The Dictionary of Human Geography

(nextflipdebug2) #1

purchasing power parities, derived from data
on the costs of a ‘standard basket’ of goods
and services. In addition, as a recent OECD
(2006) report indicated, comparison of GDP
levels internationally is difficult because: it
takes no account of leisure time and the qual-
ity of the environment; it is not standardized
for income inequality (an extra $1,000 per
annum means much more to a poor than to a
rich person); it does not factor in negative
contributors to thequality of life(such as
pollution); and it takes no account of the
depreciation of capital stock. Unfortunately,
though measures have been devised to capture
these, they are not readily available for many
countries. rj


gross national product (GNP) A measure
of economic activity in a given period of time,
usually applied to national economies. It com-
prisesgross domestic product(gdp) plus
the net return from profits, dividends and in-
come earned abroad. GNP estimates are used
to compare the volume of economic activity
over time and space – either in aggregate or
per capita – but to avoid complications intro-
duced by inflation and exchange rate fluctu-
ations they have to be converted to a common
base. This involves the use of purchasing
power parities (the costs of a ‘standard basket’
of goods and services at a given period) – as in
the calculated rate of inflation within a coun-
try, which is taken into account when calcu-
lating a ‘real terms’ rate of GNP growth. GNP
is not necessarily a valid measure of ‘economic
health’ since harmful consequences (e.g. on
the environment) are not taken into account,
whereas the later costs of their amelioration
are: increased expenditure onpolicingcould
stimulate GNP growth, for example, even
if it was merely a response to an increased
crimerate. rj


growth coalitions Alliances of urban elites,
with shared interests in local economic
growth, partnered in pursuit of business-
friendly and market-oriented forms of city
governanceandresourceallocation (Logan
and Molotch, 1987). Typically centring on the
rentierclass(including developers, financiers
and realtors), the business interests of whom
are ‘place-based’, growth coalitions also com-
prise a range of auxiliary players such as uni-
versities, media and utility owners,
representatives of business and civic organiza-
tions, cultural leaders and labour unions.
What are sometimes called ‘growth machines’
or ‘urban regimes’ have assumed increased


significance in the context of the entrepreneur-
ial turn in urban politics since the 1970s. jpe

Suggested reading
Jonas and Wilson (1999).

growth pole A dynamic and highly inte-
grated set of industries, often induced by the
state, organized around a propulsive leading
sector or industry. Growth poles are intended
to generate rapid growth, and to disseminate
this through spillover andmultipliereffects
in the rest of theeconomy. The concept
was devised by French economist Franc ̧ois
Perroux (1903–87), who, in 1955, located
thepoˆle de croissance in abstract economic
space. It was translated into more concrete
geographical terms by J.R. Boudeville (1966).
On the bases ofexternal economiesand
economies ofagglomeration– and hence of
uneven development – Boudeville argued
that the set of industries forming the growth
pole might be clustered spatially and linked to
an existing urban area. He also pointed to the
regionally differentiated growth that such a
spatial strategy might generate. The precise
meaning of the term ‘growth pole’ is difficult
to pin down, however, because it is frequently
used in a far looser fashion to denote any
(planned) spatial clustering of economic
activity.
The apparent simplicity of the notion, its
suggestion of dynamism and its ability to con-
nect problems ofsectoralgrowth and planning
with those ofintra- and inter-regionalgrowth
and planning, led to its ready acceptance
and widespread use in the 1970s and 1980s.
Although some commentators have seen Per-
roux’s ideas resurfacing in thenew economic
geography(Meardon, 2001), there were sev-
eral persistent difficulties associated with
growth poles in both theory and practice that
led to its fall from grace. These included the
following:

(1) Technical problems, notably: (a) the inter-
dependent decisions to be made on the
location, size and sectoral composition of
a growth pole – this was not a serious
problem for Perroux, who defined growth
poles around a single propulsive industry,
but more recent research on the related
ideas ofclustersandindustrial dis-
trictsidentifiesnetworksof industries
as central to urban and regional develop-
ment; (b) the distinction between spon-
taneous and planned poles, with the latter
requiring integrated social and physical

Gregory / The Dictionary of Human Geography 9781405132879_4_G Final Proof page 320 2.4.2009 6:30pm

GROSS NATIONAL PRODUCT (GNP)

Free download pdf