The impact of foreign-trade zones in the United States
Gespeichert in:
| Titel: | The impact of foreign-trade zones in the United States |
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| Autoren: | Lane, Jesse M. |
| Added Details: | NC Digital Online Collection of Knowledge and Scholarship (NCDOCKS). |
| Beschreibung: | 1 online resource (xi, 249 pages) : illustrations, digital, maps |
| Supplemental Data: | Title from PDF title page (viewed Aug. 26, 2022). |
| Abstract: | "Established in 1934 to increase exports and promote economic growth, foreign-trade zones have expanded across the U.S. and have become an integral part of local economic policy. A progenitor to modern place-based economic policy, the foreign-trade zone reflects modern neoliberalism and capitalism: free-market principles applied on a limited spatial scale and offered to a small number of firms. While the zone program occurs in every state in the U.S. and is inextricably tied to space, few geographers have analyzed its impact on historical and spatial development patterns. Using a mixed methods approach, this dissertation critically evaluates the historical and spatial evolution of the zone program, statistically analyzes the impact of foreign trade zones on spatial and temporal economic growth patterns, and analyzes the economic and external impacts of Foreign-Trade Zone No. 82 on local development in Mobile, Alabama. Since it was first proposed in 1894, the foreign-trade zone program has been used as a tool by corporate actors to consolidate control over trade in the U.S. Through the use of information management, propaganda, and control over elected officials and bureaucrats, several prominent robber barons and corporate consortiums were able to create a place-based mechanism to increase profits and market control. Statistical evidence suggests foreign-trade zones have impacted spatially uneven development patterns and negatively affected the periphery in the process. Interview and observational data in Mobile suggest the zone program has largely benefited big business at the expense of small businesses, neighboring minority communities, and local ecology."--Abstract from author supplied metadata. |
| Schlagworte: | Free ports and zones United States., Regional economic disparities., Economic geography., Space in economics., Zones et ports francs États-Unis., Disparités économiques régionales., Géographie économique., Espace (Économie politique), Economic geography, Free ports and zones, Regional economic disparities, Space in economics, United States |
| URL: | |
| Anmerkung: | Directed by Corey Johnson, Zhi-Jun Liu ; submitted to the Dept. of Geography, Environment, and Sustainability. Available online via NCDOCKS. Includes bibliographical references. |
| Other Numbers: | NGU oai:libres.uncg.edu/37889 1333221572 |
| Originalquelle: | From OAIster®, provided by the OCLC Cooperative. |
| Dokumentencode: | edsoai.on1333221572 |
| Datenbank: | OAIster |
| Abstract: | "Established in 1934 to increase exports and promote economic growth, foreign-trade zones have expanded across the U.S. and have become an integral part of local economic policy. A progenitor to modern place-based economic policy, the foreign-trade zone reflects modern neoliberalism and capitalism: free-market principles applied on a limited spatial scale and offered to a small number of firms. While the zone program occurs in every state in the U.S. and is inextricably tied to space, few geographers have analyzed its impact on historical and spatial development patterns. Using a mixed methods approach, this dissertation critically evaluates the historical and spatial evolution of the zone program, statistically analyzes the impact of foreign trade zones on spatial and temporal economic growth patterns, and analyzes the economic and external impacts of Foreign-Trade Zone No. 82 on local development in Mobile, Alabama. Since it was first proposed in 1894, the foreign-trade zone program has been used as a tool by corporate actors to consolidate control over trade in the U.S. Through the use of information management, propaganda, and control over elected officials and bureaucrats, several prominent robber barons and corporate consortiums were able to create a place-based mechanism to increase profits and market control. Statistical evidence suggests foreign-trade zones have impacted spatially uneven development patterns and negatively affected the periphery in the process. Interview and observational data in Mobile suggest the zone program has largely benefited big business at the expense of small businesses, neighboring minority communities, and local ecology."--Abstract from author supplied metadata. |
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