Chapter 11: East Asia: Rowntree, Et. Al. - Modified by Joe Naumann, Umsl
Chapter 11: East Asia: Rowntree, Et. Al. - Modified by Joe Naumann, Umsl
Chapter 11: East Asia: Rowntree, Et. Al. - Modified by Joe Naumann, Umsl
Asia
Growing competition
-Confucianism -Marxism
-Geomancy -Conurbation
-Ideographic writing -Loess
-Three Gorges Project -JAKOTA Triangle
Introduction
– East Asia is the most populous region in the world
– China is the most populous country, and the oldest
continuous national culture
– Eastern China is undergoing rapid economic
development
– China and Japan have been rivals from time to time
– East Asia has experienced colonization, and has
seen both internal and international conflict
– Japan is extremely wealthy, but poverty may be
found in parts of the region
– East Asia is one of the core areas of the world
economy and an emerging center of political power
Relative Location
CHINA’S RELATIVE LOCATION – AN
HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE
• ISOLATION
– Natural protective barriers
– Distance
– Inward looking (central kingdom) with minor
incidences of cultural diffusion
– Effects of one ocean
• A history of emperors who restricted use of
the coastline, except in local circumstances
• Today the ocean is playing a major role in the
economic (and cultural) transformation of
coastal China.
Environmental Geography: Resource
Pressures in a Crowded Land
• Flooding, Dam-Building, and Related Issues
– China’s Yangtze River is an important resource (3rd
largest volume)
– The Three Gorges Controversy
• Chinese government wants to dam the Yangtze
(Chang Jiang) River with the largest hydroelectric
dam in the world
– Purpose: control floods & generate electricity
– Problems: Will jeopardize animal species,
flood a major scenic attraction, and displace
up to 2 million people
Three
Gorges Dam
Under
Construction
Environmental Geography: Resource
Pressures in a Crowded Land
– Flooding in Northern China
• Northern China Plain has long been plagued with
floods and droughts
– Worst floods caused by Huang He (Yellow
River)
– Huang He carries a huge sediment load
(suspended clay, silt, sand); is the world’s
muddiest river
– Many dikes, but it’s still “the river of China’s
sorrow”
Environmental Geography: Resource
Pressures in a Crowded Land (cont.)
• Flooding, Dam-Building, Related Issues (cont.)
– Erosion on the Loess Plateau
• Huang He’s sediment burden from the Loess
Plateau
– Loess – a fine, wind-blown deposited material
» Light tan color accounts for the old name,
Yellow river and Yellow Sea
– Loess is fertile, but vulnerable to erosion when
plowed
• Loess Plateau - one of the poorest parts of China
LAND DEGREDATION
Environmental Geography: Resource
Pressures in a Crowded Land (cont.)
• Other East Asian Environmental Problems
– Forests and Deforestation
• Little conservation of forests in China; much more
in Japan
• Reforestation programs have been unsuccessful
• Substantial forests found in the far north and
along Tibetan border
• China may need to import wood products for
development
Environmental
Issues in
East Asia
(Fig. 11.2)
Environmental Geography: Resource
Pressures in a Crowded Land (cont.)
• Other East Asian Environmental Problems (cont.)
– Mounting Pollution
• China’s development causing water pollution, toxic waste
dumping, and air pollution from the burning of high sulfur
coal
• Japan, Taiwan, South Korea have implemented stringent
pollution controls and established pollution-generating
industries outside of their countries to reduce pollution
– Environmental Issues in Japan
• Japan has a relatively clean environment
– Environmental restrictions, cleanup and pollution
exporting
» Pollution exporting: Location of their dirtier
factories elsewhere in the world
Environmental Geography: Resource
Pressures in a Crowded Land (cont.)
• East Asia’s Physical Geography
• Large area gives it large regional climatic variability
• Similar latitude extent to U.S.
• Climate of southern China like Florida; climate of northern
China like Canada
– Japan’s Physical Environment
• Subtropical in the south and nearly subarctic in the north -
Climatic variations in the east and west
• 85% of the country is mountainous
– Japan’s forests come from favorable climate, history
of forest conservation
• Limited alluvial plains used for intensive agriculture
– Kanto Plain, Kansai Basin, and Nobi Basin
Physical Geography of East Asia (Fig.
11.6)
PHYSIOGRAPHY
Environmental Geography: Resource
Pressures in a Crowded Land (cont.)
• East Asia’s Physical Geography (cont.)
