Service Industries: A Geographical AppraisalRoutledge, 19.12.1985 - 322 Seiten The first major synthesis of an emerging geography which is undoubtedly changing the way in which academics, planners and policy-makers identify and interpret the spatial development of cities and regions in the 1980s. |
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... demand from other economic activities in local markets; Liverpool service firms already had connections which extended well beyond their immediate hinterland. Such a feature has very likely prevailed since the nineteenth century and is ...
... demand from other economic activities in local markets; Liverpool service firms already had connections which extended well beyond their immediate hinterland. Such a feature has very likely prevailed since the nineteenth century and is ...
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... demand among the developing countries for more advanced facilities such as satellite-based radio, television and business communications and the 'gap' illustrated in Figure 2.2 could become even wider. National assessments of the ...
... demand among the developing countries for more advanced facilities such as satellite-based radio, television and business communications and the 'gap' illustrated in Figure 2.2 could become even wider. National assessments of the ...
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... demand from oilimporting countries for finance to pay for the more expensive oil. Massive payment imbalances have arisen in the developing countries in particular where debts to the banks increased at 23 per cent per annum during the ...
... demand from oilimporting countries for finance to pay for the more expensive oil. Massive payment imbalances have arisen in the developing countries in particular where debts to the banks increased at 23 per cent per annum during the ...
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... clothing industries, that its overall impact on employment in particular is best assessed by using the techniques of macroeconomic analysis. Because final demand expenditure by international tourists constitutes an item.
... clothing industries, that its overall impact on employment in particular is best assessed by using the techniques of macroeconomic analysis. Because final demand expenditure by international tourists constitutes an item.
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... demand is presupposed) to assess the demand for labour. The method involves adding an exogenous increase of final demand to the various sectors connected with tourist demand; this is followed by a calculation of the output of each ...
... demand is presupposed) to assess the demand for labour. The method involves adding an exogenous increase of final demand to the various sectors connected with tourist demand; this is followed by a calculation of the output of each ...
Inhalt
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
administrative analysis behaviour British business services cent central place theory Chapter city centre classification companies consumer services corporate complexes costs demand developed countries dispersal distributive trades economic activities employees establishments example expenditure facilities factors Figure functions Geography growth hospitals ibid income increase information technology inner investment labour labourforce Liverpool location change location of service location quotients London major manufacturing Merseyside metropolitan areas Newcastle upon Tyne occupations office location office space operations organization planning policies population producer services proportion public sector public services regions relocation Research Retail Geography retail services service activities Service Economy service employment service firms service industry location service sector shopping centres significant SMSAs social Source spatial Stanback structure Studies suburban Table telecommunications teletext tourism trends urban areas variations West Germany West Midlands workers