Question
Which of the following factors shape a firm's location?

A) labor
B) land
C) capital
D) all of the above
E) only land a capital
Question
At the local scale,which factor of location is the most important?

A) the cost of labor
B) the availability and cost of land
C) capital
D) managerial skills
E) technical skills
Question
Which input to production is sentient and capable of changing the conditions of work?

A) labor
B) capital
C) land
D) management
E) cost
Question
Which of the following is NOT TRUE about theories?

A) They are a way of looking at the world.
B) They are a way of making sense of the relationships between variables.
C) They are what separates description from explanation.
D) They allow us to establish causality.
E) They are always provable.
Question
Industrial properties have expanded to the suburbs in recent decades.Which of the following is NOT a reason for this?

A) Computerization and just-in-time production systems have diminished and have made the cost of land more expensive.
B) There are locations that are easily accessible to motor freight and interstates.
C) There are locations with access to suburban services and infrastructure.
D) The attraction of residential areas and other amenities.
E) Suburban locations have minimized the journey to work.
Question
Several developments limit the applicability of Weber's model.They include all of the following EXCEPT

A) not all firms need to minimize transportation costs.
B) the production process is much more complex now.
C) transportation cost is best expressed as a linear function of distance.
D) transportation costs having been declining in the long-run.
E) brainpower has steadily been replacing muscle and machine power.
Question
Labor has a rather high level of inertia due to

A) people are reluctant to leave familiar places.
B) people will sit out short periods of unemployment or accept lower wages.
C) unemployment payments.
D) all of the above contribute to labor's inertia.
E) none of the above contribute to labor's inertia.
Question
The purchasing of raw material sources or distribution facilities is known as

A) horizontal integration.
B) diversification.
C) economies of scale.
D) diseconomies of scale.
E) vertical integration.
Question
Adjustments in scale include which of the following?

A) a division of labor
B) economies of scale
C) vertical integration
D) horizontal integration
E) all of the above are ways that scale can be adjusted
Question
Which region of the U.S.has the lowest percents of workers covered by labor unions?

A) the southeast
B) the northeast
C) the west
D) the Great Plains
E) New England
Question
Which of the following materials has the highest transport costs as a percentage of product prices?

A) lumber and wood
B) leather products
C) rubber and plastics
D) food
E) stone, clay and glass
Question
In the U.S.,the rate of new inventions and granted patents began to decline in which decade?

A) 1960
B) 1970
C) 1980
D) 1990
E) 2000
Question
Material-oriented industries emphasize

A) markets.
B) raw materials.
C) labor pools.
D) access to capital.
E) land prices.
Question
All of the following complicate locational decisions of firms EXCEPT

A) firms have only one site or situation factor.
B) more than one critical location may emerge.
C) because there are unknowns, firms cannot always precisely calculate the costs at various locations.
D) firms may select its location based on inertia.
E) amenities at a given location.
Question
Alfred Weber,a German economist,is noted for his work on

A) classical industrial location theory.
B) the Kondratiev Cycle.
C) the Demographic Transition.
D) the Spatial Product Cycle Curve.
E) Tragedy of the Commons.
Question
Which is FALSE about agglomerations?

A) They help firms that cluster reduce costs in ways they otherwise could not.
B) They arise from the numerous interconnections of people, goods, services and information provided by cities.
C) They arise because the creation of new knowledge and products takes place within a relatively small geographic area.
D) They generate synergies.
E) They never include government agencies or offices.
Question
Which of the following statement about the size of firms in a country's economy is most accurate?

A) The majority of firms remain small and peripheral.
B) Most small firms grow to become very large or they go out of business.
C) There is an even split between small and large firms.
D) Small firms are not profitable.
E) Large firms dominate the industrial base.
Question
What is the pattern of the three-stage sequence by which firms have grown in the U.S.?