– Taiwan’s Environment
• Central and eastern regions are rugged and mountainous;
west is dominated by an alluvial plain; mild winter climate;
still has extensive forests
– Chinese Environments
• Southern China: rugged mountains and hills interspersed
with lowland basins
• Northern China: Gobi Desert, North China Plain, Loess
Plateau
– Korean Landscapes
• Mountainous country with scattered alluvial basins
• South Korea has better farmlands than North Korea
Climate
Map
of
East Asia
(Fig. 11.7)
Comparing Size & Latitude
CLIMATE COMPARISON
Cold
Warm
Dry
Wet
Population and Settlement: A Realm of
Crowded Lowland Basins
• Japanese Settlement and Agricultural Patterns
– Japan’s Agriculture Lands
• Largely limited to country’s coastal plains & interior basins
• Rice, fruit, and vegetable cultivation
– Settlement Patterns
• 3 largest metropolitan areas: Tokyo, Osaka, and Nagoya
• Population density: 870 per square miles
• Mostly crowded in mainland industrial belt
– Japan’s Urban-Agricultural Dilemma
• Japanese cities located in agricultural lowlands
• Restricted living space in urban areas
• National importance of rice self-sufficiency
Population Map of East Asia (Fig.
11.14)
POPULATION COMPARISONS
285
300
250
200
MILLIONS
127
150
100 50
23
50
0
JAPAN’S AGE DISTRIBUTION
PERCENTAGE OF THE POPULATION
100%
SOURCE: UNITED NATIONS WORLD POPULATION
100%
PROSPECTS 1990 (NEW YORK: UNITED NATIONS, 1991)
DECLINING JAPANESE
POPULATION
Total fertility rates
2.06
1.66
1.65
1.44
1.24
0 0.5 1 1.5 2
Population and Settlement: A Realm of
Crowded Lowland Basins (cont.)
• Settlement and Agricultural Patterns in China, Taiwan, Korea
• China is only 30% urban; Japan, Taiwan, Korea urban
– China’s Agricultural Regions
• Rice dominant in the south; wheat, millet, sorghum in the
north
• North China Plain is one of the most thoroughly
anthropogenic landscapes in the world (anthropogenic
landscape – one that has been heavily transformed by
human activities)
• Manchuria thoroughly settled; Loess Plateau thinly settled
– Settlement and Agricultural Patterns in Korea and Taiwan
• Korea densely populated (70 million); 1,150 per square mile
• Taiwan is most densely; 22 million; 1,500 per square mil
KOREA: NORTH-SOUTH
• CONTRASTS
NORTH KOREA
– 55% of the land, 1/3 of the population, extremely
rural
– Antiquated state enterprises
– Inefficient, non-productive agriculture
– Limited trade – former Soviet Union and China
• SOUTH KOREA
– 45% of the land, 2/3s of the population, highly
urbanized
– Modern factories
– Intensive, increasingly mechanized agriculture
– Extensive trade – US, Japan, and Western Europe
North South
THE
KOREAS
•Zhuang
•Uygur
•Hiu
•Yi
•Tibetan 8.1%
•Miao
•Manchu
•Mongol
•Buyi
•Korean
CHINESE LANGUAGE
• Chinese is one of the world’s oldest active
languages.
• Spoken Chinese varies dialect to dialect
(not mutually intelligible), although the
characters (over 50,000) used to represent
the language remain the same.
• Since Chinese is written in characters rather
than by a phonetic alphabet, chinese words
must be transliterated so foreigners can
pronounce them.
THE PINYIN SYSTEM
• Enabled language to be a centripetal
force
• Adopted in 1958
• Based on pronunciation of Chinese
characters in northern mandarin
• Established a standard form of language
throughout the country
PINYIN
• Literally, “spell sounds”
• Developed in the people’s republic of China
• The most accepted system of Romanizing
Chinese
Chinese Translation
Bei North
Nan South
Xi West
Dong East
Jing Capital
Shan Mountain
He River (in the north)
Jiang River (in the south)
Cultural Coherence and Diversity: A
Confucian Realm? (cont.)
• Linguistic and Ethnic Diversity … (cont.)
