Developing industry


  • Enhancing continuing expansion of production
  • Allowing possibility for industrial development
  • Advancing industrialization
  • Coordinating industrial development
  • Supporting industrial development
  • Modernizing industry
  • Using industrialization

Description

Creating large scale machine and electronics technology based production in an economy. Industrialization results in the predominance of manufactured goods determining the economy. The process can begin with light industry, like textiles, and as this expands then transfering capital toward heavy or high technology industry. Some nations, such as the former USSR, have begun with heavy industry; others, like Japan, with simultaneous development of heavy and light industry. The availability of resources, technology, labour, capital, skilled workers and managerial capacity determine the rate and type of industrialization. The purpose and social situation of industrialization can allow provide constraints on it.

Context

The industrialization process began with the industrial revolution in the UK, spreading to continental Europe and North America. However the pattern of industrial activity has undergone important shifts in recent decades. Heavy industry is expanding rapidly in the developing Asian and South American economies, while expansion of the industrial base in Europe, the United States and Japan is directed more to high technology production processes and service-oriented activities.

Claim

  1. Many people believe that new industrial revolutions are already taking place, with the rise of cybertechnology, biotechnology and nanotechnology. It is true that these are powerful tools for change. But they are only tools – hyperefficient engines for the steamship of the first Industrial Revolution. But there is an alternative – one that will allow both business and nature to be fecund and productive. This alternative is what we call "eco-effectiveness." Our concept of eco-effectiveness leads to human industry that is regenerative rather than depletive. It involves the design of things that celebrate interdependence with other living systems. From an industrial-design perspective, it means products that work within cradle-to-cradle life cycles rather than cradle-to-grave ones. (William McDonough and Michael Braungart).

Broader

Narrower

  1. Undertaking industrial research
  2. Sustaining industrial innovation
  3. Strengthening technological competition
  4. Strengthening role of business and industry
  5. Strengthening monopolies in the telephone industry
  6. Securing industrial factory location
  7. Reviewing food processing industry
  8. Restructuring industry
  9. Promoting tourism
  10. Practising industrial ecology
  11. Industrializing developing countries
  12. Establishing new industries
  13. Equipping local factory workers
  14. Ensuring sustainable industrial development
  15. Enlarging food processing industry
  16. Encouraging selected factory locations
  17. Encouraging production of industrial equipment
  18. Developing woodworking industries
  19. Developing viable animal industry
  20. Developing textile industry
  21. Developing technological industries
  22. Developing recycling industry
  23. Developing quality controls for industrial systems
  24. Developing profitable scope of rural industrial operations
  25. Developing power industry
  26. Developing petroleum industry
  27. Developing national industries
  28. Developing military-industrial-governmental complex
  29. Developing mechanical techniques
  30. Developing manufacturing industries
  31. Developing local industrial base
  32. Developing knowledge economy
  33. Developing industrially produced cultural products
  34. Developing industrial zone
  35. Developing industrial training
  36. Developing industrial patterning capabilities
  37. Developing industrial bakeries
  38. Developing indigenous basic industry
  39. Developing feasible industrial images
  40. Developing countries through industrial pharmacy
  41. Developing construction industries
  42. Developing civil nuclear industry technology
  43. Developing basic metal industries
  44. Coordinating industrial involvement
  45. Coordinating business development
  46. Building sea products industry
  47. Advancing production efficiency

Facilitated by

  1. Training in industrial development
  2. Remediating ecological damage caused by industrial activity
  3. Providing industrial support services
  4. Providing industrial development services
  5. Preventing occupational accidents
  6. Preventing chemical accidents
  7. Monitoring underdevelopment in industrialized countries
  8. Monitoring industries
  9. Increasing business management expertise
  10. Improving working environment
  11. Improving industrial retraining programmes
  12. Improving industrial access
  13. Identifying obstacles to industrial development
  14. Generating industrial processes
  15. Fostering linkages between family planning and social welfare
  16. Financing industrial development
  17. Facilitating regional industrial development
  18. Enhancing industrial wages
  19. Encouraging industrialization
  20. Developing industrial policy
  21. Developing employable industrial arts
  22. Conveying materials for industrial processes


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