A) vertical integration (1890s-1919), then horizontal integration (1920s-1940s), followed by diversification (since 1950s).
B) diversification (1890s-1919), then horizontal integration (1920s-1940s), followed by vertical integration (since 1950s).
C) diversification (1890s-1919), then vertical integration (1920s-1940s), followed by horizontal integration (since 1950s).
D) horizontal integration (1890s-1919), then vertical integration (1920s-1940s), followed by diversification (since 1950s).
E) vertical integration (1890s-1919), then diversification (1920s-1940s), followed by horizontal integration (since 1950s).
Question
What happens in forward integration?

A) The firm begins to control the outlets for its products.
B) The firm buys other non-related firms.
C) A firm takes over operations that were previously the responsibility of its suppliers.
D) The firm merges with similar firms from other countries.
E) The firm expands its geographical reach.
Question
What is the crucial social relation of production?

A) between corporations and financial institutions
B) between business and government
C) between owners of the means of production and the workers who operate those means
D) between producers and consumers
E) between competing firms
Question
When the cost of shipping raw materials is higher than the cost of of shipping the final product,where will the firm locate?

A) near a major city
B) near the market
C) near the raw materials
D) in the suburbs
E) in China
Question
Where would a footloose industry be most likely to locate?

A) in northern urban areas of the U.S.
B) in southern suburban areas of the U.S.
C) in the Core
D) in the Periphery
E) wherever it wishes
Question
Which of the following is an example of backward integration?

A) development of iron-ore deposits in Venezuela and Australia by U.S. and Japanese automotive companies
B) fast-food companies opening new outlets in Beijing
C) Germany's Daimler-Benz merging with the U.S. Chrysler Corporation
D) Starbucks opening retail outlets in a grocery store
E) all of the above
Question
When a firm controls the production and marketing of diverse products,this is known as

A) horizontal integration.
B) diversification.
C) economies of scale.
D) diseconomies of scale.
E) vertical integration.
Question
What happens in backward integration?

A) The firm begins to control the outlets for its products.
B) The firm buys other non-related firms.
C) A firm takes over operations that were previously the responsibility of its suppliers.
D) The firm merges with similar firms from other countries.
E) The firm expands its geographical reach.
Question
Agglomeration economies take several forms including EXCEPT

A) production linkages.
B) service linkages.
C) marketing linkages.
D) urbanization economies.
E) diseconomies of scale.
Question
Mass production includes the standardization of parts and

A) the outsourcing of labor.
B) the mechanization of manufacturing.
C) the fluidity of capital.
D) the division of labor.
E) power of management.
Question
Gaining an increasing market share of a given niche of a particular industry is known as

A) horizontal integration.
B) diversification.
C) economies of scale.
D) diseconomies of scale.
E) vertical integration.
Question
A vertically integrated oil company includes which of the following activities?

A) exploration
B) drilling
C) refining
D) retailing
E) all of the above
Question
Which of the following is NOT a major criticism of structural theorists concerning industrial location theory?

A) Location theory focuses on individual firms as abstract entities.
B) Location theory all but ignores the context of the capitalist system.
C) Location theory is focused on the role of the capitalist system in the decision making process.
D) It is unrealistic.
E) It does not consider a model of the firm as a complex organizational structure.
Question
What organizational structure of the firm is a combination of at least two of the basic organizational formats?

A) Functional orientation
B) Product orientation
C) Geographic orientation
D) Customer orientation
E) Matrix structure
Question
Which of the following is an example of a functional organization structure for a firm?

A) cars, trucks, buses, farm equipment
B) Northeast region, Southeast region, West Coast region, Central region
C) industrial, commercial, consumer, government
D) manufacturing, marketing, finance, R&D
E) over $5 million, $3 million-$4.9 million, under $3 million
Question
Why does the manufacture of bottled and canned beverages tend to locate near its markets?