– The Non-Han Peoples
• Many of the remote upland districts are inhabited by non-
Han people
– Tribal: people who have a traditional social order
based on autonomous village communities
• Manchus in remote portions of Manchuria; other non-Hans
in the far south autonomous regions (designed to allow
non-Han peoples to experience “socialist modernization”
at a different pace from the rest of China
– Language and Ethnicity in Taiwan
• Tribal peoples who speak languages related to Indonesian
• Taiwanese and Mandarin speakers; Taiwanese
discouraged
Cultural Coherence and Diversity: A
Confucian Realm? (cont.)
• East Asian Cultures in Global Context
• Tension between isolation and international involvement
– The Globalized Fringe
• Capitalist countries of the region are characterized by
vibrant cosmopolitan internationalism
• English a common language; many study in the U.S.,
England
• Cultural flows increasingly two-way
• Japanese products worldwide (electronics, cars, anime)
– The Chinese Heartland
• History of internal orientation, except on southern coast
• China began to liberalize, open its doors in the 1970s and
’80s
• Urban popular culture beginning to emerge
The Geopolitical Framework and Its Evolution:
The Imperial Legacies of China and Japan
• Cold War rivalries split East Asia
• The Evolution of China
• Original core was the North China Plain and Loess Plateau
• China unified in 3rd Century B.C.; efforts to conquer Korea
– The Manchu Ch’ing Dynasty
• Manchu Dynasty in power 1644 to well into 19 th century
– The Modern Era
• In 1800s, China failed to keep pace with technological
progress, and the empire declined
• British used opium in lieu of silver to buy Chinese goods,
setting off the Opium Wars, resulting in colonization
• China divided into colonial “Spheres of Influence”
The Great Wall
•Several walls were built
over a long period
•Protection from Mongol
horsemen from the north
– communication system
•Monumental engineering
feat – they claim it can be
seen from orbit in space
China’s Grand Canal: North-
South Transportation System
•Centuries-
old
engineering
feat that is
being
upgraded for
greater use
in the coastal
growth zone
now.
19th Century European Colonialism (Fig.
11.25)
The Geopolitical Framework and Its Evolution:
The Imperial Legacies of China and Japan (cont.)
• The Rise of Japan
• Japan emerged as a unified state in 7th century A.D.
• Was divided several times between 1000 and 1580 A.D.
– The Closing and Opening of Japan
• Tokugawa Shogunate reunited Japan in 1600s, established an
isolationist policy
– Shogun: a military leader who theoretically remains under the
emperor but who actually holds power
• Meiji Restoration (1868): strengthened government and economy
– The Japanese Empire
• Period of modernization and military building
– War with China, Russia; annexation of Korea
– War with the U.S. occurred after Japanese efforts to unite East
and Southeast Asia (“Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere”)
The Geopolitical Framework and Its Evolution:
The Imperial Legacies of China and Japan (cont.)
• Postwar Geopolitics
– Japan’s Revival
• Territory reduced to four main Japanese islands and the
Ryukyu Archipelago
– The Division of Korea
• Divided by the U.S. and the Soviet Union after Korean
War
– The Division of China
• Mao Zedong and the communists vs. the nationalists
(who favored an authoritarian, capitalist economy)
– Communists victorious in 1949
– Nationalists fled to Taiwan
The Geopolitical Framework and Its Evolution:
The Imperial Legacies of China and Japan (cont.)
• Postwar Geopolitics (cont.)
– The Chinese Territorial Domain
• Occupation of Tibet, Xinjiang, and Inner Mongolia
• Paracel and Spratly islands
• China reclaimed Hong Kong in 1997
• The Global Dimension of East Asian
Geopolitics
• End of Cold War and China’s economic growth shifted the
balance of power in the region
• Increasing military budget in China; China has world’s
largest army, nuclear weapons, sophisticated missile
technology
• China’s human rights record
• Improved relations between China and the U.S.
Geopolitical Issues in East Asia (Fig. 11.24)
Economic and Social Development: An
Emerging Core of the Global Economy
• Japan’s Economy and Society
– Japan’s Boom and Bust
• 1950s was beginning of the Japanese “economic miracle”
– Use of cheap labor shifts from clothing and toys to more
sophisticated goods
• 1990s: economic slump caused by collapse of inflated
real estate market
• Japan still a core country, with global influence
– Living Standards and Social Conditions in Japan
• High standard of living, though a little lower than U.S.
