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I. Living in Latin America. Developing Countries mainlyA. AgricultureMajority of the exports1. Cash Crops and LivestockCoffee, sugarcane, bananasSome countries depend on one cropHonduras: BananasRisky for the economyNo land left for foodCrop failure?Argentina, Brazil, and Mexico raises lot
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1. Chapter 10 Latin America Today
2. I. Living in Latin America Developing Countries mainly
A. Agriculture
Majority of the exports
1. Cash Crops and Livestock
Coffee, sugarcane, bananas
Some countries depend on one crop
Honduras: Bananas
Risky for the economy
No land left for food
Crop failure?
Argentina, Brazil, and Mexico raises lots of beef
Also Costa Rica, Uruguay, and Paraguay
3. Agriculture cont. 2. Latifundia and Minifundia
1/3 of the people live in rural areas
Campesinos: rural workers
Latifundias: large farms owned by families or corporations
Minifundias: small farms that produce just enough for family use or sale at the local market
Most campesinos are very poor
The altiplano is among the poorest
Only grow beans, corn, potatoes, and cassavas
4. B. Industry Service industries are growing rapidly
1. Industrial Progress
Mexico produces cars, electrical goods, and processed foods
Maquiladoras: American owned factories in Mexico
Ex. Ciudad Juarez
Cheap land and labor
Have transportation, power and a stable govt.
These are the building blocks of industry
5. Industry cont. Progress
Brazil produces steel, cars, textiles, cement, paper, machinery, chemicals, airplanes, processed foods, and electrical goods
Mexico, Brazil, Argentina, and Venezuela produce handicrafts
Argentina, Chile, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, and Bolivia produce foods and textiles
Bolivia mines tin
Caribbean: sugar industry
6. Industry cont. 2. Industrial Development
Need money for factories, many do not have
Foreign investors
Many countries do not have all of the factors of industry
7. C. Trade and Interdependence Few countries make enough goods or grow enough food for their people
Rely on each other and countries outside of Latin Am.
Dependent on imported goods, raw materials, technology, and capital
8. D. Transportation and Communications Not highly developed because of costs and physical barriers
1. Roads and Railroads
Andes and rain forest are a barrier
Argentina and Mexico have good roads
Autopistas in Mex.
Brazil only has 12% of its roads paved
Building the Trans-Amazonian Highway
Pan-American Hwy.: from northern Mexico to Southern Chile through 17 capitals
Mexico, Guatemala, Argentina, and Brazil have good RRs
9. Transportation and Communications cont. 2. Inland Waterways
Rio de la Plata
Amazon River Basin
Panama Canal
3. Air Travel
Easiest to fly over the barriers
Major cities
Mexico City the busiest
10. Transportation and Communications cont. 4. Communications
Barriers also hinder communications
Millions use telephones
Many countries don’t have modern systems
Use of satellites for better TV and radio
Newspapers and print a major means communication
1/7 of the world’s papers
11. II. People and the Environment A. The Amazon River Basin
Covers 2.7 million sq. miles
Same as the land east of the Rockies in the U.S.
1. Deforestation
10% already destroyed
Slash-and-burn farming
Ranches too
Lumber companies
Many do not reforest
People settling there too
12. People and the Environment cont. 2. Major Concerns
Upset the oxygen balance of the atmosphere
Global warming
Extinction of plants and animals
Medicine uses?
Regenerated forests never as healthy as the original
3. Towards the Future
Government regulation
awareness
13. People and the Environment cont. B. Population Growth
1. Urban Challenges
Poverty, overcrowding, job scarcity, and lack of health services
Slums: favelas in Brazil, barriadas in Colombia, and villas miserias in Argentina
Air pollution: Mexico City
14. People and the Environment cont. 2. Solutions for One City
Mexico City
Encouraged business to locate out of the city
Promote tourism for more jobs
Improve agriculture to keep farmers in the rural areas
Cut down number of cars
Subways
New water system
Planted millions of trees