A) because of government regulations
B) because such beverages are a perishable good
C) because of industry tradition that dates back to the earliest days of Coca Cola
D) because water, a ubiquitous raw material, is the largest part of the weight of the finished product
E) all of the above
Question
Administrative hierarchies

A) are formed to perform nonproduction activities.
B) are formed due to the rise in capital intensification.
C) cluster in a relatively few large metropolitan areas.
D) all of the above
E) B and C only
Question
Dual sourcing is used by firms

A) to avoid the inevitable Kondratiev cycle.
B) to complete the product life cycle.
C) to minimize risk of labor disputes and their effects on production.
D) to decrease competition.
E) none of the above
Question
Firms organize themselves in all of the following ways EXCEPT

A) functional orientation.
B) product orientation.
C) geographic orientation.
D) amenity orientation.
E) matrix orientation.
Question
By far,the most mobile production factor is

A) labor.
B) capital.
C) land.
D) machinery.
E) technology.
Question
All of the following are ways that the government shapes economies under capitalism,EXCEPT

A) setting production quotas on consumer goods.
B) creation and enforcement of a legal system.
C) construction of infrastructure.
D) government expenditures.
E) control of the money supply.
Question
Which of the following occupations would have the largest labor shed?

A) fast-food worker
B) janitor
C) university professor
D) automobile factory worker
E) cashier
Question
The increasing globalization of production

A) was accompanied by an new international division of labor.
B) was possibly only because the largest corporations stayed put in the U.S.
C) had little effect on the deindustrialization process in the industrial nations.
D) strengthened the power of unions in advanced economies.
E) followed along the same trends as the old imperial system.
Question
What is the basis for profit in a capitalist economy?

A) land rents
B) surplus value
C) the quantity of products sold
D) reduction in tax rates and other government regulations
E) Kondratiev longwaves
Question
Which of the following organizational structure works best for companies that have diverse product lines?

A) functional orientation
B) product orientation
C) geographic orientation
D) customer orientation
E) matrix orientation
Question
Which of the following organizational structure works best for companies that wish to organize according to the types of customers they serve?

A) functional orientation
B) product orientation
C) geographic orientation
D) customer orientation
E) matrix orientation
Question
Which of the following organizational structure works best for companies that have a narrow range of products?

A) functional orientation
B) product orientation
C) geographic orientation
D) customer orientation
E) matrix orientation
Question
What is the correct ordering of the industrial activity as explained by Kondratiev longwaves of economic activity?

A) (1)Textiles; (2)Railroads & iron; (3)Automobiles, electricity & chemicals; (4)Petrochemicals and aerospace; and (5)Information
B) (1)Railroads & iron; (2)Textiles; (3)Automobiles, electricity & chemicals; (4)Petrochemicals and aerospace; and (5)Information
C) (1)Railroads & iron; (2)Textiles; (3)Petrochemicals and aerospace; (4)Automobiles, electricity & chemicals; and (5)Information
D) (1)Textiles; (2)Railroads & iron; (3)Petrochemicals and aerospace; (4)Automobiles, electricity & chemicals; and (5)Information
E) (1)Textiles; (2)Automobiles, electricity & chemicals; (3)Railroads & iron; (4)Petrochemicals and aerospace; and (5)Information
Question
Which of the following statements about capitalism is most accurate?

A) Markets are the only means through which firms make decisions.
B) Markets are the primary means through which firms make decisions.
C) Markets and governments share equally in decision-making by firms.
D) Government is the primary means through which firms make decisions.
E) Governments are the only means through which firms make decisions.
Question
Which is FALSE about the product life cycle?

A) Products at different stages of production tend to be manufactured at different places within corporate systems.
B) Innovation begins in advanced countries.
C) Less developed countries increasingly specialize in the task of transforming raw materials into commodities.
D) It occurs in 3 stages.
E) In Stage 1 competitors steal ideas.
Question
Each business cycle leaves a geographic imprint based on investment and disinvestment at the local level.These local landscapes are imprinted in which of the following ways?

A) Local labor forces are constructed.
B) Local economies, landscapes and social structures are changed.
C) These local imprints are generally short-lived.
D) Each wave or cycle imprints the local landscape completely separately from previous or subsequent waves.
E) Local labor forces are constructed and local economies, landscapes, and social structures are change.
Question
Capitalism

A) generates many contradictions.
B) is an unstable system.
C) must expand to survive.
D) all of the above
E) A and C only
Question
What does the Kondratiev Cycle illustrate?

