Geography, asked by vinod13631618, 10 months ago

Economic geography is a dynamic science evaluation critically with examples in recent time.​

Answers

Answered by maryam04
1

Economic geography has been defined by the geographers as the study of human's economic activities under varying sets of conditions which is associated with production, location, distribution, consumption, exchange of resources, and spatial organization of economic activities across the world. It represents a traditional subfield of the discipline of geography. However, many economists have also approached the field in ways more typical of the discipline of economics.[1]

Economic geography has taken a variety of approaches to many different subject matters, including the location of industries, economies of agglomeration (also known as "linkages"), transportation, international trade, development, real estate, gentrification, ethnic economies, gendered economies, core-periphery theory, the economics of urban form, the relationship between the environment and the economy (tying into a long history of geographers studying culture-environment interaction), and globalization.


vinod13631618: dear sir can you provide me this answer in description. I'm preparing as a post graduation exam so I think this answer is not enough if you describe in 2-3 pages plz plz plz if you can
Answered by anjaliom1122
0

Answer:

Economic geography has contributed to the development of countries like the United States. This enables scholars to comprehend the regional economy's structure as well as its economic ties to other regions of the world.

Explanation:

Economic geography is an evolving field of knowledge. Economics is a huge subject with a lot to learn and comprehend. Economic geography is the study of how individuals make a living, how localized livelihood systems differ, and how geographically interconnected and integrated economic activities are. FACTORS THAT IMPACT HOW ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES ARE DISTRIBUTED. The discussion of human activities in connection to the environment is the primary goal of economic geography. Once more, human activity is influenced by the local natural environment, resource availability, and cultural traditions. In order to determine a place's climate or the population of a country or the entire planet through time, we examine weather over a period of around 30 years. Since modifications do happen occasionally. As a result, geography is dynamic. Simply put, geography looks at how people interact with their surroundings. Understanding this intricate link, which is expressed in the dimensions of time (temporal) and place, is based on physical geography and human geography (spatial).

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