Accessibility, transportation and land development : complementarity and location rent adjustment in the Northern Territory beef cattle industry
Abstract
The thesis is divided into four parts. The first, which
consists of this chapter alone, looks at the Northern
Territory as a transport region. The physical environment
and the history of the development of pastoralism and
transportation are described to provide a setting for the
empirical work that follows, which is restricted to a
consideration of beef production between 1950 and 1967 and
the assessment of emerging and potential developments from
the latter date. The discussion of the limitations on
mobility and trade up to 1950 also allows the identification
and illustration of the components of property accessibility
and this leads to the formulation of a general model of this
attribute. Part 2, consisting of Chapters 2 to 5, examines
the pattern of trade and production in the study industry
to assess how far producers adjust their consignment and
resources use decisions to take account of differences in
comparative locational advantages. Chapter 2 introduces
the theory of the generation of situation and intensity rents and looks at the characteristics of the beef industry
in the Territory to point up deviations from the constraints
of von Thünen' s Isolated State. This gives a background to
the economic organisation of production and the problems
that are met in processing output and survey data. In
addition, the chapter lays the foundation for an evaluation
of the importance of location rents in modern agriculture,
and the utility of the concepts of spatial equilibrium in
exchange and resource use in research.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Collections
Source
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
Downloads
File
Description