A) the importance of geography in the location firms since 1900
B) alternative strategies for the organization of firms since the Great Depression
C) the rise and fall of labor unions in U.S. industry
D) the shift from reliance on animate energy, through fossil fuels, leading to the coming shift to renewable energy
E) the successive waves of growth and decline in industrial activity since the beginning of the Industrial Revolution
Question
On what is the proposed Fifth Wave of the Kondratiev cycle based?

A) solar energy
B) outsourcing
C) expansion of free trade agreements
D) information technology
E) decline of labor unions
Question
Which of the following organizational structure works best for companies that have a narrow range of products,markets and distribution channels?

A) functional orientation
B) product orientation
C) geographic orientation
D) customer orientation
E) matrix orientation
Question
The rise of "Silicon Valley" is best explained by tax benefits given to the industry by the State of California.
Question
Governing that is based on the premise that the market is the optimal way of allocating public as well as private resources is called

A) democratic.
B) "free market."
C) a welfare state.
D) neoliberal.
E) postindustrial.
Question
The locational decision-making of firms is an irrational process.
Question
When the cost of shipping raw materials is higher than the cost of of shipping the final product,firms tend to locate near the raw materials.
Question
All of the following are ways in which states shape economies EXCEPT

A) creation and enforcement of laws.
B) setting fiscal and monetary policy.
C) through its uneven expenditures across the landscape.
D) construction of infrastructure.
E) through military intervention.
Question
What entity is the largest single employer in the United States?

A) Walmart
B) General Motors
C) McDonald's
D) U.S. federal government
E) CitiBank
Question
Which of the following was the largest project ever undertaken my the U.S.government?

A) the welfare state
B) the Federal Interstate Highway System
C) Hoover Dam
D) the system of airports in the U.S.
E) public transportation
Question
Development of iron-ore deposits in Venezuela and Australia by U.S.and Japanese automotive companies is an example of backward integration.
Question
Mass production includes the standardization of parts and the division of labor.
Question
The clustering of the advertising industry in New York City on and around Madison Avenue is an example of service linkages.
Question
When firms within related industries cluster together in order to lower unit costs for all firms,this refers to industrial inertia.
Question
Increasing scale generally raises the unit cost of inputs.
Question
Capital is the most important determinant of a firm's location in most industries.
Question
According to Alfred Weber,the major factor influencing location of industries is labor.
Question
How much of the total U.S.land area does the federal government own and what is it primarily used for?

A) 2% used for public housing
B) 7% used for housing government offices
C) 20% used for the Interstate Highway system
D) 40% used for national parks and military facilities
E) 55% used for national parks, military facilities, Interstate Highways, government offices, and public housing
Question
A theory is a simplification of the world.
Question
When a firm becomes horizontally integrated it outsources its manufacturing.
Question
When a firm pursues a strategy of diversification,it controls production and marketing of many different products.
Question
The manufacture of bottled and canned beverages tends to locate near its markets because of industry tradition that dates back to the earliest days of Coca Cola.
Question
The largest proportion of U.S.federal government tax revenues come from

A) social insurance payroll tax.
B) individual income tax.
C) excise taxes.
D) corporate income tax.
E) other taxes.
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Deck 5: Theoretical Considerations
1
One of the world's largest region for producing computer software is

A) Research Triangle Park (NC).
B) Emilia-Romagna (Italy).
C) Silicon Valley (CA).
D) Route 128 (Boston).
E) Badden-Wurtenburg (Germany).
C
2
The functions of management include all of the following EXCEPT

A) allocating resources.
B) raising capital.
C) keeping abreast of government rules and policies.
D) making investment decisions.
E) all of the above are functions of management.
E
3
Which of the following is NOT TRUE about the process of capital intensification?

A) is essentially the substitution of capital for labor
B) is a long term trend under capitalism
C) when firms seek to reduce costs and raise productivity by using machines instead of workers
D) is most likely to be used when labor costs are low
E) is most likely to be used when labor costs are high
D
4
Weber's location theory emphasized the role of which of the following in the locational decisions of firms?