• Low unemployment, health care provided; low crime rates
• Literacy high, infant mortality low, life-spans long
JAPAN’S POST WWII
TRANSFORMATION
• 1945 –1952: Allied Occupation
– Economic reshaping
– Labor legislation
– Constitution
– Civil rights
– Land reform
– U.S. “Helping hand” policy
JAPAN’S
CORE
AREA
DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS
• LIFE EXPECTANCY - 2nd (22nd)
• INFANT MORTALITY - 1st (29th)
• GNP PER CAPITA - 3rd (6th)
• LITERACY RATE - 9th (6th)
• EDUCATIONAL RANK - 15th (2nd)
• HUMAN DEVELOPMENT - 3rd (2nd)
•CHALLENGES
–Social problems
–Political uncertainties
–Vulnerabilities
Economic and Social Development: An
Emerging Core of the Global Economy
(cont.)
• Chinese Development
– China Under Communism
• “Great Leap Forward” resulted in the death of 20 million
• Cultural Revolution of the 1960s – expulsion of many to
“re-education” camps
– Toward a Postcommunist Economy
• China seeks closer connections with the world economy
• Experimenting with capitalism
– Industrial Reform
• China opened Special Economic Zones (SEZs) in which
foreign investment was welcomed and state involvement
is minimal
• Economic growth is around 6-7%
SPECIAL ECONOMIC
ZONES
• INVESTOR INCENTIVES
• LOW TAXES
• EASING OF IMPORT AND EXPORT
REGULATIONS
• SIMPLIFIED LAND LEASES
• HIRING OF CONTRACT LABOR PERMITTED
• PRODUCTS MAY BE SOLD IN FOREIGN
MARKETS AND IN CHINA (UNDER CERTAIN
RESTRICTIONS)
• LOCATION WAS PRIME CONSIDERATION
Coastal Development &
Open Cities Selection
• SIZE
• OVERSEAS TRADING HISTORY
• LINKS TO “OVERSEAS CHINESE”
• LEVELS OF INDUSTRIALIZATION
• POOL OF LOCAL TALENT AND LABOR
• CONFINED TO COASTAL AREAS
Economic Development: The
Golden Coastline
•From the
east to the
west, it’s
less
developed
HONG KONG
• MEANS “FRAGRANT HARBOR”- AN EXCELLENT
DEEP WATER PORT
• BOOMED DURING THE KOREAN WAR
• 6 MILLION PEOPLE WITHIN 400 SQ MILES
• ECONOMY IS LARGER THAN HALF OF THE
WORLD’S COUNTRIES – Great benefit to China
• 1 JULY 1997- BRITISH TRANSFERRED CONTROL
TO CHINA– many businesses remained there
• HONG KONG RENAMED XIANGGANG
• ACQUIRED A NEW STATUS AS CHINA’S ONLY
SPECIAL ADMINISTRATIVE REGION (SAR)
Economic and Social Development: An
Emerging Core of the Global Economy
(cont.)
• Chinese Development (cont.)
– Social and Regional Differentiation
• Chinese economic reforms resulted in social and regional
differentiation (when certain groups and portions of a
country prosper while others fail)
– The Booming Coastal Region
• Most of China’s economic benefits have flowed to the
coastal region and Beijing
– Interior and Northern China
• China’s interior and northern portions have seen little
economic expansion; Manchuria is a “rust belt
Shanghai and Click on this picture to see the
River
Industrial North:
China’s Rust
Belt
•Formerly called
Manchuria
Economic and Social Development: An
Emerging Core of the Global Economy
(cont.)
• Chinese Development (cont.)
– Social Conditions in China
• China has made large investments in medical care and
education
• Regional contrasts in social development, well-being
– China’s Population Quandary
• 1.2 billion people in China
– Establishment of the “one child policy”
– Gender imbalance, other unintended consequences
– The Position of Women
• Traditionally low position in Chinese society
China’s Population Policy
• Under Mao
Zedong – no
emphasis on
reducing
population growth
rate.
• Under Deng
Xiaoping – One-
child policy per
family
China’s Demographics
• 1,249,100,000 (1998)
• 1,294,000,000 (2002)
• Annual natural increase 0.9% (1970s - 3%)
• Life expectancy: 69 (males), 73 (females)
• TFR 1.8 born/women (1997)
• Physiological density-3,594 people/sq mi
– Only 10% of the land is arable and 80% of the
population lives on this land
• Distribution: western 2/3s is sparsely
populated (minorities)
Conclusions
• East Asia united by culture and history
• Internal ethnic tensions growing in
China
• Korea must manage the transition from
low-wage exporter to high-wage
technological powerhouse
• Japan coping with its economic
challenges
End of Chapter 11: East Asia