A) capital
B) labor costs
C) transportation costs
D) human capital
E) managerial and technical skills
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Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
Factors associated with the decline in innovation in the U.S.include all of the following EXCEPT

A) a decline in federal support for basic research.
B) a widespread lack of interest in the U.S. public for science.
C) many organizations in the U.S. focus on the short-term returns.
D) difficulties in obtaining venture capital.
E) foreign competition and high labor costs.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
The behavioral approach

A) focuses on the psychology of the decision making process.
B) focuses on people's behavior.
C) emphasizes historical context and social relations.
D) derives from neo-classical economics.
E) is the scientific method.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Which of the following factors is the most important determinant of a firm's location in most industries?

A) land
B) labor
C) capital
D) technical skills
E) all of the above are equally important
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Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Those skills necessary for the continued invention of new products and processes are

A) technical skills.
B) research and development (R&D).
C) are usually beyond the reach of small firms.
D) all of the above.
E) only technical skills and (R&D).
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Which of the following factors shape a firm's location?

A) labor
B) land
C) capital
D) all of the above
E) only land a capital
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Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
At the local scale,which factor of location is the most important?

A) the cost of labor
B) the availability and cost of land
C) capital
D) managerial skills
E) technical skills
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Which input to production is sentient and capable of changing the conditions of work?

A) labor
B) capital
C) land
D) management
E) cost
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Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Which of the following is NOT TRUE about theories?

A) They are a way of looking at the world.
B) They are a way of making sense of the relationships between variables.
C) They are what separates description from explanation.
D) They allow us to establish causality.
E) They are always provable.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Industrial properties have expanded to the suburbs in recent decades.Which of the following is NOT a reason for this?

A) Computerization and just-in-time production systems have diminished and have made the cost of land more expensive.
B) There are locations that are easily accessible to motor freight and interstates.
C) There are locations with access to suburban services and infrastructure.
D) The attraction of residential areas and other amenities.
E) Suburban locations have minimized the journey to work.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
Several developments limit the applicability of Weber's model.They include all of the following EXCEPT

A) not all firms need to minimize transportation costs.
B) the production process is much more complex now.
C) transportation cost is best expressed as a linear function of distance.
D) transportation costs having been declining in the long-run.
E) brainpower has steadily been replacing muscle and machine power.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
Labor has a rather high level of inertia due to

A) people are reluctant to leave familiar places.
B) people will sit out short periods of unemployment or accept lower wages.
C) unemployment payments.
D) all of the above contribute to labor's inertia.
E) none of the above contribute to labor's inertia.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
The purchasing of raw material sources or distribution facilities is known as

A) horizontal integration.
B) diversification.
C) economies of scale.
D) diseconomies of scale.
E) vertical integration.
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Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
Adjustments in scale include which of the following?

A) a division of labor
B) economies of scale
C) vertical integration
D) horizontal integration
E) all of the above are ways that scale can be adjusted
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Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Which region of the U.S.has the lowest percents of workers covered by labor unions?

A) the southeast
B) the northeast
C) the west
D) the Great Plains
E) New England
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Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Which of the following materials has the highest transport costs as a percentage of product prices?

A) lumber and wood
B) leather products
C) rubber and plastics
D) food
E) stone, clay and glass
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Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
In the U.S.,the rate of new inventions and granted patents began to decline in which decade?

A) 1960
B) 1970
C) 1980
D) 1990
E) 2000
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Material-oriented industries emphasize

A) markets.
B) raw materials.
C) labor pools.
D) access to capital.
E) land prices.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
All of the following complicate locational decisions of firms EXCEPT

A) firms have only one site or situation factor.
B) more than one critical location may emerge.
C) because there are unknowns, firms cannot always precisely calculate the costs at various locations.
D) firms may select its location based on inertia.
E) amenities at a given location.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
Alfred Weber,a German economist,is noted for his work on

A) classical industrial location theory.
B) the Kondratiev Cycle.
C) the Demographic Transition.
D) the Spatial Product Cycle Curve.
E) Tragedy of the Commons.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Which is FALSE about agglomerations?

A) They help firms that cluster reduce costs in ways they otherwise could not.
B) They arise from the numerous interconnections of people, goods, services and information provided by cities.
C) They arise because the creation of new knowledge and products takes place within a relatively small geographic area.
D) They generate synergies.
E) They never include government agencies or offices.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
Which of the following statement about the size of firms in a country's economy is most accurate?

A) The majority of firms remain small and peripheral.
B) Most small firms grow to become very large or they go out of business.
C) There is an even split between small and large firms.
D) Small firms are not profitable.
E) Large firms dominate the industrial base.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
What is the pattern of the three-stage sequence by which firms have grown in the U.S.?

A) vertical integration (1890s-1919), then horizontal integration (1920s-1940s), followed by diversification (since 1950s).
B) diversification (1890s-1919), then horizontal integration (1920s-1940s), followed by vertical integration (since 1950s).
C) diversification (1890s-1919), then vertical integration (1920s-1940s), followed by horizontal integration (since 1950s).
D) horizontal integration (1890s-1919), then vertical integration (1920s-1940s), followed by diversification (since 1950s).
E) vertical integration (1890s-1919), then diversification (1920s-1940s), followed by horizontal integration (since 1950s).
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
What happens in forward integration?

A) The firm begins to control the outlets for its products.
B) The firm buys other non-related firms.
C) A firm takes over operations that were previously the responsibility of its suppliers.
D) The firm merges with similar firms from other countries.
E) The firm expands its geographical reach.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
What is the crucial social relation of production?

A) between corporations and financial institutions
B) between business and government
C) between owners of the means of production and the workers who operate those means
D) between producers and consumers
E) between competing firms
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29
When the cost of shipping raw materials is higher than the cost of of shipping the final product,where will the firm locate?

A) near a major city
B) near the market
C) near the raw materials
D) in the suburbs
E) in China
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30
Where would a footloose industry be most likely to locate?

A) in northern urban areas of the U.S.
B) in southern suburban areas of the U.S.
C) in the Core
D) in the Periphery
E) wherever it wishes
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31
Which of the following is an example of backward integration?

A) development of iron-ore deposits in Venezuela and Australia by U.S. and Japanese automotive companies
B) fast-food companies opening new outlets in Beijing
C) Germany's Daimler-Benz merging with the U.S. Chrysler Corporation
D) Starbucks opening retail outlets in a grocery store
E) all of the above
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32
When a firm controls the production and marketing of diverse products,this is known as

A) horizontal integration.
B) diversification.
C) economies of scale.
D) diseconomies of scale.
E) vertical integration.
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33
What happens in backward integration?

A) The firm begins to control the outlets for its products.
B) The firm buys other non-related firms.
C) A firm takes over operations that were previously the responsibility of its suppliers.
D) The firm merges with similar firms from other countries.
E) The firm expands its geographical reach.
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34
Agglomeration economies take several forms including EXCEPT

A) production linkages.
B) service linkages.
C) marketing linkages.
D) urbanization economies.
E) diseconomies of scale.
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35
Mass production includes the standardization of parts and

A) the outsourcing of labor.
B) the mechanization of manufacturing.
C) the fluidity of capital.
D) the division of labor.
E) power of management.
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36
Gaining an increasing market share of a given niche of a particular industry is known as

A) horizontal integration.
B) diversification.
C) economies of scale.
D) diseconomies of scale.
E) vertical integration.
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37
A vertically integrated oil company includes which of the following activities?

A) exploration
B) drilling
C) refining
D) retailing
E) all of the above
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38
Which of the following is NOT a major criticism of structural theorists concerning industrial location theory?

A) Location theory focuses on individual firms as abstract entities.
B) Location theory all but ignores the context of the capitalist system.
C) Location theory is focused on the role of the capitalist system in the decision making process.
D) It is unrealistic.
E) It does not consider a model of the firm as a complex organizational structure.
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39
What organizational structure of the firm is a combination of at least two of the basic organizational formats?

A) Functional orientation
B) Product orientation
C) Geographic orientation
D) Customer orientation
E) Matrix structure
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40
Which of the following is an example of a functional organization structure for a firm?

A) cars, trucks, buses, farm equipment
B) Northeast region, Southeast region, West Coast region, Central region
C) industrial, commercial, consumer, government
D) manufacturing, marketing, finance, R&D
E) over $5 million, $3 million-$4.9 million, under $3 million
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41
Why does the manufacture of bottled and canned beverages tend to locate near its markets?

A) because of government regulations
B) because such beverages are a perishable good
C) because of industry tradition that dates back to the earliest days of Coca Cola
D) because water, a ubiquitous raw material, is the largest part of the weight of the finished product
E) all of the above
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42
Administrative hierarchies

A) are formed to perform nonproduction activities.
B) are formed due to the rise in capital intensification.
C) cluster in a relatively few large metropolitan areas.
D) all of the above
E) B and C only
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43
Dual sourcing is used by firms

A) to avoid the inevitable Kondratiev cycle.
B) to complete the product life cycle.
C) to minimize risk of labor disputes and their effects on production.
D) to decrease competition.
E) none of the above
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44
Firms organize themselves in all of the following ways EXCEPT

A) functional orientation.
B) product orientation.
C) geographic orientation.
D) amenity orientation.
E) matrix orientation.
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45
By far,the most mobile production factor is

A) labor.
B) capital.
C) land.
D) machinery.
E) technology.
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46
All of the following are ways that the government shapes economies under capitalism,EXCEPT

A) setting production quotas on consumer goods.
B) creation and enforcement of a legal system.
C) construction of infrastructure.
D) government expenditures.
E) control of the money supply.
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47
Which of the following occupations would have the largest labor shed?

A) fast-food worker
B) janitor
C) university professor
D) automobile factory worker
E) cashier
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48
The increasing globalization of production

A) was accompanied by an new international division of labor.
B) was possibly only because the largest corporations stayed put in the U.S.
C) had little effect on the deindustrialization process in the industrial nations.
D) strengthened the power of unions in advanced economies.
E) followed along the same trends as the old imperial system.
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49
What is the basis for profit in a capitalist economy?

A) land rents
B) surplus value
C) the quantity of products sold
D) reduction in tax rates and other government regulations
E) Kondratiev longwaves
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50
Which of the following organizational structure works best for companies that have diverse product lines?

A) functional orientation
B) product orientation
C) geographic orientation
D) customer orientation
E) matrix orientation
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51
Which of the following organizational structure works best for companies that wish to organize according to the types of customers they serve?

A) functional orientation
B) product orientation
C) geographic orientation
D) customer orientation
E) matrix orientation
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52
Which of the following organizational structure works best for companies that have a narrow range of products?

A) functional orientation
B) product orientation
C) geographic orientation
D) customer orientation
E) matrix orientation
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53
What is the correct ordering of the industrial activity as explained by Kondratiev longwaves of economic activity?

A) (1)Textiles; (2)Railroads & iron; (3)Automobiles, electricity & chemicals; (4)Petrochemicals and aerospace; and (5)Information
B) (1)Railroads & iron; (2)Textiles; (3)Automobiles, electricity & chemicals; (4)Petrochemicals and aerospace; and (5)Information
C) (1)Railroads & iron; (2)Textiles; (3)Petrochemicals and aerospace; (4)Automobiles, electricity & chemicals; and (5)Information
D) (1)Textiles; (2)Railroads & iron; (3)Petrochemicals and aerospace; (4)Automobiles, electricity & chemicals; and (5)Information
E) (1)Textiles; (2)Automobiles, electricity & chemicals; (3)Railroads & iron; (4)Petrochemicals and aerospace; and (5)Information
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54
Which of the following statements about capitalism is most accurate?

A) Markets are the only means through which firms make decisions.
B) Markets are the primary means through which firms make decisions.
C) Markets and governments share equally in decision-making by firms.
D) Government is the primary means through which firms make decisions.
E) Governments are the only means through which firms make decisions.
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55
Which is FALSE about the product life cycle?

A) Products at different stages of production tend to be manufactured at different places within corporate systems.
B) Innovation begins in advanced countries.
C) Less developed countries increasingly specialize in the task of transforming raw materials into commodities.
D) It occurs in 3 stages.
E) In Stage 1 competitors steal ideas.
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56
Each business cycle leaves a geographic imprint based on investment and disinvestment at the local level.These local landscapes are imprinted in which of the following ways?

A) Local labor forces are constructed.
B) Local economies, landscapes and social structures are changed.
C) These local imprints are generally short-lived.
D) Each wave or cycle imprints the local landscape completely separately from previous or subsequent waves.
E) Local labor forces are constructed and local economies, landscapes, and social structures are change.
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57
Capitalism

A) generates many contradictions.
B) is an unstable system.
C) must expand to survive.
D) all of the above
E) A and C only
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58
What does the Kondratiev Cycle illustrate?

A) the importance of geography in the location firms since 1900
B) alternative strategies for the organization of firms since the Great Depression
C) the rise and fall of labor unions in U.S. industry
D) the shift from reliance on animate energy, through fossil fuels, leading to the coming shift to renewable energy
E) the successive waves of growth and decline in industrial activity since the beginning of the Industrial Revolution
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59
On what is the proposed Fifth Wave of the Kondratiev cycle based?

A) solar energy
B) outsourcing
C) expansion of free trade agreements
D) information technology
E) decline of labor unions
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60
Which of the following organizational structure works best for companies that have a narrow range of products,markets and distribution channels?

A) functional orientation
B) product orientation
C) geographic orientation
D) customer orientation
E) matrix orientation
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Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
61
The rise of "Silicon Valley" is best explained by tax benefits given to the industry by the State of California.
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62
Governing that is based on the premise that the market is the optimal way of allocating public as well as private resources is called

A) democratic.
B) "free market."
C) a welfare state.
D) neoliberal.
E) postindustrial.
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63
The locational decision-making of firms is an irrational process.
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64
When the cost of shipping raw materials is higher than the cost of of shipping the final product,firms tend to locate near the raw materials.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
65
All of the following are ways in which states shape economies EXCEPT

A) creation and enforcement of laws.
B) setting fiscal and monetary policy.
C) through its uneven expenditures across the landscape.
D) construction of infrastructure.
E) through military intervention.
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66
What entity is the largest single employer in the United States?

A) Walmart
B) General Motors
C) McDonald's
D) U.S. federal government
E) CitiBank
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67
Which of the following was the largest project ever undertaken my the U.S.government?

A) the welfare state
B) the Federal Interstate Highway System
C) Hoover Dam
D) the system of airports in the U.S.
E) public transportation
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68
Development of iron-ore deposits in Venezuela and Australia by U.S.and Japanese automotive companies is an example of backward integration.
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69
Mass production includes the standardization of parts and the division of labor.
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70
The clustering of the advertising industry in New York City on and around Madison Avenue is an example of service linkages.
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71
When firms within related industries cluster together in order to lower unit costs for all firms,this refers to industrial inertia.
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72
Increasing scale generally raises the unit cost of inputs.
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73
Capital is the most important determinant of a firm's location in most industries.
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74
According to Alfred Weber,the major factor influencing location of industries is labor.
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75
How much of the total U.S.land area does the federal government own and what is it primarily used for?

A) 2% used for public housing
B) 7% used for housing government offices
C) 20% used for the Interstate Highway system
D) 40% used for national parks and military facilities
E) 55% used for national parks, military facilities, Interstate Highways, government offices, and public housing
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76
A theory is a simplification of the world.
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77
When a firm becomes horizontally integrated it outsources its manufacturing.
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78
When a firm pursues a strategy of diversification,it controls production and marketing of many different products.
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79
The manufacture of bottled and canned beverages tends to locate near its markets because of industry tradition that dates back to the earliest days of Coca Cola.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
80
The largest proportion of U.S.federal government tax revenues come from

A) social insurance payroll tax.
B) individual income tax.
C) excise taxes.
D) corporate income tax.
E) other taxes.
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